BY
VENERABLE BEDA,
TRANSLATED BY THE REV. EDW. MARSHALL, M.A., F.S.A.
FORMERLY FELLOW OF CORPUS CHRISTI COLL., OXFORD.
Oxford and London:
JAMES PARKER AND CO.
1878
| Translator's Preface, p. iii | Bede's Prefatory Letter, p. 1 | Bede's Epigram, p. 10 | Bk. I, Ch. I, p. 11 |
| Bk. I, Ch. II, p. 17 | Bk. I, Ch. III, p. 24 | Bk. I, Ch. IV, p. 29 | Bk. I, Ch. V, p. 34 |
| Bk. I, Ch. VI, p. 37 | Bk. I, Ch. VII, p. 44 | Bk. I, Ch. VIII, p. 55 | Bk. II, Ch. VIII (cont.), p. 56 |
{1} EXPLANATION OF THE APOCALYPSEa
LETTER OF BEDA TO EUSEBIUS
TO THE BELOVED BROTHER, EUSEBIUSb,
BEDA SENDS GREETING.
THE Apocalypse of St. John, in which God was pleased to reveal
by words and figures the wars and intestine tumults of the Church, seems to
me, brother Eusebius, to be divided into several sections.
{2}In the first of these, after a copious preface to strengthen
the faith of the weak, and a description of the sufferings of the Lord and of
the glories which followed, he sees one like unto the Son of Man clothed with
the Church, Who, after He has related what has happened, or is about to happen,
in the seven Churches of Asia in particular, recounts the general conflicts
and victories of the whole Church. And here, designedly, in the sixth place
He has foretold that the Jews are to be made subject to the Church, and that
there is to be a trial of the world at large, and that He Himself will come
quickly; and He places in the seventh the lukewarm Laodicea. For "when
the Son of Man cometh, will He," dost thou think, "find the faith
in the earth?" [Luke 18.8]
Then in the second section, after that the four living creatures
in the throne of God, and the twenty-four elders, have been described, he sees
the Lamb, on the opening of the seven seals of the closed book, unfold the future
conflicts and triumphs of the Church. And here, according to the custom of this
book, he preserves the order unto the sixth number in the series; and then he
passes by the seventh, recapitulates, and concludes the two narrations with
the seventh. But {3}the recapitulation is also itself to be understood
according to its place, for sometimes he recapitulates from the commencement
of suffering, sometimes from the middle period, and sometimes with a view to
speak of the last affliction only, or a short time before. But this he observes
as a fixed point, to recapitulate after the sixth.
Next, in the third section, under the likeness of seven angels
sounding with a trumpet, he describes the various events of the Church.
In the fourth, under the figure of a woman bringing forth,
and a dragon persecuting her, he reveals the toils and victories of the same
Church, and assigns to both combatants their due rewards. And here the
words and actions of seven angels are also recorded, but not in the same manner
as above. So in mystic wisdom he almost always retains this number, for neither
in his gospel nor his epistles is the same John accustomed to say anything with
remissness and brevity.
Then, in the fifth section, by seven angels he has overspread
the earth with the seven last plagues.
In the sixth, he has manifested the condemnation of the great
whore, that is, of the ungodly city.
In the seventh, he has shewn the ornament of the Lamb's wife,
the holy Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God.
I have also thought that the seven rules of Tichonius [fl.
c. 390], a man of the most learning among those of his sect [The Donatists],
should be briefly enumerated, inasmuch as {4}those who are desirous to learn,
receive great assistance from them for understanding the Scriptures. The first
of these is concerning the Lord and His body, when there is a transition from
the Head to the body, or from the body to the Head, and yet no recession from
one and the same person. For one person speaks, saying, "He set a chaplet
upon me, as a bridegroom, and adorned me with an ornament as a bride" [Is.
41.10]; and yet, certainly, it must be understood how much of this belongs to
the Head, how much to the body; that is, how much to Christ, how much to the
Church.
