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Sagradas Escrituras

Apocalipsis 16:9

Y los hombres se inflamaron con el gran calor, y blasfemaron el nombre de Dios, que tiene potestad sobre estas plagas, y no se enmendaron para darle gloria.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Afflictions and Adversities;   Astronomy;   Blasphemy;   Character;   God;   Impenitence;   Temple;   Wicked (People);   Scofield Reference Index - Resurrection;   The Topic Concordance - Wrath;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Character of the Wicked;   Repentance;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Babylon;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Day of the lord;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Blasphemy;   Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Order;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Blasphemy;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Authority;   Gnashing of Teeth;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Antichrist;   Plagues of Egypt;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Angels;   Glory;   Plague;   Repentance;   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Vials;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Blasphemy;   Revelation of John:;   Sore;  

Parallel Translations

La Biblia de las Americas
Y los hombres fueron quemados con el intenso calor; y blasfemaron el nombre de Dios que tiene poder sobre estas plagas, y no se arrepintieron para darle gloria.
La Biblia Reina-Valera
Y los hombres se quemaron con el grande calor, y blasfemaron el nombre de Dios, que tiene potestad sobre estas plagas, y no se arrepintieron para darle gloria.
La Biblia Reina-Valera Gomez
Y los hombres se quemaron con el gran calor, y blasfemaron el nombre de Dios, que tiene potestad sobre estas plagas, y no se arrepintieron para darle gloria.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

scorched: or, burned

blasphemed: Revelation 16:10, Revelation 16:11, Revelation 16:21, 2 Kings 6:33, 2 Chronicles 28:22, Isaiah 1:5, Isaiah 8:21, Jeremiah 5:3, Jeremiah 6:29, Jeremiah 6:30, Ezekiel 24:13

and they: Revelation 16:11, Revelation 2:21, Revelation 9:20, Daniel 5:22, Daniel 5:23, Luke 13:3, Luke 13:5, 2 Corinthians 12:21

to give: Revelation 11:13, Revelation 14:7, Joshua 7:19, Jeremiah 13:6, Amos 4:6-12

Reciprocal: Genesis 1:16 - to rule Genesis 4:13 - General Genesis 42:22 - his blood Exodus 8:15 - he hardened Exodus 9:2 - General Exodus 11:1 - Yet will Joshua 10:13 - So the sun 1 Samuel 6:5 - give glory Job 1:11 - and he will curse thee Psalms 140:10 - burning coals Psalms 148:8 - Fire Proverbs 19:3 - fretteth Isaiah 3:24 - burning Isaiah 42:25 - he knew Isaiah 51:20 - a wild Jeremiah 2:30 - In vain Jeremiah 25:16 - General Lamentations 3:39 - a man Malachi 2:2 - to give Matthew 11:20 - because Luke 16:30 - repent Colossians 3:8 - blasphemy 2 Timothy 3:2 - blasphemers Revelation 2:5 - and repent Revelation 2:16 - Repent Revelation 8:12 - and the third part of the sun

Gill's Notes on the Bible

And men were scorched with great heat,.... Burned with rage against the followers of Christ; were filled with envy at the success of his Gospel, and with fury and madness at the ruinous condition of the antichristian state, being deprived of its head, and chief officers:

and blasphemed the name of God, which hath power over these plagues; plagues or judgments are from God, when and wherever they come; they are sent and inflicted by him, and he can lessen or increase them, continue or remove them, as he pleases; and these, unless sanctified, will not reform men, but harden them, and set them a blaspheming the author of them. And this blasphemy may either respect the nature and perfections of God, charging him with inequality in his ways, and with injustice and unfaithfulness; or the Gospel, and the truths of it, which declare his glory, and his greatness; and which will now have a general spread, to the great mortification and confusion of the followers of antichrist:

and they repented not to give him glory; that is, they did not repent of their wicked deeds, their idolatries, murders, sorceries, fornications, and thefts, as in Revelation 9:20 so as to own and confess them, which is, the meaning of giving glory to God in repentance; see Joshua 7:19. This shows that repentance is not in man's power, but in the gift of God's grace; for though he may give space, yet if he does not give grace to repent, no man will repent; nor will any means of themselves produce it; as not the most powerful and awakening ministry, as the ministry of John the Baptist, and of Christ, and of the Gospel preachers that will be in those times, this vial refers to, nor the greatest mercies and favours, so not the severest judgments; see Amos 6:6. The event of this vial, or the plague of it, is applied, by Mr. Daubuz, to the wars between the emperors and the popes, and between the Guelphs and Gibelines.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

And men were scorched with great heat - That is, as above expressed, calamity came upon them which would be well represented by such heat. It is said that this calamity would come upon people, and we are to suppose that it would be such that human life would be particularly affected; and as that heat of the sun must be exceedingly intense which would cut down people, we are to suppose that the judgment here referred to would be intensely severe.

