LEFTWING-CHRISTIAN.NET
By Richard Edmondson
With 2012 around the corner, I thought it might be “fun” (in a manner of speaking) to offer up my own personal interpretation on the Apocalypse of Saint John, also known as the Book of Revelation—the final book of the New Testament. To the jaded skeptics among us, prophecy is nothing more than dry, meaningless words on a piece of paper—unless you happen to be a biblical scholar with a faculty position at a prestigious university, in which case you study it solely for the insights it gives into religious communities of the first century or earlier. (Then you get a book publishing contract with Brill or some other academic publisher which in turn peddles your august, acceptable, guaranteed-to-offend-no-one-Jewish conclusions to the reading public.)
On the other hand, we have fundamentalists who believe in the idea of “biblical inerrancy.” Here I’m talking about those who’ve studied every word of the Old Testament, passionately concluding that God blesses those who bless the Jews, while pledging their eternal fealty to Israel. But there is, to be sure, another category of reader—one falling in between these two extremes. Neither fundamentalist nor skeptical, these are they at least open to the idea that prophecy contains some element of the paranormal. Perhaps they’ve read a bit on Nostradamus and thought, “Gee, he sure got it right about Hitler” (or ‘Hister’ as the case may be), perspicaciously concluding that in the end the wise man or woman at least keeps an open mind about things not completely understood (as is certainly the case with Saint John’s Apocalypse). This is the audience for which this piece is intended.
First off let me say that interpretations of the Book of Revelation, probably numbering in the tens of thousands by now, have appeared through the centuries, on and on through time, since the book was written some 1,917 years ago. Is “mystery Babylon” the Rome of the first century? Was it the Soviet Union of the twentieth century? Is it the America of today? All these have been suggested. More theories will doubtless continue to be ground out in the future. (For an overview of some of this, I would suggest my essay, Apocalypse: Perspectives on the Book of Revelation from the Left, Right, and Center ) So from that standpoint, what I’m about to offer is nothing new.
Obviously—and perhaps this needs no pointing out—humanity’s perspectives on the Apocalypse have changed with the onward march of history, evolving in a somewhat cervical line of progression, reflecting world events, as empires have risen and fallen. Some of the interpretations appear quite silly now looking back, indeed even at the time they were given—and here I’m thinking especially of Christian Zionist writers like Hal Lindsey who published books in the latter half of the twentieth century. But I’m also reminded of the words of Allan Boesak, the great South African theologian, who used the Apocalypse with almost artistic effect, as something of a cris de coeur, a cry of the heart, in the struggle against Apartheid:
Boesak understood that John was addressing the political situation in his day, and that his direct reasons for writing Revelation were the tensions between the arrogant world power of that time—Rome—and those who would adhere to the teachings of Christ. But he also viewed the Apocalypse as prophecy, arguing that “no prophecy receives its full and final fulfillment in one given historical moment only, or even in a series of events.” On the contrary, if the prophecy is an “expression of an undeniable truth which comes from God, it will be fulfilled at different times and in different ways in the history of the world.” This minister of the Dutch Reformed Mission Church put forward a “contemporary-historical understanding” of Revelation, and contended—rightly I would say—that in the apartheid government of South Africa, “the beast” had raised its head again.
It is the mysterium iniquitatis, or the “mystery of evil,” as Paul puts it in 2 Thess. 2:7—that famous passage of the New Testament in which the apostle discusses a coming, future “man of perdition.” And so with all of that in mind, I humbly offer the following. It is strictly my own interpretation of a very oblique and mysterious text that for more than 19 centuries now has challenged humanity’s imagination. This is an exegetic endeavor, and therefore perhaps only of an academic nature. But more importantly, there is no compelling reason to regard it as any more, or less, valid than that of, say, Boesak, Daniel Berrigan, Julia Esquivel, or many others who have (with different conclusions) engaged in similar exercises in decades past.
