Chapter 13
Roman Babylon and the
Resurrection of the Witnesses.
THE fourth beast of Daniel's vision, the
ten-horned and two-horned beasts, and the image of the sixth head of the
ten-horned beast, are so many different symbols, which represent the Sin-power
in its European constitution. The. apocalyptic
beasts and their image are introduced into the thirteenth chapter of Revelation
to represent certain things in relation to the Little Horn, to its Eyes, and to
its Mouth, which could not have been set forth in the symbol of the Roman
dominion seen by Daniel. In this prophet the Eyes of the Little Horn are said
to be "like the eyes of a man," which gave it "a look more stout
than its fellow-horns." Of the mouth it is said that " it spake very great things," which were "words
against the Most High"; and that "because of the voice of these great
words," consumption and final destruction came upon the whole beast.
This is the nearest approach the Eyes and Mouth
make to that order of men called the Popes. They are represented as an
audacious and blasphemous power, "wearing out the saints of the Most High,
and changing tirnes and laws"; and concerning
the saints, it is added, "They were given into his hand until a time,
times and the dividing of tirne."
Under a new symbol, some additional information
is given respecting the Eyes and Mouth in the exercise of their power, etc.
They are inserted into an image, which is said to resemble that head of the
ten-horned beast which had been wounded in its power, throne, and jurisdiction
over the third part of the Roman world (Rev 8:12,13; 13:3,14) This was the
sixth, or imperial, head. Hence, the Eyes and Mouth were part of an imperial
Image. Now, when we look mto the testimony, we find
that it did not set up itself; but is the puppet of another power represented
by a beast with two horns, which answers to the Little Horn itself, minus the
Eyes. The Mouth of the Little Horn, of the two-horned, and of the ten-horned
Beasts, is common to the three symbols -- it is mouth to them all. It is said
to be like the mouth of a dragon; hence it is Roman and Imperial -- the
speaking organ of the three. Now, the same things are affirmed of it by John as
by Daniel. He says, "It speaks great things and blasphemies against God,
to blaspheme his name and his tabernacle, and them that dwell in the
heaven." And then it is added that "it was given to him to make war
with his saints and to overcome them." It also continues the same length
of time which is expressed by " forty-two
months" instead of by "time, times, and dividing of time" for it
is clear that as long as the beast lives, so long will its mouth continue to
speak.
Now, in the exercise of the power given to it,
the imperial or Papal image spoke, and in consequence
of its speaking it caused all to be killed who would not do homage to it. It
also caused all its subjects to be marked with the sign of a cross "in
their right hand" in ordination, and " on
their foreheads" in paidorhantism and
unless a man had this mark it would not permit him to "buy or sell
" as a spiritual soul-merchant in its bazaars.
The symbols of this chapter of revelation, it may
also be remarked, represent the Gentiles in their civil and ecclesiastical
constitution, who tread down the holy city.' (Rev.11:2) This is evident from
the testimony, that the beast with its ten horns and mouth of a lion, possessed "power over all kindreds,
and tongues, and nations." From what has been advanced the reader will
then perceive that two parties are represented which are antagonists, namely,
the saints and the sin-power. Hence, he has before him a symbolical exhibition
of the sentence upon the serpent, saying, "I will put enmity between thee
and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and
thou shalt bruise his heel." The saints are marshalled
on the side of the woman and their persecutors on the side of the serpent. The
war has been long, fierce, and bloody; but the saints' victory is certain and
the destruction of the beasts and their image inevitable and sure.
