And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before our God day and night.
10. a loud voice ] See on Rev 6:6: and cf. Rev 11:12: the word “loud” here is literally “great” as there. Here, “our brethren” seems to imply, that it is a number of angels that speak.
salvation, and strength ] Rather, the salvation and the might and the kingdom of.”
power ] Differs from the preceding word “strength” or “might” as implying that it is derivative cf. 1Co 15:27-28.
the accuser ] In Jewish tradition, Satan is spoken of under this title, the Greek word here used being Hebraical, and here, though of course written in Greek letters, it has the Hebraical, not the classical form. St Michael was called by the correlative term, “the Advocate.”
which accused ] More literally accuseth, but the context shews that the meaning of the tense is to mark the act as habitual rather than as present. The “Prologue in Heaven” of the Book of Job, and Zec 3:1, of course illustrate the sense.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven – The great enemy was expelled; the cause of God and truth was triumphant; and the conquering hosts united in celebrating the victory. This representation of a song, consequent on victory, is in accordance with the usual representations in the Bible. See the song of Moses at the Red Sea, Exo. 15; the song of Deborah, Judg. 5; the song of David when the Lord had delivered him out of the hand of all his enemies, 2 Sam. 22; and Isa 12:25. On no occasion could such a song be more appropriate than on the complete routing and discomfiture of Satan and his rebellious hosts. Viewed in reference to the time here symbolized, this would relate to the certain triumph of the church and of truth on the earth; in reference to the language, there is an allusion to the joy and triumph of the heavenly hosts when Satan and his apostate legions were expelled.
Now is come salvation – That is, complete deliverance from the power of Satan.
And strength – That is, now is the mighty power of God manifested in casting down and subduing the great enemy of the church.
And the kingdom of our God – The reign of our God. See the notes on Mat 3:2. That is now established among people, and God will henceforward rule. This refers to the certain ultimate triumph of his cause in the world.
And the power of his Christ – His anointed; that is, the kingdom of Christ as the Messiah, or as anointed and set apart to rule over the world. See the notes on Mat 1:1.
For the accuser of our brethren is cast down – The phrase our brethren shows by whom this song is celebrated. It is sung in heaven; but it is by those who belonged to the redeemed church, and whose brethren were still suffering persecution and trial on the earth. It shows the tenderness of the tie which unites all the redeemed as brethren, whether on earth or in heaven; and it shows the interest which they who have passed the flood have in the trials, the sorrows, and the triumphs of those who are still upon the earth. We have here another appellation given to the great enemy – accuser of the brethren. The word used here – kategoros, in later editions of the New Testament kategor – means properly an accuser, one who blames another, or charges another with crime. The word occurs in Joh 8:10; Act 23:30, Act 23:35; Act 24:8; Act 25:16, Act 25:18; Rev 12:10, in all which places it is rendered accuser or accusers, though only in the latter place applied to Satan. The verb frequently occurs, Mat 12:10; Mat 27:12; Mar 3:2; Mar 15:3, et al.
The description of Satan as an accuser accords with the opinion of the ancient Hebrews in regard to his character. Thus he is represented in Job 1:9-11; Job 2:4-5; Zec 3:1-2; 1Ch 21:1. The phrase of the brethren refers to Christians, or to the people of God; and the meaning here is, that one of the characteristics of Satan – a characteristic so well known as to make it proper to designate him by it – is that he is an accuser of the righteous; that he is employed in bringing against them charges affecting their character and destroying their influence. The propriety of this appellation cannot be doubted. It is, as it has always been, one of the characteristics of Satan – one of the means by which he keeps up his influence in the world – to bring accusations against the people of God. Thus, under his suggestions, and by his agents, they are charged with hypocrisy; with insincerity; with being influenced by bad motives; with pursuing sinister designs under the cloak of religion; with secret vices and crimes. Thus it was that the martyrs were accused; thus it is that unfounded accusations are often brought against ministers of the gospel, palsying their power and diminishing their influence, or that when a professed Christian falls the church is made to suffer by an effort to cast suspicion on all who bear the Christian name. Perhaps the most skillful thing that Satan does, and the thing by which he most contributes to diminish the influence of the church, is in thus causing accusations to be brought against the people of God.
Is cast down – The period here referred to was, doubtless, the time when the church was about to be established and to flourish in the world, and when accusations would be brought against Christians by various classes of calumniators and informers. It is well known that in the early ages of Christianity crimes of the most horrid nature were charged on Christians, and that it was by these slanders that the effort was made to prevent the extension of the Christian church.
Which accused them before our God – See the notes on Job 1:9-10. The meaning is, that he accused them, as it were, in the very presence of God.
Day and night – He never ceased bringing these accusations, and sought by the perseverance and constancy with which they were urged to convince the world that there was no sincerity in the church and no reality in religion.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Rev 12:10-17
Now is come salvation.
The heavenly song of victory
This is a song of heaven–of that heaven from which the dragon had been cast out.
I. The salvation. It is the salvation that is here sung of–the salvation of Him whose name is Jesus, the Saviour. It is salvation–not consisting of one blessing or one kind of blessing, but of many; made up of everything which can be indicated by the reversal of our lost condition. It is not done at once, but in parts and at sundry times, each age bringing with it more of salvation in every sense; unfolding it, building it up, gathering in new objects, overcoming new enemies, occupying new ground, erecting new trophies.
II. The power. This is the more common rendering of the word (not strength), as when Christs miracles are spoken of, or the powers of the world to come. As yet Gods power has not been fully manifested; it has been hidden. Many trophies, no doubt, it has won; many enemies it has defeated; many brands it has plucked from the burning; but the full revelation of its greatness is yet to come. When that day arrives, earth as well as heaven shall rejoice.
III. The kingdom of our God. It is the kingdom–the kingdom of kingdoms; not of Satan or man, as now, but of God, nay, our God. Our God, says heaven; our God, re-echoes earth.
IV. The authority of His Christ. The Christ of God is the full name for Jesus of Nazareth–Gods Messiah–He in whom all royal, priestly, judicial, prophetical power is invested. To this Messiah all power has been given, all authority entrusted, in heaven, and earth, and hell. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Victory
1. By this song of thanksgiving we see what should be our rejoicing and duty in thanking God in like manner; to wit, that Christ, His Church and cause prevails; and that Satan and his instruments are foiled.
2. When the former prevail, we see the great benefit to man that redounds thereby; to wit, salvation comes, and strength, and the kingdom of our God to reign in mens hearts, and the power of His Christ to be seen in their lives.
3. Whereas it is said that the accuser of the brethren is cast down; then as it is said (Isa 1:9; Rom 8:33), who is it that can condemn, or lay anything to the charge of the Lords elect? It is He that helps and justifies us, and has cast down the accuser of the brethren.
4. Here is a great comfort likewise, that there is such a sweet communion between the glorious saints in heaven and the Church militant on earth; that when they speak of God they say, our God, and when of the Church on earth, our brethren. (Wm. Guild, D. D.)
The accuser of our brethren is cast down.
The accuser of the brethren
I. The accuser. The accuser, in this instance, is the enemy of our souls. An accuser need not necessarily be a foe–a friend may accuse; but his relationship to us depends upon the object he has in view by accusing us. If his intention be to harass and vex the accused, then he is an enemy; but if his design be to reform, then, indeed, he is a friend. Though the law accuses, the law is not our enemy. The law is our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ. But the design of Satan in accusing the saints is to afflict them, and not that he may induce them to amend their ways; it is not zeal for the glory of God that urges him to blame them for their remissness; he merely takes advantage of their failings to molest them.
II. The accused. The brethren. He does not accuse his own subjects. He commends in them the works which in the children of God he censures. It is better for us that he should be our censor than that he should be our vindicator; preferable that he should impeach us than that he should be our advocate.
III. The accusation. The impeachments of Satan, however fictitious they may be found to be in the aggregate, always have a sprinkling of the truth in them; just so much as will give an air of justness to the whole; for our arch-enemy is well aware that falsehood in and of itself cannot injure. Were they charged with neglecting Gods house the accusation would be false, and consequently would not affect them; but when they are accused of alienating their affections from God, they feel the justness of the charges and are grieved–there is sufficient force in the accusation to afflict their conscience. A slander was never known to be either wholly true or entirely false. Satan is incapable of telling the truth as truth. It were as impossible for him to confine himself wholly to it as that the sun should shed showers of rain, or that water should burn. He is the father of lies; but he makes use of the truth to keep his inventions together. It is difficult to detect his devices and contrivances–he is capable of transforming himself into an angel of light. Yea, he usurps even the functions of the Holy Spirit; he approaches the Christian while he is meditating upon his performances, and insidiously breathes his charges of lukewarmness and worldliness, causing his heart to bleed thereby. Neither is he to be recognised by the doctrines he inculcates. What measures does the Holy Spirit make use of in convincing the sinner of his wickedness? Does He show the evil of sin? Satan also does this. Does He point to the stringency and rigour of the law? So does Satan. But although he is not recognisable in his doctrines, he may be easily detected in the inferences which he draws from those doctrines. The conclusions which he invariably draws from his teachings are couched in such language as the following: Firstly, thy sins are too great to be forgiven. Secondly, thou mayest as well suffer punishment for much as for little. Thirdly, God is very unrelenting.
IV. The tribunal. It is not to be imagined that Satan gains admittance into heaven, there to lay his charges against the saints, because he has been eternally banished thence. Neither is it by any means probable that, were permission granted him to enter there, he would avail himself of it. And the reason of this is quite plain. He that bruised his head sits triumphant there. His design is to create enmity between God and His children; his purpose is to effect a breach between the saints and their heavenly Father. He endeavours to embitter their spirits when they approach God in meditation and prayer. He strives to weaken their power in prayer, and so to crush their faith as to render it powerless to bear the blessing they came to seek.
