Thanks, but why mention the 10 days then?The passage is to the anointed, saying that some will have tribulation all of their life, but with assurance that God has not forsaken them, but will make good on his promise of eternal life.
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Thanks, but why mention the 10 days then?The passage is to the anointed, saying that some will have tribulation all of their life, but with assurance that God has not forsaken them, but will make good on his promise of eternal life.
It's usually a mistake to cherry pick something from one book and force it into the context of a completely different book. It has a name, eisegesis.
The ten days in Rev 2 is simply ten days.
This is what people with carnal minds think. They say, let's say its ten days and then figure out where to put it on their prophecy calendar to fit their doctrine. That is silly!
No, the number ten and it's multiples (100, 1,000, etc.) illustrate the COMPLETENESS or FULLNESS OF WHATEVER IS IN VIEW.
Here is the lesson... if you have wisdom - with the spirit of Christ (remember?).
Luke 15:8
Here in the parable of the ten silver pieces, a woman loses one of the ten. She searches for it until she finds it. This is numerical symbolism which shows the believer's search for lost souls representing those who are to be Saved. When we have found what was lost, the batch will be a full or complete treasure. The number ten signified the fullness of believers there. We are the silver which is found by the lighted candle. This is just like the parable of the one hundred (multiple of 10) sheep:
- "Either what woman having ten pieces of silver, if she lose one piece, doth not light a candle, and sweep the house, and seek diligently till she find it?"
Luke 15:3-5
The same principle applies. If we lose one of them, we search till we find it. So the fullness of them must be found. The number one hundred there signified the fullness of believers which are shepherded over. Likewise in the multiple of 10x100, it signifies the fulness of whatever is in view. Isaiah chapter seven speaks about the First coming of the Lord (verse 14) and says,
- "And he spake this parable unto them, saying,
- What man of you, having an hundred sheep, if he lose one of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness, and go after that which is lost, until he find it?
- And when he hath found it, he layeth it on his shoulders, rejoicing".
Isaiah 7:23
Are we to suppose this is a literal number? Humm? Were there literally one thousand vines and one thousand silverlings (not 1001 or 999)? When we look at the verse carefully we see that God is using numerical symbology to signify that where there was the fullness of vines, there will be briers and thorns. The number one thousand is not to alert us to the exact literal number of vines, or the exact literal number of one thousand silverlings (pieces of silver money), rather it is to illustrate where the fullness of vines once were, and where the fullness of treasure was, it is changed to briers and thorns. Not literally every place where one thousand pieces of silver were of one thousand vines were. The word thousand is merely being used to signify a very long time, but not literally a thousand.
- "And it shall come to pass in THAT DAY, that every place shall be, where there were a thousand vines at a thousand silverlings, it shall even be for briers and thorns. With arrows and with bows shall men come hither; because All he land shall become briers and thorns."
Deuteronomy 7:9
1st Chronicles 16:15
- "Know therefore that the LORD thy God, he is God, the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy with them that love him and keep his commandments to a thousand generations;"
Psalms 105:8
- "Be ye mindful always of his covenant; the word which he commanded to a thousand generations,"
This is a thousand used figuratively to illustrate the fullness of time, not literally a thousand generations. His Word is commanded to all generations, not just literally one thousand. But God is using the number thousand here to show spiritual consistency in representing the fullness. Likewise in Revelation chapter 20, where it speaks of the one thousand year millennial reign of Christ. It is the perfect example of this numerical symbology. It signifies the fullness of time of the reign of Christ, the binding of satan, and the rest of the dead live not again, before the second Resurrection. Not the totality of time from the beginning, and not literally one thousand years, but the fullness of time between events spoken of there.
- "He hath remembered his covenant for ever, the word which he commanded to a thousand generations."
The same goes with ten days in Revelation 2... well...if you have the wisdom of Christ to know what He actually talk about here! It is NOT ten literal days as you think. It is fullness of time when Satan is being loosened to trail God's faithful as he takes over the house of God. This is what the great tribulation is about.
Well, I suppose if you are so adamant I am wrong, then you will have greater evidence than I that there were ten literal days that the Smyna Church suffered a particularly nasty persecution right? And of course you will have it ready to publish that all may see your evidence?No, carnal minds like make believe and fiction and like to change scripture using eisegesis to make ten days into ten years.
Revelation 5An interesting aspect of the book of Revelation is that every number in the book can and should be treated as a literal number. If 10 doesn't mean 10 in this passage, it would be the only number that is not taken as literal. Hermeneutically speaking, this is the literal, grammatical, historical, contextual method of interpretation.
