And their dead bodies [shall lie] in the street of the great city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also our Lord was crucified.
8. the street ] For the sing. cf. Rev 21:21, Rev 22:2. The word in fact means a broad street, such as the principal street of a city would be. The modern Italian piazza is the same word; but Rev 22:2 seems to shew that it is a street rather than a square perhaps most accurately a “boulevard” in the modern sense, only running through the city, not round it.
the great city ] Many commentators suppose this to be the Babylon of Rev 14:8 and chaps. 17 sqq. i.e. Rome, whether literally or in an extended sense. But this seems hardly natural. If it were, why is it not called Babylon here, just as in the last verse the beast was called the beast? Besides, here the great majority of the inhabitants repent at God’s judgement: contrast Rev 16:9. The only other possible view is, that this great city is Jerusalem: and with this everything that is said about it seems to agree.
Sodom ] Jerusalem is so called in Isa 1:10, and is likened to Sodom in Eze 16:46. For the licentiousness of the generation before the fall of Jerusalem, see comm. on Hos 4:14: Jos. B. J. IV. ix. 10 suggests a closer likeness.
Egypt ] Jerusalem, it must be admitted, is never so called in the O. T. But New Testament facts made the name appropriate: comparing Act 2:47; Act 5:12, &c. with the Epistle to the Galatians, we see how Jerusalem was at first the refuge of the people of God, from which nevertheless they had at last to escape as from a house of bondage.
our Lord ] Read, their Lord i.e. of the two Witnesses. This clause seems almost certainly to identify “the great city” as Jerusalem: perhaps St John uses the title, as implying that its old one, “the Holy City,” is forfeited. At the same time, if we do suppose the City meant to be Rome, these words can be explained, either by the responsibility of Pilate for the Lord’s death, or on the principle of the beautiful legend, Domine, quo vadis? that the Lord suffered in His Servants.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And their dead bodies shall lie in the street – Prof. Stuart, Shall be in the street. The words shall lie are supplied by the translators, but not improperly. The literal rendering would be, and their corpses upon the street of the great city; and the meaning is, that there would be a state of things in regard to them which would be well represented by supposing them to lie unburied. To leave a body unburied is to treat it with contempt, and among the ancients nothing was regarded as more dishonorable than such treatment. See the Ajax of Sophocles. Among the Jews also it was regarded as a special indignity to leave the dead unburied, and hence they are always represented as deeply solicitous to secure the interment of their dead. See Gen 23:4. Compare 2Sa 21:9-13; Ecc 6:3; Isa 14:18-20; Isa 22:16; Isa 53:9. The meaning here is, that, for the time specified, those who are here referred to would be treated with indignity and contempt. In the fulfillment of this, we are not, of course, to look for any literal accomplishment of what is here said, but for some treatment of the witnesses which would be well represented by this; that is, which would show that they were treated, after they were silenced, like unburied corpses putrefying in the sun.
Of the great city – Where these transactions would occur. As a great city would be the agent in putting them to death, so the result would be as if they were publicly exposed in its streets. The word great here supposes that the city referred to would be distinguished for its size – a circumstance of some importance in determining the place referred to.
Which spiritually is called – pneumatikos. This word occurs only in one other place in the New Testament, 1Co 2:14, because they are spiritually discerned – where it means, in accordance with the Holy Spirit, or through the aid of the Holy Spirit. Here it seems to be used in the sense of metaphorically, or allegorically, in contradistinction from the literal and real name. There may possibly be an intimation here that the city is so called by the Holy Spirit to designate its real character, but still the essential meaning is, that that was not its literal name. For some reason the real name is not given to it; but such descriptions are applied as are designed to leave no doubt as to what is intended.
Sodom – Sodom was distinguished for its wickedness, and especially for that vice to which its abominations have given name. For the character of Sodom, see Gen 18:19. Compare 2Pe 2:6. In inquiring what city is here referred to, it would be necessary to find in it such abominations as characterized Sodom, or so much wickedness that it would be proper to call it Sodom. If it shall be found that this was designed to refer to papal Rome, no one can doubt that the abominations which prevailed there would justify such an appellation. Compare the notes on Rev 9:20-21.
And Egypt – That is, it would have such a character that the name Egypt might be properly given to it. Egypt is known in the Scriptures as the land of oppression – the land where the Israelites, the people of God, were held in cruel bondage. Compare Exo. 115. See also Eze 23:8. The particular idea, then, which seems to be conveyed here is, that the city referred to would be characterized by acts of oppression and wrong toward the people of God. So far as the language is concerned, it might apply either to Jerusalem or to Rome – for both were eminently characterized by such acts of oppression toward the true children of God as to make it proper to I compare their cruelties with those which were inflicted on the Israelites by the Egyptians. Of whichever of these places the course of the exposition may require us to understand this, it will be seen at once that the language is such as is strictly applicable to either; though, as the reference is rather to Christians than to the ancient people of God, it must be admitted that it would be most natural to refer it to Rome. More acts authorizing persecution, and designed to crush the true people of God, have gone forth from Rome than from any other city on the face of the earth; and taking the history of the church together, there is no place that would be so properly designated by the term here employed.
Where also our Lord was crucified – If this refers to Jerusalem, it is to be taken literally; if to another city, it is to be understood as meaning that he was practically crucified there: that is, that the treatment of his friends – his church – was such that it might be said that he was crucified afresh there; for what is done to his church may be said to be done to him. Either of these interpretations would be justified by the use of the language. Thus in Heb 6:6, it is said of apostates from the true faith (compare the notes on the passage), that they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh. If the passage before us is to be taken figuratively, the meaning is, that acts would be performed which might properly be represented as crucifying the Son of God; that, as he lives in his church, the acts of perverting his doctrines, and persecuting his people, would be, in fact, an act of crucifying the Lord again. Thus understood, the language is strictly applicable to Rome; that is, if it is admitted that John meant to characterize that city, he has employed such language as a Jewish Christian would naturally use. While, therefore, it must be admitted that the language is such as could be literally applied only to Jerusalem, it is still true that it is such language as might be figuratively applied to any other city strongly resembling that, and that in this sense it would characterize Rome above all other cities of the world. The common reading of the text here is our Lord – hemon; the text now regarded as correct, however (Griesbach, Tittmann, Hahn), is their Lord – auton. This makes no essential difference in the sense, except that it directs the attention more particularly to the fact that they were treated like their own Master.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Rev 11:8
Where also our Lord was crucified.
