CHAPTER TWELVE. THE ANTICHRIST IN REVELATION 13.
In the thirteenth chapter of Revelation two Beasts are there
described. The first is the final Head of the last great Empire before the establishment
of the millennial kingdom of our Lord. The second Beast is denominated, in other passages,
"the False Prophet". There is a difference of opinion as to which of these
Beasts represents the Antichrist. In the Appendix to our book "The Redeemer's
Return", where this subject is discussed and from which we shall here freely
transcribe, we have stated that opinion is about equally divided. But during the last five
years we have made a much wider investigation, and as the result we have found that the
great majority of those who have written on the subject regard the first Beast as the
Antichrist, and that only a comparative few - nearly all of whom belong to a particular
school - favor the alternative view. However, the writings of the few have had a wide
circulation and have exerted a considerable influence on students of prophecy, and
therefore these papers on the Antichrist would lack completeness, and probably some of our
readers would be disappointed, if we said nothing on the subject. It is in no spirit of
controversy that we now present our own reasons for believing it is the first Beast of
Rev. 13 who is the Antichrist.
The book of Revelation makes known the fact that there is a
Trinity of Evil. Each of these three evil persons comes into view in Rev. 13. First, there
is "the Beast" (v. 2). Second, there is "the Dragon" (v. 2). Third,
there is "another Beast" (v. 11). The fact that of this third Beast it is said
"He spake as a dragon" (v. 11) at once intimates his satanic nature and
character, for the speech corresponds to the heart. The demoniacal nature of each of these
evil persons comes out clearly in Rev. 16:13,14, where we read, "And I saw three
unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth of the Dragon, and out of the mouth of
the Beast, and out of the mouth of the False Prophet. For they are the spirits of demons,
working miracles". Finally, in Rev. 19:19,20 we are told, "And the Beast was
taken, and with him the False Prophet...these both were cast alive into the lake of fire
burning with brimstone", and then in 20:10 we read, "And the Devil that deceived
them was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the Beast and the False Prophet
are, and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever".
The above scriptures clearly establish the fact that there
is a Trinity of Evil. Now it surely needs no argument to prove that these three evil
persons are opposed to and are the antithesis of the three Persons in the Godhead. The
Devil stands opposed to God the Father - "Ye are of your father, the Devil",
John 8:40, etc. The Antichrist stands opposed to God the Son - his very name shows this.
The remaining evil person stands opposed to God the Spirit. If this be the case, then our
present task is greatly simplified: it is merely a matter of noting what is separately
predicted of the two Beasts in Rev. 13 so as to ascertain which of them stands opposed to
Christ and which to the Holy Spirit.
Now there are only two arguments of any plausibility which
have been advanced to support the view that it is the second Beast of Rev. 13 which is the
Antichrist, but so far as we are aware no one has endeavored to show that the first
Beast represents the third Person in the Trinity of Evil! Yet he must be so if the
second is the Antichrist! This is unmistakably clear from Rev. 16:13,14 and 19:19,20. The
first argument used is drawn from the language of 13:11, where of the second Beast it is
said, "He had two horns like a lamb, and he spake as a dragon". This, we are
told, indicates that it is the Antichrist who is here in view, aping the Lamb of God.
Personally, we are amazed that such an assertion should have been made in soberness. It is
difficult to imagine anything more wide of the mark, seeing that not only is it not said
this beast with the two horns was "like the lamb" but in this same book
"the Lamb" is pictured with "seven horns" (see. 5:6). But if this
second Beast, the False Prophet, be the opponent of God the Spirit, then the two horns
have a pertinent significance, for two is the number of witness, and just as Christ
declared the Spirit of God should "testify (lit., bear witness) of Me" (John
15:26), so the third person in the Trinity of Evil bears witness to the first Beast - see
13:12,14,16. In the second place, it is said that the first Beast of Rev. 13 is presented
as the political Head, while it is the second who is viewed as the religious Head. But if
this is not a bad mistake, it certainly needs to be modified. It is the first Beast, not
the second, who is worshipped (v. 12)! Having thus noticed briefly the two leading
objections which have been brought against the position we are about to define and defend,
we shall now present some of the many arguments on the other side.
In the first place, to regard the Antichrist as limited to
the religious realm and divorced from the political, seems to us, to leave out entirely an
essential and fundamental element of his character and career. The Antichrist will claim
to be the true Christ, the Christ of God. Hence, it would seem that he will present
himself to the Jews as their long-expected Messiah - the One foretold by the Old Testament
prophets - and that before apostate Christendom, given over by God to believe the Lie, he
will pose as the returned Christ. Therefore, must we not predict, as an inevitable
corollary, that the pseudo christ, will usher in a false millennium, and rule over a mock
messianic kingdom? That this conclusion is fully borne out by Scripture we shall show in a
moment.
