fbpx
Wikipedia

Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse[1] are figures in the Book of Revelation in the New Testament of the Bible, a piece of apocalypse literature attributed to John of Patmos. Similar allusions are contained in the Old Testament books of Ezekiel and Zechariah, written about six centuries prior. Though the text only provides a name for the fourth horseman, subsequent commentary often identifies them as personifications of Conquest (Zelus), War (Ares), Famine (Limos), and Death (Thanatos).

Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, an 1887 painting by Viktor Vasnetsov. From left to right are Death, Famine, War, and Conquest; the Lamb is at the top.

Revelation 6 tells of a book or scroll in God's right hand that is sealed with seven seals. The Lamb of God/Lion of Judah opens the first four of the seven seals, which summons four beings that ride out on white, red, black, and pale horses. All of the horsemen save for Death are portrayed as being human in appearance.

In John's revelation the first horseman rides a white horse, carries a bow, and is given a crown as a figure of conquest,[2][3] perhaps invoking pestilence, or the Antichrist. The second carries a sword and rides a red horse as the creator of (civil) war, conflict, and strife.[4] The third, a food merchant, rides a black horse symbolizing famine and carries the scales.[5] The fourth and final horse is pale, upon it rides Death, accompanied by Hades.[6] "They were given authority over a quarter of the Earth, to kill with sword, famine and plague, and by means of the beasts of the Earth."[7]

Christianity interprets the Four Horsemen as a vision of harbingers of the Last Judgment, setting a divine end-time upon the world.[8][9]

White Horse edit

 
The first Horseman of the Apocalypse as depicted in the Bamberg Apocalypse (1000–1020). The first "living creature" (with halo) is seen in the upper right.

Then I saw when the Lamb broke one of the seven seals, and I heard one of the four living creatures saying as with a voice of thunder, "Come." I looked, and behold, a white horse, and he who sat on it had a bow; and a crown was given to him, and he went out conquering and to conquer.

— Revelation 6:1–2 New American Standard Bible[10]

The above passage is a common English translation of the rider of the White Horse (sometimes referred to as the White Rider). He is thought to carry a bow (Greek τόξο, toxo) and wear a victor's crown (Greek στέφανος, stephanos).

According to the interpretatio graeca, he is Zelus, daimon of conquest and glory.

As Christ, the Gospel, or the Holy Spirit edit

For the broad historical interpretation of Christ as the rider of the white horse, it is to be understood that the Antichrist does not appear until the opening of the sixth seal.[11] Events in world history since the founding of Christianity were interpreted as "horses" up to the sixth seal event. Therefore, this interpretation can be seen as either partially preterist, or an instance of dual fulfillment.

 
Albrecht Dürer, Knight, Death and the Devil, 1513

In the New Testament, the Book of Mark indicates that the advance of the gospel may precede and foretell the apocalypse.[5][12] The color white also tends to represent righteousness in the Bible, and Christ is portrayed as a conqueror in other instances.[5][12]

Besides Christ, the Horseman could represent the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit was understood to have come upon the Apostles at Pentecost after Jesus departed Earth. The appearance of the Lion in Revelation 5 shows the triumphant arrival of Jesus in Heaven, and the first Horseman may represent the sending of the Holy Spirit by Jesus and the advance of the gospel of Jesus Christ.[13]

As the Antichrist edit

In 1866,[14] when C. F. Zimpel defended the hypothesis that the first horseman was the Antichrist (and more precisely, according to him, Napoleon Bonaparte).[15] The Antichrist interpretation later found champions in the United States, such as R. F. Franklin in 1898[16] and W. C. Stevens in 1928.[17] It remains popular in evangelical circles today,[18] for example with Pastor Billy Graham, for whom the horseman represented the Antichrist or false prophets in general.[19]

As Roman Empire prosperity edit

 
Four horsemen, by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld, 1860

In Edward Bishop Elliott's interpretation, the Four Horsemen represent a prophecy of the Roman Empire's subsequent history; the horse's white color signifies triumph, prosperity, and health in the Roman political body. For the next 80 or 90 years, succeeding the banishment of the prophet John to the island of Patmos and covering the successive reigns of the emperors Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, and the two Antonines (Antoninus Pius and Marcus Aurelius), a golden age of prosperity, union, civil liberty and good government unstained with civil blood unfolded. The agents of this prosperity, personified by the rider of the white horse, are these five emperors wearing crowns, who reigned with absolute authority and power under the guidance of virtue and wisdom, the armies being restrained by their firm and gentle hands.[20]

This interpretation points out that the bow was preeminently a weapon of the inhabitants of the island of Crete and not of the Roman Empire in general. The Cretans were renowned for their archery skills. The significance of the rider of the white horse holding a bow indicates the place of origin of the line of emperors ruling during this time. This group of emperors can be classed together under one and the same head and family whose origins were from Crete.[21]

According to this interpretation, this period in Roman history, both at its commencement and close, illustrated the empire's glory where its limits were extended, though not without occasional wars, which were always uniformly triumphant on the frontiers. The triumphs of Emperor Trajan, a Roman Alexander, added to the empire Dacia, Armenia, Mesopotamia, and other provinces during the first 20 years of the period, which deepened the impression on the minds of the barbarians of the invincibility of the Roman Empire. The Roman war progressed triumphantly into the invader's territory, and the total overthrow of those people successfully ended the Parthian war. Roman conquest is demonstrated even in the most mighty of these wars: the Marcomannic Wars, a succession of victories under the second Antonine, unleashed on the German barbarians, who were driven into their forests and reduced to Roman submission.[22]

As war edit

In some commentaries, the white Horseman symbolizes war, which may be decently exercised on moral grounds, hence the white color. The red Horseman (see below) specifically symbolizes civil war.[23]

As infectious disease edit

Under another interpretation, the first Horseman is called Pestilence and is associated with infectious disease and plague. It appears at least as early as 1906 in the Jewish Encyclopedia.[24] This particular interpretation is common in popular culture references to the Four Horsemen.[25]

The origin of this interpretation is unclear. Some translations of the Bible mention "plague" (e.g. the New International Version)[26] or "pestilence" (e.g. the Revised Standard Version)[27] in connection with the riders in the passage following the introduction of the fourth rider; cf. "They were given power over a fourth of the Earth to kill by sword, famine, plague, and by the wild beasts of the Earth." in the NASB.[28] However, the original Greek does not use the word for "plague" or "pestilence" here, simply "death" (θάνατος).[29] The use of "pestilence" was likely drawn from other parts of the Book of Revelation and included here as another form of death. Also, whether this passage refers to the fourth rider only or the four riders as a whole is a matter of debate.[2]

Vicente Blasco Ibáñez, in his 1916 novel The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (filmed in 1921 and 1962), provides an early example of this interpretation, writing, "The horseman on the white horse was clad in a showy and barbarous attire... While his horse continued galloping, he was bending his bow in order to spread pestilence abroad. At his back swung the brass quiver filled with poisoned arrows, containing the germs of all diseases."[30]

Red Horse edit

 
The second Horseman, War on the Red Horse, as depicted in a thirteenth-century Apocalypse manuscript

When He broke the second seal, I heard the second living creature saying, "Come." And another, a red horse, went out; and to him who sat on it, it was granted to take peace from Earth, and that men would slay one another; and a great sword was given to him.

— Revelation 6:3–4 NASB[31]

The rider of the second horse is often taken to represent War[4] (he is often pictured holding a sword upwards as though ready for battle)[32] or mass slaughter.[2][9][33] His horse's color is red (πυρρός, pyrrhos from πῦρ, fire), and in some translations, the color is specifically a "fiery" red. The color red, as well as the rider's possession of a great sword (μάχαιρα, machaira), suggests blood that is to be spilled.[5] As seen in heraldry, the sword held upward by the second Horseman may represent war or a declaration of war. In military symbolism, swords held upward, especially crossed swords held upward, signify war and entering into battle (see, for example, the historical and modern images and the coat of arms of Joan of Arc).[34]

The second Horseman represents civil war as opposed to the war of conquest that the first Horseman is said to bring.[5][35] Other commentators have suggested that it might also represent the persecution of Christians.[12][36][full citation needed]

According to the interpretatio graeca, he is Ares, god of war.

