Robertson Word Pictures - Revelation 13:3 - 13:3

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Robertson Word Pictures - Revelation 13:3 - 13:3


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

And I saw (kai). No verb (eidon) in the old MSS., but clearly understood from Rev 13:2.

As though it had been smitten (hōs esphagmenēn). Perfect passive participle of sphazō, as in Rev 5:6, accusative singular agreeing with mian (one of the heads), object of eidon understood, “as though slain” (so the word means in seven other instances in the book). There is a reference to the death and new life of the Lamb in Rev 5:6.

And his death-stroke was healed (kai hē plēgē autou etherapeuthē). First aorist passive indicative of therapeuō. “The stroke of death” (that led to death). Apparently refers to the death of Nero in June 68 a.d. by his own hand. But after his death pretenders arose claiming to be Nero redivivus even as late as 89 (Tacitus, Hist. i. 78, ii. 8, etc.). John seems to regard Domitian as Nero over again in the persecutions carried on by him. The distinction is not always preserved between the beast (Roman Empire) and the seven heads (emperors), but in Rev 17:10 the beast survives the loss of five heads. Here it is the death-stroke of one head, while in Rev 13:12, Rev 13:14 the beast himself receives a mortal wound.

Wondered after the beast (ethaumasthē opisō tou thēriou). First aorist passive (deponent) indicative of thaumazō, to wonder at, to admire, as in Rev 17:8. For this pregnant use of opisō see Joh 12:9; Act 5:37; Act 20:30; 1Ti 5:15. “All the earth wondered at and followed after the beast,” that is Antichrist as represented by Domitian as Nero redivivus. But Charles champions the view that Caligula, not Nero, is the head that received the death-stroke and recovered and set up statues of himself for worship, even trying to do it in Jerusalem.