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Revelation Chapter XX
The World's Millennial Night
Verse 1 And I saw an angel come down from heaven,
having the key of the bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand. 2
And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil,
and Satan, and bound him a thousand years, 3 and cast him into the
bottomless pit, and shut him up, and set a seal upon him, that he should
deceive the nations no more, till the thousand years should be
fulfilled: and after that he must be loosed a little season.
The event with which this chapter opens seems to
follow the events of the preceding chapter in chronological order. The
inquires that here arise are, Who is the angel that comes down from
heaven? What are the key and the chain which he has in his hand? What is
the bottomless pit? What is meant by binding Satan a thousand years?
Is this angel Christ, as some suppose? Evidently not.
A direct ray of light is thrown from the old typical service directly
upon this passage.
Satan is the Scapegoat.--Christ is the great
High Priest of the gospel age. On the Day of Atonement anciently two
goats were taken by the priest, and lots were cast upon them, one for
the Lord, and the other for the scapegoat. The goat upon which the
Lord's lot fell, was then slain, and his blood carried into the
sanctuary to make an atonement for the children of Israel. After this
the sins of the people were confessed upon the head of the other, or
scapegoat, and he was sent away by the hand of a fit man into the
wilderness, a place not inhabited. As Christ is the priest of the gospel
age, a few arguments will show Satan to be the antitypical scapegoat.
The Hebrew word for scapegoat, as given in the margin
of Leviticus 16: 8, is "Azazel." On this verse, William Jenks
remarks: "Scapegoat. See diff. opin. in Bochar. Spencer, after the
oldest opinions of the Hebrews and Christians, thinks Azazel is the name
of the devil; and so Rosenm., whom see. The
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Syr. has Azzail, the 'angel (strong one) who
revolted.' " [1] The devil is here evidently pointed out. Thus we
have the definition of the Scripture term in two ancient languages, with
the oldest opinion of the Christians, in favor of the view that the
scapegoat is a type of Satan.
Charles Beecher says: "What goes to confirm this
is that the most ancient paraphrases and translations treat Azazel as a
proper name. The Chaldee paraphrase and the targums of Onkelos and
Jonathan would certainly have translated it if it was not a proper name,
but they do not. The Septuagint, or oldest Greek version, renders it by
{GREEK CHARACTERS IN PRINTED TEXT}, apopompaios, a word applied by the
Greeks to a malign deity sometimes appeased by sacrifices. Another
confirmation is found in the book of Enoch, where the name Azalzel,
evidently a corruption of Azazel, is given to one of the fallen angels,
thus plainly showing that was the prevalent understanding of the Jews at
that day. Still another evidence is found in the Arabic, where Azazel is
employed as the name of the evil spirit." [2]
Here is the Jewish interpretation:
"Far from involving the recognition of Azazel
as a deity, the sending of the goat was, as stated by Nahmanides, a
symbolic expression of the idea that the people's sins and their evil
consequences were to be sent back to the spirit of desolation and
ruin, the source of all impurity." [3]
In a striking manner these views harmonize with the
events to take place in connection with the cleansing of the heavenly
sanctuary, as revealed to us in the Scriptures of truth.
In the type we see the sin of the transgressor
transferred to the victim. We see that sin borne by the ministration of
the priest and the blood of the offering into the sanctuary. On the
tenth day of the seventh month we see the priest, with the blood of the
sin offering for the people, remove all their sins from the sanctuary,
and lay them upon the head of the scape-
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goat. And we see the goat bear them away into a land
not inhabited. (Leviticus 1: 4; 4: 3-6; 16: 5-10, 15, 16, 20-22.)
Answering to these events in the type, we behold in
the antitype, the great offering for the world made on Calvary. The sins
of all those who avail themselves of the merits of Christ's shed blood
by faith in Him, are borne by the ministration of Christ into the new-covenant
sanctuary. After Christ, the minister of the true tabernacle (Hebrews 8:
2), has finished His ministration, He will remove the sins of His people
from the sanctuary, and lay them upon the head of their author, the
antitypical scapegoat, the devil. The devil will be sent away, bearing
them into a land not inhabited.