The Cross of the Lord Jesus
This passage strikingly identifies the Master and the servants–our Lord and His witnesses. They were to suffer as He suffered and where He suffered: one with Him in life and death, in shame and glory; one with Him on the Cross, in the grave, in resurrection, in ascension, and on the throne. Where also our Lord was crucified. It is the last reference to the Cross of Christ in the Bible, and corresponds well with that frequent expression in the Revelation, the Lamb slain; carrying us back to the seed of the woman and the bruised heel.
1. It was the place of guilt and condemnation (Mat 27:22; Mat 27:26; Mat 27:28).
2. It was the place of shame (Heb 12:2).
3. It was the place of weakness (2Co 13:4).
4. It was the place of pain (Heb 13:12).
5. The place of the curse (Gal 3:13).
6. The place of rejection (Joh 19:6).
7. The place of hatred (Mat 27:25).
8. The place of death (Mat 20:18-19). (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Good things found in the Cross
This Cross, where so many evil things meet, is the place where all good things are to be found. God gathered all the evil to that spot, that He might utterly make away with it, through Him who took all the evil on Himself, that He might bring out of it only good.
1. It is the place of propitiation (Lev 16:15; Rom 3:25). The altar was there for the burnt-offering. The place without the gate for the sin-offering was there.
2. It is the meeting-place (Exo 29:42). It is the place where we meet with God, and God meets with us in friendship, and love, and joy. It is the place where the Father meets the prodigal and embraces him.
3. It is the place of love. Gods love is there, shining in its full brightness, unhindered and undimmed.
4. It is the place of acceptance. Here we become accepted in the Beloved. Here the exchange takes place between the perfect and the imperfect. Believing in the perfect One, we become complete in Him. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
What the Cross accomplished
The Cross accomplished such things as the following:–
1. It removed the wall of partition (Col 2:14).
2. It made peace (Col 1:20).
3. It has secured oneness (Eph 2:15-16).
4. It has brought life (2Co 13:4).
5. It contains power (1Co 1:18; 1Co 1:23).
6. It is the focus or centre of all wisdom (1Co 1:24).
7. It crucifies the world (Gal 6:14).
8. It furnishes a theme for glorying (Gal 6:14).
9. It is the model and test of service (Mar 8:34; Luk 9:23).
10. It is the badge of discipleship (Luk 14:27).
11. It is Gods way of salvation (Act 10:39-43).
12. It is the measure of Christs endurance and obedience (Php 2:8).
13. It is the pledge and standard of Divine love (Rom 5:8).
14. It is the revelation of Gods character (1Jn 4:10).
15. It is Gods lamp of light.
16. It is the universal magnet (Joh 12:32).
17. It is the universal balm and medicine.
18. It is mans estimate of sin.
19. It is Gods verdict against sin, and His estimate of it (Rom 8:3).
20. It is mans estimate of the Son of God.
21. It is Gods interpretation of law and its penalties.
(H. Bonar, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 8. The great city] Some say Rome, which may be spiritually called Sodom for its abominations, Egypt for its tyrannous cruelty, and the place where our Lord was crucified, because of its persecution of the members of Christ; but Jerusalem itself may be intended. All these things I must leave to others.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Their bodies dead, in the sense before mentioned, shall continue so for three days and a half, of which we shall speak, Rev 11:11. But what is here meant:
1. By the great city?
2. By the street of the great city?
Some, by the great city, would have Jerusalem understood; but that was now far from a great city, nor do the addition of those words in the latter end of the verse prove it; for Christ was not crucified in that city, but without the gates. Most judicious interpreters, by the great city here, understand Rome, which is seven or eight times (under the name of Babylon) so called in this hook, Rev 14:8; Rev 16:19; 18:10,16,18,19,21; nor is any other city but that so called. This great city is here said, in a spiritual sense, to be Sodom and Egypt; Sodom, for whoredom and filthiness; Egypt, for oppression of the Lords Israel. As to the second question, what is here meant by the street of the great city? Mr. Mede hath irrefragably proved, that it cannot be meant of any parish, or such place in this city, as we call a street:
1. Because our Lord was crucified neither in any street, or parish, or any other place within the walls of Jerusalem.
2. Both Jerusalem and Rome had many more than one street.
3. Because the bodies being dead, doubtless lay in the place where they were slain; but men do not use to fight in the streets of cities.
4. Nor was that a place for all people, kindred, tongues, and nations, to see them in.
He therefore rightly judgeth, that the Greek word which we translate street, signifies the territories and jurisdiction of this city. See what he says to justify this in his Clavis Apocal. 40. p. 138. And this makes the last clause plain; for though our Lord was not crucified within any city, or in the street of any city, yet he was crucified in a place belonging to the jurisdiction of the Roman emperor; and it is very likely that it is in Europe that the witnesses shall be slain, which, in this sense, was all of it a street belonging to the city of Rome.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
8. dead bodiesSo Vulgate,Syriac, and ANDREAS.But A, B, C, the oldest manuscripts, and Coptic read thesingular, “dead body.” The two fallen in one cause areconsidered as one.
the great cityeighttimes in the Revelation elsewhere used of BABYLON(Rev 14:8; Rev 16:19;Rev 17:18; Rev 18:10;Rev 18:16; Rev 18:18;Rev 18:19; Rev 18:21).In Re 21:10 (EnglishVersion as to the new Jerusalem), the oldest manuscriptsomit “the great” before city, so that it forms noexception. It must, therefore, have an anticipatory reference to themystical Babylon.
whichGreek,“the which,” namely, “the city which.“
spirituallyin aspiritual sense.
SodomThe very termapplied by Isa 1:10 to apostateJerusalem (compare Eze 16:48).
