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than Latinity, "Victus qui sæviebat, vicit qui suf"ferebat." "The conqueror was subdued, the suf"ferer conquered;" or, as, in more stately language, God the Father is represented speaking of the Son incarnate;

"I send him forth

"To conquer sin and death, the two grand foes,
"By humiliation and strong suff'rance."

It is the duty of every Christian to be ready at all times to fight this spiritual battle, under the conviction, that he is certain to triumph, if he be lawfully called to the conflict †, and have faith to follow his great Leader. For, to suffer in that cause is to triumph; "nay, in all these things," says Saint Paul speaking of such sufferings, "we are more than con

querors, through Him who loved us‡." And this notion of conflict, battle, victory, &c. will be found also to pervade the writings of the early Christians. In the martyrdom of Ignatius, published by Archbishop Usher, that martyr is called Aλntys naι yevναιος μαρίυς Χρισις, καλοποίησας τον Δίκβολον § and in that precious morsel of Ecclesiastical History in the second century, the epistle from the Gallic Churches, the persecuting power is styled avlnuevos, the adversary, who goyuμvale, skirmishes before the battle; but avliolule. ☆ Xagıç 78 88, the grace of God conducts the Christian force against him, and supports the martyrs, who are called Yevvaio 2, noble combatants ||. Agreeably to these images, that ancient hymn of the

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Rom. viii. 37.

|| Euseb. H. E. lib. v. Pref. & cap. i. See also the same lan

guage in Minuc, Felix Octav. c. 87. .

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Christian Church, beginning with Te Deum, recounts the "noble army of Martyrs." But besides this battle which every Christian has to fight individually, and on his own private account, against the great adversary, there is a more general and extended warfare, in which the followers of Christ are engaged in a body, as the body of Christ's Church. It is against the same arch-enemy, the devil, and under the same leader, Christ. For our Lord is represented as continually presiding over the fortunes of his church: "Lo, I am with you, even unto the end of the "world." It is this warfare extended through all the ages of the world, which seems principally, if not solely, to be prefigured in the Apocalypse. The Devil and his worldly agents attack by seduction and corrupt doctrine, by terror and persecution; the church resists, covering herself with the arms of her great Leader, "the cincture of truth, the breast-plate of "righteousness, the helmet of salvation, the sword of "the Spirit, and, above all, the shield of faith †. "Though she walk in the flesh, yet does she not war "after the flesh, for the weapons of her warfare are "not carnal, but mighty, through God, to the pull'ing down of strong holds, bringing into captivity

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every thought to the obedience of Christ." Agreeably to which words of Scripture in the language. of the Apocalypse: "He that conquereth," is "he "who keeps the works of his Lord even unto the "end;" he who, by the prevalence of faith, perseveres in the profession and practice of Christianity, when assailed by temptation or terror, is the faithful and victorious soldier of Christ. And to a church

Matt. xxviii. 20.

Eph. vi. 14, &c.

See ch. ii. 26. where the expression may be thus paraphrased.

of

of this character, and to none other, is promised power over the nations," a spiritual, increasing dominion.

As to the passage immediately before us, it concerns the times & *, the situation of the church at the time when our Lord addressed these warnings to it; when the Faith was assailed both by delusive teachers from within, and by heathen persecutors from without. Of the former of these, we have spoken t. The hostility of the latter had commenced some years before, in the reign, of Nero, whose unjust edicts against the Christians had been renewed by Domitian a little time before the date of this prophecy. For, under this persecution, Saint John was banished to the Isle of Patmos, where he saw the vision. That the seven Churches were actually under persecution at this time, and were not to be relieved immediately, may be collected from various passages of these addresses to them §.

Ver. 7. To eat of the tree of Life, &c.] The Lord God is described to have planted a garden, or paradise, in Eden, and to have placed in the midst of the garden the tree of life; of which the first created pair might eat, and by eating live for ever. Under this description is represented that immortality, to which, by obedience, the race of men might have attained in their primitive state, and which they forfeited by disobedience . For they listened to the seductions of their wily foe, and were overcome. But the Second Adam, the Lord from "Heaven ¶," having condescended to undergo, in

* See note, ch. i. 19.
Hist. Eccl. lib. iii. cap. xix.
Gen. ii. 8, 9.