In the previous chapter I have briefly sketched
the cruelties practised by the Ten Horns, the Little
Horn, and the ecclesiastical image upon the witnesses and the holy city (called
the saints in the aggregate) in all the countries in which they have appeared. France
and the "bloody house of Austria"
have been pre-eminent in the strife. They are dyed in infamy of every kind,
which they have enacted on the most virtuous of the human race. In all their
deeds of fiendishness they have been applauded by the archdemon
of the Papacy, who styles them his beloved sons, and the mercenary instruments
of his cruelty, his "dear children." Does the reader suppose that the
just and merciful Father of the Lord Jesus Christ, and of those who keep His
commandments and have His testimony, hath looked on the fiendism
of the sin-power with indifference; and that He will permit their wrongs to die
Un-avenged? If he do, he has greatlv mistaken God's
character, and knows nothing at all of the awful judgments He has decreed against
those who "bruise the heel" of His beloved. Did He judge Egypt for
oppressing Israel, though at the time idolaters; did He sink Sodom into the
volcanic abyss for its crimes; and did He punish Judah with pestilence, famine,
sword, and scattering for eighteen centuries, because of unbelief of " the
truth as it is in Jesus," and for killing His servants -- and will
He not avenge His elect whom He hath chosen, upon the demoniac powers which
have continued to crush them ? The scripture saith,
" Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints"; and
"precious shall their blood be in his sight." If the blood of the
murdered Abel, crying from the ground, was heard of God and avenged, what shall
be said of that exceeding great and piercing cry, which upon the same
principle, ascends to His throne from that ocean of blood which has been poured
out like water from the hearts of his slaughtered saints? Doth it not cry aloud
to heaven against popes, emperors, kings, hypocritical and blaspheming priests,
and their hordes of mercenaries; and against all ecclesiastical abettors of
arbitrary power in Church and State? Yes, that voice, though unheard and
unheeded by those who worship the beasts and their image, continually ascendeth, and hath " entered into the ears of the
Lord of sabaoth," saying, "How long, 0
Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge aud
avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth?" (Rev. 6:10) The
hour has come, and the death-knell of the destroyer hath sent forth its clangour throughout the dominion of the Roman beast. As in
the case of Sodom, though unseen by
the eye of the flesh, God hath "come down to see if they have done
altogether according to the cry." He has found it even so. "Their
sins have reached unto heaven," therefore. He will reward them double for
all the evil with which they have afflicted His saints.
Such, then, is the case before us. The great
national crime has been committed, and perpetuated, of converting the truth
of God into a lie, of blaspheming His name, and of bruising the heel of His
saints. All nations are guilty of this, and as national offences can only,
and must necessarily, be punished by national judgments, retribution is pouring
out upon them according to the word of the Lord. The outline I have sketched
has brought us down to the epoch of the death of the two witnesses. Daniel
beheld this, and at the same time received the information, that the Little
Horn was to triumph over "the saints" to the end of the beast's life, which it arrives at by the end of 1,260 years.
This long period having elapsed, he beheld a sight, the knowledge of which must
rejoice the heart of every one who sympathizes in the award of justice to them
who are oppressed. He saw a revolution in human affairs that completely
reversed every thing that had previously existed. Instead of "the
saints" being worn out any longer, he saw the power of judgment given to
them to take away the dominion of the Little Horn, to slay the beast, and to
destroy his body with the burning flame, so that nothing represented by the
symbol should be left.
The territory which is to be the scene of this
judgment is all that region comprehended in the Roman
Dragon, and in the Austrian and German domain. By the Roman Dragon, I mean the
old Roman territory, extending from the Euphrates to the
German Ocean,
including Turkey,
Italy, Switzerland,
Roman Africa, and the other countries contained within the limits of the ten
toe-kingdoms. Upon this territory, then, our attention must be fixed if we
would discern the progress of the events by which the beast's destiny is
fulfilled. He is to be destroyed by the burning flame. It is evident,
therefore, that the territory of his dominion will be turned into a region of
flame, in which the populations being everywhere insurgent, and contending with
fire and sword against their oppressors, it will become "a lake of fire
burning with brimstone" (Rev 19:20). Into this are cast alive the
two-horned beast of the earth, and the image, which before the end of its
existence is stripped of its imperial character, and reduced to the humbler
dignity of a "prophet," and that a false one.