Egyptthe nation whichthe Jews’ besetting sin was to lean upon.
where . . . Lord wascrucifiedThis identifies the city as Jerusalem, though theLord was crucified outside of the city. EUSEBIUSmentions that the scene of Christ’s crucifixion was enclosed withinthe city by Constantine; so it will be probably at the time of theslaying of the witnesses. “The beast [for example, Napoleon andFrance’s efforts] has been long struggling for a footing inPalestine; after his ascent from the bottomless pit he struggles muchmore” [BENGEL]. Someone of the Napoleonic dynasty may obtain that footing, and even beregarded as Messiah by the Jews, in virtue of his restoring them totheir own land; and so may prove to be the last Antichrist. Thedifficulty is, how can Jerusalem be called “the great city,”that is, Babylon? By her becoming the world’s capital of idolatrousapostasy, such as Babylon originally was, and then Rome has been;just as she is here called also “Sodom and Egypt.”
also ourA, B, C,ORIGEN, ANDREAS,and others read, “also their.” Where their Lord,also, as well as they, was slain. Compare Re18:24, where the blood of ALLslain on earth is said to be found INBABYLON, just as in Mt23:35, Jesus saith that, “upon the Jews and JERUSALEM”(Compare Mat 23:37; Mat 23:38)shall “come ALL therighteous blood shed upon earth”; whence it follows Jerusalemshall be the last capital of the world apostasy, and so receive thelast and worst visitation of all the judgments ever inflicted on theapostate world, the earnest of which was given in the Romandestruction of Jerusalem. In the wider sense, in theChurch-historical period, the Church being the sanctuary, all outsideof it is the world, the great city, wherein all the martyrdoms ofsaints have taken place. Babylon marks its idolatry, Egyptits tyranny, Sodom its desperate corruption, Jerusalemits pretensions to sanctity on the ground of spiritual privileges,while all the while it is the murderer of Christ in the person of Hismembers. All which is true of Rome. So VITRINGA.But in the more definite sense, Jerusalem is regarded, even inHebrews (Heb 13:12-14),as the world city which believers were then to go forth from, inorder to “seek one to come.”
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And their dead bodies [shall lie] in the street of the great city,…. Not Jerusalem, which was destroyed when John had this vision, and which will; not be rebuilt at the time it refers to; nor is it ever called the great city, though the city of the great King; however, not in this book, though the new Jerusalem is so called,
Re 21:10; but that can never be designed here; but the city of Rome, or the Roman jurisdiction, the whole empire of the Romish antichrist, which is often called the great city in this book; see
Re 16:19. The city of Rome itself was very large, and the Roman empire still larger, so as to be called the whole world and the antichristian see of Rome has been of great extent. Now as the street of a city denotes a public open place in it, a place of concourse and resort, Pr 1:20, the dead bodies of those witnesses being said to lie here, may design the publicness of their silence, disgrace, and contempt; and that the silencing and degrading them, and depriving them of all privileges, will be known all over the antichristian empire; and that they will be exposed to public ignominy and shame, their persons, their characters, their testimony, their doctrines, their writings, their churches, and families, and all that belong to them: or else this “street” may design some part of the Romish jurisdiction, and it may be Great Britain may be particularly designed; for where should the dead bodies of the witnesses lie, but where they are slain? and where can they be slain, but where they are? and where are they, at least where are there so many as in these islands? It may be objected, that Great Britain is not a part of the see of Rome, does not belong to the jurisdiction of it; to this it may be replied, that in this last war of the beast, the outer court will be given to the Gentiles, the bulk of the reformed churches will fall off to Popery, and their countries again fall into the hands of the pope, and, among the rest, Great Britain. The fears of Dr. Goodwin seem to be too just, and well grounded, that the prophecy in Da 11:45 respects our island, which speaks of antichrist planting “the tabernacles of his palace between the seas, in the glorious holy mountain”, or “the mountain of delight, of holiness”. Now where has God such a mountain of delight, or a people that are the darling of his soul, as here? where in all the globe is there such a spot where God has so many saints, so many Holy Ones, as in this island? it may have been truly called a glorious holy mountain, or a mountain of delight; and what place between the seas is there to which these characters can agree, but Great Britain? Here then antichrist will plant the tabernacles of his palace; but it will be but a tabernacle, or tent; it will be but for a short time, as it follows, “yet he shall come to his end, and none shall help him”, Da 11:45. Now this great city, in the street of which the bodies of the witnesses will lie exposed, is that
which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt; that is, it is called so in a mystic and allegoric sense, in distinction from the literal sense; see 1Co 10:3; it is called Sodom because of the fulness of bread, plenty and abundance of all outward good things in it; as well as for the pride and idleness of the priests, monks, and friars which swarm in it; and also for the open profaneness and contempt of true and serious religion in it; and particularly for the sin of sodomy, so frequently committed here, with impunity, yea with allowance, and even with commendation. This sin was extolled with praises, as Brightman observes, by John a Casa, archbishop of Beneventum; and was defended in a book, published for that purpose, by one Mutius; and which was allowed by the bulls and letters patent of Pope Julius the Third; and it is called Egypt, because of its tyranny and oppression; as the Egyptians kept the Israelites in bondage, and made them to serve with rigour, and embittered their lives, so the pope, and his Gentiles, or Egyptians, have in a most oppressive and rigorous manner tyrannised over the souls, bodies, and estates of men; and also because of its great idolatry, Egypt being very remarkable for the number of its deities, and the meanness of them; by which the idols and idolatries of the church of Rome may be fitly expressed:
where also our Lord was crucified; that is, in the great city, which is fitly compared to Sodom and Egypt; for Christ was crucified actually in Judea, which was then become a Roman province, and under Pontius Pilate, a Roman governor, and by his order, and suffered a Roman kind of death, crucifixion, and for a crime he was charged with, though a false one, against Caesar the Roman emperor; and Christ has been crucified at Rome itself in his members, who have suffered persecution and death, and even the death of the cross there; and he has been crucified afresh, both by the sins and immoralities of those who have bore the Christian name there, and by the frequent sacrifices of him in the Mass. Moreover, by this periphrasis may be meant Jerusalem; and the sense be, that as the great city, or jurisdiction of Rome, may be spiritually or mystically called Sodom and Egypt, so likewise the place where our Lord was crucified, that is, Jerusalem; and that for this reason, because that as Jerusalem stoned and killed the prophets of the Lord, and upon the inhabitants of it were found all the righteous blood shed upon the earth, so in Rome, in mystical Babylon, will be found the blood of prophets, and of saints, and of all that were slain upon earth, Mt 23:35. The Alexandrian copy, the Complutensian edition, the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions, read, “where also their Lord was crucified”; and the Arabic version more expressly, “the Lord of these two”, i.e. the two witnesses.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Their dead bodies lie ( ). Old word from (to fall), a fall, especially of bodies slain in battle, a corpse, a carcase (Mt 14:12), here the singular (some MSS. , plural) as belonging to each of the (their) like (their mouth) in verse 5. So also in verse 9. No word in the Greek for “lie.”