As empire division edit

 
Death on the Pale Horse, Benjamin West, 1817

According to Edward Bishop Elliott's interpretation of the Four Horsemen as symbolic prophecy of the history of the Roman Empire, the second seal is opened and the Roman nation that experienced joy, prosperity, and triumph is made subject to the red horse which depicts war and bloodshed—civil war. Peace left the Roman Earth, resulting in the killing of one another as insurrection crept into and permeated the Empire, beginning shortly into the reign of Emperor Commodus.[37]

Elliott points out that Commodus, who had nothing to wish for and everything to enjoy, that beloved son of Marcus Aurelius who ascended the throne with neither competitor to remove nor enemies to punish, became the slave of his attendants who gradually corrupted his mind.[38]

Elliott further recites that, after the death of Commodus, a most turbulent period lasting 92 years unfolded, during which time 32 emperors and 27 pretenders to the Empire hurled each other from the throne by incessant civil warfare. The sword was a natural universal badge, among the Romans, of the military profession. The apocalyptic figure armed with a great sword indicated an undue authority and unnatural use of it. Military men in power, whose vocation was war and weapon the sword, rose by it and also fell. The unrestrained military, no longer subject to the Senate, transformed the Empire into a system of pure military despotism.[39]

Black Horse edit

 
The third Horseman, Famine on the Black Horse, as depicted in the Angers Apocalypse Tapestry (1372–1382)

When He broke the third seal, I heard the third living creature saying, "Come." I looked, and behold, a black horse; and he who sat on it had a pair of scales in his hand. And I heard something like a voice in the center of the four living creatures saying, "A quart of wheat for a denarius, and three quarts of barley for a denarius; but do not damage the oil and the wine."

— Revelation 6:5–6 NASB[40]

The third Horseman rides a black horse and is popularly understood to be Famine, as the Horseman carries a pair of balances or weighing scales (Greek ζυγὸν, zygon), indicating the way that bread would have been weighed during a famine.[5][35] The rider is typically portrayed as an emaciated man. Other authors interpret the third Horseman as the "Lord as a Law-Giver," holding Scales of Justice.[41] In the passage, it is read that the indicated price of grain is about ten times normal (thus the famine interpretation popularity), with an entire day's wages (a denarius) buying enough wheat for only one person (one choenix, about 1.1 litres), or enough of the less nutritious barley for three, so that workers would struggle to feed their families.[5] In the Gospels, the denarius is repeatedly mentioned as a monetary unit; for example, the denarius was the pay of a soldier for one day, and the day labor of a seasonal worker in the harvesting of grapes is also valued at one denarius (Matthew 20:2). Thus, it is probably a fact that with the approach of the Apocalypse, the most necessary food will rise in price greatly and the wages earned per day will be enough only for the minimum subsistence for the same day and nothing more.

Of the Four Horsemen, the black horse and its rider are the only ones whose appearance is accompanied by vocalization. John hears a voice, unidentified but coming from among the four living creatures, that speaks of the prices of wheat and barley, saying, "and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine". This suggests that the black horse's famine is to drive up the price of grain but leave oil and wine supplies unaffected (though out of reach of the ordinary worker). One explanation is that grain crops would have been more naturally susceptible to famine years or locust plagues than olive trees and grapevines, which root more deeply.[5][35]

The statement might also suggest a continuing abundance of luxuries for the wealthy, while staples, such as bread, are scarce, though not completely depleted;[35] such selective scarcity may result from injustice and the deliberate production of luxury crops for the wealthy over grain, as would have happened during the time the Book of Revelation was written.[4][42] Alternatively, the preservation of oil and wine could symbolize the preservation of the Christian faithful, who use oil and wine in their sacraments.[43]

According to the interpretatio graeca, he is Limos, god of famine.

As imperial oppression edit

According to Edward Bishop Elliott's interpretation, through this third seal, the black horse is unleashed, representing aggravated distress and mourning. The balance in the rider's hand is not associated with a man weighing out bread for his family but with buying and selling corn and other grains. During the time of the apostle John's exile in Patmos, the balance was commonly a symbol of justice since it was used to weigh grains for a set price. The balance of justice held in the hand of the rider of the black horse signified the aggravation of the other previous evil, with the bloodstained red of the Roman aspect morphing into the darker blackness of distress.[44] The black horse rider is instructed not to harm the oil and the wine, which signifies that this scarcity should not fall upon the superfluities, such as oil and wine, which men can live without, but upon the necessities of life—bread.[45]

This interpretation also borrows from Edward Gibbon's The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, which claims the Roman Empire suffered as a result of excessive taxation of its citizens, particularly during the reign of Emperor Caracalla, whom history has primarily remembered as a cruel tyrant and among the worst of the Roman emperors. Under the necessity of gratifying the greed and excessive lifestyle which Caracalla had excited in the army, old as well as new taxes, were at the same time levied in the provinces. The land tax, taxes for services, and heavy contributions of corn, wine, oil, and meat were exacted from the provinces for court, army, and capital use.

According to Gibbon, this was exacerbated by the rise to power of Emperor Maximin, who "attacked the public property at length." Every city of the empire was destined to purchase corn for the multitudes, as well as supply expenses for the games. By the Emperor's authority, the whole mass of wealth was confiscated for use by the Imperial treasury—temples "stripped of their most valuable offerings of gold, silver [and statues] which were melted down and coined into money."[46]

Pale Horse edit

 
The fourth Horseman, Death on the Pale Horse.
Engraving by Gustave Doré (1865).

When the Lamb broke the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth living creature saying, "Come." I looked, and behold, an ashen horse; and he who sat on it had the name Death; and Hades was following with him. Authority was given to them over a fourth of the Earth, to kill with sword and with famine and with pestilence and by the wild beasts of the Earth.

— Revelation 6:7–8 (New American Standard Bible)[47]

The fourth and final Horseman is named Death (Mors). Known as Θάνατος (Thanatos) or Μόρος (Moros),[48] of all the riders, he is the only one to whom the text itself explicitly gives a name. Unlike the other three, he is not described as carrying a weapon or other object, instead, he is followed by Hades (the resting place of the dead). However, illustrations commonly depict him carrying a scythe, sword,[49] or another implement, he is typically no different than typical portrayals of Death, and is the only horseman who doesn’t appear to be a human.

The color of Death's horse is written as khlōros (χλωρός) in the original Koine Greek,[50] which can mean either green/greenish-yellow or pale/pallid.[51] The color is often translated as "pale", though "ashen", "pale green", and "yellowish green"[35] are other possible interpretations (the Greek word is the root of "chlorophyll" and "chlorine"). Based on the uses of the word in ancient Greek medical literature, several scholars suggest that the color reflects the sickly pallor of a corpse.[5][52] In some modern artistic depictions, the horse is distinctly green.[53][54][55]

The verse beginning with "they were given power over a fourth of the Earth" is generally taken as referring to Death and Hades,[35][56] although some commentators see it as applying to all four horsemen.[2]

According to the interpretatio graeca, he is Moros, god of doom.

Destroying an empire edit

 
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (by Arnaldo dell'Ira, neo-roman project of mosaic, 1939–1940)

This fourth, pale horse, was the personification of Death, with Hades following him, jaws open and receiving the victims slain by Death. Death's commission was to kill upon the Roman Earth with all of the four judgements of God—with sword, famine, pestilence, and wild beasts. The deadly pale and livid appearance displays a hue symptomatic of approaching empire dissolution. According to Edward Bishop Elliott, an era in Roman history commencing within about 15 years after the death of Severus Alexander (in 235 AD)[57] strongly marks every point of this terrible emblem.[58]

Edward Gibbon speaks of a period from the celebration of the great secular games by the Emperor Philip to the death of Gallienus (in 268 AD)[59] as the 20 years of shame and misfortune, of confusion and calamity, as a time when the ruined empire approached the last and fatal moment of its dissolution. Every instant of time in every province of the Roman world was afflicted by military tyrants and barbarous invaders—the sword from within and without.[60][61]

According to Elliott, famine, the inevitable consequence of carnage and oppression, which demolished the present crop as well as the hope of future harvests, produced the environment for an epidemic of diseases, the effects of scanty and unwholesome food. That furious plague (the Plague of Cyprian), which raged from the year 250 to the year 265, continued without interruption in every province, city and almost every family in the empire. During a portion of this time, 5000 people died daily in Rome; and many towns that had escaped the attacks of barbarians were entirely depopulated.[62]

For a time in the late 260s, the strength of Aurelian crushed the enemies of Rome, yet after his assassination a certain amount of them revived.[63] While the Goths had been destroyed for almost a century and the Empire reunited, the Sassanid Persians were uncowed in the East and, during the following year, hosts of central Asian Alani spread themselves over Pontus, Cappadocia, Cilicia and Galatia, etching their course by the flames of cities and villages they pillaged.[64]

As for the wild beasts of the Earth, according to Elliott, it is a well-known law of nature that they quickly occupy the scenes of waste and depopulation—where the reign of man fails and the reign of beasts begins. After the reign of Gallienus and 20 or 30 years had passed, the multiplication of the animals had risen to such an extent in parts of the empire that they made it a 'crying evil.'[65]