V. The victory. They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb. (D. Roberts, D. D.)
Overcoming the accuser
1. The accuser charges the servants of God with guilt. They are not worthy, as he alleges, to stand in the Holy Presence. To this, however, they have a triumphant reply. They do not deny that they have sinned and are unworthy; but they have Gods free gift of pardon since Jesus has died. There is a Rabbinic tradition to the effect that Satan is compelled to refrain from accusations against Israel, and keep silence, on one day of the year–the great Day of Atonement. Though it be a mere legend, it indicates some true perception of the only ground on which the charge of guilt before God can be successfully met. But let us extend the statement. There is no respect of days. The peace of conscience which rests on the blood of the Lamb is not for one day, but for all the days of the year. There is a continual and unfaltering answer of the Satanic accusation.
2. The accuser rails against the servants of God as mere self-seekers. In this respect, wicked men are very like their father the devil. Their base instinct is to suspect and jibe at goodness. All virtue is in their eyes humbug. All who seem to be in earnest for any moral or religious object are seeking praise for themselves, and perhaps money also. Disinterestedness is a dream, and holiness a fraud. So says the devil; and so say his followers. Now it may be impracticable in many instances to meet this odious charge with a complete refutation. A good man cannot prove his inward motives to all the outside world, least of all to those who wish to think the worst. To some, however, both in early and in later times of the Church, opportunity and power have been given to make a triumphant answer to the unworthy accusation of selfishness. They were exposed to cruel persecution, and obliged to show whether their hearts were so knit to Christ that they would lay down their lives for His sake. These overcame because of the word of their testimony. Far from shirking the ordeal, they conquered by their firm endurance. What then could Satan allege?
3. We are not of the noble army of martyrs. But all Christians are called to be martyrs in the sense of witnesses, and all are subjected to some test of fidelity. Yet every one in his own order, and according to the measure of grace which he has received; not the least effective being the little ones that honour the Lord Jesus. (D. Fraser, D. D.)
They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb.–
How they conquered the dragon
I. All the blessed ones who are rejoicing in heaven were once warriors and victors here below. We too often think of the saints that have gone before as if they were men of another race from ourselves, capable of nobler things, endowed with graces which we cannot reach, and adorned with holiness impossible to us. The mediaeval artists were wont to paint the saints with rings of glory about their heads, but indeed they had no such halos; their brows were furrowed with care even as ours, and their hair grew grey with grief. Their light was within, and we may have it; their glory was by grace, and the same grace is available for us.
1. It is clear from our text that every one of the saints in heaven was assailed by Satan. How could there be a victory without a battle?
2. The glorified, in addition to having been attacked, were led to resist the evil one, for nobody overcomes an antagonist without fighting.
3. We find that these warriors all overcame, for heaven is not for those who fight merely, but for those who overcome. I do fight against my sin, says one. Brother, do you overcome it? Attack, resistance, and victory must be yours.
4. So, then, in heaven they all rejoice because they have overcome, for the next verse to our text puts it, Therefore rejoice, ye heavens, and ye that dwell in them. It is a theme for gladness in heaven that they did fight and resist and overcome. There is joy among the angels, for they had their conflict when they stood firm against temptation; but ours will be a victory peculiarly sweet, a song especially melodious, because our battle has been peculiarly severe.
II. The victors all fought with the same weapons.
1. First, the blood of the Lamb: it was theirs. The blood of the Lamb will not help us until it becomes our own. It is the blood of the covenant, and it secures all the covenant gifts of God to us. It is the life of our life. So, then, they had the blood of the Lamb, and they possessed the privilege which the blood brings with it.
2. They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony. Now, what is the testimony of the saints? It is a testimony concerning the blood of the Lamb. If ever we are to conquer Satan in the world, we must preach the atoning blood.
III. While they all fought with the same weapons they all fought with the same spirit; for the text says, they loved not their lives unto the death.
1. The expression indicates dauntless courage. They were never afraid of the doctrine of a bleeding Saviour. Let us never be ashamed of our hope.
2. These men, in addition to dauntless courage, had unanswering fidelity. They loved not their lives unto the death. They thought it better to die than deny the faith.
3. More than that, they were perfect in their consecration. They loved not their lives unto the death. They gave themselves up, body soul, and spirit, to the cause of which the precious blood is the symbol, and that consecration led them to perfect self-sacrifice. No Christian of the true type counts anything to be his own. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The blood of the Lamb, the conquering weapon
I. What is this conquering weapon?
1. The blood of the Lamb signifies, first, the death of the Son of God. The sufferings of Jesus Christ might be set forth by some other figure, but His death on the Cross requires the mention of blood. The death of Christ is the death of sin and the defeat of Satan, and hence it is the life of our hope, and the assurance of His victory. Because He poured out His soul unto the death, He divided the spoil with the strong.
2. Next, by the blood of the Lamb we understand our Lords death as a substitutionary sacrifice. It is not said that they overcame the arch-enemy by the blood of Jesus, or the blood of Christ, but by the blood of the Lamb; and the words are expressly chosen because, under the figure of a lamb, we have set before us a sacrifice. Sin must be punished; it is punished in Christs death. Here is the hope of men.
3. Furthermore, I understand by the expression, The blood of the Lamb, that our Lords death was effective for the taking away of sin. When John the Baptist first pointed to Jesus, he said, Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world. Our Lord Jesus has actually taken away sin by His death.
II. I have shown you the sword; now I come to speak to the question, how do you use it? They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb. When a man gets a sword, you cannot be quite certain how he will use it. A gentleman has purchased a very expensive sword with a golden hilt and an elaborate scabbard; he hangs it up in his hall, and exhibits it to his friends. Occasionally he draws it out from the sheath, and he says, Feel how keen is the edge! The precious blood of Jesus is not meant for us merely to admire and exhibit. We must not be content to talk about it, and extol it, and do nothing with it; but we are to use it in the great crusade against unholiness and unrighteousness, till it is said of us, They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb. Let me show you your battle-field. Our first place of conflict is in the heavenlies, and the second is down below on earth.
1. First, then, you who believe in the blood of Jesus, have to do battle with Satan in the heavenlies; and there you must overcome him by the blood of the Lamb. How? say you. First, you are to regard Satan this day as being already literally and truly overcome through the death of the Lord Jesus. Satan is already a vanquished enemy. By faith grasp your Lords victory as your own, since He triumphed in your nature and on your behalf. I would have you overcome Satan in the heavenlies in another sense: you must overcome him as the accuser. At times you hear in your heart a voice arousing memory and startling conscience; a voice which seems in heaven to be a remembrance of your guilt. All comfort drawn from inward feelings or outward works will fall short; but the bleeding wounds of Jesus will plead with overwhelming argument, and answer all. Still further, the believer will have need to overcome the enemy in the heavenly places in reference to access to God. The sacred name of Jesus is one before which he flees. This will drive away his blasphemous suggestions and foul insinuations better than anything that you can invent. We next must overcome the enemy in prayer.
2. It is time that I now showed you how this same fight is carried on on earth. Amongst men in these lower places of conflict saints overcome through the blood of the Lamb by their testimony to that blood. Every believer is to bear witness to the atoning sacrifice and its power to save. He is to tell out the doctrine; he is to emphasise it by earnest faith in it; and he is to support it and prove it by his experience of the effect of it. You can bear witness to the power of the blood of Jesus in your own soul. If you do this, you will overcome men in many ways. First, you will arouse them out of apathy. This age is more indifferent to true religion than almost any other. The sight of the bleeding Saviour overcomes obduracy and carelessness. The doctrine of the blood of the Lamb prevents or scatters error. I do not think that by reason we often confute error to any practical purpose. We may confute it rhetorically and doctrinally, but men still stick to it. But the doctrine of the precious blood, when it once gets into the heart, drives error out of it, and sets up the throne of truth. We also overcome men in this way, by softening rebellious hearts. Men stand out against the law of God, and defy the vengeance of God; but the love of God in Christ Jesus disarms them. The Holy Spirit causes men to yield through the softening influence of the Cross. How wonderfully this same blood of the Lamb overcomes despair. Glory be to God, the blood is a universal solvent, and it has dissolved the iron bars of despair, until the poor captive conscience has been able to escape. There is nothing, indeed, which the blood of the Lamb will not overcome; for see how it overcomes vice, and every form of sin. The world is foul with evil. What can cleanse it? What but this matchless stream? Satan makes sin seem pleasure, but the Cross reveals its bitterness. This blood overcomes the natural lethargy of men towards obedience; it stimulates them to holiness. If anything can make a man holy it is a firm faith in the atoning sacrifice. When a man knows that Jesus died for him, he feels that he is not his own, but bought with a price, and therefore he must live unto Him that died for him and rose again. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The Churchs victory
I. The churchs victory. The Church is here set before us in a state of triumph, having conquered all its enemies and received its reward.
II. The medium through which this victory is obtained, They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb.
III. The connection that subsists between the means and the end of the conflict.
1. The blood of the Lamb is the source of the disposition which regenerated men feel when entering upon this spiritual warfare.
2. It is the blood of the sacrifice that perpetuates the conflict, by carrying on the sanctification of the soul.
3. The blood of the Lamb alone can inspire fortitude and courage for this conflict.
4. The blood of the Lamb is the only source of spiritual life, and therefore they conquer by it. It was not spilt as water upon the ground, it was the opening of the fountain of immortality for the soul of man.
5. By the blood of the Lamb they learned the example of conflicting to the death, and gathered the assurance of a glorious triumph beyond it. Two things will tend to make a man a good soldier–a readiness to leave his body a corpse on the battlefield, and a thorough conviction that ultimately his cause must succeed. Both are requisite in the spiritual strife. (John Aldis.)