In (). “Upon,” as in verse 6, with genitive ( ), the broad way ( understood), from (broad) as in Mt 6:5, old word (Rev 21:21; Rev 22:2).
Of the great city ( ). Clearly Jerusalem in view of the closing clause (—), though not here called “the holy city” as in verse 2, and though elsewhere in the Apocalypse Babylon (Rome) is so described (Rev 14:8; Rev 16:19; Rev 17:5; Rev 18:2; Rev 18:10; Rev 18:16; Rev 18:18; Rev 18:19; Rev 18:21).
Which (). Which very city, not “whichever.”
Spiritually (). This late adverb from (spiritual) occurs in the N.T. only twice, in 1Co 2:14 for the help of the Holy Spirit in interpreting God’s message and here in a hidden or mystical (allegorical sense). For this use of see 1Co 10:3f. Judah is called Sodom in Isa 1:9; Ezek 16:46; Ezek 16:55. See also Matt 10:15; Matt 11:23. Egypt is not applied to Israel in the O.T., but is “an obvious symbol of oppression and slavery” (Swete).
Where also their Lord was crucified ( ). First aorist passive indicative of , to crucify, a reference to the fact of Christ’s crucifixion in Jerusalem. This item is one of the sins of Jerusalem and the disciple is not greater than the Master (Joh 15:20).
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Dead bodies [] . Read ptwma carcass. See on Mt 24:28; Mr 14:45.
In the street [ ] . Lit., “Upon the street.” See on Luk 14:21.
The great city. Jerusalem is never called by this name. Different expositors refer it to Rome or Babylon. Milligan to Jerusalem.
Spiritually [] . Typically or allegorically. (compare 1Co 10:3, 4.
Our Lord. Read aujtwn their for hJmwn our.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “And their dead bodies,” (kai to ptoma auton) “and their corpse-form,” not nekros (a dead body) the outward forms of unspiritual, natural Israel, and formal unspiritual Christiandom, later referred to as that great whore and her children, Rev 17:1; Rev 17:5; Rev 12:17.
2) “Shall lie in the streets of the great city,” (epi tes plateias tes poleos tes megales) “shall appear upon the open street of the great city,” the city of Jerusalem, where they, the two true witnesses, had prophesied for forty-two months. Their lifeless, spiritless, physical, spurious bodies, synagogues, of natural Israel, in formal religion and formal spiritless Christiandom, shall visibly appear in the streets of Jerusalem, 2Ti 3:5; Mat 5:20.
3) “Which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt,” (hetis kaleitai pneumatikos sodoma kai aiguptos) “which spiritually (in a spiritual sense) is called Sodom and Egypt,” indicating a city of moral and ethical evil, debauchery, and spiritual rebellion against God, also spiritually referred to as Babylon, Rev 14:8; Rev 18:10; Isa 1:1; Isa 1:9-10.
4) “Where also our Lord was crucified,” (hopou kai ho kurios auton estaurothe) “even where their Lord was crucified,” Joh 19:17-18; Act 7:58; Heb 13:12; Rev 18:24; Act 7:52; Act 7:58.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
(8-10) And their dead bodies . . .Better, And their corpse (is) upon the street of the great city, which is called spiritually Sodom and Egypt, where their Lord also was crucified. And some from among the peoples and tribes and tongues and nations look upon their corpse three days and a half, and do not suffer their corpses to be put into a tomb. And they that dwell upon the earth rejoice over them, and make merry, and shall send gifts one to another; because these two prophets tormented them that dwelt upon the earth. Their corpses remain unburied, while congratulations and rejoicings go on; harmony and concord prevail, as when Pilate and Herod were made friends; it is the millennium of evil, the paradise of fools who make a mock at sin; but the forms of the witnesses, though silenced, still in silence witness against evil. At no time are they hid away out of sight. Even in an age of religious and social anarchy the silent tokens of a better order remain, as when in mockery and profanation the harlot was enthroned within Notre Dame, the very sanctuary walls, which no longer echoed to the psalm of Christian life, yet bore silent testimony to the higher genius of the past. They are said to lie in the street of the great city. The city is described as the great city (comp. Rev. 16:19), and also as Sodom, Egypt, and Jerusalem. Do not passages like this show conclusively that to deny the mystical or allegorical sense of the Apocalypse is to keep the husk and cast away the seed? The city is great, for it is all-important in the eyes of the inhabitants, as public opinion is all-important to the weak or the worldly; it is Sodom, for it is the place where, through pleasure and luxuriousness (fulness of bread), the worst forms of immorality take root; it is Egypt, for it is the house of bondage, where the wages of sin become tyrannous; it is Jerusalem, for it is the apostate place where the presence of Christ is hated. The same spirit which slew their Lord is alive to persecute His servants. It cannot be that a prophet perish out of Jerusalem. If they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more them of his household; and the reason of this hatred is toldthe words of the witnesses tormented them. The reproof of their gospel and the reproof of their example . . . had been a torture to them; there was a voice in them which echoed its voicethe voice of a convicting conscience, and the voice of an anticipated judgment.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
8. The great city In opposition to the holy city of Rev 11:2; and so identical with the Babylon of Rev 14:9, the antichristic capital.
Lie in the street Picture of most dishonouring exposure. The defeat of the reformation is in its hour of defeat the object of derision through all the ranks of the apostasy.
Spiritually called The word figurative is the opposite to literal, and the word spiritual, as an epithet for language, is opposed to secular. Secularly the great city is called Babylon, but in the dialect of the spirit it is a Sodom, an Egypt. Babylon is called Sodom as the seat of licentiousness, whose end was to be burned. Rev 19:3, compared with Gen 19:28. And is called Egypt, as the cruel oppressor of God’s people, from which they were called to come out, Rev 18:4.