One notable point of apparent difference between the prophecy and history might seem to be expressly limited to the fourth part of the Roman Earth, but in the history of the period, the devastation of the pale horse extended over all. The fourth seal prophecy seems to mark the malignant climax of the evils of the two preceding seals, to which no such limitation is attached. Turning to a reading in Jerome's Latin Vulgate which reads "over the four parts of the Earth,"[66][67] it requires that the Roman empire should have some kind of quadripartition. Dividing from the central or Italian fourth, three great divisions of the Empire separated into the West, East, and Illyricum under Posthumus, Aureolus, and Zenobia respectively—divisions that were later legitimized by Diocletian.[68]

Diocletian ended this long period of anarchy, but the succession of civil wars and invasions caused much suffering, disorder and crime, which brought the empire into a state of moral lethargy from which it never recovered.[69] After the plague had abated, the empire suffered from general distress, and its condition was very much like that which followed after the Black Death of the Middle Ages. Talent and art had become extinct in proportion to the desolation of the world.[70]

Interpretations edit

 
The Horsemen of the Apocalypse, in a woodcut by Albrecht Dürer (c. 1497–1498), ride forth as a group, with an angel heralding them, to bring Death, Famine, War, and Conquest unto man.[71]
 
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, Saint-Sever Beatus, 11th century

Christological interpretation edit

Before the Reformation and the woodcut by Albrecht Dürer, the usual and more influential commentaries of the Book of Revelation thought there was only one horseman riding successively these four horses, who was the Christ himself. So did some medieval illuminations, and after that some modern commentators: Oecumenius, a Greek exegete writing in the sixth-century, Berengaudus a French Benedictine monk of Ferrières Abbey at the same period, Luis del Alcázar a Spanish Jesuit in 1612, Benito Arias Montano, a Spanish Orientalist, in 1622, Jacques de Bordes, a French capuchin in 1639, Emanuel Swedenborg a Swedish theologian in 1766.[72]

Prophetic interpretation edit

Some Christians interpret the Horsemen as a prophecy of a future Tribulation,[42] during which many on Earth will die as a result of multiple catastrophes. The Four Horsemen are the first in a series of "Seal" judgements. This is when God will judge the Earth, and is giving humans a chance to repent before they die. A new beautiful Earth is created for all the people who are faithful to Him and accept him as their Savior.[citation needed]

John Walvoord, a premillennialist, believed the Seals will be opened during the Great Tribulation and coincides with the arrival of the Antichrist as the first horseman, a global war as the second horseman, an economic collapse as the third horseman, and the general die-off of one quarter of the World's population as the fourth horseman; which is followed by a global dictatorship under the Antichrist and the rest of the plagues.[73]

Historicist interpretation edit

According to E. B. Elliott, the first seal, as revealed to John by the angel, was to signify what was to happen soon after John seeing the visions in Patmos, and that the second, third, and fourth seals in like manner were to have commencing dates each in chronological sequence following the preceding seal. Its general subject is the decline and fall, after a previous prosperous era, of the Empire of Heathen Rome. The first four seals of Revelation, represented by four horses and horsemen, are fixed to events, or changes, within the Roman Earth.[74]

Preterist interpretation edit

Some modern scholars interpret Revelation from a preterist point of view, arguing that its prophecy and imagery apply only to the events of the first century of Christian history.[35] In this school of thought, Conquest, the white horse's rider, is sometimes identified as a symbol of Parthian forces: Conquest carries a bow, and the Parthian Empire was at that time known for its mounted warriors and their skill with bow and arrow.[5][35] Parthians were also particularly associated with white horses.[5] Some scholars specifically point to Vologases I, a Parthian shah who clashed with the Roman Empire and won one significant battle in 62 AD.[5][35]

Revelation's historical context may also influence the depiction of the black horse and its rider, Famine. In 92 AD, the Roman emperor Domitian attempted to curb excessive growth of grapevines and encourage grain cultivation instead, but there was a major popular backlash against this effort, and it was abandoned. Famine's mission to make wheat and barley scarce but "hurt not the oil and the wine" could be an allusion to this episode.[35][52] The red horse and its rider, who take peace from the Earth, might represent the prevalence of civil strife at the time Revelation was written; internecine conflict ran rampant in the Roman Empire during and just prior to the 1st century AD.[5][35]

Latter-day Saint interpretation edit

Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believe the prophet, Joseph Smith, revealed that the book described by John "contains the revealed will, mysteries, and the works of God; the hidden things of his economy concerning this Earth during the seven thousand years of its continuance, or its temporal existence" and that the seals describe these things for the seven thousand years of the Earth's temporal existence, each seal representing 1,000 years.[75]

About the first seal and the white horse, LDS Apostle Bruce R. McConkie taught, "The most transcendent happenings involved Enoch and his ministry. What John saw was not the establishment of Zion and its removal to heavenly spheres, but the unparalleled wars in which Enoch, as a general over the armies of the saints, 'went forth conquering and to conquer' Revelation 6:2; see also Moses 7:13–18."[76] The second seal and the red horse represent the period from approximately 3,000 B.C. to 2,000 B.C., including the wickedness and violence leading to the Great Flood.[77]

The third seal and black horse describe the period of ancient Joseph, son of Israel, who was sold into Egypt, and the famines that swept that period (see Genesis 41–42; Abraham 1:29–30; 2:1, 17, 21). The fourth seal and the pale horse are interpreted to represent the thousand years leading up to the birth of Jesus Christ, both the physical death brought about by great warring empires and the spiritual death through apostasy among the Lord's chosen people.[77]

Other interpretations edit

Artwork which shows the Horsemen as a group, such as the famous woodcut by Albrecht Dürer, suggests an interpretation where all four horsemen represent different aspects of the same tribulation.[78]

American Protestant Evangelical interpreters regularly see ways in which the horsemen, and Revelation in general, speak to contemporary events. Some who believe Revelation applies to modern times can interpret the horses based on the various ways their colors are used.[79] Red, for example, often represents Communism, the white horse and rider with a crown representing Catholicism, Black has been used as a symbol of Capitalism, while Green represents the rise of Islam. Pastor Irvin Baxter Jr. of Endtime Ministries espoused such a belief.[80]

Some equate the Four Horsemen with the angels of the four winds.[81] (See Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, and Uriel, angels often associated with four cardinal directions).

Some speculate that when the imagery of the Six Seals is compared to other eschatological descriptions throughout the Bible, the themes of the horsemen draw remarkable similarity to the events of the Olivet Discourse. The signs of the approaching end of the world are likened to birth pains, indicating that they would occur more frequently and with greater intensity the nearer the event of Christ's return. With this perspective the horsemen represent the rise of false religions, false prophets, and false messiahs; the increase of wars and rumours of wars; the escalation of natural disasters and famines; and the growth of persecution, martyrdom, betrayal, and loss of faith.

According to Anatoly Fomenko, the Book of Revelation is largely astrological in nature. The 'Four Horsemen' represent the planets Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.[82]

Other Biblical references edit

Zechariah edit

The Book of Zechariah twice mentions colored horses; in the first passage there are three colors (red, speckled/brown, and white),[83] and in the second there are four teams of horses (red, black, white, and finally dappled/"grisled and bay") pulling chariots.[84] The second set of horses are referred to as "the four spirits of heaven, going out from standing in the presence of the Lord of the whole world."[84] They are described as patrolling the Earth and keeping it peaceful. It may be assumed by some Christian interpretations that when the tribulation begins, the peace is taken away, so their job is to terrify the places in which they patrol.[5]

Ezekiel edit

The four living creatures of Revelation 4:6–8 are written similarly to the four living creatures in Ezekiel 1:5–12.[85] In Revelation, each of the living creatures summons a horseman, where in Ezekiel the living creatures follow wherever the spirit leads, without turning.