The encouragement to increased missionary effort to be derived from the assurance of final victory
I. We shall never be aroused to magnanimous efforts till we have a clear apprehension of the invisible enemy who foments all the opposition against Christ and His gospel.
1. In the general description, mark, first, his deadly hatred to God and goodness, implied in the names Satan, the Enemy, the Adversary, the Wicked One. Next, his rage and fury, as the great Red Dragon, the Apollyon or Destroyer. Further, his craft and subtilty, as the Old Serpent, in allusion to the form under which he seduced our first parents. Next, the extent of his dominion, the whole world lying in wickedness, or, in the wicked one.
2. And what is the general method of Satans opposition to Christ, and the salvation of men? His grand vantage-ground is the tendency in human corruption to listen to all his suggestions. He thus works his way unperceived into our hearts.
3. The place where Satan carries on this opposition is set forth in this symbolical passage as his heaven, from the popular notion of heaven as a place of eminence, of ease, safety, and enjoyment. It imports, here, the visible kingdom of Satan in its full pride and power; from which, when he is dispossessed, he is said to be cast down unto the earth.
II. The means of resisting this great adversary.
1. The faithful overcame by the blood of the Lamb; and in what manner did they do this?
(1) By trusting to it for their own salvation;
(2) By proclaiming it to others, as men touched with the love of Him who shed it;
(3) By seeing all the purposes of Almighty God centre in it.
III. The issue of the conflict. They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb. (Bp. Daniel Wilson.)
Missionary conflict and victory
I. Let us consider missions under the aspect of a victory gained.
1. Of course the word implies conflict. The Revelation, resonant with sounds of battle, exhibits the King of Heaven upon earth as engaged in a, struggle. This mode of representation only displays in pictures ideas common to the whole of the New Testament. The Church under the present dispensation is church militant. Let us not despise or underestimate our foe. To follow Christ and to take up His cause anywhere is to challenge the world, the flesh, and the devil.
2. But the point now is that a victory has been won, and this victory is distinguished by two features, celebrated in the song heard by John, which render it extremely interesting and important for those on the threshold of life, whose privilege it is to look forward to service.
(1) The accuser has been cast down, and in his casting down certain practical problems have been solved and doubts swept out of the way. No great and good movement has ever been inaugurated that did not stir up an accuser. He was maliciously busy at the outset of the missionary enterprise, and tried to raise obstacles to harass the timid.
(2) Then, too, in the gospel victories is to be included a beautiful, delightful social revolution, for now is come the kingdom of our God and the authority of His Christ.
II. The principles and instrumentalities whereby this victory was gained.
1. We would not lose sight of the fact that there was war in heaven. We have always had the supernatural support of a leader of invisible legions, whose name, Michael, suggests the question, Who is like unto God? and whose guarantee, conveyed along with the marching orders, is, Lo! I am with you alway unto the consummation of the age.
2. Looking at these words as a whole, we say they intimate conquests gained through dependence on spiritual forces. It was so, we may remind ourselves, in the conflict with the paganism of the ancient Roman world. It would be a mistake to suppose that the triumph of Christianity followed the so-called conversion of Constantine. On the contrary, he gave in his adhesion because Christianity was already on the march, firm and triumphant. The victory had been won, and it was won with the weapons of faith, hope, love, patience, forgiveness, and prayer. So also has it been in the conflict with the paganism of the modern world. God in nature, God in history, and God in grace is one God, and we may expect Him to be making each department of His rule dovetail in some way into the other, in order to the accomplishment of His purposes.
3. Three things are, we take it, specially necessary to meet the fundamental spiritual requirements of the human heart–viz., redemption; revelation; and these mediated and ministered by messengers of intense self-sacrificing sympathies. These are the very elements which are here displayed aa grounds of success.
(1) They overcame because of the blood of the Lamb. Readers must note that in this book, in which the general outlines of Church history are exhibited in symbolic pictures, the blood of the Lamb holds a most prominent place. It precisely forecasts what has happened in the actual event. By the atoning sacrifice of Calvary were the missionaries hearts first set on fire. The provision made in the death of Gods dear Son for meeting their condition as sinners was what deeply agitated, and, like the touch of the live coal from off the altar, flamed through them into the offer and entreaty, Here are we, send us. By the same sacrifice they were sustained in their surrender. The Saviours blood was their life. His dying wounds were not only fountains of expiation and cleansing, but also springs out of which pulsated the streams of life through the lips of faith into their thrilled hearts. Advancing with this experience, it turned out that the story of redemption through His blood was just the good news the heathen needed, and leaped excitedly to welcome.
(2) To meet the cry for light, the ministers of grace delivered the word of their testimony. Observe, testimony. Not an argument, but a testimony; not a denunciation, but a testimony; not a destructive attack, but a testimony; not a peradventure, but a testimony. This testimony, originally received by apostles from Christ and His Spirit, was by them embodied in a word. This word, again tasted and tested through the Spirit of Christ by believers, became in their lips and lives a testimony. They marched to the field with this testimony, a Pentecostal glory mitring their brows and firing their tongues, and breaking out in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs. They knew whom they believed, and, Philip-like, joining themselves unto the chariot of heathendom, they just preached and explained Him of whom every voice of truth in the Vedas also spoke to those in the darkness feeling after an unknown God to be their Shepherd and King.
(3) The third reason does not occupy precisely the same level as the other two. It is not joined to them with because. The proposal to surrender life, standing by itself, would be impotent and fruitless. It is when united with the blood of the Lamb and the word of testimony that it is energised into an important factor in the product. The mode of expression seems based upon a common course in human affairs. A man takes a stand from which it is sought to divert him by threats of poverty, want, and hardship. There are some in whom the love of life is so near the surface, and so sensitive and ready to take alarm, that the above threat would be enough to make it leap to its feet instantly and shriek out, You shall not. Others, however, are not conscious of this love at that point, and the threat does not move them. Then it is represented they will lose caste, be boycotted in society, be shut out of the road which leads to applause and power, and condemned to calumny, reprobation, scorn–or, what is worse, neglect. Some who resisted in the first stage would be sifted out here, whilst a remnant would continue yet untouched and resolute. But now I imagine the ghastly king of terrors drawing nigh to these and compelling them at close quarters to look into his cavernous, cruel face. Proud is this grisly monarch, and omnipotent in his own conceit. But many think that Deaths bark is worse than his bite. I know the prospect is under some conditions appalling, and yet I can fancy those who had stood the first two tests contemplating this almost with contempt. There is, however, another deeper, darker possibility suggested. It is not merely hardship; it is not merely shame; it is not merely physical extinction; it is the sacrifice of the opportunity of self-cultivation for what seems a grander destiny in this world, and even a better, higher standing in the world to come. Many missionaries, like, e.g., Carey and Livingstone, possessed surpassing powers. They would succeed splendidly anywhere. Had they stayed in this country no one can predict the distinction to which they might have risen. To go away, say into the wilds of Africa, as evangelists is to renounce magnificent chances. Nay more. They who feel the loss most will leave the stimulus of Christian society; the bracing impulse of Christian atmosphere; the sweet help of the first day of the week, with its sacred hush and uplifting worship; the very continuance of the life of piety will be imperilled. That education and development of the faculties and qualities of mind and spirit which in itself is so delightful must be relinquished, and, so far as this world is concerned, relinquished for ever. They must cease to love their own soul, and that unto death. I believe that scores of witnesses in all ages, and, thank God, in ours also, have risen to this height; and it is in this way and by this means they have gained the victory. If you want to capture others, you must abandon self. (R. H. Roberts, B. A.)
Victory over the foe
I hope it is possible for a few minutes to interest you in the fortunes of a battle. The fight is fought, and the victory is won. Your troops have engaged and conquered the foe. And we are told they overcame him by three modes and weapons of warfare–the blood of the Lamb, the word of their testimony, and the not loving their life even unto death. The several particulars are striking; their combination is wonderful. They overcame him because of the blood of the Lamb. Strange! But is it not true–true to a history none the less real because it is, in part at least, the history of souls? Is it not true that that Cross of pain and shame has in it the virtue of a thousand times ten thousand victories, compared with which Marathon and Salamis, Trafalgar and Waterloo, were events of temporary and fleeting significance? Is it not true that lives have been remade in their most secret, and yet in their most practical, being–remade for strength, remade for happiness, remade for usefulness, influence, and blessing to other lives, entirely by that sacrifice of the Son of God for sin which is here briefly characterised as the blood of the Lamb? The man who has conquered a besetting sin by reason of the blood of the Lamb is a greater hero, greater in kind as well as in degree, than the man who can count his slain enemies in some death-grapple on the Nile by tens and by twenties. But it is conceivable that there might be in some heart a strong sense of gratitude for the death of the Son of God, which as yet has nothing to say for itself as to a definite work to be done for Him. Therefore the voice from heaven speaks in the second place of the word of their testimony. The Christian owes his victory, secondly, to a word–that is, a message or revelation from God, to the truth of which he himself is witness. We have three thoughts here. First, God has spoken. A word is more than a sound. A word has meaning in it. It is the communication of mind to mind. Word is speech, and speech is, by definition, reason communicating itself. This is why Christ Himself is called by St. John the Word. In Christ God has spoken, not in precept and prohibition only, rather in revelation of will and mind, setting before us the Divine character in human action, and saying, This am I; this be thou. Made, and now remade in My image, bear, act, be this to thy brethren. Thus the word becomes next a testimony. The business of the Christian is witnessing, having, as St. John says, the witness in himself; able from experience, able from consciousness of the power and beauty of the gospel, to set to it his seal that it is true. He goes about his business, speaks his daily speech, does his everyday work, as one who believes, strives not to contradict, not to belie his conviction, lives as its witness, dies as its martyr. And thus, thirdly, he overcomes because of it. The blood of the Lamb is his motive, but the Word of His testimony is his direction. Without this he might be well-intentioned, but he would neither know his enemy nor know how to cope with him. They overcame him, therefore, because of the Word of which they were witnesses. Yet another principal cause remains. They loved not their life even unto death. Contempt for death is a great secret of victory. Even in the perpetration of deeds of darkness, the chance of success is infinitely enhanced by the willingness of the doer to die for it. The assassin who will give life for life is half assured of victory. The text speaks of a nobler strife, that of the Christian victor, and it says of him that side by side with two other things, faith in Christs sacrifice, and faith in Christs word, there stands this reason also for his victory, that he loved not his life. The earthly conqueror must have no friendship for his life in comparison with two other things–duty and honour. The earthly conqueror must have no charity for his life when it tries to stand between him and courage, or between him and the love of his country. Tis the peculiarity of the Christian victor, not always realised, perhaps, to the full, even in him, that, taking all things into account, he has a positive desire–positive desire–to depart and be with Christ. It is not only that there are so many dark features of the world he lives in, it is rather that he knows Someone on the other side of death, whom he longs to be with. He endures as seeing the Invisible, but all the time he is seeking a better country, that is, a heavenly. (Dean Vaughan.)