For one thing, YAM is a world military power. “Who is like the beast?” people all over the earth will ask themselves. [13:4] “Who can make war against him?” For another thing, it gets its power from “the dragon,” who clearly is identified, in the previous chapter, chapter 12, as Satan. [12:9] Another thing about YAM is that it has seven heads (as well as ten horns), although we are told that one of its heads “seemed to have had a fatal wound, but the fatal wound had been healed” [13:3]—indicating perhaps that YAM did lose one of its wars at some point in the past. Be that as it may, we are informed that YAM is quite haughty and proud of itself. It clearly believes it is the greatest nation on earth, or as John starkly puts it, YAM “was given a mouth to utter proud words and blasphemies.” [13:5]
Another striking thing about this beast is that people worship it. They worship both the dragon “because he had given authority to the beast,” and they worship the beast itself. [13:4] YAM, as is to be expected, also inflicts death on a massive scale:
John concludes his description of YAM by commenting, “This calls for patient endurance and faithfulness on the part of the saints (i.e. followers of Christ).” [13:10]
If we take strictly the historical view, the one favored by modern day scholars, we can see that in this chapter, and in his description of YAM, John clearly is referring to ancient Rome. But this presents our modern day skeptics with something of a dilemma, because if YAM is Rome, then who does the other beast, ERETZ, represent? What other power in the first century rivaled that of Rome? Parthia perhaps? Hmmm…somehow it doesn’t seem convincing.
And what of this other beast? What does John confide to us about it? Well first off, we learn that ERETZ has two horns—“like a lamb,” as John puts it—but that at the same time it speaks “like a dragon.” [13:11] Again, recall that the “dragon” has been identified as Satan. We also learn that ERETZ exercises “all the authority of the first beast,” but at this point we equally note something curious going on: while it holds equal authority with YAM, one of its primary functions seems to be impelling and inciting the inhabitants of the earth to worship the first beast. [13:12] And how does it go about this? Well one way is by erecting an “image” and giving it the power to speak. Follow closely:
Those who have studied ancient history know that in the first century there were charlatans and con artists around who would rig up statues to make it appear as if they were speaking. In such manner were large numbers of the public duped into believing they were witnessing oracles delivering messages from the gods. It was a convenient method of propagating just about any political view you cared to foster upon a gullible, unsuspecting public. And if we’re adopting the rigidly historical view of the Apocalypse so studiously adhered to by our erudite university scholars, then this, we can see, is the social phenomenon John references. But if we’re taking the Boesakian “contemporary-historical understanding” of the book—namely that “no prophecy receives its full and final fulfillment in one given historical moment”—then what happens? The charlatans and con artists who rigged up statues in the first century find their counterparts in the charlatans and con artists who today own the media. And what, after all, are televisions and cinema screens other than talking “images”?
At this point it’s important to note that while there are some differences between them, YAM and ERETZ are essentially alike as two grossly deformed conjoined twins.
One other little thing John confides about ERETZ is that it forces all people to “receive a mark” on either their foreheads or their right hands. Should they fail to do this, or for some reason refuse, they will not be able to buy or sell anything. [13:16-17] And finally, John closes his description of this second beast with a comment somewhat similar to his closing remark about YAM:
I’m not going to get into the business of trying to name the anti-Christ, which seems to be the man spoken of here, but I will offer up some observations about the number 666—though we’ll save those for later. For right now, let’s backtrack, shall we? Still in the Book of Revelation—but let’s go backwards…to chapter 6.
Finally we meet the fourth rider—and a companion. Mounted on a “pale” horse, the fourth horseman is named “Death,” and he is followed close behind by “Hades.” Hades was the Greek name for the land of the dead. It finds its compliment in the Hebrew word Sheol. The text tells us that Death and Hades “were given power over a fourth of the earth to kill by sword, famine and plague, and by the wild beasts of the earth.” [6:8]
One way of looking at the four horsemen is by viewing all four as symbolic of the same beast, though at different stages of its evolution. This is not specific to either YAM or ERETZ. This can apply to any beast which may arise and imperil humanity at any point in time. Notice that the first horseman, “bent on conquest,” is not so different from any territorial-expansionist state that ever barked out its belligerence at its neighbors in this age or that. History has seen lots of these. More fearsome and bloody is the second horseman, while the third, driven by profit, is totally without pity. Finally comes the last—a carrier of darkness, releasing destruction and annihilation upon “a fourth of the earth.” What John is giving us here is an outline or diagram of the four stages of bestial evolution. He is showing us how an entity evolves from a non-beast, into a partial beast, and finally into a fully-fledged beast of death.
Study the history of any beast that has ever arisen and you will notice that it followed similar stages of development.