What remains of this chapter will be occupied in
explaining these words of the prophet, -- "The judgment shall sit, and they
shall take away his dominion, to consume and to destroy it
unto the end." (Dan 7:26). The judgment sits upon the whole beast, and
consists of slaying and burning. This distinction is preserved in the
Apocalypse; for whilst the beast and false prophet are cast alive into a lake
of fire, "the remnant," or the horns that remain, are "slain with the sword of him that sits upon the
horse, which sword proceedeth out of his mouth." "With the breath of
his' lips will he slay the wicked." This implies
a prolongation of existence to certain powers beyond that of the beast and
false prophet. These will be totally destroyed by "the saints"; but
"the remnant" are reserved for a future fate
at the hand of the King of kings and Lord of lords. Daniel makes the same
distinction in ,the judgment of the fourth beast.
Speaking of it as a whole, he says, "I beheld till the beast was slain,
and his body given to the burning flame." The consuming
affects the body; and the destroying, "the remnant" of his
political carcase by the sword. Turkey,
and the Austro-Papal dominions, constitute the hody and Little Horn of the beast. These go into perdition
first. They entirely disappear from among "the powers that be"; as
completely as a carcase cast into Nebuchadnezzar's
furnace. After their fate is sealed, a power arises to conquer the toe-, or
horn-kingdoms, which are not suppressed, but made tributary to the Conquering
power; and are incorporated as vassal kingdoms into his dominion; and under his
banner meet the Lord of hosts in battle in the plains of another Waterloo,
called Armageddon, where both he and they are overcome, and lose their crowns
for ever.
Speaking of the Little Horn, or Austro-Papal
power, the prophet says, "They shall take away his dominion."
Now the context shows that the agents indicated in "they" are
the "saints" with whom the horn has contended so long. In the twenty~second
verse he says, "Judgment was given to the saints."
Having received power to judge, what use did they make of it? This is answered
in the twenty-sixth verse "to take away his dominion"; and if a
further inquiry be made, by what means? The reply is by consuming and
destroying it with fire and sword. There is a fitness
in this. The Austro-Papacy has been established by fraud and violence; and
shored up to the end of its existence by murder. It has fattened on the blood
of the two witnesses in all countries of its dominion; and therefore the rule
of the judgment is to "give them blood to drink, for they are worthy"
(Rev 16:6). This is the fate impending over Austria
and all thrones which have given their power to execute the will of the Roman
prophet.
But to this some may object, How can the saints
execute the judgment written, (Psalm 149:5-9) seeing that the beast overcame
them and killed them in the reign of Louis XIV ? It is
very certain that they cannot, unless they are the subjects of a political resurrection ; and this the testimony affirms they should
be. But before they rose from political death, they were to remain politically
dead, but unburied, for three symbolic days and a half; after which the spirit
of political life from God was to enter into them; and in consequence they were
to stand upon their feet, ascend to power, and strike terror into all their
enemies who beheld them.(Rev 11:8-12). They were to
lie dead and unburied "upon the broad way of the great city, which
spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt,
where also our Lord was crucified." Jesus was put to death in Judea; but
then Judea was a Roman province at the time, and therefore a part of "the
great city"; for all the Roman provinces were regarded merely as an
extension of Rome which ruled over them, inasmuch as the Roman city was made
co-extensive with the empire by the edict of Caracalla.
This empire, then, as a whole, is figuratively designated by the Spirit as Sodom
and Egypt~as Sodom,
because of its filthiness, and as Egypt,
because of its darkness; and as Sodom
and Egypt
conjointly, because the fate of Sodom
awaits Rome, and the judgments of Egypt,
the nations that acknowledge its spiritual dominion.
The ten horns of the Roman Dragon are ten parts
of this great city; the most ample of which, as will be seen by consulting a
map of the Roman empire, is the
realm of France.