In Ezekiel 14:21, the Lord enumerates His "four disastrous acts of judgment" (ESV), sword, famine, wild beasts, and pestilence, against the idolatrous elders of Israel. A symbolic interpretation of the Four Horsemen links the riders to these judgments, or the similar judgments in 6:11–12.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "four horsemen of the apocalypse". Britannica. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2022-07-19.
  2. ^ a b c d Flegg, Columba Graham (1999). An Introduction to Reading the Apocalypse. Crestwood, New York: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press. p. 90. ISBN 9780881411317. Retrieved 2015-04-10.
  3. ^ Hieronymous Sophronius, Eusebius (405). Biblia Sacra Vulgata (in Latin). Apocalypsis 6,2.
  4. ^ a b c Lenski, Richard Chales Henry (2008). The Interpretation of St. John's Revelation. Augsburg Fortress Publishers. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-8066-9000-1. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Mounce, Robert H. (2006). The Book of Revelation. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans. p. 140. ISBN 9780802825377. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2015-04-10.
  6. ^ "Apocalypse of John", The King James Bible, retrieved 2023-11-05
  7. ^ "Revelation, Chapter 6". United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2020-03-21.
  8. ^ Compare: Flegg, Columba Graham (1999). An Introduction to Reading the Apocalypse. Crestwood, New York: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press. p. 90. ISBN 9780881411317. Retrieved 2021-10-27. The sword, famine, and pestilence are the traditional list of the three plagues of God's wrath, which we find in Ezechiel 6; and in Ezekiel 14 we read of God's judgments upon Jerusalem in the forms of the sword, famine, the noisome beast, and pestilence, together with the promise that a remnant shall be spared – another important theme in the Apocalypse.
  9. ^ a b "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Apocalypse". Newadvent.org. 1907-03-01. from the original on 2020-11-12. Retrieved 2021-10-27. At the opening of four seals, four horses appear. Their colour is white, black, red, and pale/sallow (chloros, piebald). They signify conquest, slaughter, dearth and death. The vision is taken from Zechariah 6:1–8.
  10. ^ Revelation 6:1–2
  11. ^ "Apocalypse 6 – Haydock Commentary Online". haydockcommentary.com. Retrieved 2023-11-05.
  12. ^ a b c Beale, G. K. (1999). The Book of Revelation (3rd ed.). Grand Rapids, Michigan: W.B. Eerdmans. pp. 375–379. ISBN 0-8028-2174-X. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  13. ^ Rev. Brian Vos. . Reformedfellowship.net. Archived from the original on 2014-01-21. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  14. ^ References given by B. Gineste, Les Quatre Chevaux du Messie, Paris, 2d ed., 2019, pp. 53–54.
  15. ^ Ch. Fr. Zimpel, Le Millénaire, Franckfort-sur-le-Main, 1866, p. 43.
  16. ^ Annotations on the Revelation, New York, 1898, p. 85.
  17. ^ W. C. Stevens, Revelation, Harrisburg, 1928, vol. 2, p. 129.
  18. ^ "evangelical – Search". www.bing.com. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2022-03-17.
  19. ^ Graham, Billy (1985). Approaching Hoofbeats: The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. New York: Avon. p. 273. ISBN 0380-69921-4.
  20. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 129–131,134.
  21. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 140,142–144.
  22. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 131–133.
  23. ^ Herder German Bible, Freiburg im Breisgau 2007, p. 1348, annotation to Apc 6,7: "The four Horsemen of the Apocalypse symbolize various plagues: [1.] War, [2.] Civil War, [3.] famine and inflation, [4.] pestilence and death." (translated from German)
  24. ^ Toy, Crawford H.; Kohler, Kaufmann (1906). "Revelation (Book of)". The Jewish Encyclopedia. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2021-08-22. ...and sees a white horse appear, with a rider holding a bow (representing, probably, Pestilence).
  25. ^ Stableford, Brian (2009). The A to Z of Fantasy Literature. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-0810868298. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  26. ^ "The NIV Bible". NIV Bible. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2022-03-17.
  27. ^ "Bible Gateway passage: Revelation 6 - Revised Standard Version". Bible Gateway. Retrieved 2023-05-17.
  28. ^ Revelation 6:7–8
  29. ^ "Revelation 6:8 Interlinear: and I saw, and lo, a pale horse, and he who is sitting upon him – his name is Death, and Hades doth follow with him, and there was given to them authority to kill, (over the fourth part of the land,) with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and by the beasts of the land". biblehub.com. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2022-08-10.
  30. ^ Ibáñez, Vicente Blasco (1916). The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (ch V). from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2012-08-19.
  31. ^ Revelation 6:3–4
  32. ^ "Sword – Definition and More from the Free Merriam-Webster Dictionary". Merriam-webster.com. 2012-08-31. from the original on 2017-09-27. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  33. ^ Jeffrey, David Lyle (1992). 0802836348 (22nd ed.). Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans. p. 363. ISBN 0802836348. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  34. ^ "Crossed Swords". Seiyaku.com. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2015-12-19.
  35. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Morris, Leon (1988). The Book of Revelation: An Introduction and Commentary (2nd ed.). Leicester, England: Inter-Varsity Press. pp. 100–105. ISBN 0-8028-0273-7.
  36. ^ Peters, Alan R., Bible Prophecies fulfilled by 2012, chapter 2.
  37. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 147–148.
  38. ^ Gibbon 1776, p. 86–87.
  39. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 150–152.
  40. ^ Revelation 6:5–6
  41. ^ Hutchinson, Jane Campbell (2013). Albrecht Durer: A Guide to Research. Routledge. p. 58. ISBN 978-1135581725. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2015-04-10.
  42. ^ a b Hendriksen, W. (1939). More Than Conquerors: An Interpretation of the Book of Revelation (Commemorative ed.). Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker's Book House. p. 105. ISBN 0-8010-4026-4.
  43. ^ Hoeck, Andres; Manhardt, Laurie Watson (2010). Ezekiel, Hebrews, Revelation. Steubenville, Ohio: Emmaus Road Pub. p. 139. ISBN 978-1-931018-65-4. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  44. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 161,164–167,170.
  45. ^ Gill, John (1776). An Exposition of the Revelation of S. John the Divine, both doctrinal and practical. London: George Keith. p. 71.
  46. ^ Gibbon 1776, p. 142–143.
  47. ^ Revelation 6:7–8
  48. ^ Rev 6:8
  49. ^ Alexander of Bremen. "Expositio in Apocalypsim". Cambridge Digital Library. from the original on 2 March 2014. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
  50. ^ "See The Manuscript | Revelation |". Codex Sinaiticus. from the original on 2013-10-30. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  51. ^ "Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, χλωρός". Perseus.tufts.edu. from the original on 2014-04-06. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  52. ^ a b Case, Shirley Jackson (1919). The Revelation of John: A Historical Interpretation (2nd ed.). University of Chicago Press. Retrieved 2015-04-10.
  53. ^ "The Pale Horse Vision~One of 4 Horses of the Apocalypse | Flickr – Photo Sharing!". Flickr. 2010-08-09. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  54. ^ "Apocalypse | Flickr – Photo Sharing!". Flickr. 2006-11-30. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  55. ^ . Revelation4today.com. Archived from the original on 2013-11-02. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  56. ^ Friedrich, Gerhard; Bromiley, Geoffrey W. (1968). Theological Dictionary of the New Testament (Reprinted. ed.). Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans. p. 996. ISBN 9780802822482. Retrieved 2015-04-10.
  57. ^ "Alexander Severus" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 01 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 567.
  58. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 191–192.
  59. ^ "Gallienus, Publius Licinius Egnatius" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 419.
  60. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 192.
  61. ^ Gibbon 1776, p. 189.
  62. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 193.
  63. ^ Gibbon 1776, p. 246.
  64. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 197.
  65. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 194.
  66. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 201.
  67. ^ Muggleton, Lodowick (1665), True Interpretation of All the Chief Texts, and Mysterious Sayings and Visions Opened, of the Whole Book of the Revelation of St. John, London, England, p. 56
  68. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 202.
  69. ^ Elliott 1862, p. 203.
  70. ^ Niebuhr, Barthold Georg (1844), The History of Rome from the First Punic War to the Death of Constantine, vol. 5, Rome, Italy: Taylor and Walton, p. 346
  71. ^ Leeming, David (2006). The Oxford Companion to World Mythology. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 22. ISBN 0195156692. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  72. ^ Gineste, Bernard (2019). Les Quatre Chevaux du Messie (2d ed.) (in French). Paris, France: BoD. ISBN 9782322158799. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2019-10-02.
  73. ^ Walvoord, John. Every Prophecy of the Bible
  74. ^ Elliott 1862, pp. 121, 122.
  75. ^ "Doctrine and Covenants 77". www.churchofjesuschrist.org. Retrieved 2023-11-05.
  76. ^ Bruce R. McConkie, Doctrinal New Testament Commentary, 3 vols. [1966–1973], 3:477.
  77. ^ a b "Chapter 54: Revelation 4–11". www.churchofjesuschrist.org. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2019-07-16.
  78. ^ O'Hear, Natasha F. H. (2011). Contrasting Images of the Book of Revelation in Late Medieval and Early Modern Art: A Case Study in Visual Exegesis (1st ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-19-959010-0. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  79. ^ Humphries, Paul D. (2005). A Dragon This Way Comes: Revelations Decrypted. Mustang, Oklahoma: Tate Publishing. pp. 13–85. ISBN 1-59886-061-5. Retrieved 2009-01-13.
  80. ^ Baxter, Irvin. "The Apocalypse". Endtime Ministries. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2006-12-05.
  81. ^ Smith, Robert H.; Dürer, Albrecht (2000). Apocalypse: A Commentary on Revelation in Words and Images. Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-8146-2707-5. from the original on 13 January 2023. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  82. ^ (PDF). chronologia.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2019-11-30.
  83. ^ "Zechariah 1:8–17 NIV – During the night I had a vision, and". Bible Gateway. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  84. ^ a b "Zechariah 6:1–8 NIV – Four Chariots – I looked up again, and". Bible Gateway. from the original on 2023-01-13. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  85. ^ "Bible Gateway passage: Ezekiel 1:5-12 – English Standard Version". Bible Gateway. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
Bibliography