They loved not their lives unto the death.–
The evidence of Christianity from the persecution of Christians
The progress of Christianity is a most interesting object of speculation, and must appear truly wonderful when it is considered that it prevailed by means the very reverse of what might have been expected, and which have been used to establish other systems of religion or philosophy, and the corruptions of Christianity itself. Other religions had either the aid of power, or at least of the learning of the age and countries in which they were established. The founders of them were either conquerors, legislators, or men who were distinguished in life; so that independently of the doctrines they promulgated, they appeared in a respectable light to the world. On the contrary, the Founder of Christianity was an obscure person, a common mechanic, in a country the inhabitants of which were despised by the rest of the world; without the advantage of any learned education, where the greatest account was made of that advantage, and where persons destitute of it were held in contempt. The first followers of Christ were, in general, of the same low rank of life with Himself, wholly destitute in power, or of policy. They were all their lives persecuted, as He had been, and many of them died violent deaths. What then were the means by which Christianity, thus extraordinarily circumstanced, did make its way in the world, till, in the natural course of things, the very powers which opposed it came to be on its side? They were, as we are informed in my text, the death of the Founder of Christianity, and the testimony of His followers to His doctrine, miracles, and resurrection, sealed with their blood. If we consider the nature of Christianity, and the object of it, we shall see that it could not be established by any other means than these, how ill adapted soever they may, on a superficial view of things, appear to answer the end. What is Christianity but that firm belief in a future life which produces the proper regulation of mans conduct in this? Any attempt to gain belief to this, or any doctrine, by power, would have been unavailing and absurd. It is evident that nothing could make mankind believe that Christ wrought miracles, that He died, and rose from the dead, and therefore that there is a future life, to which themselves will be raised, but the proper evidence of the truth of those facts. And in distant ages, in which persons can have no opportunity of inquiring into the truth of the facts for themselves, the only evidence to them is the full conviction that they who had that opportunity did believe them. Now we cannot imagine in what manner any person can express his firm persuasion of the truth, or the value, of any set of principles, more strongly than by his suffering and dying for them. Still, however, there would have been room to doubt, if they had not persisted in their testimony, and if they had not also had both sufficient opportunity, and sufficient motives to consider lind reconsider the thing. Now the witnesses were numerous, and, living together, they must have had frequent opportunities of conversing with one another on the subject, and of comparing their observations. And surely no motive could be wanting, when all the happiness of their lives, and even life itself, was depending. How satisfactory, then, is the evidence of the truth of Christianity from the testimony of almost all its proper witnesses, as sealed with their blood, and therefore not given without the most deliberate consideration, and in opposition to the strongest inducements to declare the reverse of what they did. How much more convincing is this kind of evidence than that of men who draw their swords in defence of any cause? The man who fights hopes to get the victory, and most probably expects to secure to himself some temporal advantage. It cannot by any means, therefore, be inferred that a man may not fight for a falsehood, provided it promises to be a gainful one. We see, then, the infinite superiority of the pretensions of Christ to those of Mahomet, or of any who have endeavoured to establish a religion by violence. Our Lord, confiding in the power of truth, disclaimed all other aid, and therefore ordered His disciples not to fight, but to die. I would farther observe, that violence in support of truth is utterly contrary to the nature and genius of the Christian religion; and it supposes a temper of mind inconsistent with it, viz., hatred and revenge. And not only should we avoid all actual violence, but everything that approaches to it, as anger and abuse. If calm reasoning fail, these are not likely to succeed. As we must not make use of violence or abuse ourselves, so we should take it patiently when it is offered by others. It is generally a proof that our adversaries have nothing better to offer, and therefore is a presumption that we have truth on our side; and surely the sense of this may well enable us to bear up under any insult to which we may be exposed. A state of persecution has been the lot of truly good men, and especially of all great and distinguished characters whose aim has been to reform abuses, and introduce new light into the minds of men, in all ages. (J. Priestley, LL. D.)
Love triumphant
Geleazius, a gentleman of great wealth, who suffered martyrdom at St. Angelo, in Italy, being much entreated by his friends to recant, and thus save his life, replied, Death is much sweeter to me with the testimony of truth, than life with its least denial:
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 10. The accuser of our brethren] There is scarcely any thing more common in the rabbinical writings than Satan as the accuser of the Israelites. And the very same word , accuser, or, as it is in the Codex Alexandrinus, , is used by them in Hebrew letters, katigor; e. gr., Pirkey Eliezer, c. 46, speaking of the day of expiation; “And the holy blessed God hears their testimony from their accuser, min hakkatigor; and expiates the altar, the priests, and the whole multitude, from the greatest to the least.”
In Shemoth Rabba, sec. 31, fol. 129, 2, are these words; “If a man observes the precepts, and is a son of the law, and lives a holy life, then Satan stands and accuses him.”
“Every day, except the day of expiation Satan is the accuser of men.”-Vayikra Rabba, sec. 21, fol. 164.
“The holy blessed God said to the seventy princes of the world, Have ye seen him who always accuses my children?”-Yalcut Chadash, fol. 101, 3.
“The devil stands always as an accuser before the King of Israel.”-Sohar Levit., fol. 43, col. 171. See much more in Schoettgen.
NOTES ON CHAP. XII., BY J. E. C.
Ver. 10. And I heard a loud voice, saying,-Now is come salvation, c.] This is a song of triumph of the Christian Church over the heathen idolatry, and is very expressive of the great joy of the Christians upon this most stupendous event. The loud voice of triumph is said to be heard in heaven, to show that the Christian religion was now exalted to the heaven or throne of the Roman. empire. “It is very remarkable,” as Bishop Newton observes, “that Constantine himself, and the Christians of his time, describe his conquests under the image of a dragon, as if they had understood that this prophecy had received its accomplishment in him. Constantine himself, in his epistle to Eusebius and other bishops concerning the re-edifying and repairing of the churches, saith that ‘liberty being now restored, and that the dragon being removed from the administration of public affairs, by the providence of the great God and by my ministry, I esteem the great power of God to have been made manifest to all.’ Moreover, a picture of Constantine was set up over the palace gate, with the cross over his head, and under his feet the great enemy of mankind, who persecuted the Church by means of impious tyrants, in the form of a dragon, transfixed with a dart through the midst of his body, and falling headlong into the depth of the sea.” See Eusebius de Vita Constantini, lib. ii. c. 46 and lib. iii. c. 3, and Socratis Hist. Eccles., lib. i. c. 9. Constantine added to the other Roman ensigns the labarum, or standard of the cross, and constituted it the principal standard of the Christian Roman empire. To this labarum Prudentius refers, when speaking of the Christian soldiers, in his first hymn ,
Caesaris vexilla linquunt, eligunt SIGNUM CRUCIS,
Proque ventosis Draconum, quae gerebant, palliis,
Proferunt INSIGNE LIGNUM, quod Draconem subdidit.
“They leave the ensigns of Caesar; they choose the standard of the cross; and instead of the dragon flags which they carried, moved about with the wind, they bring forward the illustrious wood that subdued the dragon.”
When the apostle saw the woman in heaven, well might he call it, in the spirit of prophecy, a great wonder.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven: John undoubtedly heard this voice as in the third heaven, whither he was caught; but it is not only expressive of the joy and satisfaction which the glorious angels and glorified saints had, upon their knowledge of what was done upon the earth, but prophetical of the great joy which should be over all the church, upon Constantines stopping the persecution. and restoring peace to the church, by casting out all pagan idolatries and superstitions.
Now is come salvation; temporal salvation, and deliverance from persecutors.
And strength; now God hath showed himself a strong and mighty God.
And the kingdom of our God; and the King of kings, who reigneth over all the earth.
And the power of his Christ; now Christ hath shown his power.