+ Note, ch. ii. 6.

§ Ch. ii. 3, 10, 13. iii. 10.

¶ 1 Cor. xv. 22, 45. John vi. 51. xi. 25.

the

the behalf of fallen man, the penalty, which was death, man is hereby restored to his lost privileges. The tree of life is again placed within his reach, he may put forth his hand and live for ever." This advantage, which the Saviour of the world has regained by his own prowess, he bestows as a free gift or reward upon those servants of his who follow him faithfully in his victorious carcer. A description of the tree of life will recur in ch. xxii. 2, 14.

* Gen. ii. 17.

+See a copious explanation of the tree of life, as signifying immortality, in Bp. Horne's Sermons, vol. i. It was so understood by the author of the 2d Book of Esdras, ch. viii. 52. which was probably written soon after this book of Revelation. See Gray's Key to the Old Tes

tament.

PART I.

SECTION V.

The Address to the Church in Smyrna.

§ Καὶ τῷ ἀγέλῳ τῆς ἐν Σμύρνη ἐκκλησίας γράψον Τάδε λέ γει ὁ πρῶτος καὶ ὁ · ἔσχατος, ὃς ἐγένετο VEXgos xai (nσEN 9 Οιδά σε [τὰ ἔς[α, κα] τὴν θλίψιν, και τὴν πλωχείαν, (ἀλλὰ πλέσιος εἶς) καὶ τὴν βλασφημίαν ἐκ τῶν λεγόντων Ισδαίες εξ ναι ἑαυτὸς, καὶ ἐκ εἰσιν, ἀλλὰ συνα

CHAP. ii. VER. 8-11.

8 And to the Angel of
the Church in Sinyrna,
write; Thus saith the

First and the Last, who
was dead and is alive;
9 I know thy [works aud
thy] tribulation and
thy poverty, (but thou
art rich,) and the blas-
phemy of those who
say they are Jews, and
are not, but are a syna-
gogue of Satan. Fear
none of those things

10

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γωγὴ τῇ σατανᾶ. 10 Mnder po ä μέλλεις πάσχειν ἰδὲ, μέλλει βαλεῖν ἐξ ὑμῶν ὁ διάβολα εἰς φυλακὴν, ἵνα πειρασθῆτε καὶ ἔξελε θλίψιν ἡμερῶν δέ και γίνει ταιςὸς ἄχρι θανάτω, καὶ δώσω

σοι τὸν τέφανον τῆς 11 ζωῆς. Ὁ ἔχων ες, ακεσάτω τί τὸ πνεῦμα λέγει ταῖς ἐκκλησίαις· Ο νικῶν ἐ μὴ ἀδικηθῇ ἐκ το θανάτε το διυτέρα.

which thou art about to suffer; behold, the Devil is about to cast some of you into prison, that ye may be tried; and ye shall have tribulation ten days; be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee the crown of 11 life, He that hạth an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches: He who overcometh, shall not be injured by the second death.

of those things which thou shalt suffer: be hold, the Devil shall cast some of you into prison, that ye may be tried; and ye shall have tribulation ten days be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of 11 life. He that hath an

ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches, He that overcometh, shall not be hurt of the second death.

Ver. 8. Smyrna.] The city of Smyrna is represented by Strabo, as situated about forty miles to the north of Ephesus, of which it was originally a colony. Pliny describes it as the city of greatest account in Asia, after Ephesust. There is no mention of it, as a Church, in the books of Scripture. The renowned martyr, Polycarp, was its Bishop: but as he suffered in the reign of Verus, aged 86 years, he must have been too young to have exercised this important office at the time of this Revelation; even if we should suppose, with Bishop Pearson, the date of his martyrdom to be more early §. Yet he is represented by the ancients as receiving his doctrine immediately from the Apostles; and Irenæus, when a youth, had heard him discoursing of his acquaintance with Saint John . The Bishops of Smyrną † Nat. Hist. v. c. 29.

* Strabo, ii. p. 940,

Euseb, Hist. Eccl, lib. iv, c. 15. § Cave, Hist. Lit, art. Polycarp. Euseb. Hist. Eccl. lib. v. c. 20.

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