Where crucified Stuart, Gebhardt, and others, consider this clause as demonstrating that Jerusalem is the great city. But, 1. All the references to Jerusalem in the Apocalypse make her a symbol of the holy. She is “the city of God,” Rev 3:12; “the holy city,”
Rev 11:2; the “beloved city,” Rev 20:9; the “holy city,”
Rev 22:19. And so, also, the Jews and Israel are throughout a type of the true Church. 2. On the other hand, in every case the “great city” is Babylon, Rev 14:8; Rev 17:18; Rev 18:16; see also, Rev 16:19; Rev 18:10; Rev 18:19. So uniform a use, in both cases, cannot but be decisive. 3. Our Lord was truly crucified, not indeed in the literal and local, but in the mystical or spiritual, “Babylon.” Literal and fallen Jerusalem was within the limits, and part of, that Babylon, as being part of the Roman Empire as belonging to antichrist, and as where Roman hands crucified the Saviour. The also implies that our Lord’s being crucified is viewed as a martyrdom in addition to that of the saints slain in the great city.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘And their dead bodies lie in the street of the great city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also their Lord was crucified.’
Here the city in mind is clearly identified as Jerusalem. It is the place where the Lord was crucified. John could not have made it plainer. It is a clear indication of how God sees Jerusalem at this point. He sees it as a place of sexual perversion (Sodom – Genesis 19; Jer 23:14; Jud 1:7) and of idolatry and worldly aggrandisement (Egypt – see below), the very sins God had especially warned the seven churches against in readiness for this day. The people were guilty of following the ways of the land of Egypt and the land of Canaan (Lev 18:3). They were in direct disobedience to God, in contrast with the witnesses and the church of Christ. They prefer idolatry (Neh 9:18; Eze 23:3 with 7 ), and the luxuries of Egypt to the Lord’s fare (Num 11:5-6), for they honour the Beast who demands the one (Rev 13:4; Rev 13:12) and provides the other (Rev 13:17).
For Jerusalem as ‘the great city’ brought to humiliation see Jer 22:8. For Israel as Sodom, apart from the holy remnant, see Isa 1:9. How far this idolatry will be literal, and how far spiritual idolatry, only time will tell. Religious artefacts can soon become idols as witness the brazen serpent of Moses (2Ki 18:4).
‘Their dead bodies lie in the street’. No one is permitted to bury them. They are exposed to total shame just as Christ was. Psa 79:1-4 is illustrative of this episode and is probably in John’s mind. ‘Oh God, the nations are come to your inheritance, your holy sanctuary have they defiled. They have laid Jerusalem in heaps. The dead bodies of your servants they have given to be food to the fowls of heaven, the flesh of your saints to the beasts of the earth — there was none to bury them. We are become a reproach to our neighbours, a scorn and derision to those who are round about us’. It is probable we are to see here the last remnants of the church in Jerusalem. One by one they have been hunted down, but these, with their two prophets, had been preserved for the task they were given. Now they too have been put to death.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Rev 11:8-10 . As the slaying of the two witnesses could not occur [2868] until they had fulfilled their mission, so the Almighty Lord [2869] here allows dishonor to be shown their dead bodies, only in order afterwards to glorify them the more, Rev 11:11 .
. The sing. [2870] is regarded collectively; [2871] “that which has fallen of them,” i.e., their corpses.
. On the street, in the place where in the public exercise of their they are slain, they remain lying unburied, [2872] the most ignominious outrage even according to the feeling of the Gentiles, [2873] who here are represented as instruments of the beast of the abyss from the fact that they inflict such an outrage upon Christ’s witnesses, Rev 11:9 , and rejoice at this, Rev 11:10 .
That “the great city ” is identical with the holy city where the stands, Rev 11:1 sqq., and, therefore, is none other than Jerusalem, is evident already from the connection; just as unambiguously is this declared in Rev 11:8 , first in the spiritual designation of the same as Sodom and Egypt, then especially in the words . The spiritual designation ( . ) expresses, in distinction from the proper historical name, the spiritual nature of the city; but the juxtaposition of the two names, Sodom and Egypt, shows that reference is not made here to individual relations, [2874] but to that wherein Sodom and Egypt are essentially alike, viz., entire enmity to the true God, his servants, and his people. As already the ancient prophets called Jerusalem, in express terms, Sodom, [2875] or a sister of Sodom, [2876] they wished not so much to characterize individual sins, as rather to designate them radically from the perverted position of the people to their God. So here the city wherein the witnesses of Christ are slain, and lie unburied on the street, and wherein also the Lord was crucified, is spiritually designated by both anti-theocratic names, because its antichristian hostility to the Lord is to be represented as against his witnesses. [2877] But the pneumatic designation of the city gives also the answer in harmony with the context to the question in hand as to why the city is called here, not, as Rev 11:2 , the holy, but “the great .” Aret., Calov., and many of the older Protestants, have concluded from a comparison with Rev 16:19 , Rev 18:15 , etc., that also in this passage the great city is nothing but Babel, i.e., Papal Rome. Ebrard and other allegorists wish from this designation to prove at least that not the actual Jerusalem, but that which is allegorically meant, i.e., the secularized church, is to be understood. The reply of De Wette, that John could no longer call the city holy after its “profanation,” and yet “wanted to designate it as a chief city containing a large population, Rev 11:13 , and at the same time many Gentiles, warriors, and others,” especially in its second part, is not properly satisfactory. The reason is more probable that it is impossible in one breath to call the city holy, and Sodom and Egypt, while the . points in like manner as with respect to the city, which in ch. 16 sqq. bears the spiritual name of Babel, to the city’s greatness and power as the vain foundation of its godless security and arrogant enmity against the Lord and his witnesses calling to repentance.