External links edit

four, horsemen, apocalypse, this, article, about, concept, bible, other, uses, disambiguation, figures, book, revelation, testament, bible, piece, apocalypse, literature, attributed, john, patmos, similar, allusions, contained, testament, books, ezekiel, zecha. This article is about the concept in the Bible For other uses see Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse disambiguation The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse 1 are figures in the Book of Revelation in the New Testament of the Bible a piece of apocalypse literature attributed to John of Patmos Similar allusions are contained in the Old Testament books of Ezekiel and Zechariah written about six centuries prior Though the text only provides a name for the fourth horseman subsequent commentary often identifies them as personifications of Conquest Zelus War Ares Famine Limos and Death Thanatos Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse an 1887 painting by Viktor Vasnetsov From left to right are Death Famine War and Conquest the Lamb is at the top Revelation 6 tells of a book or scroll in God s right hand that is sealed with seven seals The Lamb of God Lion of Judah opens the first four of the seven seals which summons four beings that ride out on white red black and pale horses All of the horsemen save for Death are portrayed as being human in appearance In John s revelation the first horseman rides a white horse carries a bow and is given a crown as a figure of conquest 2 3 perhaps invoking pestilence or the Antichrist The second carries a sword and rides a red horse as the creator of civil war conflict and strife 4 The third a food merchant rides a black horse symbolizing famine and carries the scales 5 The fourth and final horse is pale upon it rides Death accompanied by Hades 6 They were given authority over a quarter of the Earth to kill with sword famine and plague and by means of the beasts of the Earth 7 Christianity interprets the Four Horsemen as a vision of harbingers of the Last Judgment setting a divine end time upon the world 8 9 Contents 1 White Horse 1 1 As Christ the Gospel or the Holy Spirit 1 2 As the Antichrist 1 3 As Roman Empire prosperity 1 4 As war 1 5 As infectious disease 2 Red Horse 2 1 As empire division 3 Black Horse 3 1 As imperial oppression 4 Pale Horse 4 1 Destroying an empire 5 Interpretations 5 1 Christological interpretation 5 2 Prophetic interpretation 5 3 Historicist interpretation 5 4 Preterist interpretation 5 5 Latter day Saint interpretation 5 6 Other interpretations 6 Other Biblical references 6 1 Zechariah 6 2 Ezekiel 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksWhite Horse editSee also White horse mythology For other uses of the term White Rider see White rider nbsp The first Horseman of the Apocalypse as depicted in the Bamberg Apocalypse 1000 1020 The first living creature with halo is seen in the upper right Then I saw when the Lamb broke one of the seven seals and I heard one of the four living creatures saying as with a voice of thunder Come I looked and behold a white horse and he who sat on it had a bow and a crown was given to him and he went out conquering and to conquer Revelation 6 1 2 New American Standard Bible 10 The above passage is a common English translation of the rider of the White Horse sometimes referred to as the White Rider He is thought to carry a bow Greek to3o toxo and wear a victor s crown Greek stefanos stephanos According to the interpretatio graeca he is Zelus daimon of conquest and glory As Christ the Gospel or the Holy Spirit edit For the broad historical interpretation of Christ as the rider of the white horse it is to be understood that the Antichrist does not appear until the opening of the sixth seal 11 Events in world history since the founding of Christianity were interpreted as horses up to the sixth seal event Therefore this interpretation can be seen as either partially preterist or an instance of dual fulfillment nbsp Albrecht Durer Knight Death and the Devil 1513 In the New Testament the Book of Mark indicates that the advance of the gospel may precede and foretell the apocalypse 5 12 The color white also tends to represent righteousness in the Bible and Christ is portrayed as a conqueror in other instances 5 12 Besides Christ the Horseman could represent the Holy Spirit The Holy Spirit was understood to have come upon the Apostles at Pentecost after Jesus departed Earth The appearance of the Lion in Revelation 5 shows the triumphant arrival of Jesus in Heaven and the first Horseman may represent the sending of the Holy Spirit by Jesus and the advance of the gospel of Jesus Christ 13 As the Antichrist edit In 1866 14 when C F Zimpel defended the hypothesis that the first horseman was the Antichrist and more precisely according to him Napoleon Bonaparte 15 The Antichrist interpretation later found champions in the United States such as R F Franklin in 1898 16 and W C Stevens in 1928 17 It remains popular in evangelical circles today 18 for example with Pastor Billy Graham for whom the horseman represented the Antichrist or false prophets in general 19 As Roman Empire prosperity edit nbsp Four horsemen by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld 1860 In Edward Bishop Elliott s interpretation the Four Horsemen represent a prophecy of the Roman Empire s subsequent history the horse s white color signifies triumph prosperity and health in the Roman political body For the next 80 or 90 years succeeding the banishment of the prophet John to the island of Patmos and covering the successive reigns of the emperors Nerva Trajan Hadrian and the two Antonines Antoninus Pius and Marcus Aurelius a golden age of prosperity union civil liberty and good government unstained with civil blood unfolded The agents of this prosperity personified by the rider of the white horse are these five emperors wearing crowns who reigned with absolute authority and power under the guidance of virtue and wisdom the armies being restrained by their firm and gentle hands 20 This interpretation points out that the bow was preeminently a weapon of the inhabitants of the island of Crete and not of the Roman Empire in general The Cretans were renowned for their archery skills The significance of the rider of the white horse holding a bow indicates the place of origin of the line of emperors ruling during this time This group of emperors can be classed together under one and the same head and family whose origins were from Crete 21 According to this interpretation this period in Roman history both at its commencement and close illustrated the empire s glory where its limits were extended though not without occasional wars which were always uniformly triumphant on the frontiers The triumphs of Emperor Trajan a Roman Alexander added to the empire Dacia Armenia Mesopotamia and other provinces during the first 20 years of the period which deepened the impression on the minds of the barbarians of the invincibility of the Roman Empire The Roman war progressed triumphantly into the invader s territory and the total overthrow of those people successfully ended the Parthian war Roman conquest is demonstrated even in the most mighty of these wars the Marcomannic Wars a succession of victories under the second Antonine unleashed on the German barbarians who were driven into their forests and reduced to Roman submission 22 As war edit In some commentaries the white Horseman symbolizes war which may be decently exercised on moral grounds hence the white color The red Horseman see below specifically symbolizes civil war 23 As infectious disease edit Under another interpretation the first Horseman is called Pestilence and is associated with infectious disease and plague It appears at least as early as 1906 in the Jewish Encyclopedia 24 This particular interpretation is common in popular culture references to the Four Horsemen 25 The origin of this interpretation is unclear Some translations of the Bible mention plague e g the New International Version 26 or pestilence e g the Revised Standard Version 27 in connection with the riders in the passage following the introduction of the fourth rider cf They were given power over a fourth of the Earth to kill by sword famine plague and by the wild beasts of the Earth in the NASB 28 However the original Greek does not use the word for plague or pestilence here simply death 8anatos 29 The use of pestilence was likely drawn from other parts of the Book of Revelation and included here as another form of death Also whether this passage refers to the fourth rider only or the four riders as a whole is a matter of debate 2 Vicente Blasco Ibanez in his 1916 novel The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse filmed in 1921 and 1962 provides an early example of this interpretation writing The horseman on the white horse was clad in a showy and barbarous attire While his horse continued galloping he was bending his bow in order to spread pestilence abroad At his back swung the brass quiver filled with poisoned arrows containing the germs of all diseases 30 Red Horse edit nbsp The second Horseman War on the Red Horse as depicted in a thirteenth century Apocalypse manuscript When He broke the second seal I heard the second living creature saying Come And another a red horse went out and to him who sat on it it was granted to take peace from Earth and that men would slay one another and a great sword was given to him Revelation 6 3 4 NASB 31 The rider of the second horse is often taken to represent War 4 he is often pictured holding a sword upwards as though ready for battle 32 or mass slaughter 2 9 33 His horse s color is red pyrros pyrrhos from pῦr fire and in some translations the color is specifically a fiery red The color red as well as the rider s possession of a great sword maxaira machaira suggests blood that is to be spilled 5 As seen in heraldry the sword held upward by the second Horseman may represent war or a declaration of war In military symbolism swords held upward especially crossed swords held upward signify war and entering into battle see for example the historical and modern images and the coat of arms of Joan of Arc 34 The second Horseman