For the accuser of our brethren is cast down, who accused them before our God day and night; for the devil, who incessantly accuseth the saints, is overcome. Two things are here observable:
1. That the holy angels call the saints brethren.
2. That the accusers of Christians, for their piety towards God, are of their father the devil, for his works they do.
Informers show who is their father, by accusing others, by murdering the servants of God; they differ no more than as elder and younger brethren, both are children of the same father.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
10. NowNow that Satanhas been cast out of heaven. Primarily fulfilled in part at Jesus’resurrection and ascension, when He said (Mt28:18), “All power [Greek, ‘exousia,”authority,’ as here; see below] is given unto Me in heaven and inearth”; connected with Re12:5, “Her child was caught up unto God and to Histhrone.” In the ulterior sense, it refers to the eve ofChrist’s second coming, when Israel is about to be restored asmother-church of Christendom, Satan, who had resisted her restorationon the ground of her unworthiness, having been cast out by theinstrumentality of Michael, Israel’s angelic prince (see on Re12:7). Thus this is parallel, and the necessary preliminary tothe glorious event similarly expressed, Re11:15, “The kingdom of this world is become (the very wordhere, Greek, ‘egeneto,‘ ‘is come,’ ‘hath come to pass’)our Lord’s and His Christ’s,” the result of Israel’s resumingher place.
salvation, c.Greek,“the salvation (namely, fully, finally, and victoriouslyaccomplished, Heb 9:28 compareLu 3:6, yet future; hence, nottill now do the blessed raise the fullest hallelujah forsalvation to the Lamb, Rev 7:10;Rev 19:1) the power(Greek, ‘dunamis‘), and the authority (Greek,‘exousia‘; ‘legitimate power‘; see above) of HisChrist.”
accused them before our Godday and nightHence the need that the oppressed Church, God’sown elect (like the widow, continually coming, so as evento weary the unjust judge), should cry day and night untoHim.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven,…. Which was a song of praise on account of the victory obtained by Michael and his angels over the dragon and his, or for the overthrow and downfall of Paganism in the Roman empire; for by “heaven” is meant the empire, now become Christian, or the Christian church state in it; and the “loud voice” heard in it by John shows that there was a great number in it, who rejoiced on this occasion, and that they were full of affection and fervency, and therefore expressed themselves in such manner, and in form following:
now is come salvation and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ; “salvation” was come when Christ obtained it by his sufferings and death, and comes to particular persons in the effectual calling, and it will only be fully come when it is perfectly enjoyed in heaven: but here it designs a deliverance from Satan, as the god of this world, who was now dethroned, and cast down from his power, authority, and influence in the empire; and from Pagan idolatry and superstition, and from the ten days of tribulation, the cruel and bloody persecutions under the Heathen emperors; and denotes that safety and security, comfort, peace, and happiness, the churches enjoyed under the government of a Christian emperor: and now was come “strength”; not the strength of Christ personal, displayed in the redemption of his people; but rather of Christ mystical, of his church and interest, which had been very weak and low, and under oppression and persecution, but was now exalted, and in a flourishing condition, and was become strong and mighty; or it may design the strength and power of Christ, shown in destroying his enemies, in casting the dragon out of heaven down to the earth, and in bringing to confusion and destruction the Heathen emperors, princes, and others, who fled to the rocks and mountains for fear of him, and because of his great wrath: also now came “the kingdom of our God”, the Gospel of the kingdom was preached everywhere and Gospel churches were set up in all parts of the empire, both which are sometimes signified by the kingdom of God; here was now an illustrious appearance of the kingdom of God in the world, such as had never been before; and which was a pledge and presage of the greatness of the kingdom, or of that everlasting kingdom which will be set up hereafter, when all other kingdoms will be at an end: to which is added “the power of his Christ”; or his authority as Lord and Christ, which took place at his resurrection, ascension, and session at the right hand of God, and which will more fully appear at the last day, when he shall come in glory, and exercise his authority in judging the quick and dead, of which there was some resemblance at this time, in dethroning Satan, destroying Paganism, and putting an end to the power of the Heathen emperors and empire; and which is expressed in such language as the day of judgment is, Re 6:12; for to the opening of the sixth seal does this passage belong: a further account is given of the matter of this song, and the reason of it:
for the accuser of our brethren is cast down; hence it appears that this is not a song of the angels in heaven, since the saints are never called their brethren, nor the angels theirs, but their fellow servants; rather it may be thought to be the song of the saints in heaven, acknowledging those on earth to be their brethren, as they are, for there is but one family in heaven and in earth, and the saints on earth are called the of the souls under the altar, Re 6:9; but as this refers to the state of the church in Constantine’s time, it must be the song of the saints in that state, who call the martyrs, that had been slain under the former persecutions, their brethren; for that they are the persons meant is clear from the following verse, whom Satan is an accuser of, for he is designed here; the word rendered “devil” signifies an accuser, and a false one, and is so translated Tit 2:3; this is a name frequently given to Satan by the Jews, and have adopted into their language the very Greek word q that is here used; and often say of him that he accuses Israel, and particularly that he accuses Israel above, that is, in heaven; and that he stands and r, “continually accuses them”, the very phrase used in the next clause: when Israel came out of Egypt, they say s the angel Samael (the devil) stood and accused them; the first day of the month Tisri, according to them t, is appointed a day for blowing of trumpets, to confound Satan, who comes to accuse at that time; so they say u that Satan stood and accused Abraham, and others; and indeed he was an accuser from the beginning, both of God to men, and of men to God; we have instances in Job and Joshua the high priest, Job 1:8 Zec 3:1; but here it refers to the accusations brought against the Christians in the primitive times, during the ten persecutions, which were very horrid ones indeed; as that they had their private suppers, at which they ate their own infants, and their nightly meetings, for the gratifying of their lusts, in which they committed adultery, incest, and all manner of uncleanness; if ever a fire happened in a city, they were charged with it; and whenever there were any famine, or pestilence, or wars, or any public calamity, they were accused as the cause and occasion of it; as appears from the apologies for them written by Justin, Tertullian, Cyprian, Minutius Felix, c. so that Satan at this time was remarkably the accuser of the brethren but now this father of lies was cast down, he was cast out of heaven, and deprived of that power and authority he had in the empire, and lost his influence over men, and could not spread his lies, and get his false charges and accusations credited and received as before; he was not indeed wholly destroyed, nor even shut up in the bottomless pit, but he was cast down to the earth; he was in a low condition, his power was greatly diminished, and he was conquered by Christ, and cast down and bruised under the feet of the saints,
which accused them before our God day and night; so the evil spirit in Ahab’s time, and Satan in Job’s time, are said to stand before the Lord: and this shows the malice, and also the insolence of the devil, that he should stand and accuse the saints before God, who he knew was their God, and was on their side, and therefore his accusations could be of no avail; and though Christ appears in the presence of God for them, and is their advocate with the Father, yet he is constant and indefatigable in going about, and picking up charges against them, and carrying them to God.
q Pirke Abot, c. 4. sect. 11. Maimon. & Bartenora in ib. r Shaare Ora, fol. 21. 4. & 24. 2. s Shemot Rabba, sect. 21. fol. 106. 4. t Targum Jon. in Numb. xxix. 1. u Zohar in Numb. fol. 107. 2.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
A great voice saying ( ). Accusative after in this phrase as in Rev 5:11; Rev 10:4; Rev 14:2; Rev 18:4, but the genitive in Rev 11:12; Rev 14:13. We are not told whence this voice or song comes, possibly from one of the twenty-four elders (Swete) or some other heavenly beings (11:15) who can sympathize with human beings (19:10), the martyrs in heaven (Charles).
Now is come ( ). (Joh 13:33) shows how recent the downfall of Satan here proleptically pictured as behind us in time (aorist tense ).
The salvation ( ). Here “the victory” as in Rev 7:10; Rev 19:1.
The power ( ). Gods power over the dragon (cf. Rev 7:12; Rev 11:17; Rev 19:1).
The kingdom ( ). “The empire of God” as in 11:15.
The authority of his Christ ( ). Which Christ received from the Father (Matt 28:18; John 17:2). See 11:15 (Ps 2:2) for “his Anointed.”
The accuser ( ). The regular form, , occurs in John 8:10; Acts 23:30; Acts 23:35; Acts 25:16; Acts 25:18 and in many MSS. here in Re 12:10, but A reads , which Westcott and Hort accept. It was once considered a Greek transliteration of a Hebrew word, but Deissmann (Light, etc., p. 93f.) quotes it from a vernacular magical papyrus of the fourth century A.D. with no sign of Jewish or Christian influence, just as appears as a vernacular form of . Only here is the word applied to Satan in the N.T. In late Judaism Satan is the accuser, and Michael the defender, of the faithful.
Of our brethren ( ). The saints still on earth battling with Satan and his devices.
Which accuseth them ( ). Articular present active participle of , old verb, to accuse, usually with the genitive of the person (Joh 5:45), but here with the accusative. This is the devil’s constant occupation (Job 1:6f.).
Day and night ( ). Genitive of time. “By day and by night.”
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Saying in heaven [ ] . The correct reading joins in heaven with great voice. So Rev. I heard a great voice in heaven. Now [] . See on Joh 13:33.
Is come [] . Lit., came to pass. Alford says : “It is impossible in English to join to a particle of present time, such as arti now, a verb in aoristic time. We are driven to the perfect in such cases.”
Salvation, power, the kingdom. All have the article : the salvation, etc. So Rev. The phrase, now is come the salvation, etc., means that these are realized and established. Some, less correctly, render, now is the salvation, etc., become our God ‘s Compare Luk 3:6.
Power [] . See on Mr 2:10. Rev., authority.
The accuser of our brethren [ ] . The correct form of the Greek for accuser is a transcript of the Rabbinical Hebrew, kathgwr. The Rabbins had a corresponding term sunhgwr for Michael, as the advocate of God ‘s people. The phrase is applied to Satan nowhere else in the New Testament.
Is cast down [] . The aorist tense. Once and for all. Compare Joh 12:31; Joh 16:8, 11.
Which accuseth [ ] . Lit., the one. The article with the present participle expresses what is habitual.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven,” (kai ekousa phonen megale en to ourano legousan) “and I heard a megaphone-like voice in heaven advising,” declaring, where the first wonder was heard and seen, Rev 12:1.
2) “Now is come salvation,” (arti egeneto he soteria) now (at this moment) is come deliverance,” salvation, from incessant accusations by the Devil and demon spirits at the throne of God against the saved of the earth, requiring the continual advocacy and intercession of Christ for the redeemed, Heb 7:25; 1Jn 2:1-2.