The second is concerning the twofold body of the Lord, or
rather, concerning the true and simulated body of the Lord, as St. Augustine
was better pleased that it should be termed. So the Church says I am dark
and comely, as the tents of Kedar, and as the curtains of Solomon" [Song
of Solomon 1.5]; for she does not say, I was dark and am comely, but she
has said that she is both, because of the fellowship in sacraments, and the
commingling for a time of the good and bad fish within one net, seeing that
the tents of Kedar belong to Ishmael, "for that he shall not be heir with
the son of the free woman [Gal. 4.20].
The third is concerning the promises and the law, which may
otherwise be expressed as concerning the spirit and the letter, or concerning
grace and the com-{5}mandment This appears to St. Augustine to be itself
a great question, rather than a rule to be applied to the solution of questions.
For it was through failing to understand this that the Pelagians either began,
or increased their heresy.
The fourth is concerning species and genus. For species
is a part, but genus the whole of which it is a part, as each state is a part
of the whole province, and each province a part of the whole world. These
terms, accordingly, have come to the knowledge of persons in general, so that
even the unlearned understand what is enjoined in any imperial command. This
takes place also in respect of men, as the things which are said of Solomon
are out of proportion to him; and it is only when they are referred to Christ
and the Church, of which He is part, that they become clear. Yet the species
is not always exceeded, for such things are often said as more evidently agree
with it also, or perhaps with it alone. But when there is a transition
from the species to the genus, as if Scripture were still speaking of the species,
there the attention of the reader ought to be on the watch.
He lays down a fifth rule, which he names concerning times,
and it may, as appears to me, also be called concerning numbers. This
he states to be of force, even in the case of legitimate numbers, by the figure
synecdoche. For the figure synecdoche is either to infer the whole from a part,
or a part from the whole. And by this manner of speaking is the question
of the resurrection of Christ also solved. For unless the last part of
the day on which He suffered is taken for the whole {6}day, that is, with the
addition of the past night too, and unless the night in the latter part of which
He rose again is taken for a whole day, that is, with the addition of the dawning
Lord's day, there cannot be the three days and three nights, in which He foretold
that He should be in the heart of the earth [Matt. 12:40]. Now by legitimate
numbers he means those which the divine Scripture more eminently commends, as
the seventh, or tenth, or twelfth; by which, for the most part, either the whole
course of time, or the perfection of anything is designated, as, "seven
times in a day I sing praise unto Thee," [Ps. 98 (AV 99): 164)]
is nothing else than, "His praise was ever in my mouth" [Ps. 33:2
(AV 34:1)] And they are of the same value also when they are multiplied
either by ten, as seventy and seven hundred, in which case, the seventy years
of Jerusalem may be taken spiritually for all the time during which the Church
is among aliens; or by themselves, as ten by ten are a hundred, and twelve by
twelve are a hundred and forty-four, by which number the whole body of the saints
is denoted in the Apocalypse.
The sixth rule Tichonius calls recapitulation. For
some things are stated in the Scriptures as if they follow in the order of time,
or are related in the succession of events, when, indeed, the narration is tacitly
recalled to what has been omitted. As it is said in Genesis, "These
are the sons of Noah, in their tribes and their tongues. By these are
the isles of the nations upon the earth overspread [Gen. 10:32; 9:19]
and immediately, "But the whole {7} earth was of one lip, and of' the same
speech" [Gen. 11.1] So it seems to be stated, as if at the very time when
they were dispersed, they all had one language, when rather, by a recapitulation,
he was secretly adding in what manner the tongues were divided.
His seventh rule is, concerning the devil and his body.
For sometimes that is stated in respect of the devil which cannot be recognised
in himself, but only in his body; as the Lord saith, among other things, to
the blessed Job, in exposing the deceit and power of this enemy, "Will
he make many prayers to thee, or will he speak soft things to thee? [Job
41:3]. And it is not the devil himself who is anywhere read of as repentant,
but his body, which, when condemned at the last, will say, Lord, Lord,
open unto us" [Matt. 25.11].