It is, therefore, styled "the broad way" by the Spirit. Here
the witnesses received their death blow, which was speedily followed by their
political death in all other parts of the great city. Though politically dead
the witnesses were still visible, or unburied. The democracy and the Calvinists
still existed in France;
and democracy and dissent in England,
where thousands of the Huguenots found refuge; but in all countries of the
beast they were at zero in political affairs.
In their exile from Europe,
multitudes found an asylum in the American wilderness. There they mingled with
their brethren, whose progenitors had expatriated themselves
from Britain to
escape the galling yoke of Church and State Toryism
which was carrying itself with a high hand. Thus, by the tyranny of the beast,
liberty and democracy were crushed in Europe, and
simultaneously planted in American soil. But even there the witnesses were not
permitted to rest, for they lived in the other hemisphere, though dead in this.
Home tyranny claiming the right to tax the unrepresented,
the descendants of the Puritans and Huguenots resisted, and refused to pay. A
profligate and extortionate government goaded them into insurrection, by which thev became entitled to the honourable
distinction of "rebels," and by their success, to that of
"patriots." The struggle was between might and right. An arbitrary
government demanded tribute, and an ignorant clergy tithes; and the democracv, religious and secular, gave them lead and steel.
This was the old fashion in which they had been accustomed to "devour
their enemies" during their 1,260 years' contest with the beast. But the
conflict was unequal; and but for the suicidal policy of one of its horns, the
witnesses would have again been overcome.
The liberty-hating, and the heretic-slaying,
Bourbons sent a fleet and army to enable "liberty, equality and
fraternity" to triumph in America!
Not that they hated sectarianism and democracy less than formerly, but that
they hated England
more. La Fayette and his companions, though scions of nobility, became the sons
of freedom. Britain
was check-mated; and the model republic founded, and acknowledged by all the
horns of the beast. There, then, beyond the broad waters of the mighty deep,
the tree of liberty, planted by the two prophets of human rights, spreads its
ample and expanding branches, affording shade and shelter for the persecuted
and oppressed of all nations, who may be fortunate enough to escape the
"great iron teeth" and "brazen claws" of the all-devouring
monster of the sea.
Peace being proclaimed, the French army returned
to Europe in 1783. This proved a refreshing breeze to
the democracy of that kingdom. "Philosophers" were hard at work
teaching the people to despise the superstition of Rome,
and the creatures that fattened upon it. They miscalled it Christianity; as if
the religion of Christ had the remotest affinity to that of" Sodom and
Egypt" But Romanism was the only view the people had of Christianity; for
there had been no testimony borne against it in France for ninety-eight years.
The priests taught them that Romanism was the religion of the Bible, but would
not permit them to look into it to see. Need one be surprised, then, that when
the democracy arose to judgrnent it should abolish
such a Christianity as that which had destroyed them; treat the Bible with
contempt; and even deny the existence of a God, who was supposed to sanction
the falsehoods of Romanism, or to approve its hypocritical and licentious
priests? The liberalism of the American auxiliaries manifested itself soon
after their return, in the appearance of an American party in French politics.
The influence of this in connection with the scepticism
of " the philosophers," became " the
breath of (political) life from God." It entered into the unburied
'witnesses and "they stood upon their feet," ready for action. Thus
they drew their first breath in the very city where they had received their
death blow.
A few words may be offered here respecting the
time signified by "three days and a half," during which the
two witnesses were deprived of political life. The Apocalypse as a whole is a miniature
representation of "the things which are, and the things which shall be
hereafter" (Rev 1:1,19); that is, of things in
existence while John was in Patmos, and of the things
shortly to happen after he wrote, and until the setting up of the kingdom.
Everything is exhibited on a smaller scale than the reality; and the time of
the symbols is in keeping with them. Thus, multitudes of witnesses are reduced
to two; and the years of their prophesying, to days. It would have been a
violation of the fitness of things to have made them testify for 1,260 years,
because this is far beyond the duration of human life, which is the rule of
speaking in the case. So in indicating the time of their unburied state, the
real time must be expressed in accordance with the physical laws. A dead body
might lie in the open air for "three days and a half" without
disappearing; but not three years and a half, or three months and a half.