That the concluding words of Rev 11:8 , , . . ., dare not be conceived of as a mere notice of locality, Ebrard properly mentions; but from this the impossibility does not result that the significance of the with extends also to the clause
, as Hengstenb. and Ebrard still assert, as, like the old Protestant allegorists, they refer it to the spiritual crucifixion of the Lord in the secularized church, [2878] a conception against which already the aor. , pointing to the definite fact of the crucifixion, is arrayed, but only the necessity follows for seeking the correct reference of that clause in the pragmatism of the context. Again, the text itself shows this, partly by the before . ., partly by the expression . . Both belong inwardly together; as the two witnesses, so also their Lord was there slain, crucified; the servants have suffered the same thing as their [2879] Lord. [2880] This is accordingly made prominent, because from this it becomes clear that the antichristian enmity of the great city remains always the same; with the same hatred as that wherewith they formerly once brought the Lord there to the cross, they now slay the two witnesses just because they are his witnesses. But still in another respect is the allusion to the crucifixion of the Lord significant, viz., with respect to the judgment announced. For even in their days, [2881] the city shows the same impenitent hostility, on account of which the Lord himself already had proclaimed its judgment. [2882]
Rev 11:9 . The subj. to lies directly in the partitively formed expression , in connection with which a is not to be supplied. [2883] In like manner, the subject is partitively formed, Joh 16:17 , the object, Mat 23:34 ; in the simple gen., without , the partitive obj. is found; e.g., Rev 3:9 .
From peoples, kindreds, etc. (Rev 5:9 ), Jews and Gentiles (cf. Rev 11:2 ), many then have assembled in Jerusalem; [2884] these see the indignity (Rev 11:8 ) , “ three days and a half .” [2885] The schematic significance of this date can only be mistaken, and a definite chronological prophecy be found here, if the specifications of time of Rev 11:2-3 , also be taken literally, [2886] which then of course is ill adapted to the further view of the allegorical character, and the reference of the whole to the antichristian period at the end of the world. All those have felt the schematic nature of the three and a half days, who have thought in connection therewith of only a short time; [2887] but that just three and a half days are named cannot be explained by an allusion to the three days during which the Lord lay in the grave; [2888] also not with Ewald: “Longer than it is proper for a dead person to be left unburied, especially if we consider that from the nature of the land the dead should be buried sooner, so as not to become offensive;” but only from the analogy of the three and a half years, Rev 11:2 sq. [2889]
. The form, like the , Mar 1:34 ; Mar 11:16 , from the stem . [2890]
. Cf. Luk 23:53 ; Luk 23:55 ; Mat 27:60 .
From the fact that in Rev 11:10 it is said, “they that dwell upon the earth” rejoice over them, [2891] it has been inferred [2892] that not the actual Jerusalem is to be regarded as the scene, but the allegorically so-called great city, Papal Rome, or rather the Romish Papacy, which actually extends over the whole earth. Improperly; for the strange attempt in this way to present the entire mass of all individuals dwelling on earth as spectators would thereby miscarry. In the expression . . . , the question is not with respect to the numerical mass, but the generic idea; [2893] the self-evident limitation to the [2894] found in the city, as representatives of the entire class, the text itself gives by accounting for their joy, to which they testify by mutual presents as on festivals, [2895] as follows: . The [2896] on the part of the two prophetic witnesses, which in no way can be referred to the inner pain [2897] excited by their preaching of repentance, [2898] was perceptible only to the enemies in the city, who just as such represent the entire class of dwellers upon earth.
[2868] Cf., on this idea, the (Rev 13:7 ).
[2869] Cf. Rev 11:4 .
[2870] Cf. Rev 11:9 , the plural.
[2871] De Wette.
[2872] Cf. Rev 11:9 .
[2873] Cf. Winer, Rwb ., i. 172 sq.
[2874] Against Hengstenb.: “ refers to religious corruption, to immoral practices.” Otherwise in Vitr., etc.
[2875] Isa 1:9 sqq.
[2876] Eze 16:48 .
[2877] Cf. Ewald, Bleek, De Wette.
[2878] In the Papacy. Calov., etc.
[2879] The reference of the to the inhabitants of Jerusalem (Ew. ii.) is ingenious, but violates the pragmatism of the statement, which also testifies to the passive form .
[2880] Cf. Mat 10:24 sqq.: Joh 15:20 .
[2881] Cf. Rev 11:2 sqq.
[2882] Cf. Luk 19:41 sqq.
[2883] Against Ebrard.
[2884] Beng., De Wette, etc.
[2885] Accus. of duration, as Rev 11:3 .
[2886] Beng.
[2887] Zeg., Hengstenb., etc.
[2888] C. a Lap., Hengstenb.
[2889] De Wette. Cf. also Hengstenb. and Ebrard, of whom, however, the latter concurs therein with Beng., etc., in that he also understands the time of antichrist at the end of the world, by conceiving of the one thousand two hundred and sixty days (Rev 11:3 ), at whose close the three and one-half days (Rev 11:9 ) fall, as the period of the Church from the destruction of Jerusalem until the conversion of Israel before the end of the world.
[2890] Cf. Winer, p. 77.
[2891] ; viz., so far as the witnesses are slain, and lie ignominiously upon the street.
[2892] Calov., Vitr., etc.
[2893] Cf. Rev 6:10 , Rev 3:10 .
[2894] Cf. Rev 11:9 : , . . .
[2895] Cf. Neh 8:10 ; Neh 8:12 ; Est 9:22 . Cf. Winer, Rwb ., i. 482.
[2896] Rev 9:5 .
[2897] Hengstenb.
[2898] Beng., Ew., De Wette.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
8 And their dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also our Lord was crucified.
Ver. 8. And their dead bodies ] This shows it cannot be meant as a natural death; for how should their bodies lie dead (in that sense) for three years and a half, or (say as it were) for a shorter time?
Of the great city ] Rome, of whose greatness Lipsius and Stapleton have written. See Rev 17:18 ; Rev 18:2-6 . Hence she is called the great whore, and great Babylon, not without reference unto the old Babylon; which was so great a city, that when it was taken by Cyrus, some part of it knew not what condition they were in till three days after. (Herodot. Arist. Pol.)