represents civil war as opposed to the war of conquest that the first Horseman is said to bring 5 35 Other commentators have suggested that it might also represent the persecution of Christians 12 36 full citation needed According to the interpretatio graeca he is Ares god of war As empire division edit nbsp Death on the Pale Horse Benjamin West 1817 According to Edward Bishop Elliott s interpretation of the Four Horsemen as symbolic prophecy of the history of the Roman Empire the second seal is opened and the Roman nation that experienced joy prosperity and triumph is made subject to the red horse which depicts war and bloodshed civil war Peace left the Roman Earth resulting in the killing of one another as insurrection crept into and permeated the Empire beginning shortly into the reign of Emperor Commodus 37 Elliott points out that Commodus who had nothing to wish for and everything to enjoy that beloved son of Marcus Aurelius who ascended the throne with neither competitor to remove nor enemies to punish became the slave of his attendants who gradually corrupted his mind 38 Elliott further recites that after the death of Commodus a most turbulent period lasting 92 years unfolded during which time 32 emperors and 27 pretenders to the Empire hurled each other from the throne by incessant civil warfare The sword was a natural universal badge among the Romans of the military profession The apocalyptic figure armed with a great sword indicated an undue authority and unnatural use of it Military men in power whose vocation was war and weapon the sword rose by it and also fell The unrestrained military no longer subject to the Senate transformed the Empire into a system of pure military despotism 39 Black Horse edit nbsp The third Horseman Famine on the Black Horse as depicted in the Angers Apocalypse Tapestry 1372 1382 When He broke the third seal I heard the third living creature saying Come I looked and behold a black horse and he who sat on it had a pair of scales in his hand And I heard something like a voice in the center of the four living creatures saying A quart of wheat for a denarius and three quarts of barley for a denarius but do not damage the oil and the wine Revelation 6 5 6 NASB 40 The third Horseman rides a black horse and is popularly understood to be Famine as the Horseman carries a pair of balances or weighing scales Greek zygὸn zygon indicating the way that bread would have been weighed during a famine 5 35 The rider is typically portrayed as an emaciated man Other authors interpret the third Horseman as the Lord as a Law Giver holding Scales of Justice 41 In the passage it is read that the indicated price of grain is about ten times normal thus the famine interpretation popularity with an entire day s wages a denarius buying enough wheat for only one person one choenix about 1 1 litres or enough of the less nutritious barley for three so that workers would struggle to feed their families 5 In the Gospels the denarius is repeatedly mentioned as a monetary unit for example the denarius was the pay of a soldier for one day and the day labor of a seasonal worker in the harvesting of grapes is also valued at one denarius Matthew 20 2 Thus it is probably a fact that with the approach of the Apocalypse the most necessary food will rise in price greatly and the wages earned per day will be enough only for the minimum subsistence for the same day and nothing more Of the Four Horsemen the black horse and its rider are the only ones whose appearance is accompanied by vocalization John hears a voice unidentified but coming from among the four living creatures that speaks of the prices of wheat and barley saying and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine This suggests that the black horse s famine is to drive up the price of grain but leave oil and wine supplies unaffected though out of reach of the ordinary worker One explanation is that grain crops would have been more naturally susceptible to famine years or locust plagues than olive trees and grapevines which root more deeply 5 35 The statement might also suggest a continuing abundance of luxuries for the wealthy while staples such as bread are scarce though not completely depleted 35 such selective scarcity may result from injustice and the deliberate production of luxury crops for the wealthy over grain as would have happened during the time the Book of Revelation was written 4 42 Alternatively the preservation of oil and wine could symbolize the preservation of the Christian faithful who use oil and wine in their sacraments 43 According to the interpretatio graeca he is Limos god of famine As imperial oppression edit According to Edward Bishop Elliott s interpretation through this third seal the black horse is unleashed representing aggravated distress and mourning The balance in the rider s hand is not associated with a man weighing out bread for his family but with buying and selling corn and other grains During the time of the apostle John s exile in Patmos the balance was commonly a symbol of justice since it was used to weigh grains for a set price The balance of justice held in the hand of the rider of the black horse signified the aggravation of the other previous evil with the bloodstained red of the Roman aspect morphing into the darker blackness of distress 44 The black horse rider is instructed not to harm the oil and the wine which signifies that this scarcity should not fall upon the superfluities such as oil and wine which men can live without but upon the necessities of life bread 45 This interpretation also borrows from Edward Gibbon s The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire which claims the Roman Empire suffered as a result of excessive taxation of its citizens particularly during the reign of Emperor Caracalla whom history has primarily remembered as a cruel tyrant and among the worst of the Roman emperors Under the necessity of gratifying the greed and excessive lifestyle which Caracalla had excited in the army old as well as new taxes were at the same time levied in the provinces The land tax taxes for services and heavy contributions of corn wine oil and meat were exacted from the provinces for court army and capital use According to Gibbon this was exacerbated by the rise to power of Emperor Maximin who attacked the public property at length Every city of the empire was destined to purchase corn for the multitudes as well as supply expenses for the games By the Emperor s authority the whole mass of wealth was confiscated for use by the Imperial treasury temples stripped of their most valuable offerings of gold silver and statues which were melted down and coined into money 46 Pale Horse edit nbsp The fourth Horseman Death on the Pale Horse Engraving by Gustave Dore 1865 When the Lamb broke the fourth seal I heard the voice of the fourth living creature saying Come I looked and behold an ashen horse and he who sat on it had the name Death and Hades was following with him Authority was given to them over a fourth of the Earth to kill with sword and with famine and with pestilence and by the wild beasts of the Earth Revelation 6 7 8 New American Standard Bible 47 The fourth and final Horseman is named Death Mors Known as 8anatos Thanatos or Moros Moros 48 of all the riders he is the only one to whom the text itself explicitly gives a name Unlike the other three he is not described as carrying a weapon or other object instead he is followed by Hades the resting place of the dead However illustrations commonly depict him carrying a scythe sword 49 or another implement he is typically no different than typical portrayals of Death and is the only horseman who doesn t appear to be a human The color of Death s horse is written as khlōros xlwros in the original Koine Greek 50 which can mean either green greenish yellow or pale pallid 51 The color is often translated as pale though ashen pale green and yellowish green 35 are other possible interpretations the Greek word is the root of chlorophyll and chlorine Based on the uses of the word in ancient Greek medical literature several scholars suggest that the color reflects the sickly pallor of a corpse 5 52 In some modern artistic depictions the horse is distinctly green 53 54 55 The verse beginning with they were given power over a fourth of the Earth is generally taken as referring to Death and Hades 35 56 although some commentators see it as applying to all four horsemen 2 According to the interpretatio graeca he is Moros god of doom Destroying an empire edit See also Crisis of the Third Century nbsp Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse by Arnaldo dell Ira neo roman project of mosaic 1939 1940 This fourth pale horse was the personification of Death with Hades following him jaws open and receiving the victims slain by Death Death s commission was to kill upon the Roman Earth with all of the four judgements of God with sword famine pestilence and wild beasts The deadly pale and livid appearance displays a hue symptomatic of approaching empire dissolution According to Edward Bishop Elliott an era in Roman history commencing within about 15 years after the death of Severus Alexander in 235 AD 57 strongly marks every point of this terrible emblem 58 Edward Gibbon speaks of a period from the celebration of the great secular games by the Emperor Philip to the death of Gallienus in 268 AD 59 as the 20 years of shame and misfortune of confusion and calamity as a time when the ruined empire approached the last and fatal moment of its dissolution Every instant of time in every province of the Roman world was afflicted by military tyrants and barbarous invaders the sword from within and without 60 61 According to Elliott famine the inevitable consequence of carnage and oppression which demolished the present crop as well as the hope of future harvests produced the environment for an epidemic of diseases the effects of scanty and unwholesome food That furious plague the Plague of Cyprian which raged from the year 250 to the year 265 continued without interruption in every province city and almost every family in the empire During a portion of this time 5000 people died daily in Rome and many towns that had