Revelation 20:5 Meaning and Commentary Revelation 20:5 But the rest of the dead Meaning not the dead saints, for they will be all raised together, but the wicked dead; and not them as morally or spiritually, but as corporeally dead: these ...
Revelation 1:1-8 Meaning and Commentary INTRODUCTION TO REVELATIONS That this book was written by the Apostle and Evangelist John, is clear not only from the express mention of his name, and from his office, a servant of Jesus Christ,Re 1:1; but also from the character this writer gives...
Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers (14, 15)And death and hell were cast . . .--Better,And death and Hades were cast into the lake of fire.The latter part of the verse contains, according to the best MS. authority, the additional words "the lake of fire." We then read, not...
The root of the word ‘rapture’ is ‘rapt,’ meaning: “transported with emotion; enraptured, as to be rapt with joy.” This rapture can and does happen whenever and wherever saints of God will seek Him with a whole heart. That means to repent, surrender, dedicate, consecrate oneself wh...
Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(1) The Revelation of Jesus Christ.--The book is a revelation of the things which are and the things which shall be. "John is the writer, but Jesus Christ is the author," says Grotius; and consistently with this the action of Christ is seen thro...
Revelation: A Commentary in the Wesleyan Tradition verse-by-verse details and meanings found in the text; and significance, relevance, intertextuality, and application from the textHelpful Sidebars, which pr... C Rotz 被引量: 1发表: 2012年 Voice of God on Mount Sinai: Rabbinic Commentaries on...
The Commentary likens these “locusts” to “the plague of locusts that infested Egypt” back in the time of Moses, and to “the Moslem Arabs, who” overran “North Africa, the Near East, and Spain” [20] back in the 8th century A.D. From the historic perspective, such conclusions are...
The Commentary refers to two instances in which White mentions “silence.” [8] In one reference there is “silence” on earth at the time of the second coming, but not in heaven. The other reference is a time of “silence in heaven [when] no harp was touched [and] in silent grief...
What does Revelation 21:23 mean? Read commentary on this popular Bible verse and understand the real meaning behind God's Word using John Gill's Exposition of the Bible.
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