Why was it (from the human side) that, when out Lord
tabernacled among men, the Jews rejected Him as their Messiah? Was it not because He
failed to fulfill their expectations that he would take the government upon His shoulder
and wield the royal sceptre as soon as He presented Himself to them? Was it not because
they looked for Him to restore the Kingdom to Israel there and then? Is it not therefore
reasonable to suppose that when the Antichrist presents himself to them, that he will
wield great temporal power, and rule over a vast earthly empire? It would certainly seem
so. Happily we are not left to logical deductions and conclusions. We have a "thus
saith the Lord" to rest upon. In Dan. 11:36 - a scripture upon which all are agreed
concerning its application - the Antichrist is expressly termed "The King"
(which) shall do according to his will". Here then is unequivocal proof that
Antichrist will exercise political or governmental power. He will be a king - "the
king" - and if a king he must be at the head of a kingdom.
In the second place, if the Antichrist is to be a perfect
counterfeit of the true Christ, if he is to ape the millennial Christ as set forth in Old
Testament prophecy - for, of course, he will not mimic the "suffering" Christ of
the first advent - then it necessarily follows that he will fill the role of king, yea,
that he will reign as a King of kings, as Satan's parody of the Son of man seated upon
"the throne of His glory". That the Antichrist will also be at the head of the
religious world, that he will demand and receive Divine honors, is equally true. Just as
in the Millennium the Lord Jesus will "be a Priest upon His Throne"
(Zech. 6:13), so the Antichrist will combine in his person the headships of both the
political and the religious realms - see our notes on Ezek. 21:25,26 in Chapter 9. And
just as the Son of Man will be the Head of the fifth world-empire (Dan. 2:44) so, the Man
of Sin will be the head of the revived fourth world-empire (Dan. 2:40).
In the third place, to make the Antichrist and "the
False Prophet" one and the same person is to involve us in a difficulty for which
there seems to be no solution. In Rev. 19:20 we read, "And the Beast was taken, and
with him the False Prophet that wrought miracles before him....These both were cast alive
into a lake of fire burning with brimstone". Now, if the False Prophet be the
Antichrist, then who is "the Beast" that is cast with him into the Lake of Fire?
The Beast here cannot be the Roman Empire (the people in it), for no member of the human
race (as such) is cast into the Lake of Fire until after the Millennium (see Rev.
20). That "the Beast" is a separate entity, another individual than the False
Prophet is also clear from Rev. 20:10 - "And the Devil that deceived them was cast
into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the Beast and the False Prophet are". In
this last quoted scripture, each of the three persons in the Trinity of Evil is
specifically mentioned, and if "the Beast" is not the Antichrist, the Son of
Perdition, the second person in the Trinity of Evil, who is he?
In the fourth place, what is predicted of the first Beast in
Rev. 13 comports much better with what is elsewhere revealed concerning the Antichrist,
than what is here said of the second Beast. In proof of our assertion we submit the
following:
Points of resemblance between the first Beast of Rev. 13
and the Man of Sin of 2 Thess. 2: -
1. The first Beast receives his power, seat, and great
authority from the Dragon, Rev. 13:2. Cf. 2 Thess. 2:9 - "Him, whose coming is after
the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders".
2. :All the world" wonders after the first Beast, Rev.
13:2. Cf. 2 Thess. 2:11,12 - "And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion,
that they should believe the Lie; that they all might be damned", etc.
3. The first Beast is "worshipped", Rev. 13:4. Cf.
2 Thess. 2:4 - "He as God sitteth in the temple of God".
4. The first Beast has a mouth "speaking great
things", Rev. 13:5. Cf. 2 Thess. 2:4 - "Who...exalteth himself above all that is
called God". Note also that in Rev. 13:5 it is said of the first Beast, he "has
a mouth speaking great things and blasphemies". Is not this one of the chief
characteristic marks of the Antichrist?
5. The first Beast makes war on the saints, Rev. 13:7. Cf 2
Thess. 2:4 - "Who opposeth...all that is called God", that is, he will seek to
exterminate and obliterate everything on earth which bears God's name.
From these points of analogy it is evident that the first
Beast of Rev. 13 and the Man of Sin of 2 Thess. 2 are one and the same person.
In the fifth place, that the second Beast is not the Man of
Sin appears from the fact that the second Beast causeth the earth to worship the first
Beast (Rev. 13:12), whereas the Man of Sin exalteth himself (2 Thess. 2:4), and compare
Dan. 11:36: "And he exalteth himself". As already intimated, there are several
things which show plainly that the second Beast is the third person in the Trinity of
Evil, that is, the one who is the satanic parody of the Holy Spirit. The point now before
us supplies further confirmation. There is nothing in Rev. 13, nor elsewhere, to show that
this second Beast is worshipped, rather does he direct worship away from himself, to the
first Beast. Therefore, he cannot be the pseudo christ, for the Lord Jesus did, again and
again, receive worship (see particularly Matthew's Gospel), and will be worshipped on His
return. But this second Beast, who directs worship away from himself, accurately imitates
the Holy Spirit in this respect, for nowhere in the New Testament is the third Person of
the Holy Trinity presented as a distinct Object of worship; instead, He is to
"glorify" Christ (John 16:14) by drawing out our hearts unto that blessed One
who loved us and gave Himself for us.