"Let us contemplate that scene at Christ's
return to earth. The Church has been judged; Israel has been judged; the
Gentile nations have been also judged. . . . Now it is Satan's turn to
be judged also; and our High Priest is seen 'putting' the moral blame to
where it rightly belongs; judging the great corruptor and banishing him
to a place of separation from the affairs of men." [4]
"Satan is not here, as some allege against this
opinion, put on an equality with God; for the two goats were both
brought 'to Jehovah,' and were His; while the very casting of lots,
which was in itself a solemn appeal to God, shows that Jehovah claimed
the power of disposal. Neither can it be objected that this was in any
sense a sacrifice to Satan, for the animal was not slain to him; it was
only sent to him in disgrace. Bearing upon it sins which God had already
forgiven, it was sent to Azazel in the wilderness.
"The phrase 'scape,' by which the strange term
Azazel is rendered in our version, came from the 'hircus emissarius'
[goat emissary], of the Vulgate. The term Azazel may mean the 'apostate
one'--a name which Satan merits, and which he seems to have borne among
the Jews. It was Satan that brought sin into the world; and this
seduction of
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man adds to his guilt, and consequently to his
punishment. Sin is now pardoned in God's mercy. The one goat was
sacrificed as a sin offering; its blood was carried into the holy place,
and the mercyseat was sprinkled with it. Guilt was therefore canceled;
by this shedding of blood there was remission. But sin, though pardoned,
is yet hateful to God, and it cannot dwell in His sight: it is removed
away to a 'land not inhabited'--severed from God's people, and sent away
to man's first seducer. The sins of a believing world are taken off
them, and rolled back on Satan, their prime author and instigator.
Though the penalty is remitted to believers, it is not remitted to him
who brought them into apostasy and ruin. The tempted are restored, but
the whole punishment is seen to fall on the archtempter. Hell is
'prepared for the devil and his angels.' " [5]
This we believe to be the very event described in the
verses under notice. At the time here specified, the sanctuary service
is closed. Christ lays upon the head of the devil the sins which have
been transferred to the sanctuary, and which are imputed to the saints
no more. The devil is sent away, not by the hand of the High Priest, but
by the hand of another person, according to the type, into a place here
called the bottomless pit.
The Key and the Chain.--It cannot be supposed
that the key and chain are literal; they are rather used merely as
symbols of the power and authority with which this angel is clothed on
this occasion for the accomplishment of his mission.
The Bottomless Pit.--The original word
signifies an abyss, bottomless, deep, profound. Its use seems to be such
as to show that the word denotes any place of darkness, desolation, and
death. Thus in Revelation 9: 1, 2, it is applied to the barren wastes of
the Arabian desert, and in Romans 10: 7, to the grave. But the use which
specially throws light upon the meaning of the word here is found in
Genesis 1: 2, where we
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read that "darkness was upon the face of the
deep." The word there rendered "deep" is the same word
that is here rendered "bottomless pit," and the text might
have been translated, "Darkness was upon the face of the abyss, or
bottomless pit." We all know that the word "deep" as
there used is applied to the earth in its chaotic state. Precisely this
it must mean in this third verse of Revelation 20. Let it be borne in
mind that at the time the angel does this work, the earth is a vast
charnel house of desolation and death. The voice of God has shaken it to
its foundations; the islands and mountains have been moved out of their
places; the great earthquake has leveled to the earth the mightiest
works of man; the seven last plagues have left their all-desolating
trail over the earth; the burning glory attending the general
desolation; the wicked have been given to the slaughter, and their
putrefying flesh and bleaching bones lie unburied, ungathered, and
unlamented from one end of the earth to the other.
Thus is the earth made empty and waste, and turned
upside down. (Isaiah 24: 1.) Thus is it brought back again, partly at
least, to its original state of confusion and chaos. (See Jeremiah 4: 19-26,
especially verse 23.) What better term could be used to describe the
earth thus rolling on in its course of darkness and desolation for a
thousand years than that of abyss, or bottomless pit? Here Satan will be
confined during this time, amid the ruins which indirectly his own hands
have wrought, unable toe flee from his habitation of woe, or to repair
in the least degree its hideous ruin.