In chapter 14 three angels stroll calmly out upon the stage of the Apocalypse, and all three, but especially the last two, have something striking to tell us. The first angel says, “Fear God and give him glory, because the hour of his judgment has come. Worship him who made the heavens, the earth, the sea and the springs of water.” [14:7] Fear and worship God. This in reality is the most important message of all, and I want strongly to emphasize that, but at the same time it’s about what we’d expect to hear from an angel. So let’s move to the other two angels, for they also have something worthwhile to say, and their messages pertain directly to the two beasts, YAM and ERETZ:
Second angel says: “Fallen! Fallen is Babylon the Great, which made all the nations drink the maddening wine of her adulteries.” [14:8]
Third angel says: “If anyone worships the beast and his image and receives his mark on the forehead or the hand, he, too, will drink of the wine of God’s fury, which has been poured full strength into the cup of his wrath.” [14:9-10]
So one of the beasts has fallen, while the other is still left standing. But wait! When did this happen? It hasn’t. At least not yet. What the angels are giving us here is “a preview of coming attractions,” as they used to say in Hollywood. (I think they just call them “trailers” now.) The key question here is which beast falls and which remains standing? Look closely at what the third angel says about the mark on the forehead and the hand. Remember our discussion on chapter 13? This was a characteristic of ERETZ. On the other hand, “Babylon the Great” is code for YAM.
YAM is the beast that will fall.
It is also in chapters 15 and 16 that the angels return—and this time they’re not simply leaving messages. One by one a total of seven angels step forward to pour out seven bowls of God’s wrath upon the earth. With the first three bowls we get plagues, disease, and rivers and oceans turning to blood. [16:2-4] Interestingly, the pouring of the fourth angel’s bowl results in what would appear to be intense solar storms:
Then comes the fifth angel, bringing the downfall of YAM:
They “refused to repent”—sounds a bit like YAM’s pride, doesn’t it? What happens next is less ambiguous. The sixth angel clearly has ERETZ in his sights:
In Genesis 15:18, the eastern border of the land of Israel is given as the Euphrates River. We go on:
The false prophet, remember, is the one whose number is 666.
So it seems ERETZ is deliberately fomenting a war against “the kings of the East” and trying to enlist other nations in the fight. But how much help will it get from YAM? Remember YAM has fallen. Or has it? In the next chapter we begin to see that despite being “plunged into darkness,” YAM has not been overthrown (at least for now) so much as it has been harnessed—by ERETZ.
Finally comes the seventh angel, and we get a massive earthquake “such as was not since men were upon the earth.” [16:17-18] Keep that earthquake in mind.
The “me” referred to is John. Being ‘carried away in the Spirit” means he is having a vision.
Remember in our discussion of chapter 13—YAM was described as having seven heads and ten horns. He was also said to be constantly uttering “proud words and blasphemies.” The beast the woman is riding on is none other than YAM. Okay. But who is the woman? Who is this whore riding upon YAM?
This may seem off the subject, but please bear with me. In the book of Exodus, God gives Moses instructions how to make a tabernacle. The tabernacle is to be the “dwelling place” of God, and as per his instructions its curtains are to be blue, purple, and scarlet—bound together by fasteners of gold. The court inside the tabernacle is to be decorated in the same colors—blue, purple, and scarlet—as also the clothing of the priests. This clothing includes an ephod, a robe, an embroidered coat, a mitre, and a girdle—all made of fabric of the same three colors: blue, purple, and scarlet. And then there are offerings to be made at the tabernacle, including offerings of “fine linen.” Again blue, purple, and scarlet are the colors specified. It would appear, then, that these are God’s favorite colors. In fact, the words “blue,” “purple,” and “scarlet” appear together a total of 26 times in the book of Exodus (25:4; 26:1, 31, 36; 27:16; 28:5, 6, 8, 15, 33; 35:6, 23, 25, 35; 36:8, 35, 37; 38:18, 23; 39:1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 24, and 29). And something else to note as well: every time they appear, it is always in the same order: with blue first, followed by purple, then scarlet. In addition, the word “blue” also appears by itself a total of 7 more times (28:28, 31, 37; 36:11; 39:21, 22, and 31).
It would seem that out of God’s preferred colors, one especially is his favorite—blue.
As I said above, the curtains in the tabernacle are to be fastened together with gold fasteners. But that’s not the only gold in the enclosure. There is more. Lots more. The ark was overlaid with pure gold, as were the rings at its corners through which were to be inserted poles to carry it; in addition there was a table, a candlestick and various vessels, cups, dishes, etc., to go upon the table, carved cherubim, and a mercy seat, the seat upon which God was to sit—all of it, every bit of it, of gold. And even beyond that, gold and precious stones were woven into the priestly garments as well. Also to be worn by the priest was a breastplate of gold upon which were set a number of precious stones, including emerald, sapphire, diamond, amethyst, and more.