And blasphemed the name of God - The effect would be to cause them to blaspheme God or to reproach him as the author of these calamities; and in the fulfillment of this we are to look for a state of things when there would be augmented wickedness and irreligion, and when people would become worse and worse, notwithstanding the woes that had come upon them.

Which hath power over these plagues - Who had brought these plagues upon them, and who had power to remove them.

And they repented not - The effect was not to produce repentance, though it was manifest that these judgments had come upon them on account of their sins. Compare the notes on Revelation 9:21.

To give him glory - To turn from sin; to honor him by lives of obedience. Compare the notes on John 9:24.

In regard to the “application” of this the following things may be remarked:

  1. That the calamity here referred to was one of the series of events which would precede the overthrow of the “beast,” and contribute to that, for to this all these judgments tend.
  2. In the order in which it stands it is to follow, and apparently to follow soon, the third judgment - the pouring of the vial upon the fountains and streams.
  3. It would be a calamity such as if the sun, the source of light and comfort to mankind, were smitten, and became a source of torment.
  4. This would be attended by a great destruction of people, and we should naturally look in such an application for calamities in which multitudes of people would be, as it were, consumed.
  5. This would not be followed, as it might be hoped it would, by repentance, but would be attended with reproaches of God, with profaneness, with a great increase of wickedness.

Now, on the supposition that the explanation of the previous passages is correct, there can be no great difficulty in supposing that this refers to the wars of Europe following the French revolution, the wars that preceded the direct attack on the papacy and the overthrow of the papal government, for these events had all the characteristics here referred to:

(a) They were one of a series in weakening the papal power in Europe - heavy blows that will yet be seen to have been among the means preliminary to its final overthrow.

(b) They followed in their order the invasion of Northern Italy, for one of the purposes of that invasion was to attack the Austrian power there, and ultimately through the Tyrol to attack Austria itself. Napoleon, after his victories in Northern Italy, above referred to (compare chapter xx of Alison’s History of Europe), thus writes to the French Directory: “Coni, Ceva, and Alexandria are in the hands of our army; if you do not ratify the convention I will keep these fortresses and march upon Turin. Meanwhile I shall march tomorrow against Beaulieu, and drive him across the Po; I shall follow close at his heels, overrun all Lombardy, and in a month be in the Tyrol, join the army of the Rhine, and carry our united forces into Bavaria. That design is worthy of you, of the army, and of the destinies of France” (Alison, i. 401).

(c) The campaign in Germany in 1796 followed immediately this campaign in Italy. Thus, in chapter xx. of Alison’s History, we have an account of the campaign in Italy; in chapter xxi. we have the account of the campaign in Germany; and the other wars in Europe that continued so long, and that were so fierce and bloody, followed in quick succession - all tending, in their ultimate results, to weaken the papal power and to secure its final overthrow.

(d) It is hardly necessary to say here that these wars had all the characteristics here supposed. It was as if the sun were smitten in the heavens and power were given to scorch people with fire. Europe seemed to be on fire with musketry and artillery, and presented almost the appearance of the broad blaze of a battlefield. The number that perished was immense. These wars were attended with the usual consequences - blasphemy, profaneness, and reproaches of God in every form. And yet there was another effect wholly in accordance with the statement here, that none of these judgments brought people to “repentance, that they might give God the glory.” Perhaps these remarks, which might be extended to great length, will show that, on the supposition that it was intended to refer to those scenes by the outpouring of this vial, the symbol was well chosen and appropriate.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Revelation 16:9. They repented not — No moral national amendment has taken place in consequence of the above calamities in that unhappy country, nor indeed any of those nations engaged against her in that long and ruinous contest, which has now terminated, (1817,) without producing one political, moral, or religious advantage to herself or to Europe.


 
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