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In all of Scripture one cannot find a more complete and incisive
interpretation of history than we
find here in the passage we wish to consider in this chapter.
REV 6:1 And I saw when the Lamb opened one of the seals,
and I heard, as it were the noise of
thunder, one of the four beasts saying, Come and see. [2] And I
saw, and behold a white horse: and he that
sat on him had a bow; and a crown was given unto him: and he went
forth conquering, and to conquer. [3]
And when he had opened the second seal, I heard the second beast
say, Come and see. [4] And there went
out another horse that was red: and power was given to him that
sat thereon to take peace from the earth,
and that they should kill one another: and there was given unto
him a great sword. [5] And when he had
opened the third seal, I heard the third beast say, Come and see.
And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and he
that sat on him had a pair of balances in his hand. [6] And I heard
a voice in the midst of the four beasts say,
A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for
a penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and
the wine. [7] And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the
voice of the fourth beast say, Come and
see. [8] And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that
sat on him was Death, and Hell followed
with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of
the earth, to kill with sword, and with
hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth.
We must remember that the vantage point is heaven.
The Apostle John was on the isle of Patmos
and while confined there for the sake of the gospel (Rev. 1:9) received
a vision. In this vision he saw the
throne of God (Rev. 4:2ff.) and round about this throne there were
gathered representatives of the entire
redeemed world, The church was officially represented by the
24 elders (12 patriarchs of the Old
Testament and 12 apostles of the New Testament) Rev. 4:4.
There was the innumerable throng of the
saints. Rev. 7:9. The brute creation was represented
by four beasts taken from the different spheres of the
animal world (Rev. 4:6ff.) and the angels were there as the heavenly
choir (Rev. 7:11) and as the servants of
God. Rev. 8:2ff.
In one word, John saw heaven in all its glory as it is now
constituted.
The focal point of the vision was Christ. God was the
one sitting on the throne (Rev. 4:11) and in
His right hand was a book, a scroll, that was rolled up and sealed
with seven seals. These were seals on the
edge of the scroll, spaced in such a way that when one was broken
the scroll could be unrolled until the
reader came to the next seal. This scroll represented the
counsel of God as it pertained to the history of the
world and the things that had to come to pass in order that Christ
might realize the kingdom of heaven. In a
sense it contained the blueprint for the heavenly kingdom that John
saw in the vision. The question was
asked, "Who is worthy to open book?" rev. 5:2. By this
is meant, who has the authority and the power to
reveal its contents not only, but to realize the events that are
contained therein. When John wept at heaven's
silence, he was overcome with the prospect that the kingdom of heaven,
as he saw it in the vision, would
never be realized. At this point the attention of John and
all the inhabitants of heaven is directed to the
"lamb as it had been slain, having the seven horns and the seven
eyes which are the seven spirits of God
sent forth into all the world." This indicates Christ is already
in heaven as the Exalted One, having
completed the work of redemption. By this work He merited
all power in heaven and earth. Matt. 28:18.
Christ earned the right and received the power from God to reveal
the secret counsel of God and bring it to
pass so that throughout all history all things are being directed
with view to the personal return of Christ and
the establishment of the kingdom of heaven as John saw it.
They all sang, "Worthy is the Lamb." Rev. 5:9.
The four horsemen are the revealed contents of the first
four seals after they are broken one at a
time. John watched as Christ took the book, broke the seals,
and revealed the contents. When the first seal
was broken, John heard a voice call "Come!" This call was
not directed to John (the inclusion of "and see"
is not a correct translation, it should be simply come) rather to
the horse and the rider. After the breaking of
each seal the same command is given and each time another horse
and rider come forth. The total is four
horsemen.
According to the proper method of interpretation, the four
horsemen represented certain historical
events. Taken in their totality they represent history as
it is being unfolded today. We must not be entirely
futuristic and apply them to the events of the "Great Tribulation"
when the church will not be present in the
world. Rather they refer to all history from the beginning
of the world to the end, especially from the
moment of the ascension of Christ to His personal return.
Throughout all our days these four horsemen are
riding. We emphasize all four are riding. It is not
correct to interpret these four horses as if they ride in
chronological succession, at one point in history the white horse
rides, then later the red begins to ride, etc.
All 4 are present in the world at all times, only at certain points
in history one may be predominant and
seem to draw the "spotlight" of attention.
To interpret these horsemen we must use Scripture with Scripture.