3) “And strength, and the kingdom of our God,” (kai he dunamis kai basileia tou theou hemon) even the dynamic power and kingdom of our God.” The redeemed in heaven here rejoiced to see the imminent coming of Christ’s kingdom, the millennium, on earth.
4) “And the power of his Christ,” (kai he eksousia tou christou autou) “and the administrative kingdom authority of the Christ,” of the anointed one, Luk 1:32; Luk 1:34; 1Co 15:24-28.
5) “For the accuser of our brethren is cast down,” (hoti eblethe ho kategor ton adelphon humon) “because the accuser of our brethren was cast (is cast) down or out from heaven,” out from our midst. The saved in heaven rejoiced that their brethren yet living on the earth would no longer be accused by demon angels.
6) “Which accused them before our God day and night,” (ho kategoron autous enopion tou theou hemeras kai nuktos) “the one who accuseth them continually, in the presence of our God, day and night,” as he and his horde of accusers and insinuators had done from ancient times, Job 1:6-9; Job 2:2.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
(10) And I heard a loud voice . . .Better, And I heard a great voice in the heavens saying, Now is come the salvation, and the might, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ. The definite article is placed before the words salvation and might. The words of this doxology are like an echo of the close of the Lords Prayer. The prayer Thy kingdom come seems answered. Now is come the kingdom. But it is not the full establishment of the kingdom which is here described; it is rather the manifestation of it. Since our Master passed into the heavensand His victory is achieved, we know Him to be King, and even while we pray Thy kingdom come we yet confess Thine is the kingdomthe salvation so anxiously looked for (1Pe. 1:10); the power so much needed by weak and sinful men (1Pe. 1:5 and 1Co. 1:24); and the kingdom which cannot be shaken (Heb. 12:28). The accuser of the brethren is cast down. This is another reason for joy and another feature of the salvation. The habit of the accuser is expressed by the use of the present tense. We should read not who accused, but who accuseth. Night and day he accused. (Comp. Zec. 3:1, and Job. 1:9; Job. 2:5.) In Jewish writings, Michael is called the advocate (sunegor), and stands in opposition to the accuser (kategor); but now the accuser is cast down; for who shall lay anything to the charge of Gods elect, when it is God that justifieth, when it is Christ that died? (Rom. 8:33-34.)
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
10. And a similar exultation rings through heaven.
A loud voice He hears the voice but knows not the utterer. Yet apparently it comes from the redeemed spirits of the previous martyrs under pagan supremacy, now in paradise; for Christians on earth are to them our brethren.
Now In the glad hour of the pagan dragon’s downfall. Sublime is their song even over an incomplete victory; for it is a special instalment of that salvation, strength, kingdom, power, which shall be terrenely exhibited in their reign on earth, (Rev 20:4,) and consummated in Rev 21:22. Thus far the pagan dragon had impeded their power; he has fallen from heaven, but survives, alas, on earth and sea. Rev 12:12.
Accused them As Satan did Job. Satan suggested the accusation that Christians who opposed the pagan gods were atheists; charged them with atrocious crimes, and brought terrible persecutions upon them.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘And I heard a great voice in Heaven saying, “Now is come the salvation and the power and the kingship of our God, and the authority of his Christ, for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, who accuses them before our God day and night. And they overcame him because of the blood of the Lamb and because of the word of their testimony, and they loved not their life even unto death”.’
We have been looking at the whole panorama of saving history, and this is seen as one whole by the watchers in Heaven who recognise what it means, and what it will mean for the future.
They have seen the visions of the future that have preceded this one, of the brethren overcoming because of the blood of the Lamb and the word of their testimony (Rev 6:9-11; Rev 7:14), and this explains how it was achieved. Through the power of the cross and the defeat of Satan the Kingly Rule of God has been established, salvation has been achieved for men, the power of God has become available for man through the Spirit (Act 1:8; Act 2:33), and Christ has received all authority in Heaven and on earth (Mat 28:18; Act 2:33-36), and this is demonstrated to the full by the casting down of the accuser of the brethren who never ceases to point out man’s failure. His power is broken. He can no longer point out their failure for they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.
‘And they overcame him because of the blood of the Lamb and because of the word of their testimony and they loved not their life even unto death’. In their heavenly wisdom the watchers recognise that what has been accomplished here explains the future victory of the overcomers. They see the picture as one. What Christ has done means that His people have already achieved their victory, even before they face their tribulation. As Paul tells us, when His blood was shed, our blood was shed, when He rose, we rose, when He ascended into the heavenly places we ascended with Him and sat with Him in the heavenly places (Eph 2:5-6). Because of His death, and Satan’s casting out, our triumph is thus assured. So the one who speaks from Heaven can look forward and see the triumph of God’s people in the light of what he sees and of what he has seen. It has already been displayed in chapters 6 and 7, and on that basis also he can speak of it as accomplished.
Three things were required in order to be an overcomer, (1) the blood of the Lamb which cleanses from all sin and motivates their lives, (2) their witness to the truth of His word and to Him Who is the truth, as a result of being clothed in the whole armour of God (Eph 6:11), which is all based on His word, and (3) their readiness to die for Christ. This is the encouragement John gives in the face of coming persecution. (This use of the aorist, signifying something completed once for all, is similar to what some call the prophetic perfect, the using of a past tense to depict a future action because it is already certain).
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Rev 12:10-12 . A loud voice in heaven [3113] celebrates the victory which has just occurred before the eye of the seer, over the adversary of Christ and his kingdom (Rev 12:10-12 a ), as one in which believers also are to participate, Rev 12:10 ; but this voice proclaims, also, woe to the whole earth, because the dragon cast out upon it will make use of the short time given him for his wrath (Rev 12:12 b ).
, “ now ,” since the victory over the dragon, Rev 12:8 sq., as also the conclusion from Rev 12:10 , ., . . ., once again expressly emphasizes.
, . . . Incorrectly, Hofm.: “God and his Anointed have established their salvation and their power.” Also De Wette, who properly refers to Rev 11:15 , is incorrect in his remark: There is with respect to the a sort of zeugma or mingling of thoughts; the sentence, “Salvation is God,” Rev 7:10 , Rev 19:1 , becomes in this connection: “Now it is shown that the salvation is God’s.” De Wette, as also those who have wished to change the meaning of , has correctly felt that it is just the idea of the whereby the mode of statement in this passage appears more difficult than in the entirely similar passage, Rev 11:15 . But precisely as the and the , so also the , i.e., salvation in the specific Christian sense, not “victory,” [3114] which does not mean, is beheld with complete objectivity. The salvation, like the kingdom, the strength, and the power, has now become our God’s, since the dragon in heaven has been overcome; now his salvation, his power, his kingdom, are no longer attacked and injured by the violence of the dragon up to this time unbroken, and his power not yet overcome. This is the precise mode of the presentation, along with which the other view also co-exists, that it is essentially and alone God’s salvation, power, and kingdom which God seizes, [3115] or which becomes God’s . The individual ideas are very significant; is the salvation, not only inasmuch as saints are thereby delivered, [3116] this reference is necessary, nevertheless is too narrow, but [3117] the sum total of all righteousness, blessedness, and holiness, as they have been prepared for the creature by God through his Christ, the , but have been prevented from reaching the same by the dragon, the antichrist. The , the power of God, has been manifested in his victory over the dragon; [3118] the , “where God’s majesty shows itself,” [3119] is the royal glory of God, [3120] which is peculiar to him as the possessor of unconditioned power, and which he displays especially in creation and the imparting of salvation. [3121] The is ascribed to God’s Christ, because it is the definite, supreme power [3122] peculiar to God’s Christ as such. [3123] The reason for the ascription of praise, , . . . , lies in what is reported in Rev 12:8-9 ; for the entire undertaking of the dragon [3124] was nothing else than the truly antichristian attempt to frustrate the , to bid defiance to the of God, to oppose his , and to bring to naught the of Christ, ay, Christ himself. From a new side, not at all touched in Rev 12:3 sqq., and also very remote from that presentation, is the overcome adversary designated by the appellation . . ., . . . The form of the word is Hebraistic: . Precisely analogous is the rabbinical designation of Michael as the , the , i.e., , advocate, of the godly. [3125] In the later Greek there is also the analogous form for . [3126]
. The brethren of those by whom, in a loud voice, the song of praise is raised, are undoubtedly believers in the earthly life, for only they could be exposed to the accusation on the part of Satan; but an inference as to the designation of the heavenly persons who speak of believing men as their brethren is not to be made: it can in no way be decided as to whether the adoring voice proceeds from the angels, [3127] or from the twenty-four elders, [3128] or perhaps from the already perfected saints, [3129] who, however, would not be regarded as saints only of the O. T. [3130] The idea of a perpetual [3131] accusation of the godly on the part of Satan, [3132] which occurs neither in the N. nor the O. T. as an express doctrinal article, is derived and formulated by Jewish theology from Zec 3 and Job 1:2 . [3133] The N. T. contains an allusion to that conception only so far as the names ordinarily used in the N. T., and , also , according to their original significance, point back to the same. In the latter circumstance, sufficient scriptural ground for receiving the accusing activity of Satan in dogmatical seriousness can be acknowledged only if the Scriptures were elsewhere to show expressly that they advocate such definite sense for that name already firmly fixed. But this occurs neither in Job 1:2 , nor in Zec 3 ; for the former mythically fashioned passage does not treat at all of a peculiar accusation, while, according to the nature of the subject, objective reality does not pertain to the vision of the prophet. Scripture, therefore, does not give us a doctrinal article, which would be just as incomprehensible to Christian thought, as the idea of an actual abode of the devil and his angels in heaven. [3134] But as there, so also here, every allegorizing interpretation of the text is to be rejected, [3135] and it is to be decided, according to the analogy of Scripture, that the idea of a perpetual accusation of believers by Satan, derived in its concrete formation from Jewish theology, makes no claim of objective truth, but is to be regarded as a point of the prophetic conception founded in the individuality of John.