Hence, the symbol required the smallest possible period capable of
expressing the real time of their political non-existence; and that is
"three days and a half."
The time that elapsed between their death in
1685, and their resurrection in 1790, was 105 years. This is a period contalned in three lunations and
a half, on the day for a year principle. It is harmoniously related to the
"forty-two months" of the down-treading of the Holy
City mentioned in Rev. 11:2. That
is to say, forty-two months equals three-and-a-half years, which, in prophetic
language, would be expressed as "three days and a half."
This consideration led Mr. Bicheno,
a Baptist Pastor in Newbury, England,
in 1793, to conclude that lunar days were intended. Taking the Jewish
month of 30 days (for the 42 months of Rev. 11:2 are coupled with the 1,260
days in verse 3), Mr. Bicheno found that
three-and-a-half times thirty, or 105 days (years), gave just the interval from
the death of the witnesses in 1685 to their political resurrection in 1790, in
the time of the Great French Revolution. Mr. Bicheno,
though cloudy on some points, was nevertheless, sufficiently sound to be
regarded as one of the witnesses. He did well in stirring up his own generation
to the study of the Apocalypse; and in discovering for us the true import of
the "three days and a half." His labour was not lost; and we thank
our Heavenly Father for raising up such witnesses,
whose memory the faithful in Christ Jesus do always delight to honour.
Now, "after three days and a half,
the breath of life from God entered into the witnesses"; that is, after
the three months and a half of day-years had fully expired, "they stood
upon their feet." The death-period elapsed on Feb. 18, 1789, and in two months and fourteen days
after, being May 4, they accepted the invitation of "a great voice from
the heaven," saying to them, "Come up hither!" This great voice
was the royal proclamation by which the States General were convened, and in
which the witnesses took their seats as the third estate of the kingdom. They
soon proved their existence there by the events which followed. They ascended
to power in a portentous cloud, which burst upon the devoted heads of their
enemies; and in the earthquake which followed they shook the world.
The resurrection of the Calvinist, and Secular,
democracies, in the great city, constitutes a great and remarkable epoch in
prophetic time. It was 1,260 years from A.D. 529. Now when we turn to the
history of that period, we find that it also is dignified as a notable epoch of
the times of the Gentiles. From 529 to December
16, 533, a period of four years and eight months, there were
published the celebrated code, pandects, institutes, and novels of Justinian. "These were declared," says Gibbon, "to be the legitimate system of civil
jurisprudence; they alone were admitted in the tribunals; and they alone were
taught in the academies of Rome, Constantinople,
and Berytus. He addressed them to the senate and
provinces as his eternal oracles; and his pride, under the mask of piety,
ascribed the consummation of this great design to the support and inspiration
of the Deity." These documents became the civil and ecclesiastical
constitution of the Roman empire; and as the new kingdoms of the west looked up
to the majesty of Constantinople and the episcopate of Rome as the founts of
jurisprudence, civilization, and religion, they gradually came to adopt the Justinian as the common law code of their kingdoms. An
incident recorded in the memoirs of Lavallette will illustrate the truth of
this. "The events that preceded the grand drama of 1789," says he, "took me by surprise in the midst of my books, and
my love of study. I was then reading the Esprit des Lois, a work that
charmed me by its gravity, etc. I wished also to become acquainted with the
code of the laws of France;
but Dommanget, to whom I mentioned my desire,
laughed, and pointed to the Justinian code as the
common law code of the kingdom." The institutes were published in 533, and
in that year, in the case of an appeal by the Emperor Justinian
to the ecclesiastical decision of the Bishop of Rome, he addressed him as the
head of all the holy churches of the empire.