Again; it has been generally recognized by prophetic
students that our Lord referred to the Antichrist when He said, "I am come in My
Father's name, and ye receive Me not: if another shall come in his own name, him ye will
receive" (John 5:43). If the one here mentioned as coming "in his own name"
is the Antichrist, then it is certain that the second Beast of Rev. 13 cannot be the
Antichrist, for he does not come "in his own name". On the contrary, the second
Beast comes in the name of the first Beast as is clear from Rev. 13:12-15. Just as the
Holy Spirit - the third Person in the Holy Trinity speaks "not of Himself" (John
16:13), but is here to glorify Christ, so the second Beast - the third person in the Evil
Trinity seeks to glorify the first Beast, the Antichrist.
If it should be objected that the second Beast is
represented as working miracles (Rev. 13:13,14) and, that as the Man of Sin is also said
to come "after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders"
(2 Thess. 2:9), therefore, the second Beast must be the Antichrist, the answer is, This by
no means follows. The power to work miracles is common to each person in the Trinity of
evil. Just as God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, each perform miracles,
so does the Dragon, the Beast, and the False Prophet (see Rev. 16:13,14 for proof). Three
things are said in connection with the second Beast which correspond closely with the work
of the Holy Spirit. First, "he maketh fire come down from heaven" (Rev. 13:13),
cf Acts 2:1-4. Second, "he had power to give life unto the image of the Beast"
(Rev. 13:15), cf John 3:6 - "born of the Spirit". Third, "he causeth all,
both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand,
or in their foreheads" (Rev. 13:16), cf Eph. 4:30 - "Grieve not the Holy Spirit
of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption".
Finally; the second Beast is clearly subordinate to the
first Beast. But would the Jews receive as their Messiah and King one who was himself the
vassal of a Roman? Was not this the very reason why the Jews of old rejected the Lord
Jesus, i.e., because He was subject to Caesar, and because He refused to deliver the Jews
from the Romans!
In the sixth place, as we have seen, in Dan. 11:36 the
Antichrist is termed "the King", and if a king he must posses a kingdom, and can
there be any doubt as to the identity of this kingdom? Will not Antichrist's kingdom be
the very one which Satan offered in vain to Christ? namely, "all the kingdoms of the
world, and the glory of them" (Matt. 4:8). That the kingdom of the Antichrist will be
much wider than Palestine appears from Dan. 11:40-42 - "And at the time of the end
shall the king of the South push at him (the Antichrist): and the king of the North (the
Antichrist, as King of Babylon) shall come against him (the King of the South) like a
whirlwind, with chariots, and with horsemen, and with many ships: and he (the Antichrist)
shall enter into the countries, and shall overflow and pass over. He (the Antichrist)
shall be overthrown: but these shall escape out of his (the Antichrist's) hand, even Edom
and Moab, and the chief of the children of Ammon. He (the Antichrist) shall stretch forth
his hand upon the countries: and the land of Egypt shall not escape". From this
scripture it is also clear that the Antichrist will be at the head of a great army and
therefore must be a political ruler as well as a religious chief.
In the seventh place, it is generally agreed among those
students of prophecy who belong to the Futurist school, that the rider upon the four
horses in Rev. 6 is the Antichrist. If this be the case, then we have further proof that
the Antichrist and the Head of the revived Roman Empire is one and the same person. This
may be seen by comparing three scriptures. In Rev. 6:8, of the rider on "the pale
horse", we read, "His name that sat on him was Death and Hell followed with
him". In Isa. 28:18, those who will be in Jerusalem during the Tribulation period are
addressed by Jehovah as follows: "And your covenant with Death shall be disannulled,
and your agreement with Hell shall not stand". What "covenant" can this be,
except the one mentioned in Dan. 9:27, where we read of the Roman Prince (the Head of the
revived Roman Empire) confirming the covenant with the many for seven years? Now reverse
the order of these three passages, and what do we learn? In Dan. 9:27 we learn that the
Head of the Roman Empire makes a covenant with the Jews. In Isa. 28:18 this covenant is
said to have been made with Death and Hell". While in Rev. 6:8 the rider on the pale
horse (whom it is generally admitted is the Antichrist) is named "Death and
Hell". Hence, from whatever angle we approach the subject it is seen that the
Antichrist is the Head of the fourth world-kingdom.

[ The Antichrist - Contents Page ] [ The Antichrist - Forward ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 1 ] [ The Antichrist Chapter 2 ] [ The Anticrist - Chapter 3 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 4 ] [ The Anticrist - Chapter 5 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 6 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 7 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 8 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 9 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 10 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 11 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 12 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 13 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 14 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 15 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 16 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 17 ] [ The Antichrist ]