[3113] Cf. Rev 11:15 ; Rev 11:12 .
[3114] Eichh., Ew. ii.
[3115] Cf. (Rev 11:17 ) the . . in connection with the .
[3116] Beng. Cf. Hengstenb., Ebrard.
[3117] Cf. the similar passages Rev 7:10 , Rev 19:1 .
[3118] Cf. Beng.
[3119] Beng.
[3120] Rev 11:15 ; Rev 11:17 .
[3121] Cf. Rev 1:6 , Rev 5:10 .
[3122] Cf. Rev 13:2 , where . stands for the definite supreme power existent in a commission, office, etc.
[3123] Cf. Rev 13:2 , where . is with ; Rev 6:8 , Rev 9:3 , Rev 11:6 , Rev 14:18 , Rev 17:18 , Rev 20:6 , where . is used with respect to definite supreme authority lying in a commission, office, etc.
[3124] Rev 12:3 sqq.
[3125] Cf. Schttg.
[3126] Cf. Wetst.
[3127] Beda, etc.
[3128] Ew. i., etc.
[3129] Ew. ii., according to Rev 6:4 sqq., Rev 7:9 sqq
[3130] Beng.
[3131] . Cf. Rev 4:8 .
[3132] Sohar Levit. , p. 43: “He always stands as accuser before the king of Israel” (in Schttg.).
[3133] Cf. examples in Schttg.
[3134] Cf. Rev 12:7 sqq.
[3135] Against Beda: “He suggests both that they abuse prosperity, and in adversity do not have patience.” De Wette: “Satan is at the same time wicked lust and the bad conscience.”
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
10 And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before our God day and night.
Ver. 10. And I heard a loud voice ] Great joy was throughout the Churches of Christ, as great cause there was, when Constantine came to the empire. That was very remarkable, that Constantine being now a conqueror, should cause a table to be hanged up on high before the doors of his palace, wherein was painted a dragon that lay thrust through with a dart under his own and his subjects’ feet. (Euseb. in Vita Constan.)
For the accuser of our brethren ] So the devil is called, saith one, in direct and full opposition to that special name and office of the Holy Ghost, the Comforter, or pleader for us, . The Russians are so malicious one towards another, that you shall have a man hide some of his own goods in the house of him whom he hateth, and then accuse him for the stealth of them; just so deals the devil many times by God’s dearest servants. The word , here rendered the accuser, signifieth not any kind of accuser, saith a learned divine, but such a one as accuseth before a king.
Which accuseth them ] And upon some such articles too as he is able to prove against them. Hence he is said to stand at Joshua’s right hand, at the upper hand, because his accusation was as true as vehement, Zec 3:3 . But here is the comfort, Christ appears in heaven for his (as a lawyer appears for his client), to nonsuit all the devil’s accusations, Heb 9:24 . The Spirit also (as an advocate, ) makes request in our hearts to God for us, and helpeth us to make apologies for ourselves,2Co 7:112Co 7:11 . But may not the saints say to Satan (first drawing them to sin, and then accusing them) as he did to Joab?2Sa 18:12-132Sa 18:12-13 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Rev 12:10 . ( ) is the counterpart to the rabbinic (Lueken 22) title of given to Michael as a sort of Greatheart or advocate and protector of men (En. lx. 9). The Aramaic derivation of the word (Win. 8. 13) is not absolutely necessary, as the papyri show that it might have sprung up on Greek soil ( cf. Thumb, 126; Rademacher, Rhein. Mus. lvii. 148). On the accuser’s rle cf. Sohar Levit. fol. 43 (ille semper stat tanquam delator coram rege Israelis) and the prayer of Jub. Rev 1:20 : “let not the spirit of Beliar rule over them to accuse them before thee and to turn them deceitfully from all the paths of righteousness” (where both traits are combined, cf. above on 9).
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Rev 12:10-12
10″Now the salvation, and the power, and the kingdom of our God and the authority of His Christ have come, for the accuser of our brethren has been thrown down, he who accuses them before our God day and night. 11″And they overcame him because of the blood of the Lamb and because of the word of their testimony, and they did not love their life even when faced with death. 12″For this reason, rejoice, O heavens and you who dwell in them. Woe to the earth and the sea, because the devil has come down to you, having great wrath, knowing that he has only a short time.”
Rev 12:10-12 This is the message of the one with the loud voice in heaven.
Rev 12:10 “the salvation, and the power, and the kingdom of our God and the authority of His Christ have come” This is a literary equivalent to Rev 11:15-18. The end is already present and God is victorious! This was very helpful to a group of believers who were suffering extreme persecution, even death.
“for the accuser of our brethren” This shows that the voice of Rev 12:10 was not an angel, but apparently believers, possibly the martyrs of Rev 6:9-11.
The Hebrew term Satan means “accuser.” We see Satan in this role in Job 1:9-11 and Zec 3:1.
“he who accuses them before our God day and night” Satan is cast out of heaven yet he still accuses the faithful before God. This is the fluidity of this genre. His power is broken, but he is still active (however, limited by God, cf. Job 1-2).
Rev 12:11 “And they overcame him because of the blood of the Lamb and because of the word of their testimony” The victory has already been won by the substitutionary atonement of God’s Messiah (cf. Rev 1:5; Rev 7:14; 1Pe 1:18-19; 1Jn 1:7). This atonement involves both
1. the grace of God through Christ’s sacrificial death (cf. Mar 10:45; 2Co 5:21)
2. believers’ required faith response (cf. Rev 6:9; Mar 1:15; Joh 1:12; Joh 3:16; Act 3:16; Act 3:19; Act 20:21) and their sharing of that faith (i.e., lifestyle and verbally)
This phrase is much like Rev 14:12. There is great similarity between Rev 12:11; Rev 12:17. Revelation 11 seems to describe salvation, while Rev 12:17 seems to describe Christian maturity and perseverance. Notice Christ’s victory occurs at Calvary, not the millennium.
NASB”and they did not love their life even to death”
NKJV”and they did not love their lives to the death”
NRSV”for they did not cling to life even in the face of death”
TEV”they were willing to give up their lives and die”
NJB”because even in the face of death they did not cling to life”
First century believers and their families faced horrible deaths (as do many in every age). They were sealed and protected by God, but still they are subject to persecution by unbelievers. Their faith in Christ was stronger than their fear of death (cf. Rev 2:10; Mar 8:35; Mar 13:13; Luk 14:26; Joh 12:25).
Rev 12:12 “rejoice, O heavens and you who dwell in them” This is a present middle imperative (cf. Rev 18:20). It may be an allusion to Psa 96:11 or Isa 49:13. Heaven is to rejoice because Satan has been cast out, but woe be unto the earth!
The plural “heavens” is used in the OT to denote (1) the atmosphere above the earth (cf. Genesis 1) and (2) the place where God dwells. In this context it is #2.
The term “dwell” (NASB, NKJV, NRSV) or “live there” (TEV, NJB) is from the noun “tabernacle.” It implies a permanent residence with God (cf. Rev 7:15; Rev 12:12; Rev 13:6; Rev 21:3 and Joh 1:14 of Christ with us).
“wrath” See full note at Rev 7:14.
“knowing that he has only a short time” This seems to refer to the period of time between the Ascension of Christ (cf. Act 1:9-11) and the Second Coming which John and the first century Christians thought would be in a short period of time. It has been almost 2,000 years now; every generation has the hope of the any-moment return of the Lord. Believers were warned of this delay in 2 Thessalonians and Mat 24:45-51. Be careful that the delay does not reduce faith (cf. 2Pe 3:3-4).
SPECIAL TOPIC: THE ANY-MOMENT RETURN OF JESUS VERSUS THE NOT YET (NT PARADOX)
Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley
The central verse in Revelation.
loud = great.
salvation = the salvation.
strength = the power. App-172.1; Rev 176:1.
kingdom. See App-114.
power. App-172.
Christ. App-98.
accuser. Greek. kategoros. Only here in Rev.
is = was.
cast down. As “cast out”, Rev 12:9, with the texts.
accused = accuseth. First occurance: Mat 12:10; last, here.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Rev 12:10. , now) This particle teaches most evidently, that this twelfth chapter, from its very beginning, refers to the trumpet of the seventh angel; for the voice which was heard immediately under the sound of that trumpet, ch. Rev 11:15, respecting the kingdom, is here repeated with a remarkable increase of meaning by the figure, Epitasis [see Append.]; nor can it by any means be placed before this trumpet in particular. The accuser attacked the citizens, and not the king. Moreover, the latter part of the twelfth chapter, has a most close coherence with this very passage. In ch. Rev 2:15-18, these things are set forth, which this most important trumpet comprises; in Rev 2:19, and ch. 12-22 is an Exergasia [see Append. Epexegesis.], and copious description of its accomplishment.- [127]) A name naturalized and adopted even in the East, and so used by the Syriac translator in this passage. Therefore in this very place it is not used as a Greek word (as Camero remarks), but as a Hebrew word, the purely Greek synonym, , following. The two languages are joined together, as in Rev 12:9, and repeatedly in this book, which has reference to both Israelites and Gentiles. See Schoettgen, Hor. Hebr. p. 1120, and those winch follow; where also the office of Michal, and the appellation, old serpent, are illustrated from the writings of the Hebrews.
[127] , A. , BC and Rec. Text.-E.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
kingdom of our God
The Dispensation of the Kingdom (2Sa 7:16 refs.) begins with the return of Christ to the earth, runs through the “thousand years” of His earth-rule, and ends when He has delivered up the kingdom to the Father. (See Scofield “1Co 15:24”).
salvation (See Scofield “Rom 1:16”).