Binding of Satan.--We well know that Satan, in
order to work, must have subjects upon whom to work. Without these, he
can do nothing. But during the thousand years of his confinement to this
earth, all the saints are in heaven beyond the power of his temptations,
and all the wicked are in their graves beyond his power to deceive. His
sphere of action is circumscribed, and thus is he bound, being condemned
throughout this period to a state of hopeless inactivity. To a
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mind that has been as busy as his has been for the
past six thousand years in deceiving the inhabitants of the world from
generation to generation, this must be a punishment of the most intense
severity.
According to this exposition, the "binding"
of Satan means simply placing beyond his reach the subjects upon whom he
works. His being "loosed" means their being brought again by a
resurrection to a position where he can again exercise his power upon
them. On this exposition some say that we have mistaken the personnel,
and have the wicked bound, instead of the devil. Yet how often do we
hear, in the daily transactions of life, such expressions as these: My
way was completely hedged up. My hands were completely tied. but when
persons use such expressions, do we imagine that some insurmountable
obstacle was literally thrown across the path they were traveling, or
that their hands were literally confined with ropes and cords?--No; we
understand that a combination of circumstances rendered it impossible
for them to act. Even so here. Why will not people grant to the Bible
the same liberty of speech that they give without question to their
fellow men?
More than this, there is here a great limitation of
Satan's power, which may well be called a "binding." He no
longer has the power of traversing space and visiting other worlds, but
like a man he is confined to this earth, which he nevermore leaves. The
place of the ruin he has wrought now becomes his gloomy prison house
until he is led out to execution at the end of the thousand years.
Verse 4 And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them,
and judgment was given unto them: and I saw the souls of them that were
beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which
had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received
his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lived and
reigned with Christ a thousand years. 5 But the rest of the dead lived
not again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first
resurrection. 6 Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be
priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with Him a thousand years.
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Exaltation of the Saints.--From the devil in
his gloomy confinement, John now directs our attention to the saints in
victory and glory, the saints reigning with Christ. Their employment is
to assign to the wicked dead the punishment due their evil deeds. From
that general assembly John then selects two classes as worthy of
especial attention: the martyrs who had been beheaded for the witness of
Jesus, and those who had not worshiped the beast and his image. The
latter class, those who refuse the mark of the beast and his image, are
of course the ones who hear and obey the third angel's message of
Revelation 14. But these are not the ones who are beheaded for the
witness of Jesus, as some who claim that the last generation of saints
are all to be slain, would have us believe. The word rendered
"which," in the expression, "which had not worshiped the
beast," shows that there is another class introduced. The word is
the compound relative, {GREEK CHARACTERS IN PRINTED TEXT}, hotis,
"whoever," not merely the simple relative {GREEK CHARACTERS IN
PRINTED TEXT}, hos, "who," and is defined by Liddell and
Scott, "Whosoever, whichsoever, any one who, anything which."
As one class, John saw the martyrs, and as another he saw those who had
not worshiped the beast and his image.
It is true that {GREEK CHARACTERS IN PRINTED TEXT},
hostis, is sometimes used as a simple relative as in 2 Corinthians 3:
14; Ephesians 1: 23, but never in such construction as this, where it is
preceded by the conjunction {GREEK CHARACTERS IN PRINTED TEXT}, kai,
"and."
Lest anyone should say that if we render the passage
"and whosoever had not worshiped the beast," we thereby
include millions of heathen and sinners who have not worshiped the
beast, and promise them a reign of a thousand years with Christ, we
could call attention to the fact that the preceding chapter states that
the wicked had all been slain, and the seal of death had been set upon
them for a thousand years. John is here viewing only the righteous
company who have part in the first resurrection.
To avoid the doctrine of two resurrections, some
claim that the passage, "The rest of the dead lived not again until
the
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thousand years were finished," is an
interpolation, not found in the original, and hence not genuine. Even if
this were so, it would not disprove the main proposition that the
righteous dead are raised by themselves in a "first
resurrection," and that there is a second resurrection a thousand
years later, in which all the wicked are brought from their graves.