escaped the attacks of barbarians were entirely depopulated 62 For a time in the late 260s the strength of Aurelian crushed the enemies of Rome yet after his assassination a certain amount of them revived 63 While the Goths had been destroyed for almost a century and the Empire reunited the Sassanid Persians were uncowed in the East and during the following year hosts of central Asian Alani spread themselves over Pontus Cappadocia Cilicia and Galatia etching their course by the flames of cities and villages they pillaged 64 As for the wild beasts of the Earth according to Elliott it is a well known law of nature that they quickly occupy the scenes of waste and depopulation where the reign of man fails and the reign of beasts begins After the reign of Gallienus and 20 or 30 years had passed the multiplication of the animals had risen to such an extent in parts of the empire that they made it a crying evil 65 One notable point of apparent difference between the prophecy and history might seem to be expressly limited to the fourth part of the Roman Earth but in the history of the period the devastation of the pale horse extended over all The fourth seal prophecy seems to mark the malignant climax of the evils of the two preceding seals to which no such limitation is attached Turning to a reading in Jerome s Latin Vulgate which reads over the four parts of the Earth 66 67 it requires that the Roman empire should have some kind of quadripartition Dividing from the central or Italian fourth three great divisions of the Empire separated into the West East and Illyricum under Posthumus Aureolus and Zenobia respectively divisions that were later legitimized by Diocletian 68 Diocletian ended this long period of anarchy but the succession of civil wars and invasions caused much suffering disorder and crime which brought the empire into a state of moral lethargy from which it never recovered 69 After the plague had abated the empire suffered from general distress and its condition was very much like that which followed after the Black Death of the Middle Ages Talent and art had become extinct in proportion to the desolation of the world 70 Interpretations edit nbsp The Horsemen of the Apocalypse in a woodcut by Albrecht Durer c 1497 1498 ride forth as a group with an angel heralding them to bring Death Famine War and Conquest unto man 71 nbsp Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Saint Sever Beatus 11th century Christological interpretation edit Before the Reformation and the woodcut by Albrecht Durer the usual and more influential commentaries of the Book of Revelation thought there was only one horseman riding successively these four horses who was the Christ himself So did some medieval illuminations and after that some modern commentators Oecumenius a Greek exegete writing in the sixth century Berengaudus a French Benedictine monk of Ferrieres Abbey at the same period Luis del Alcazar a Spanish Jesuit in 1612 Benito Arias Montano a Spanish Orientalist in 1622 Jacques de Bordes a French capuchin in 1639 Emanuel Swedenborg a Swedish theologian in 1766 72 Prophetic interpretation edit Some Christians interpret the Horsemen as a prophecy of a future Tribulation 42 during which many on Earth will die as a result of multiple catastrophes The Four Horsemen are the first in a series of Seal judgements This is when God will judge the Earth and is giving humans a chance to repent before they die A new beautiful Earth is created for all the people who are faithful to Him and accept him as their Savior citation needed John Walvoord a premillennialist believed the Seals will be opened during the Great Tribulation and coincides with the arrival of the Antichrist as the first horseman a global war as the second horseman an economic collapse as the third horseman and the general die off of one quarter of the World s population as the fourth horseman which is followed by a global dictatorship under the Antichrist and the rest of the plagues 73 Historicist interpretation edit According to E B Elliott the first seal as revealed to John by the angel was to signify what was to happen soon after John seeing the visions in Patmos and that the second third and fourth seals in like manner were to have commencing dates each in chronological sequence following the preceding seal Its general subject is the decline and fall after a previous prosperous era of the Empire of Heathen Rome The first four seals of Revelation represented by four horses and horsemen are fixed to events or changes within the Roman Earth 74 Preterist interpretation edit Some modern scholars interpret Revelation from a preterist point of view arguing that its prophecy and imagery apply only to the events of the first century of Christian history 35 In this school of thought Conquest the white horse s rider is sometimes identified as a symbol of Parthian forces Conquest carries a bow and the Parthian Empire was at that time known for its mounted warriors and their skill with bow and arrow 5 35 Parthians were also particularly associated with white horses 5 Some scholars specifically point to Vologases I a Parthian shah who clashed with the Roman Empire and won one significant battle in 62 AD 5 35 Revelation s historical context may also influence the depiction of the black horse and its rider Famine In 92 AD the Roman emperor Domitian attempted to curb excessive growth of grapevines and encourage grain cultivation instead but there was a major popular backlash against this effort and it was abandoned Famine s mission to make wheat and barley scarce but hurt not the oil and the wine could be an allusion to this episode 35 52 The red horse and its rider who take peace from the Earth might represent the prevalence of civil strife at the time Revelation was written internecine conflict ran rampant in the Roman Empire during and just prior to the 1st century AD 5 35 Latter day Saint interpretation edit Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints believe the prophet Joseph Smith revealed that the book described by John contains the revealed will mysteries and the works of God the hidden things of his economy concerning this Earth during the seven thousand years of its continuance or its temporal existence and that the seals describe these things for the seven thousand years of the Earth s temporal existence each seal representing 1 000 years 75 About the first seal and the white horse LDS Apostle Bruce R McConkie taught The most transcendent happenings involved Enoch and his ministry What John saw was not the establishment of Zion and its removal to heavenly spheres but the unparalleled wars in which Enoch as a general over the armies of the saints went forth conquering and to conquer Revelation 6 2 see also Moses 7 13 18 76 The second seal and the red horse represent the period from approximately 3 000 B C to 2 000 B C including the wickedness and violence leading to the Great Flood 77 The third seal and black horse describe the period of ancient Joseph son of Israel who was sold into Egypt and the famines that swept that period see Genesis 41 42 Abraham 1 29 30 2 1 17 21 The fourth seal and the pale horse are interpreted to represent the thousand years leading up to the birth of Jesus Christ both the physical death brought about by great warring empires and the spiritual death through apostasy among the Lord s chosen people 77 Other interpretations edit Artwork which shows the Horsemen as a group such as the famous woodcut by Albrecht Durer suggests an interpretation where all four horsemen represent different aspects of the same tribulation 78 American Protestant Evangelical interpreters regularly see ways in which the horsemen and Revelation in general speak to contemporary events Some who believe Revelation applies to modern times can interpret the horses based on the various ways their colors are used 79 Red for example often represents Communism the white horse and rider with a crown representing Catholicism Black has been used as a symbol of Capitalism while Green represents the rise of Islam Pastor Irvin Baxter Jr of Endtime Ministries espoused such a belief 80 Some equate the Four Horsemen with the angels of the four winds 81 See Michael Gabriel Raphael and Uriel angels often associated with four cardinal directions Some speculate that when the imagery of the Six Seals is compared to other eschatological descriptions throughout the Bible the themes of the horsemen draw remarkable similarity to the events of the Olivet Discourse The signs of the approaching end of the world are likened to birth pains indicating that they would occur more frequently and with greater intensity the nearer the event of Christ s return With this perspective the horsemen represent the rise of false religions false prophets and false messiahs the increase of wars and rumours of wars the escalation of natural disasters and famines and the growth of persecution martyrdom betrayal and loss of faith According to Anatoly Fomenko the Book of Revelation is largely astrological in nature The Four Horsemen represent the planets Mercury Mars Jupiter and Saturn 82 Other Biblical references editZechariah edit The Book of Zechariah twice mentions colored horses in the first passage there are three colors red speckled brown and white 83 and in the second there are four teams of horses red black white and finally dappled grisled and bay pulling chariots 84 The second set of horses are referred to as the four spirits of heaven going out from standing in the presence of the Lord of the whole world 84 They are described as patrolling the Earth and keeping it peaceful It may be assumed by some Christian interpretations that when the tribulation begins the peace is taken away so their job is to terrify the places in which they patrol 5 Ezekiel edit The four living creatures of Revelation 4 6 8 are written similarly to the four living creatures in Ezekiel 1 5 12 85 In Revelation each of the living creatures summons a horseman where in Ezekiel the living creatures follow wherever the spirit leads without turning In Ezekiel 14 21 the Lord enumerates His four disastrous acts of judgment ESV sword famine wild beasts and pestilence against the idolatrous elders