Where also our Lord was crucified ] For he was put to death by a Roman judge, by a Roman authority, by a kind of death proper to the Romans, &c. He is also crucified in Rome in his members, word, spirit, and worship.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Rev 11:8 . God’s servants rejected and cast aside, as so much refuse! See Sam. Agonistes , 667 704. The “great city” is Jerusalem, an identification favoured by ( a ) incidental O.T. comparisons of the Jews to Sodom (Isa 11:9 ; Jer 23:14 ; so Asc. Isa 3:10 ), ( b ) the Christian editor’s note , ( c ) a passage like Luk 13:33 , ( d ) the reference in Rev 16:19 , and ( e ) passages in Appian ( Syr. 50 .), Pliny ( H. N. xiv. 70), Josephus ( Apion , i. 22), and Sib. Or. (ver 154, 226, 413, written before 80 A.D.), all of which confirm this title ( cf. the variant addition in Rev 21:10 ): it is indeed put beyond doubt by the peculiar antichristtradition upon which the Jewish original was based ( A. C. 19 f., 134 f., E. Bi. i. 179, 180). The obscurity and isolated character of this eschatology, “an exotic growth upon the soil of Judaism” and much more in early Christianity, may be accounted for perhaps by the historical changes in the later situation, which concentrated the antichrist in anti-Roman rather than in anti-Jewish hostility. As yet, however, the seduction of the Jews by a false messiah ( cf. Joh 5:43 and its patristic interpretation) was quite a reasonable expectation: see the evidence gathered in A. C. 166 f. Victorinus, following the Apocalypse literally (Rev 11:7 = Rev 17:11 ), makes Nero redivivus beguile the Jews. The alternative to this theory has won considerable support (especially from Spitta and Wellhausen) upon various grounds; it regards the great city as Rome, where the two prophets are supposed to preach repentance to the heathen world and eventually to be killed. But although this suits some portions of the language well ( e.g. , Rev 11:13 , conversion to God of heaven ), it is not exegetically necessary; it introduces Rome abruptly (8 c being of course taken as a gloss) and irregularly: nor does it explain the general contour of the oracle as happily as that advocated above. Bruston’s ingenious attempt to take . with (= Jewish justice) is quite untenable, and the great city is not likely to be a translator’s error (Weyland), for . ( cf. Gal 4:24 f.) as opposed to (“literally,” Just. Mart. Dial. xiv. 231 d ) is “allegorically, or mystically.” , not as the home of magic ( cf. Blzu’s Altjd. Zauber-wesen , 39 f.) but as a classical foe of God’s people (and Moses of old?). The connexion with the water-dragon of Rev 12:15 ( cf. Eze 29:3 ; Eze 32:2 ) is obvious. Philo allegorises E [914] usually as a type of the corporeal and material. . . ., no wonder if Christians suffer, after what their Lord had to suffer ( cf. Mat 10:22-25 ; Mat 10:28 f.) at the hands of impious men. There is none of the modern’s surprise or indignation at the thought of “Christian blood shed where Christ bled for men”.
[914]. Codex Sangermanensis (sc. ix.), a Grco-Latin MS., now at St. Petersburg, formerly belonging to the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prs. Its text is largely dependent upon that of D. The Latin version, e (a corrected copy of d), has been printed, but with incomplete accuracy, by Belsheim (18 5).
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
dead bodies = corpse (singular, with all texts). Greek. ptoma. Only here, Rev 11:9 (plural) Mat 24:28. Mar 6:29.
shall lie. Read “lie”.
in. Greek. epi. App-104.
street. Greek. plateia, a broad place or way, rather than “street”. See Rev 21:21; Rev 22:2.
the great city. See Jer 22:8. Jerusalem will have been rebuilt only to be again destroyed. See Isa 25:2-9.
spiritually. See 1Co 2:14.
Sodom and Egypt. Compare Isa 1:9, Isa 1:10. Eze 16:46, Eze 16:53; Eze 23:3, Eze 23:8, Eze 23:19, Eze 23:27. See Psa 9:9; Psa 10:1.
our. The texts read “their”, The Holy Spirit thus points to the city in the plainest way.
crucified. Only here in Rev.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Rev 11:8-9. ) in the singular number is used collectively, Psa 79:2; Isa 26:19; Jer 34:20 : and so in this place, respecting two. Also the head of Oreb and Zeeb is spoken of for the heads, Jdg 7:25. Presently afterwards, in the third place, [111] is used: although in that place also there is a trace of the singular number in the Codex Leicestrensis, . Although we see no reason for the difference, yet it would be rash to say that there is none. [In the text they are not said to lie. What, if you should suppose that they will be suspended, as their Lord also was suspended from the cross?-V. g.]- -, in the street-was crucified) The place of crucifixion was outside the city under Tiberius; I almost think that it was so under Adrian also. Eusebius teaches, that the scene of the Lords martyrdom, or the place of the cross, passed over into the city built by Constantine; lib. iii. on the Life of Const. ch. xxxii. and ch. xxxviii., where he mentions the neighbouring street. The shape of the city has been changed in various ways, and will be changed hereafter. Whether the city has the place of the cross within the walls at the present day, or has not (for travellers are at variance with one another, and those who deny it, do so with far greater appearance of truth), at the time of the witnesses, at least, it will undoubtedly have the place of the cross in the street, either within the walls or without; for thus also is called the street, 2Sa 21:12; Pro 26:13; Neh 8:1, with Adnot. Halens, p. 178; Luk 10:10 (comp. Mat 10:14); Est 4:6. Comp. Lightfoot, Hor. in Matt. p. 54. The beast has been this long time struggling eagerly concerning Palestine; after his ascent from the bottomless pit he struggles much more.
[111] in ver. 8, and in the first and second places ver. 9, is the reading of Rec. Text, with h Vulg. Syr. But ABC Memph., in the former two instances, read .-E.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
great city
i.e. Jerusalem.
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
their dead: Rev 11:9, Psa 79:2, Psa 79:3, Jer 26:23, Eze 37:11
the great: Rev 11:13, Rev 14:8, Rev 16:19, Rev 17:1, Rev 17:5, Rev 18:2, Rev 18:10, Rev 18:18, Rev 18:21
Sodom: Gen 13:13, Gen 19:24, Isa 1:10, Jer 23:14, Eze 16:53-55, Amo 4:11, Mat 10:15, 2Pe 2:6, Jud 1:7
Egypt: Exo 1:13, Exo 1:14, Exo 3:7, Exo 20:2, Psa 78:43-51
our Lord: Rev 18:24, Luk 13:33, Luk 13:34, Act 9:4, Heb 6:6, Heb 13:12
Reciprocal: Psa 141:7 – bones Isa 1:21 – become Isa 24:10 – of confusion Isa 26:19 – Awake Jer 50:40 – General Eze 16:46 – thy younger sister Eze 24:6 – Woe Dan 11:42 – and Hos 11:8 – Admah Amo 5:11 – treading Mat 11:23 – in Sodom Mat 23:37 – Jerusalem Luk 17:29 – General Act 2:10 – Egypt Rev 14:20 – without Rev 16:10 – upon
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Rev 11:8. Dead bodies must be understood in the light of the comments on the preceding verse. We know the literal truth is that Rome was the institution that mistreated the Bible and took it away from the people. For that reason the symbols in this verse must be interpreted accordingly. The city is the domain of the apostate church, and the reference to Sodom and Egypt is made because of the wickedness that was in those places and their enmity against the Lord. The Lord’s crucifixion also is laid to the same kind of elements that plotted the attack upon the Bible.