But the criticism is not true, for all scholarship is
against it. The English Revised Version makes no reference to this text
as being "not found" in ancient manuscripts. The American
Revised Version does not give the slightest hint that a part of the text
is omitted. Rotherham's translation, though noting elsewhere
"doubtful" renderings, says nothing about this text being
spurious. It is found in Tischendorf's eight editions of the Greek New
Testament, and in the Greek text of Westcoot and Hort. The sentence
occurs also in all the Greek New Testaments issued by the world-renowned
critics. Griesbach, Wordsworth, Lachmann, Tregelles, and Alford. Three
or four Greek manuscripts do not have this sentence; sixteen hundred and
ninety-seven of them do contain it if they have the Revelation at all.
Two Resurrections.--"The rest of the dead
lived not again until the thousand years were finished." Whatever
may be said to the contrary, no language could more plainly prove two
resurrections. The first is a resurrection of the righteous at the
beginning of the thousand years. The second is that of the wicked at the
end of the millennium. On such as have part in the first resurrection,
the second death will have no power. They can pass unharmed through the
elements which destroy the wicked like chaff. They will be able to dwell
with devouring fire and everlasting burnings. (Isaiah 33: 14, 15.) They
will be able to go forth and look upon the carcasses of the men who have
transgressed against the Lord, as the quenchless fire and undying worm
are preying upon them. (Isaiah 66: 24.) The difference between the
righteous and the wicked in this respect is seen again in the fact that
while God is to the latter a consuming fire, He is to His people both a
sun and a shield.
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Wicked Raised to Life.--The wicked who are
raised at the end of the thousand years actually live again as they have
once lived on the earth. To deny this is to do violence to this
scripture. In what physical condition they will be raised, we are not
informed. It is usual to say on this point that what we have lost
unconditionally in Adam, is restored unconditionally in Christ. With
respect to physical condition, this should not perhaps be taken in an
unlimited sense, for the race has lost greatly in stature and vital
force, which need not be restored to the wicked. If they are brought
back to the average mental and physical condition which they possessed
during life or the period of their probation, that would certainly be
sufficient to enable them to receive understandingly the last judgment
due them for all their deeds done while living here upon this earth.
Verse 7 And when the thousand years are expired,
Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, 8 and shall go out to deceive
the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth, Gog, and Magog,
to gather them together to battle: the number of whom is as the sand of
the sea. 9 And they went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed
the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city: and fire came down
from God out of heaven, and devoured them. 10 And the devil that
deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the
beast and the false prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night
for ever and ever.
Perdition of Ungodly Men.--At the end of the
one thousand years, the holy city New Jerusalem, in which the saints
have dwelt in heaven during that period, comes down and is located upon
the earth. It then becomes the camp of the saints, around which the
risen wicked gather, numberless as the sand of the sea. The devil
deceives them, and thus brings them to this battle. They are induced to
undertake an impious warfare upon the Holy City, in prospect of some
advantage to be gained by fighting against the saints. Satan doubtless
persuades them that they can overcome the saints, dispossess them of
their city, and still hold possession of the earth. But fire comes down
from God out of heaven, and devours them. The word here rendered
"devoured," Moses Stuart admits is
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"intensive," and signifies "to eat up,
devour, so that it denotes utter excision." [6]
This is the time of the perdition of ungodly men--the
time when "the elements shall melt with a fervent heat, the earth
also," and when the works that are in the earth shall be burned up.
(2 Peter 3: 7, 10.) In the light of these scriptures, we can see how the
wicked are to received their recompense in the earth. (Proverbs 11: 31.)
We can see also that this recompense is not eternal life in misery, but
an "utter excision," entire and complete destruction.
The Wicked Never Tread the New Earth.--Two
views deserve a passing notice at this point. The first is that the
earth is renewed at the second coming of Christ, and is the habitation
of the saints during the thousand years. The other is that when Christ
appears the second time, He sets up His kingdom in Palestine, and
performs in connection with His saints a work of conquest over the
nations left on the earth during the thousand years, and subdues them to
Himself.