But the Justinian code
was not adopted by Europe simultaneously, nor in 534, when his labours were
complete. He had made the Roman bishop spiritual head of the empire, but his
supremacy was not acknowledged by the toe-kingdoms until about seventy-five
years after. Students flocked from all of them to the schools of Rome,
Constantinople and Berytus,
where they studied the law of the empire; and from these centres
also priests and missionaries were sent to propagate the faith, and to convert
the governments of the west to the religion of the Roman bishop. When this was
accomplished, Roman law and Roman superstition struck deep root among the
institutions of the west. The Roman high priest was regarded as their spiritual
father; and the emperor, as the imperial head of the divided, but still Roman,
dominion of the east and west. This work required years to complete; but when
finished, as it was about 606 or 608, we find the contest between the Bishop of
Rome and the Patriarch of Constantinople, for the spiritual supremacy of the
world, brought to a conclusion by the former being proclaimed universal
bishop by the Emperor Phocas. From 529 to 604 is
a period of 75 years; and from 533 to 608 is also 75 years; and between 604 and
608, the Bishop of Rome obtained his legal recognition, which was celebrated by
the erection of a statue to Phocas, with the date of
608 inscribed upon it.
This period of 75 years with a double beginning
and a double ending of four years, is the period of
the civil and ecclesiastical constitution of the ten-horned beast, when the
Roman Dragon "gave him his power, and his throne, and great
authority." (Rev 13:2) Now this symbol is to "continue forty and
two months," which is. the representative
time of the continuance of the things represented by the symbol expressed in
miniature. It is the symbolical duration of the decemregal
and imperial constitution of Roman. Europe. Daniel
expresses the same duration by the phrase, "time, times, and dividing
of time"; which also represents l,260 years.
The beasts and their image, and the little horn and his eyes and mouth, are to
prevail against the saints until the end of that period. The little horn, and
the two-horned beast and the image, do not exist all that time; for they did
not appear till 270 years "after" the Justinian
epoch: but although they did not all rise from the earth and sea, and attain to
dominion at one and the same time, yet it is plainly revealed, that they are
all to lose their independence, and finally their sovereignties at the end of
the 1,260 or forty-two months of years; so that while the ten horns will have practised 1,260 years from the time of Phocas,
the little horn and his apocalyptic synonyms will have existed only somewhat
more than 1,000. The Bishop of Rome, however, as lion mouth of the ten horns,
will have passed through his 1,260 years.
Not to interrupt the train of thought before us,
I shall finish what I have to say about the time of the beast before I return
to the subject of the witnesses. The prophet saith, "Blessed is he that waiteth, and cometh to the 1,335 days." (Dan 12:12,13) The end of this period is a time of blessedness to the
saints of the Holy City,
because like Daniel they shall "stand in their lot in the end of the
days." But so long as the fourth beast "prospers" this cannot
be; for the Gentiles tread down the Holy
City until the 42 months expire. .
. . There will, however, be no delay of the resurrection on account of the
"practising" of the beast, because it will
have to be destroyed out of the way by the Holy
City. The prophet informs us, that
all things shown to him are to be finished after a "time, times, and a
half," (Dan 12:7,2) or 1,260 years; and among
these wonders is the resurrection of many of the dead to everlasting
life....(Dan 12:7,2)
"Justinian's
legislation (A.D. 530-3) was all devoted to the building up and strengthening
of the Catholic Church; while the legislation of the National Assembly (A.D.