A horse was principally an animal of war. Consider
Job 9:19-25, "he paweth in the valley and
rejoiceth in his strength . . . He mocketh fear . . .neither turneth
he back from the sword." Israel was
forbidden the use of horses in battle lest they attribute the strength
of the victory to men and animals rather
than to God. The Psalmist declared this in Ps. 20:7 and Ps
33:17. The horses as they ride throughout
history represent certain powers that prevail as they are under
the rational and moral direction of Christ (the
rider is not identified here, for it is not significant, merely
the fact that they do not run wild). Each time
Christ breaks another seal, another horse rides. Obviously
these four powers are under the direct control of
Christ Who alone is worthy to break the seals and send for the horsemen.
What are these powers that prevail throughout history?
We get our first clue from the colors of each horse and then
from the additional description given
in the test.
The first horse is described as white. In Scripture
white is a symbol of purity, "though your sin be
as scarlet they shall be white as snow," Isa. 1:18.
The saints, victoriously gathered in heaven, wear white
robes, Rev. 7:9 and Rev. 19:11. Besides it is added in the
text itself that the rider receives a crown, the
symbol of victory and he is sent forth, "Conquering and to conquer,"
repeated for emphasis. The white
horse therefore represents the victorious power of the preaching
of the gospel which alone is able to purify
the hearts of men and bring the entire church into heavenly perfection.
Over against the blackness of this
world, which remains black, Christ gathers His own out of the world
through the sanctifying power of His
Spirit and Word. It is the victory of the truth over the lie,
of the holy will of God over the moral depravity
of men. This truth and holiness is applied to 5the hearts
of the elected through the power of the preaching
of the gospel. Notice emphatically, that the power is under
the direction of Christ! He send His Word to all
those for whom He died on the cross and therefore surely realizes
the eternal good pleasure of His Father in
heaven, Consider Acts 2:47, "The Lord added daily such as
should be saved." Acts 16:6, "forbidden by the
Holy Ghost to preach the word in Asia." Also Acts 13:48, "As
many as were ordained to eternal life
believed." this horse has been riding throughout all history
and continues to ride with power and glory till
the last elect shall be gathered within the church.
The second horse is red in color. According to Scripture
red is a symbol of lust and passion. The
contrast is made between red and white (purity) in Isa. 1:18.
There, our sins are described as scarlet and
crimson. The redness of Esau indicated robust power.
Gen. 25:25. The dragon, Satan, is pictured as red,
burning with lust and evil. This evil lust for power and wealth
produces war and bloodshed. Prov. 23:29
speaks of "redness of eyes" as a result of wounds. All this
indicates that the red horse is the power of lust
that produces bloodshed. This is confirmed in the text, "power
was given to him that sat thereon to take
peace from the earth, and that they should kill one another;
and there was given unto him a great sword."
This takes place throughout all history. From Abel's blood
that cried to the God of heaven to the last battle
of Armageddon, human history is written in blood.
The third horse is black. Also in this connection the
Bible speaks on the meaning of this color.
"Our skin is black like an oven because of the terrible famine."
Lam. 5:10, or "Judah mourneth and the
gates thereof languish, they are black unto the ground" Jeremiah
14:2. Blackness speaks of famine, of so
great scarcity that one is in anguish. This black horse represents
the power of economic and social strife
associated with poverty and riches. The rider has a pair of
balances by which he measures out one's daily
portion (a measure of wheat and three measures of barley) for one's
daily wage ( a penny). Here we see
scarcity, a meager existence by which one has not enough to live,
but too much to die. This is in contrast to
"touch not the wine and oil." this represents riches and luxury
present in the world. What an accurate
description of history this really is. There has been constant
striving between the haves and the have nots.
Labor unions with strikes and boycotts, public riots have their
deep roots in the distribution of wealth.
Surely this third horse is also riding today, individually, nationally,
and internationally.
The fourth and last horse is pale in color. Literally
this is greenish yellow. Scripture makes two
references to this color. Both in Isa. 29:22 and Jer. 30:6
it describes people that are faint and about to die.
The power of death upon the body produces this effect, a pale corpse
is a terrifying sight to behold. This
horse represents death in all its horror and the many ways that
bring one to the grave. In our text the name
of the rider is "Death" and "Hell" follows after him. Graphically
this portrays the grim reaper claiming
mankind at any given point in history bringing them to the state
of the dead and grave (Hades, hell). A
substantial number of the earth's population is constantly being
killed (one fourth indicates that one portion
of the four corners of the earth, not literally, rather a goodly
number). To wit diseases, murders, violence of
many forms, traffic accidents (50,000 a year in the United States
alone), plane crashes, earthquakes, floods,
etc. This horse also rides on and on throughout history.
We must now ask, what is the relationship between these four
horsemen? Is there any significance
to the fact that the white horse is first and the other three follow?