One among many objections to the first view is that
it makes the wicked come up in their resurrection, and with the devil at
their head, tread with their unhallowed feet upon the purified and holy
earth, while the saints, who have held possession for a thousand years,
are obliged to yield the ground, and flee into the city. We cannot
believe that the saints' inheritance will ever be thus marred, or that
the fair plains of the earth made new will ever be soiled with the
polluting tread of the resuscitated wicked. Besides outraging all ideas
of propriety, there is no scripture from which even an inference can be
drawn to support this position.
As to the second view, one among many of its
absurdities is that although Christ and His saints have conquered the
earth during the thousand years, at the end of this period the wicked
get the upper hand, they lose their territory, the work of a thousand
years is undone, and they are compelled to beat an
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ignominious retreat into the city for shelter,
leaving the earth to the undisputed sway of their foes.
A Thousand Years in Heaven.--In contrast with
these theories, there is harmony in the view herein presented. The
saints are with Christ in heaven during the thousand years while the
earth lies desolate. The saints and the city come down, and the wicked
dead are raised and come up against it. There the latter receive their
judgment. From the purifying fires which destroy them come forth the new
heavens and the new earth, to be the abode of the righteous throughout
endless ages.
Subjects of Torment.--From verse 10, some have
argued that the devil alone was to be tormented day and night, but the
testimony of this verse includes more than that. The verb phrase
"shall be tormented" is in the plural, and makes affirmation
concerning the beast and the false prophet, whereas it would be in the
singular number if it referred to the devil alone. It will be noticed in
the expression, "where the beast and the false prophet are,"
that "are" is a supplied word. It would be more proper to
supply the words "were cast," coordinating with what was
spoken of the devil just before. A more exact translation, too, supplies
the word "also" after "where." The sentence would
then read, "The devil was cast into the lake of fire, where also
the beast and the false prophet were cast." The beast and the false
prophet were cast into the lake of fire and destroyed, at the beginning
of the thousand years. (Revelation 19: 20.) The individuals of whom
their organizations were then composed, now come up in the second
resurrection, and a similar and final destruction is visited upon them
under the names Gog and Magog.
The Lake of Fire.--Some reader may be inclined
to ask for a definition of the lake of fire. As a comprehensive
definition, may it not be called a symbol of the agencies which God
employs to close up His controversy with the living wicked at the
beginning of the thousand years, and with all the hosts of the ungodly
at the end of that period? Literal fire will of course be
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largely employed in this work. We can better describe
its effects than the thing itself. At the second coming of Christ, it is
the flaming fire in which the Lord Jesus is revealed, the spirit of His
mouth, and brightness of His coming by which the man of sin is to be
consumed, the fire in which great Babylon shall be utterly burned.
(Revelation 18: 8.) At the end of the thousand years, it is that day
that shall burn as an oven (Malachi 4: 1); it is the fervent heat that
shall melt the elements and the earth, and burn up the works that are in
it; it is the fire of Tophet prepared for the king (the devil and his
angel, Matthew 25: 41), the pile whereof is deep and large, and which
"the breathe of the Lord, like a stream of brimstone, doth
kindle" (Isaiah 30: 33). In short, it is the fire that comes down
from God out of heaven. (On the expression, "tormented day and
night forever and ever," see comments on Revelation 14: 11.)
Verse 11 And I saw a great white throne, and Him
that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and
there was found no place for them. 12 And I saw the dead, small and
great, stand before God; and the books were opened: and another book was
opened, which is the book of life: and the dead were judged out of those
things which were written in the books, according to their works. 13 And
the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and hell delivered
up the dead which were in them: and they were judged every man according
to their works. 14 And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire.
This is the second death. 15 And whosoever was not found written in the
book of life was cast into the lake of fire.
A Throne of Judgment.--With verse 11, John
introduces another scene in connection with the final doom of the
ungodly. It is the great white throne of judgment, before which they are
assembled to receive their awful sentence of condemnation, and death.
Before this throne the heavens and the earth flee away, so that no place
is found for them. A moment's reflection on the changes which must then
take place in the earth will bring out the great force of this language.
The scene is that of Peter's burning day, which is the "perdition
of ungodly men," and in which even the "elements" melt
with fervent heat. (2 Peter 3: 7-13.)