Comments by Foy E. Wallace
Verse 8.
In verse 8, the specter of their dead bodies was seen lying in the street of the great city; it was an open spectacle of shame upon “the faithful city become an harlot.” (Isa 1:21) The once glorious city was figuratively called “Sodom and Egypt,” a designation known to the Jews as symbols of wickedness. Jerusalem had become a spiritual Sodom and Egypt. (Jer 23:14; Eze 16:46-52; Isa 1:10)
The great city is identified in the text as Jerusalem by the description where also our Lord was crucified, of which, and in reference to himself, Jesus said, “for it cannot be that a prophet perish out of Jerusalem.” (Luk 13:33; Mat 23:34-37)
It was consistent with all aspects of the scene to designate Jerusalem as Sodom and Egypt. The two names in biblical history were synonymous with abominable wickedness, oppression and persecution. Both designations–the holy city, and Sodom and Egypt–were adaptable to the checkered history of Jerusalem.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Rev 11:8. Their enemies are not satisfied with putting them to death. Dishonour and contumely are heaped upon them after they have been slain. The use of the singular for the plural number in speaking of them in this verse is remarkable, for the true reading is not, as in the Authorised Version, their bodies shall lie but their dead body lies. There must be a sense in which the witnesses, though spoken of as two, may be regarded as one.Their dead body lies in the street, in the broad open way, where there are many passers-by to behold the contempt and the profanation (comp. Psa 79:3).This street belongs to the great city, several characteristics of which are next given. Spiritually it is called Sodom and Egypt, and there also their Lord was crucified. That this city is in the first place Jerusalem not, as many suppose, Rome seems clear from the statement that it is the city in which the Lord was crucified. But the question still arises, What does Jerusalem, so spoken of, denote? The literal Jerusalem alone it cannot be, not only because all such names are in the Book of Revelation allegorically used, but also because the city is spiritually, that is allegorically, called Sodom and Egypt. Sodom and Egypt, however, were both remarkable for three things, their sinfulness, their oppression of the people of God, and the judgments by which they were overtaken. As these ideas, again, correspond exactly with the course of thought in the present passage, we are justified in thinking that they are the ideas mainly associated in the mind of the Seer with the two names. The great city, therefore, is something sinful, persecuting, doomed to judgment. Still further the thought of both Jews and Gentiles must be connected with this citymention of the crucifixion leading us to the one, of Sodom and Egypt to the other. We are thus led to regard the great city as a designation for a degenerate Christianity which has submitted to the world.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
The “great city” is always Babylon in Revelation. ( Rev 14:8 ; Rev 16:19 ; Rev 17:5 ; Rev 17:18 ; Rev 18:2 ; Rev 18:10 ; Rev 18:16 ; Rev 18:18-19 ; Rev 18:21 ) This is a worldly city full of spiritual adultery, slavery, or tyranny, and one that rejects the truth, thus is said to have crucified the Son of God.
Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books
11:8 And their dead bodies [shall lie] in the {13} street of the great city, which {d} spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, {14} where also our Lord was crucified.
(13) That is, openly at Rome: where at that time was a most great crowd of people, the year of Jubile being then first ordained by Boniface to the same end, in the year 1300, an example of which is read in chapter 1 “Extra, de poenitentys & remissionibus.” So by one act he committed two wrongs against Christ, both abolishing his truth by restoring the type of the Jubile, and triumphing over his members by wicked superstition. O religious heart! Now that we should understand the things of Rome, John himself is the author, both after in the seventeenth chapter almost throughout, and also in the restriction now next following, when he says, it is that great city (as he calls it) Rev 17:18 and is spiritually termed Sodom and Egypt: and that spiritually (for that must here again be repeated from before) Christ was there crucified. For the two first names signify spiritual wickednesses: the latter signifies the show and pretence of good, that is, of Christian and sound religion. Sodom signifies most licentious impiety and in the most confident glorying of that city, as it were in true religion, being yet full of falsehood and ungodliness. Now who is ignorant that these things do rather, and better fit Rome, than any other city? The commendations of the city of Rome for many years past, are publicly notorious, which are not for me to gather together. This only I will say, that he long since did very well see what Rome is, who upon leaving, used these verses: “Roma vale, vidi, Satis est vidisse: revertar, Quumleno, meretrix, scurra, cinadus ero.” “Now farewell Rome, I have seen thee, it was enough to see: I will return when as I mean, bawd, harlot knave to be”
(d) After a more secret type of meaning and understanding.
(14) Namely in his parts, as also he said to Saul in Act 9:5
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
The beast will add insult to injury by allowing the corpses of the two witnesses to lie in the street unburied. This was the worst indignity that someone could perpetrate on a person in biblical times (cf. Psa 79:2-3). "Mystically" (Gr. pneumatikos, "spiritually") indicates a comparative rather than a literal meaning. The city will be similar to Sodom and Egypt in that it will be extremely wicked, morally degraded, antagonistic toward God, and oppressive toward God’s people because of Antichrist’s influence. The place of Jesus Christ’s crucifixion identifies this city as Jerusalem (cf. Jer 22:8). Other views are that it is every city that has opposed God’s servants through history, [Note: Mounce, pp. 226-27; Morris, p. 150; Kiddle, p. 199.] Rome, [Note: Swete, p. 138.] or Babylon (cf. Rev 14:8; Rev 17:1; Rev 17:5; Rev 18:10). Since God specified a spiritual understanding of the identity of "the great city" here, it seems reasonable that he also would have specified a spiritual meaning of other entities in the book if He had wanted us to interpret them this way.