So then, if any one will observe carefully, he will find
these rules to prevail in all the canonical Scriptures, and especially in the
prophetical parts, as well as in the Apocalypse, that is, the Revelation of
St. John the Apostle, which the same Tichonius both understood with a lively
apprehension, and expounded with truthfulness, and in a sufficiently Catholic
sense, excepting only those places in which he endeavoured to defend the schism
of his party, that is, the Donatists. For here he laments the persecutions
which they endured from the religious Emperor Valentinian, as heretics, when
their churches, and followers, and houses, and possessions were given up into
the hands of the Catholics, and their priests were driven into exile; and he
calls {8} these things martyrdoms, and boasts that they were foretold in the
same Apocalypse.
Now we have followed on our part the sense of this author
in the present work, but in so doing we have omitted some things beyond the
purpose which he inserted, in order that we may be more compendious; and we
have taken care to add many more, which to him, as a man of genius, and who
flourished, as was said of him, like an open rose among thorns, appeared plain
and unworthy of investigation; and this we have done, so far as we have been
able to attain, either by the tradition of masters, or the recollection of reading,
or even our own capacity; for this, too, is among the commandments which we
have received, to return to the Lord with usury the talents which have been
committed to us.
Now, although it had seemed fit that the aforesaid work should
be divided into three short booksc
to relieve the mind; for in some way or other, as the blessed Augustine says:
The attention of the reader is refreshed by the termination of a book,
as the toil of the traveller by resting at an inn" [Contr. adv. leg. et.
proph., Bk. I. Ch. 33]; nevertheless, that it might be rendered more easy
for those who search to find, it was thought good that the continuous order
of paragraphs should be preserved through out, which I had previously noted
in the book itself by prefixing marks. For, as I think that the indo-{9}lence
of our nation, I mean of the English, ought to be taken into account,--which
too, not long since, that is, in the time of the blessed Pope Gregory, received
the seed of faith, and has cultivated the same remissly enough, so far as reading
is concerned,--I have arranged my plan, so as not only to elucidate the sense,
but also to compress the sentences, inasmuch as brevity, if it is clear, is
wont to be fixed in the memory more than prolix discussion.
I bid thee farewell in Christ, most beloved brother, and
desire that thou mayest deign to be ever mindful of thy Beda.
a. This Explanation is inserted by Beda in
the list of works written by him previously to A.D. 731, as On the Apocalypse
of St. John three Books. Hist. Eccl., bk. v. ch. 24. It is also
noticed in a Letter of Beda to Acca, Bishop of Hexham, prefixed to the Exposition
of the Acts of the Apostles, Bed. Opp., tom. xii, p. 1, ed. Giles,
Lon. 1844, as The Explanation of the Apocalypse of the holy Evangelist
John, which, written at the request of our brother Eusebius, and comprised in
three books, I intend to transcribe and send to thee soon. As Eusebius
is here addressed simply as a brother, and not as abbat, it would seem that
the Expostion of the Apocalypse was written after Acca had been
made a bishop in A.D. 710, and before Eusebius was appointed Abbat in A.D. 716.
For the date of Accas Epsicopate, see Hist. Eccl., bk. v, ch. 20,
p. 291, ed. Hussey, Oxf. 1846. Return.
b. Eusebius, or Huaetberht, was Abbat of the Monastery of Jarrow, to which he was unanimously elected on the resignation of Ceolfrid, in A.D. 716. Besides his obedience in the monastic life, he was distinguished for his "industry in writing, singing, reading, and teaching." His Letter to Pope Gregory II. on the occasion of his appointment, sent by Ceolfrid, is in part preserved. See Beda's Vita SS. Abbat. Mon. in Uuiram. et Gyr., ch. xiv sq. Return.
c. The first Book extends to ch. viii. I, the second
to ch. xiv. 20, and the third to ch. xxii. 21. The seven sections into
which Beda considered (supra, pp.1-3) the Apocalypse to be divided, are these,
Sec. I, ch. i. 1-iii. 22; sec. 2, ch. iv. 1-vii. 17; sec. 3, ch. viii. I xi.18
; sec. 4, ch. xi. 19-xv. 8 ; sec. 5, ch. xvi. I-xvi. 21; sec. 6, ch. xvii. I-xviii.
25; Sec. 7, ch. xix. 1-xxii. 21. Return
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