Fire comes down from God out of heaven. The works
that are in the world are burned up, and the wicked are destroyed. This
is the fire of Gehenna, which contains all the elements necessary to
consume utterly every mortal being that comes under its power. (Mark 9:
43-48.) Then will be fulfilled Isaiah 66: 24: "They [the righteous]
shall go forth, and look upon the carcasses of the men that have
transgressed against Me: for their worm shall not die, neither shall
their fire be quenced: and they shall be an abhorring unto all
flesh."
Then also will be fulfilled in Isaiah 33: 14:
"Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? Who among us
shall dwell with everlasting burnings?" The answer in the following
verses shows it to be the righteous. This must be the time to which
Isaiah's questions and answers apply.
In all this conflagration the elements are not
destroyed. They are only melted and purged from the taint of sin and
every token of the curse. The almighty fiat then goes forth,
"Behold, I make all things new. . . . It is done." Revelation
21: 5, 6. At the first creation, "the morning stars sang together,
and all the sons of God shouted for joy." Job 38: 7. At this new
creation, that song and shout will be augmented by the glad voices of
the redeemed. So will this earth, wrenched for a time by sin from its
intended orbit of joy and peace, be brought back renewed into harmony
with a loyal universe, to be the everlasting home of the saved.
The Books of the Record.--Men are judged out
of the things written in the books, from which we learn the solemn fact
that a record of all our deeds is kept on high. A faithful and unerring
record is made by the angelic secretaries. The wicked cannot conceal
from them any of their deeds of darkness. They cannot bribe them to pass
over in the record their unlawful acts. They must meet them again, and
be judged accordingly.
Execution of the Sentence.--The wicked are to
be punished according to their works. The Scriptures declare that they
shall be rewarded according to their deeds. That the degree of suffering
which each one is to endure is taken into the
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account as a part of the punishment for his sins, is
evident: "That servant, which knew his lord's will, and prepared
not himself, neither did according to his will, shall be beaten with
many stripes. But he that knew not, and did commit things worthy of
stripes, shall be beaten with few stripes. For unto whomsoever much is
given, of him shall be much required." Luke 12: 47, 48.
The Book of Life.--Why, it may be asked is the
book of life brought forth on this occasion, when all who have part in
the second resurrection, beyond which this scene is located, are already
forejudged to the second death? At least one apparent reason is that all
may see that none of the names of all the multitude who die the second
death are in the book of life, and why they are not there; and if the
names have ever been there, why they are not retained. Thus all the
intelligences of the universe may see that God acts with justice and
impartiality.
It is stated also that "death and hell were cast
into the lake of fire. This is the second death." Here is the final
epitaph of all the forces from first to last that have risen up to
oppose the will and work of the Lord. Satan originated and led out in
this nefarious work. A part of heaven's angels joined him in his false
position and murderous work, and for him and them the everlasting fire
was prepared. (Matthew 25: 41.) Men become involved only because they
join him in his rebellion. But here the controversy closes. The fire is
to them everlasting because it allows of no escape, and of no cessation
until they are consumed. The second death is their punishment, and it is
"everlasting punishment" (Matthew 25: 46) because they never
find release from its dread embrace. "The wages of sin is
death," not punishing forever. Roman 6: 23.
To sum up the argument, "Whosoever was not found
written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire."
Reader, is your name written in the book of life? Are you striving to
avert in your own case the fearful doom that awaits the ungodly? Rest no
until you have reason to believe that your name is among those who are
to share at last in eternal life.
[1] William Jenks, The Comprehensive Commentary, Vol.
I, p. 410, note on Leviticus 16: 8.
[2] Charles Beecher, Redeemer and Redeemed, pp. 67,
68.
[3] Jewish Encyclopedia, Vol. II, p. 366, art. "Azazel."
[4] Albert Whalley, The Red Letter Days of Israel, p.
125
[5] John Eadie, Biblical Cyclopaedia, p. 577, art.
"Scape-Goat."
[6] Moses Stuart, A Commentary on the Apocalypse,
Vol. II, p. 369.