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
I heard: Rev 11:15, Rev 19:1-7
the kingdom: 1Ch 29:11, Psa 22:28, Psa 45:6, Psa 145:11-13, Dan 2:44, Mat 6:10, Luk 11:2
the power: Rev 2:26, Psa 2:8-12, Psa 110:5, Psa 110:6, Mat 26:64, Mat 28:18, 1Co 5:4, 2Co 12:9
the accuser: Job 1:9, Job 2:5, Zec 3:1, Zec 3:2, Luk 22:31, Tit 2:3
Reciprocal: Exo 23:1 – an unrighteous witness 1Ki 22:22 – a lying spirit 1Ch 21:1 – Satan Ezr 4:6 – wrote Job 1:6 – Satan Psa 50:20 – slanderest Psa 52:2 – Thy Psa 126:3 – General Psa 145:12 – make known Isa 13:11 – I will punish Isa 29:20 – and all Isa 50:8 – mine adversary Isa 54:17 – every Isa 59:19 – the enemy Eze 22:9 – men that carry tales Zep 3:15 – he hath Mat 3:7 – O generation Luk 3:14 – accuse Act 4:26 – against his Rom 8:33 – Who Rom 16:20 – shall Eph 4:31 – evil speaking 1Ti 3:11 – not Rev 2:7 – To him Rev 19:6 – for Rev 21:3 – a great
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Rev 12:10. It was perfectly logical that the righteous persons should rejoice over the defeat of Satan. Nov is come is their way of saying that the kingdom of our God was given another victory through the power of his Christ. Accuser of our brethren. The specific accusation is not stated, but since it was a daily performance we may conclude that it refers to the general opposition that Satan has always waged against the Lord and his faithful servants.
Comments by Foy E. Wallace
Verse 10.
(2) The victory of the woman–Rev 12:10-17.
It should be remembered that with the twelfth chapter there is the beginning of the recapitulation of all the events depicted in the first series of visions from chapter four to eleven. The first series of symbols surrounded Christ the conqueror; the second series encompassed the same events in a new set of symbols and surrounded the woman, the church in the midst of that period of trial. The verses now under consideration set forth the woman’s victory over the dragon and parallels the triumph of the Rider of the white horse of the sixth chapter who was the conquering Christ of the closing verses of chapter eleven.
1. And I heard a loud voice saying, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ–Rev 12:10. This “loud voice” of victory reverted to the chorus of “great voices” in Rev 11:15; and the exclamation “now is come salvation . . . and the kingdom of our God” was repetitive of the refrain of Rev 11:15, “the kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ.” The meaning is that the kingdoms of the world became the kingdoms of the Lord by the conversion of its citizens. It was the anticipation of the world-wide expansion of Christianity through the gospel, after the destruction of Jerusalem, as forecast by the Lord in Mat 24:31 –and that is the meaning of the statement, “now is come salvation . . . and the kingdom of our God.”
The salvation here meant deliverance of the woman (the church) from the dragon; and strength referred to the source of endurance; and the power of his Christ referred to that authority higher than Rome’s emperor, that divine rod of iron by which the power of Satan, personified in the persecutor, had been broken and by which his diabolical character had been exposed.
2. For the accuser of our brethren is cast down–Rev 12:10. In verse 9 it states that the dragon was cast out into the earth–the place of the nations, or the political society. This was not the positions of government authority included within the sphere of the phrase in heaven. In verse 10 the dragon (the persecutor) was called the accuser of our brethren. This referred to that part of the offspring of the woman who were not martyrs, but were like the seer of the apocalypse on Patmos: “I John, who also am your brother, and companion in tribulation, and in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ.” The emphasis put on the accuser of our brethren by the additional statement, which accused them before our God day and night, indicated the habitual character of the dragon-accuser, that the oppositions of the persecutor would be persistent and continuous.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Rev 12:10-12. The victory thus gained is followed by a song of praise and thanksgiving, which proceeds from a great voice in heaven. Whose voice this is we are not told, and it may be well to leave it in its indefiniteness.
The song is one of adoring praise that the salvation, and the power, and the kingdom of our God, and the authority of his Christ, have been perfectly established. Now is there judgment of this world: now shall the prince of this world be cast out; He will convict the world concerning judgment, because the prince of this world hath been judged (Joh 12:31; Joh 16:8; Joh 16:11).
This victory of the brethren has been gained because of the blood of the Lamb, and because of the word of their testimony. By the former can only be understood the blood of Jesus shed and presented before God on behalf of His people, by the latter that testimony of Jesus, that witness concerning Him, which they had been enabled to deliver.
When the victory has thus been spoken of as pained the great voice further cries, Rejoice ye heavens, and ye that tabernacle in them. They who thus tabernacled in the heavens can hardly be angels; nor are they the spirits of the just made perfect contrasted with the righteous still struggling upon earth. The victory of all the righteous is by this time supposed to be complete. They can be no other than the whole redeemed family of God. These form the Divine Tabernacle, the place in which God rests, as He rested of old in the tabernacle in the wilderness (comp. chap. Rev 7:15, Rev 13:6, Rev 21:3). Thus constituting a tabernacle for God, they may by an easy transition be said themselves to tabernacle, for the true idea of the Tabernacle consisted in this, that it was the meeting-place of God and man. There is no thought of the transitoriness of a tent, or of tent life. While all the good rejoice, there is woe for the earth and for the sea, that is, not the neutral earth or the ocean, but all who are unconnected with Gods kingdom the heavens.
Because the devil is come down unto you, having great wrath, knowing that he hath but a short time. The consciousness that it is so fills him with the rage of despair.
The second scene of the chapter is a distinct advance upon the first. We pass from the dragon the ideal representative of evil to the devil or Satan, known to us as the source of all the sin and misery from which earth suffers. Further, we learn why the Church on earth has to contend with this great adversary. He has been cast, with his angels, out of heaven; and it is Gods decree that the main and last struggle between good and evil shall be fought out on earth. Among men, not angels, the plan of redemption shall be conducted to its glorious issue. To impress these thoughts upon us is the reason why the second scene of this chapter has its place assigned to it.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
After Michael and his angels’, Christ and his followers’ victory over the dragon and his angels, over Satan and his instruments, here follows a solemn thanksgiving for the devil’s downfall: the saints in heaven join with believers on earth in this song of confidence and triumph: when they speak of God, they say our God: and when they speak of the church below, they say our brethren: behold a sweet communion between the church militant and the church triumphant; indeed they constitute and make up but one church, one family, one household: the whole family of heaven and earth is but one.
Observe farther, Another name here given to Satan, the accuser of the brethren; he accuses them continually before God, and by his instruments before men; the primitive Christians were accused by their enemies to the magistrates as guilty of the most villanous practices in their religious assemblies: and behold the assuduity of Satan in accusing the saints day and night; but blessed be God, as Satan is a continual accuser, Christ is a continual mediator.
Observe again, How the saints overcame Satan.
1. By the blood of the Lamb; that is, by faith in his blood.
2. By the word of their testimony; that is, by their preaching, professing, and practising the word of God.
3. By their sufferings and martyrdom, they loved not their lives unto the death: that is, they loved not their lives so well but that they were willing to expose them to death, rather than renounce the cause of Christ, and desert their holy profession.
Observe lastly, After this great exultation and joy in heaven for the devil’s downfall, here is a denunciation of woe to the inhabiters of the earth, and of the sea, upon that account; that is, to all earthly sensual men, whether they inhabit the continent, or any island in the sea; because the devil is come down full of rage, knowing that his time is short to execute his malice in.
Learn hence, 1. Who is the author of wrath, and malice, and revenge; and whose children they are that partake of that spirit and temper: the devil has great wrath; that is his character, and the very soul and spirit of the apostate nature.
Learn, 2. That something good may be learned from the evil one; Satan is very busy, doubly diligent, because his time is short; so should we be; our grave and coffin is at hand, our glass has but a little sand; since but a few leaves are remaining in the book of our lives unfilled up, it concerns us to write the closer, and the faster too: as Satan’s time for mischief is short, so is our time for doing good.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Michael and his angels won because Jesus had already won. How reassuring to know the same blood is available to us in our battle with Satan and he cannot defeat us as long as that blood is ours. Christ truly was given all authority after he overcame death. ( Mat 28:18-20 ; Eph 1:20-23 ; 1Pe 3:21-22 ) All of this is announced by a “loud voice,” which may describe the voice of one being or a large group speaking as one. The latter seems best since the voice says, “our brethren.”
Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books
12:10 And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, {16} Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before our God day and night.
(16) The song of victory or triumph containing first, a proposition of the glory of God and of Christ shown in that victory: secondly, it contains a reason for the same proposition, taken from the effects, as the enemy is overcome in battle, in this verse, and the godly are made conquerors (and more than conquerors) Rom 8:37 . Thirdly a conclusion, in which is an exhortation to the angels, and to the saints: and to the word, a prophecy of great misery, and of destruction obtained by the devil against mankind, since he himself will soon be miserable Rev 12:12 .
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
John then heard another outburst of praise in heaven. This one seems to have come from the Tribulation martyrs (Rev 6:10; cf. Rev 12:10). Their rejoicing is proleptic anticipating the imminent expulsion of Satan. God’s salvation (victory), the manifestation of His power, and His kingdom (both the millennial and eternal phases) will have come even closer when this happens. Likewise the manifestation of the authority of His Anointed One will be nearer (cf. Rev 11:15; Psa 2:8). The way will then be more open than it was previously for the establishment of God’s kingdom on the earth.
Satan’s malevolent work of accusing believers before God will cease (cf. Job 1:6). However, he will continue to persecute the living brethren of the martyrs still on earth even though he can no longer accuse them in heaven. Satan accused believers day and night (constantly), just as steadily as the four living beings praise God (Rev 4:8).