1790-3) was all directed to its destruction. It is a remarkable fact that these
two mutually antagonistic and subversive systems of legislation flourished
exactly 1,260 years apart from epoch to epoch, and that the one hour of 30
years added to it, or 1,290, brings us to the beginning of the outpouring of
the sixth vial (A.D. 1820) 'upon the great River Euphrates.' . . . Is this,
indeed, the true ending of Daniel's 1,290? And, if so, is A.D. 1865-6 the
ending of the 1,335, as well as of John's forty and two months? If it be,
then there is an epoch upon us of four years in any day of which Christ may
come as a thief. . . . This appears to me, at this writing, to be the correct
interpretation of the times. It is, of course, impossible to say that the
interpretation is without error. The ensuing years will determine this point
beyond dispute. while I write, it is the most
satisfactory to my own mind. I have thought that Daniel's 1,290 terminated in 1864, and his 1,335 in 1909. But in writing the exposition
of this chapter, the fact of the great earthquake-resurrection of the witnesses
being exactly 1,260 years after the promulgation of the civil law of the city,
and the hour of 30 years added, bringing us to the beginning of the pouring out
upon the desolator of the Holy Land, that which is determined (Dan. 9: 27), or
1,290 years afterwards -- I do not feel at liberty to persist in rejecting my
original conviction that the 1,290 ends in 1820; and the 1,335 forty-five years
after, or in the epoch current with 1865-6 or thereabouts.
In A.D. 800 came the restoration of the Roman
empire of the west, or establishment of the little Latin Horn of
Daniel, and two horned beast, and the image, of the Apocalypse. This was 270
years from the publication of the Justinian code; and
240 from the settlement of Italy,
according to the articles of the Pragmatic sanction, by which "Rome
was degraded to the second rank" among the cities of the empire. The
fourth trumpet, which proclaimed the smiting of the sixth head of the Beast in
its jurisdiction over a third part of the Roman territory, still continued its soundiugs. The events which pertained to it yet, showed
themselves in the wars between Justinian and the
Vandals, Goths, and other people, until Italy
was depopulated of many millions of its inhabitants. Under this trumpet, the
sovereignty of the eternal city suffered a total eclipse; so that the imperial
day shone not upon her "for a third part of it, and the night
likewise" (Rev 8:12). This was a
day and night of years, the minimum of time demanded by the nature of the
eclipse.
A day of years, and a night of years, are each
360 years along; for as a day in symbolic time represents a year, or 360 days;
so if the decorum of the symbol require it, each of these days may represent a
year. A scripture, or Jewish, day contains 12 hours; and a night likewise.
Hence, the third part of a day is four hours; and the third part of a night,
four hours also. An hour being a twelfth part is equal to 30, which multiplied
by 4 gives 120 years for the third part of the day; and 120 years for the third
part of the night, which added together make 240 years. Now, if my calculation
and interpretation be correct, it follows that Rome (in which there had been
seven sovereignties from the foundation of the city till the fall of the Gothic
kingdom of Italy in A.D. 553) should be no more the seat of empire, from the
degradation by the Pragmatic sanction until the end of 240 years. In other
words, that at the end of that period her eclipse should terminate, and she
should once more shine forth with imperial splendour.
Now, no interpretation of prophecy is worth
anything which is not sustained by facts; for prophecy is not a
prediction of opinions, principles, or feelings, but of tangible and stubborn
facts. What, then, are the facts in the case before us? I give the answer to
this question in the words of Gibbon. "On the festival of Christmas,"
says he, "the last year of the eighth century (i.e., 800) Charlemagne
appeared in the church of St.
Peter. After the celebration of the holy mysteries,
Leo suddenly placed a precious crown upon his head, and the dome resounded with
the acclamations of the people, 'Long life and victory to 'Charles, the most
pious Augustus, crowned by God the great and pacific emperor of the Romans!'
The head and body of Charlemagne were consecrated by the royal unction; after
the example .of the Caesars, he was saluted or adored by the pontiff; his
coronation oath represents a promise to maintain the faith and privileges of
the Church; and the frrst fruits were paid in his
rich offerings to the shrine of the aposile."
Gibbon styles him "the Restorer of the western empire," which
included France,
Spain, Italy,
Germany, and Hungary;
and from the restoration of which Europe," says he,
"dates a new era." Thus, Rome's
eclipse passed away, and her system was again illumined by the shining forth of
the imperial sun, moon, and stars over the third part from which they had been
so long obscured.