Do they have a causal relationship
amongst each other at all? These questions must be related
to Christ Who is the One Who breaks the seals
and sends the riders forth. Each time Christ opens the seal
and one of the beasts (representatives of all
creatures) calls, come!
In brief we must see that the white horse is the first because
it represents the essential purpose of
God in history. The preaching of the gospel and the cause
of the church in the world is essentially the only
purpose that God has with all events in time. The world continues
to exist because God will gather from the
fallen human race of men His own elect, redeemed in Christ.
This is the one work of God in history.
The remaining three horses are important only in their relationship
to the first, the cause of the
church of Jesus Christ. I emphasized at the outset that if
we can understand properly these four horsemen,
we will have the key that unlocks the proper interpretation of history.
Here it is then! There is significance
to wars, to economic and social unrest, to pestilence and riots
that lead to death only in their relationship to
the church. Their significance is that they serve the gathering
in two ways, first by preventing the premature
establishment of the anti-christian world kingdom, and secondly,
by strengthening the faith of the people of
God so that they continue in the midst of affliction looking for
the day when Christ shall establish His
kingdom of peace, not on earth, but in the glory of the new heavens
and the new earth.
Let's consider how this is true.
Take wars first of all. the red horse (war) follows
after the white horse. We ask, how do wars
serve the purpose of the church? throughout history fallen
man has scoffed at God's sentence of death.
Using his depraved reasoning and perverse will, he envisions a kingdom
of pleasure in the midst of this
world. Mockingly he scoffs at Christ and His kingdom.
He reacts to the pure preaching of the gospel with
bitter hatred and becomes all the more determined to erect his kingdom
in defiance of God and Christ. (In
this sense the first horse causes the rest of the horses to follow.)
So he strives in passionate envy and greed
to build this kingdom. He wants to take hold of his neighbors
land and possessions and soon his passion for
power brings him into war with his neighbor. This makes a
divided world and such a world cannot stand in
great power and victory. Today man strives for international
peace, yet it is as elusive as the mechanical
rabbit. By this division the powers of the world fight amongst
each other instead of concentrating their
power against the chruch. While this takes place the church
is able to dwell in the world and be busy with
preaching of the gospel. While war hardens mankind into deeper
hatred and determination against God and
excites him to build the kingdom of antichrist, the effect of war
on the church is that of humility. When our
sons go off to battle, and we send them there in obedience to Christ
who places rulers over us, we as
Christians are made to see that we have no abiding city here below.
the red horse serves the white as Christ
controls all events with His eye upon His church.
Similarly also the black and pale horses follow the white
and red horses. Economic stress, the
unbalance of the distribution of wealth which produces riots, unrest,
boycotts, strikes and all the rest follow
upon war and serve the purpose of the church. We can see this
round about us daily. Man may build
wonderful machines like the automobile, yet death and hell follow
as more people are killed with them than
with all the wars combined. Christ sends forth the black and
pale horses. by their presence Christ casts out
His hand of judgment on His enemies. Our surgeons practice
their skills, yet they stand baffled before an
increase in diseases. Murders, suicides, "accidents" abound
more and more. This too serves the church.
While these things plague the world, their dream of the great society
must also be put off. They are
frustrated in their design to build the perfect man in the perfect
society in the perfect world. While this
transpires the church is still able to be gathered and to worship
5together. We can still enjoy a measure of
freedom to let the light of the gospel shine forth. The terrifying
effects of the presence of these two horses
on the people of God also works for spiritual strength. through
poverty, through the loss of employment,
through sickness, and even death we are brought closer to God by
His all sufficient grace.
When the four horse will have finished their course, there
will be a brief period of international
peace, economic prosperity, great advances in medicine and science,
so that all will wonder at man and his
achievements. During this time the great tribulation will
take place for the people of God that are yet on
earth. Then the full anger of the wicked will be directed
against the faithful witnesses and they shall be
slain in the streets.
That day is near at hand. Yet, we fear not, for we
know from history's lesson that God's all
sufficient grace will surely give to His church the complete victory.
All things serve the well being of the
church, this includes the coming of antichrist.
When Christ shall come, He will shake the heavens and the
earth in His divine wrath. The wicked
will see briefly the terrible fury of His anger before being cast
into the burning depths of the unquenchable
fire of hell.
When Christ shall appear upon the clouds of heaven, we may
be found poor, naked, hiding in the
caves of the earth, yet we will see Him in power and great glory
and hear His blessed voice say, "Enter into
the joy of the Lord."
Christ is all powerful. He controls all events as He
sends forth the horses and his rider working all
things for the day of His coming. With this insight into the
Word of God we have reason not to be faint
hearted, but to watch and pray.
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