Are you beginning to see? The woman seated astride the beast is ERETZ, only this time she comes to us in the guise of a prostitute. Like the priests in the tabernacle, we see her decked out in gold and precious stones. She even drinks from a golden vessel:
ERETZ has become a whore, but not just any whore, as John makes clear. She is the mother of all whores:
BABYLON THE GREAT
THE MOTHER OF PROSTITUTES
AND OF THE ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH [17:5]
In the Rome of the first century it was customary for prostitutes to write their names on their foreheads. It was sort of the equivalent of hanging out your sign and offering your goods for sale. John is using this as a device to emphasize his point that ERETZ has become a prostitute. But let’s look one more time at the clothing in which the prostitute is adorned. Notice the colors…all of them among the prominent colors of the tabernacle:
Purple, scarlet, and gold, yes, but one color is missing—blue. The favorite color of all. This in essence is a counterfeit ERETZ, and her kingdom/state (regardless what color it may put on its flag) is a counterfeit state. But that doesn’t stop it from killing people.
Muslims of course revere Jesus. Some Muslims probably in reality are truer followers of Christ, or at any rate his teachings, than millions of Christian Zionists, who worship Talmudic Jews, who in turn revile Jesus. The woman, in essence, is drinking the blood of martyrs, whose ranks are growing in ever greater numbers. Upon laying eyes upon the sight, John, as we noted above, marvels in astonishment. It is at this point we hear from the angel John is with, and he offers up some interesting comments concerning YAM—the beast upon which the whore rides:
Rome…to YAM…to Mystery Babylon…nurtured by the dragon, they are all essentially one and the same beast, are they not? The angel additionally informs us that under the influence of YAM, a number of “kings” of the earth are being organized for a great war—kings who will “give their power and authority to the beast.” But which beast are they actually giving their power to? YAM or ERETZ? Remember, YAM has been harnessed and saddled and is now being ridden by the great whore, ERETZ, and as John notes [17:3] he has become scarlet-colored.
Let’s leave John and the angel for the moment and return briefly to the subject of colors—not scarlet, not blue, but let’s specifically talk about the color purple this time. Interestingly, it was the favored color of the Roman ruling classes. Purple dye could be obtained only from the murex shellfish and it was extremely expensive. If you wore purple clothing, you were immediately recognized as well-to-do. Another interesting thing to ask ourselves is what two colors combine to create the color purple? But wait!—YAM, as John tells us [17:3], is not purple (or blue or red or white), but instead has become scarlet. And it has been harnessed by the scarlet whore. The once-proud beast, humiliatingly, has become a beast of burden.
Now let’s get back to John and the angel, because the latter is about to relate something very interesting. It seems the beast, YAM, is not particularly content at having been reduced to its lowly station in life:
Finally, the angel confirms exactly what we suspected above: that the “many waters” upon which the prostitute sits represent occupied lands and peoples.
Well certainly mass media indoctrination has a great deal to do with it, and of course there’s a lot that could be said on that subject, but the short answer is simply: because they don’t want to see them.
As may be expected, the merchants and kings are quite distraught by this turn of events:
In one hour? So is YAM destroyed in a nuclear war? We don’t know. John doesn’t say, and of course such things as nuclear bombs were beyond his comprehension. What he does tell us is this:
Maybe it’s an earthquake. All we know for sure is that at three separate points [18:10, 17, 19] the text emphasizes the destruction occurs in “one hour.” In any case, the Apocalypse has reached a major turning point: one beast has fallen; the other remains standing.
In ancient times names were sometimes converted into numbers by means of taking letters of the alphabet and giving them numerical values as follows: the first nine letters of the alphabet were represented as 1-9; the second nine as 10-90; with the remaining letters falling into the 100s. In Hebrew, this process is called Gematria, while in Greek it is referred to as Isopsephy, and such name-to-number conversions were computed in both alphabets. The same thing probably was done utilizing the Latin alphabet as well. Thus, you can simply take the name of your favorite anti-Christ candidate, spell it out in Greek, Hebrew, or Latin (or even English for that matter) and see if it tallies to the correct number.