of Israel A symbolic interpretation of the Four Horsemen links the riders to these judgments or the similar judgments in 6 11 12 See also edit nbsp Bible portal nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Religion portal The Book with Seven Seals Events of Revelation Chapter 6 Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse in popular culture Four Horsemen of the Infocalypse an analogous usage in the use of computers Kalki Four Perils The Fifth Horseman disambiguation several concepts adding to the four horsemenReferences edit four horsemen of the apocalypse Britannica Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2022 07 19 a b c d Flegg Columba Graham 1999 An Introduction to Reading the Apocalypse Crestwood New York St Vladimir s Seminary Press p 90 ISBN 9780881411317 Retrieved 2015 04 10 Hieronymous Sophronius Eusebius 405 Biblia Sacra Vulgata in Latin Apocalypsis 6 2 a b c Lenski Richard Chales Henry 2008 The Interpretation of St John s Revelation Augsburg Fortress Publishers p 224 ISBN 978 0 8066 9000 1 Retrieved 18 December 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Mounce Robert H 2006 The Book of Revelation Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans p 140 ISBN 9780802825377 Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2015 04 10 Apocalypse of John The King James Bible retrieved 2023 11 05 Revelation Chapter 6 United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2020 03 21 Compare Flegg Columba Graham 1999 An Introduction to Reading the Apocalypse Crestwood New York St Vladimir s Seminary Press p 90 ISBN 9780881411317 Retrieved 2021 10 27 The sword famine and pestilence are the traditional list of the three plagues of God s wrath which we find in Ezechiel 6 and in Ezekiel 14 we read of God s judgments upon Jerusalem in the forms of the sword famine the noisome beast and pestilence together with the promise that a remnant shall be spared another important theme in the Apocalypse a b CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Apocalypse Newadvent org 1907 03 01 Archived from the original on 2020 11 12 Retrieved 2021 10 27 At the opening of four seals four horses appear Their colour is white black red and pale sallow chloros piebald They signify conquest slaughter dearth and death The vision is taken from Zechariah 6 1 8 Revelation 6 1 2 Apocalypse 6 Haydock Commentary Online haydockcommentary com Retrieved 2023 11 05 a b c Beale G K 1999 The Book of Revelation 3rd ed Grand Rapids Michigan W B Eerdmans pp 375 379 ISBN 0 8028 2174 X Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2009 08 14 Rev Brian Vos Outlook Article The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Reformedfellowship net Archived from the original on 2014 01 21 Retrieved 2014 04 03 References given by B Gineste Les Quatre Chevaux du Messie Paris 2d ed 2019 pp 53 54 Ch Fr Zimpel Le Millenaire Franckfort sur le Main 1866 p 43 Annotations on the Revelation New York 1898 p 85 W C Stevens Revelation Harrisburg 1928 vol 2 p 129 evangelical Search www bing com Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2022 03 17 Graham Billy 1985 Approaching Hoofbeats The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse New York Avon p 273 ISBN 0380 69921 4 Elliott 1862 p 129 131 134 Elliott 1862 p 140 142 144 Elliott 1862 p 131 133 Herder German Bible Freiburg im Breisgau 2007 p 1348 annotation to Apc 6 7 The four Horsemen of the Apocalypse symbolize various plagues 1 War 2 Civil War 3 famine and inflation 4 pestilence and death translated from German Toy Crawford H Kohler Kaufmann 1906 Revelation Book of The Jewish Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2021 08 22 and sees a white horse appear with a rider holding a bow representing probably Pestilence Stableford Brian 2009 The A to Z of Fantasy Literature Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 18 ISBN 978 0810868298 Retrieved 18 December 2015 The NIV Bible NIV Bible Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2022 03 17 Bible Gateway passage Revelation 6 Revised Standard Version Bible Gateway Retrieved 2023 05 17 Revelation 6 7 8 Revelation 6 8 Interlinear and I saw and lo a pale horse and he who is sitting upon him his name is Death and Hades doth follow with him and there was given to them authority to kill over the fourth part of the land with sword and with hunger and with death and by the beasts of the land biblehub com Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2022 08 10 Ibanez Vicente Blasco 1916 The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse ch V Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2012 08 19 Revelation 6 3 4 Sword Definition and More from the Free Merriam Webster Dictionary Merriam webster com 2012 08 31 Archived from the original on 2017 09 27 Retrieved 2014 04 03 Jeffrey David Lyle 1992 0802836348 22nd ed Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans p 363 ISBN 0802836348 Retrieved 18 December 2015 Crossed Swords Seiyaku com Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2015 12 19 a b c d e f g h i j k Morris Leon 1988 The Book of Revelation An Introduction and Commentary 2nd ed Leicester England Inter Varsity Press pp 100 105 ISBN 0 8028 0273 7 Peters Alan R Bible Prophecies fulfilled by 2012 chapter 2 Elliott 1862 p 147 148 Gibbon 1776 p 86 87 Elliott 1862 p 150 152 Revelation 6 5 6 Hutchinson Jane Campbell 2013 Albrecht Durer A Guide to Research Routledge p 58 ISBN 978 1135581725 Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2015 04 10 a b Hendriksen W 1939 More Than Conquerors An Interpretation of the Book of Revelation Commemorative ed Grand Rapids Michigan Baker s Book House p 105 ISBN 0 8010 4026 4 Hoeck Andres Manhardt Laurie Watson 2010 Ezekiel Hebrews Revelation Steubenville Ohio Emmaus Road Pub p 139 ISBN 978 1 931018 65 4 Retrieved 18 December 2015 Elliott 1862 p 161 164 167 170 Gill John 1776 An Exposition of the Revelation of S John the Divine both doctrinal and practical London George Keith p 71 Gibbon 1776 p 142 143 Revelation 6 7 8 Rev 6 8 Alexander of Bremen Expositio in Apocalypsim Cambridge Digital Library Archived from the original on 2 March 2014 Retrieved 27 February 2014 See The Manuscript Revelation Codex Sinaiticus Archived from the original on 2013 10 30 Retrieved 2014 04 03 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon xlwros Perseus tufts edu Archived from the original on 2014 04 06 Retrieved 2014 04 03 a b Case Shirley Jackson 1919 The Revelation of John A Historical Interpretation 2nd ed University of Chicago Press Retrieved 2015 04 10 The Pale Horse Vision One of 4 Horses of the Apocalypse Flickr Photo Sharing Flickr 2010 08 09 Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2014 04 03 Apocalypse Flickr Photo Sharing Flickr 2006 11 30 Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2014 04 03 The riders on the chloros and the blood red apocalypse horses Revelation4today com Archived from the original on 2013 11 02 Retrieved 2014 04 03 Friedrich Gerhard Bromiley Geoffrey W 1968 Theological Dictionary of the New Testament Reprinted ed Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans p 996 ISBN 9780802822482 Retrieved 2015 04 10 Alexander Severus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 01 11th ed 1911 p 567 Elliott 1862 p 191 192 Gallienus Publius Licinius Egnatius Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed 1911 p 419 Elliott 1862 p 192 Gibbon 1776 p 189 Elliott 1862 p 193 Gibbon 1776 p 246 Elliott 1862 p 197 Elliott 1862 p 194 Elliott 1862 p 201 Muggleton Lodowick 1665 True Interpretation of All the Chief Texts and Mysterious Sayings and Visions Opened of the Whole Book of the Revelation of St John London England p 56 Elliott 1862 p 202 Elliott 1862 p 203 Niebuhr Barthold Georg 1844 The History of Rome from the First Punic War to the Death of Constantine vol 5 Rome Italy Taylor and Walton p 346 Leeming David 2006 The Oxford Companion to World Mythology Oxford England Oxford University Press p 22 ISBN 0195156692 Retrieved 18 December 2015 Gineste Bernard 2019 Les Quatre Chevaux du Messie 2d ed in French Paris France BoD ISBN 9782322158799 Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2019 10 02 Walvoord John Every Prophecy of the Bible Elliott 1862 pp 121 122 Doctrine and Covenants 77 www churchofjesuschrist org Retrieved 2023 11 05 Bruce R McConkie Doctrinal New Testament Commentary 3 vols 1966 1973 3 477 a b Chapter 54 Revelation 4 11 www churchofjesuschrist org Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2019 07 16 O Hear Natasha F H 2011 Contrasting Images of the Book of Revelation in Late Medieval and Early Modern Art A Case Study in Visual Exegesis 1st ed Oxford England Oxford University Press p 100 ISBN 978 0 19 959010 0 Retrieved 18 December 2015 Humphries Paul D 2005 A Dragon This Way Comes Revelations Decrypted Mustang Oklahoma Tate Publishing pp 13 85 ISBN 1 59886 061 5 Retrieved 2009 01 13 Baxter Irvin The Apocalypse Endtime Ministries Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2006 12 05 Smith Robert H Durer Albrecht 2000 Apocalypse A Commentary on Revelation in Words and Images Collegeville Minnesota Liturgical Press p 40 ISBN 978 0 8146 2707 5 Archived from the original on 13 January 2023 Retrieved 18 December 2015 The new dating of the astronomical horoscope as described in the Apocalypse PDF chronologia org Archived from the original PDF on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2019 11 30 Zechariah 1 8 17 NIV During the night I had a vision and Bible Gateway Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2014 04 03 a b Zechariah 6 1 8 NIV Four Chariots I looked up again and Bible Gateway Archived from the original on 2023 01 13 Retrieved 2014 04 03 Bible Gateway passage Ezekiel 1 5 12 English Standard Version Bible Gateway Retrieved 2022 10 06 Bibliography Elliott Edward Bishop 1862 Horae Apocalypticae vol I 5th ed London England Seely Jackson and Halliday Gibbon Edward 1776 The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Vol I Strahan and Cadell External links editFour Horsemen of the Apocalypse at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse amp oldid 1223910756, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.