Bible Commentary

Revelation 11:8

The Pulpit Commentary on Revelation 11:8

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

And their dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also our Lord was crucified; their dead body (in the singular), according to A, B, C, Arethas, and others.

The plural is read in N, P, Andreas, Primasius, and others. Omit "lie upon the highway … their Lord." "The great city" is referred to in ; ; . Its signification is always the same, viz.

the type of what is ungodly and of the world, and it is always consigned to punishment. Jerusalem, the type of what is holy, is never thus designated. Here we are plainly told the spiritual, that is, the symbolical nature of the designation.

Sodom and Egypt are chosen as the type of what is evil (cf. ; ; ; , etc.). It was in this city, that is, by the influence of this world power, that the Lord was crucified.

In describing the fate of the Church, St. John seems to have in mind the life of Christ. His witness, the opposition he encountered, his death for a brief time at the completion of his work, his resurrection and ascension, and triumph over the devil, are all here reproduced.

"The bodies lie in the street" symbolizes, according to Jewish custom, the most intense scorn and hatred.

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