But wait! What is the correct number? Is it 666—or 616? Most surviving early texts of Revelation give the number of the beast as 666, and that is the number most commonly accepted today. However, a few manuscripts render it as 616. You can read a little more about this here. The discrepancy is most likely due to scribal error, but even after you opt for one number or the other, you still face the question of how to spell the name. Do you spell it using vowels as we normally would in modern English? Or without vowels as was the case with ancient Hebrew? Or if we employ the Greek alphabet—the question of which letters to include again arises. Do we stick to the 24-letter Greek alphabet or do we also include such letters as the stigma and the sampi, now for the most part obsolete but which, at various times, were used to signify letters and numbers? The agreed-upon method was probably known to both John and his intended audience, but we have no way today of knowing what it was. Any methodology you choose will in fact yield some names, but to my way of thinking it’s largely an exercise in self-amusement.
I’d like to move on to the subject of the anti-Christ himself, or more specifically beliefs about the anti-Christ. In the Catholic Church there is a long-standing tradition that the anti-Christ would be a Jew from the tribe of Dan. This belief is based in part on Revelation 7:5-8, where the 12 tribes of Israel are listed but Dan is omitted. An early church father who discussed this in his writing was Irenaeus, who served as bishop of Lyons in the latter part of the second century. Irenaeus, by the way, was also aware of the textual inconsistency with regard to the number—he believed 666 was indeed the correct number. And below, in one rather remarkable paragraph from his treatise Against Heresies, we find the bishop discussing the anti-Christ’s tribal identity as well as the numerical disparity:
“The city” of course is Jerusalem. In the above passage, Irenaeus mentions three scriptural passages—I Thess. 5:3, Jeremiah 8:16, and the same passage from Revelation I mentioned earlier—7:5-8—where the tribe of Dan is omitted. The first passage, from Thessalonians, does not specifically point to Dan, however, the latter two do. Dan is fingered in other biblical passages as well. Let’s have a look at Genesis 49:1, 16-17:
It is equally worth noting that the biblical figure Samson, he who gives his name to the famous Samson Option, was also from the tribe of Dan. A website that has compiled a considerable amount of research on this subject is Watch Unto Prayer. Check out their article The Lost Tribe of Dan, by Janet Moser. You can also find much else of interest at that site as well.
What we have here is Jesus appearing to John and instructing him to write individual letters to seven churches in Asia Minor. Four of the churches—in Ephesus, Pergamum, Thyatira, and Sardis—receive both praise as well as criticism in their letters, while one, Laodicea, has pretty much royally screwed up and comes in only for criticism. However, two of the churches, Smyrna and Philadelphia, are exemplary and are offered nothing but praise. Coincidentally (or not) these are the same two churches undergoing persecution from what John calls the “synagogue of Satan” [2:9 and 3:9].
It’s important for us to remember that the earliest Christians were Jews. Gentiles did not enter the faith in significant numbers until mid first century. We should also recall that in 66 AD the Jews of Palestine launched a revolt against Rome that culminated in the destruction of the Temple and much of the city of Jerusalem. Jewish Christians by and large did not participate in this armed insurrection, led by Jewish terrorists known as Sicarii and now called the First Jewish Revolt, and in failing to join the struggle they earned for themselves the wrath of mainstream Jewry. This, I think, is what is reflected in the term “synagogue of Satan.” Jewish Christians began to be persecuted and expelled from their synagogues. As a result, the Jewish presence in Christianity was a flame which diminished, growing smaller and smaller, dying out finally sometime after the Third Jewish Revolt in 135 AD. But in the middle of the last decade of the first century, when the Apocalypse was written, Jewish Christians were still most likely a fairly strong presence. These in a sense were the original self-hating Jews. Thus when we look at the seven churches, we have to consider that a good many of their members, perhaps even most, were Jews. Likewise today a good many of those speaking out against the criminality of the state of Israel are Jews. It is important to make distinctions like that. And in fact, this is precisely what John is showing us in his letters to the seven churches—the importance of making distinctions.
What’s obviously being prophesied is the coming of Christ. The words “a time, times and half a time” have most often been construed as meaning a year, plus two years, plus a half year—or in other words, half of a seven-year period.
In the Apocalypse, Jesus is referred to in what seem to be contradictory terms—as a “lamb” on the one hand, but also as a being who will “rule with a rod of iron” on the other. In 5:12, the lamb, we are told, “was slain” while in 19:15 the man with the iron scepter “will rule.” It seems to be a deliberate effort on John’s part to contrast the “past Jesus” with the “future Jesus,” the implication of which is that the Jesus to come will no longer be a turn-the-other-cheek nice guy.