Mmm. And 7 spirits of God?Revelation 5
11 And I beheld, and I heard the voice of many angels round about the throne and the beasts and the elders: and the number of them was ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of thousands;
Yes, not one more and not one less.![]()
Well, I suppose if you are so adamant I am wrong,
then you will have greater evidence than I that there were ten literal days that the Smyna Church suffered a particularly nasty persecution right? And of course you will have it ready to publish that all may see your evidence?
Isn’t the 7 Spirits of God the Holy Spirit (one)?Mmm. And 7 spirits of God?
It's prophecy. If we cannot understand prophecy from history, and make the appropriate harmonising comparisons, then what do you have to prove prophecy is reliable? You are correct that there is nothing in the text that specifically denotes a particularly nasty persecution, yet that time period, whether it be ten days or ten years, was an inspired insight into a specific time frame that applied to the church of of the first 3 centuries. Historically, that church did suffer terribly for ten years under Diocletian.You are responding to something I said to TribulationSigns but speaking as if I spoke to you. Is that a second account of yours?
Unlike you, I don't make bold and exact claims about this. Where in the passage does it say they experience "a particularly nasty persecution"?
Here is the issue. You are taking preconceived beliefs and forcing them into the passage.
"And out of the throne proceeded lightnings and thunderings and voices: and there were seven lamps of fire burning before the throne, which are the seven Spirits of God."Isn’t the 7 Spirits of God the Holy Spirit (one)?
It's prophecy. If we cannot understand prophecy from history, and make the appropriate harmonising comparisons, then what do you have to prove prophecy is reliable? You are correct that there is nothing in the text that specifically denotes a particularly nasty persecution, yet that time period, whether it be ten days or ten years, was an inspired insight into a specific time frame that applied to the church of of the first 3 centuries.
Thanks, but why mention the 10 days then?
Thanks, but I believe the 10 days is meaningful.... we just have to find its meaning...It is a word in parable. By the image of God cast in mankind--ten toes below, and ten fingers above--ten means "all"...as in all the days of your life.
Thanks, but I believe the 10 days is meaningful.... we just have to find its meaning...
I understand that is what you believe. No problem! After studying Daniel, I have learned there usually is a very specific reason for God to write these kind of things in His Word.I gave you the meaning. It means: All.
If the 10 days are not a literal 10 days, then it would be the only symbolic number in the entire book of Rev. That is, all other numbers mentioned in Rev are literal numbers. But this is something that one must accept before trying to interpret a passage. I basically subscribe to the literal, grammatical, historical, normal reading of a text. I take all passages are to be taken literal unless there is clear evidence that the number is not to be taken literally. I believe that the writers of Scripture use metaphors and symbolism at times, but the context will make that clear.I gave you the meaning. It means: All.
I understand that is what you believe. No problem! After studying Daniel, I have learned there usually is a very specific reason for God to write these kind of things in His Word.
You certainly may be right but I would like to continue thinking how it might be applied in all of the church periods not just being applicable to one church.
If the 10 days are not a literal 10 days, then it would be the only symbolic number in the entire book of Rev. That is, all other numbers mentioned in Rev are literal numbers. But this is something that one must accept before trying to interpret a passage. I basically subscribe to the literal, grammatical, historical, normal reading of a text. I take all passages are to be taken literal unless there is clear evidence that the number is not to be taken literally. I believe that the writers of Scripture use metaphors and symbolism at times, but the context will make that clear.
10 literal days should be taken literally unless the context says otherwise, and it doesn't.
You need to pay attention to what is written in my post. The number seven is a literal number that John uses to write to seven actual churches. The number 7 is not a symbolic number. It is a real number. Each message to these 7 churches is a message to all believers throughout the entire Church Age. Just as all the churches and believers in the NT is written to all believers.As for "ten" being "the only symbolic number in the entire book of Revelation", that is not true: Even from the beginning, the seven lampstands are symbolic of the seven churches--which themselves are not only seven, but symbolic of all churches.
Revelation 5You need to pay attention to what is written in my post. The number seven is a literal number that John uses to write to seven actual churches. The number 7 is not a symbolic number. It is a real number. Each message to these 7 churches is a message to all believers throughout the entire Church Age. Just as all the churches and believers in the NT is written to all believers.
10 is not a symbolic number, it is an actual number. 144,000 Jewish witnesses is a real number. All numbers in Rev are to be taken literally.
Like the second epistle to Corinth, it was literally written to that Church (all the believers in the various house-churches) in Corinth but applies to all believers. Corinth is not a symbolic place, but real house-churches in Corinth. But it is applicable to all believers.