The war starts in chapter 19, and as before, it begins with a proclamation from the angels:
What we’re seeing here is another preview of coming attractions. The angels announce [19:7] “the wedding of the Lamb,” at which point they leave the stage, whereupon Jesus appears [19:11]—riding on a white horse and wearing a robe “dipped in blood.” His eyes are like “blazing fire” and he is followed by “the armies of heaven.” [19:12-14] Perhaps these latter are “the kings of the East,” though we don’t know; the text doesn’t say. But suddenly an angel appears, “standing in the sun,” who thereupon calls out to the birds of the earth: “Come, gather together for the great supper of God, so that you may eat the flesh of kings, generals, of mighty men, and horses and their riders, and the flesh of all people, free and slave, small and great.” [19:17-18] The birds, we are clearly given to understand, are going to be devouring a great deal of carrion flesh.
In the next verse, the scene shifts. The beast appears, and once again we see it in the guise of ERETZ:
Chapter 20 is mainly a sort of “mopping up” operation in which the dragon is seized and thrown into the abyss, while the martyrs who had given their lives for Christ are rewarded. Then in chapters 21 and 22 a “new Jerusalem” descends from the heavens. The King James Version puts it best, I think:
John is allowed to see what the new Jerusalem will look like, and it is truly a happy ending to the story. Again from the King James version:
The following two videos, also with Hosein, are kind of lengthy and go into more details about Muslim eschatology than you may want to try and absorb, but they do highlight a number of very striking convergence points between Islam and Christianity’s views of the end times. Remember what I said in part 4 above about the massive earthquake delivered by the seventh angel, and how I said you should keep that earthquake in mind? In the first video, Hosein discusses 10 signs of the last days, three of which—numbers 7, 8, and 9—will be three massive earthquakes, one in the west, one in the east, and one in Arabia. He also talks about the anti-Christ, or the Dajjal, as it’s referred in Islam, but by far the most interesting aspect of the program is the discussion on Gog and Magog, which Hosein identifies with the Khazar kingdom of southern Russia in the eighth century.
The words Gog and Magog appear together only twice in the Bible, in the 38th chapter of Ezekiel and in the 18th chapter of Revelation, but apparently they are covered quite a bit more extensively in the Koran and the Hadith. In the Bible, both are depicted as evil, but it is only Ezekiel which offers any geographical information, specifying that the Gog-Magog kingdom lay north of Israel. Of course, looking at a world atlas, you can see that a straight line leading due north from Israel will take you eventually into the heart of Russia, and back in the last three decades of the 20th century, when Christian Zionists were especially busy churning out paperbacks, the general consensus quite naturally was that Gog and Magog were the Soviet Union. Of course, back then little was known about the Khazars—a kingdom which grew into a rather powerful empire and underwent a mass conversion to Judaism sometime around the eighth century. Khazaria sprang up in the region of the Caucasus Mountains of Russia, stretching—as Shlomo Sand describes in his book, The Invention of the Jewish People—“from Kiev in the northwest to the Crimean Peninsula in the south, and from the upper Volga to present-day Georgia.” What we know today is that the vast majority of European Jews are descended from the Khazars—not the original Israelites.
A rather in-depth perspective on the “Khazars-as-Gog-Magog” viewpoint can be found here. Or you can watch the two videos below. Both as I say are lengthy, and while Hosein has a tendency to digress from time to time, the talk overall covers quite a bit of interesting ground. What the Islamic scholar tells us is that “in the last age Gog and Magog are going to succeed in getting all of mankind to enter into their embrace,” and that we presently are arriving at a period in which “for the first time in history, one people will control the whole world—nobody ever did that before.” He also makes reference to “the imposter state of Israel,” which of course correlates with the point made above about ERETZ as a “counterfeit” state.
One other thing I’ll say before closing. Given that John obviously attached a fair bit of significance to numerology, we might ask ourselves what portents, if any, his book might offer with regard to the numbers “9” and “11.” Moreover, what specifically do we find if we turn to Revelation 9:11? Chapter 9 is perhaps one of the strangest and weirdest chapters in the entire Apocalypse. In verses 1-10, we are told of a plague of locusts which will rise out of the earth’s abyss, along with enormous clouds of smoke, causing such torment that people will wish to die but they will not be able to find death. Verses 7-10 give us a physical description of the locusts—human faces, long hair, yet bodies shaped like horses “ready for battle,” and with tails resembling those of scorpions. Then we come to 9:11:
The Hebrew word Abaddon and the Greek word Apollyon both mean “destroyer.” Pertinently also, the locusts, with their wings, make a sound that could perhaps be conceived of as a helicopter—or as John describes it, “the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle.” Finally in 9:12 we read:
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