Erklarung der Offenbarung Johannis: Es entwickelt sich zugleich die Frage,
wo wir jetzt in der Zeit der Anzeigen solcher Offenbarung leben; Braunschw.
1759
"The Jews of Asia had at Jerusalem separate
schools and synagogues. The ground on which these stood, was named
Asia. The number of schools upon that ground was seven ; and
these bore, respectively, the names which appear in the inscriptions to
the seven epistles ; like the English schools at Rome, in the 8th
century, which bore the names of the Heptarchy." (Erklarung, p. 67)
WHAT OTHERS HAVE SAID
Friedrich Bleek
"The same Abauzit wrote another treatise which belongs to
this place (Essai sur 1'Apocalypse, 1730), in which he tries to show
that the book was written under Nero, and is in its prophecy only a
development of the sayings of Christ about the fall of Jerusalem; that
all refers to the destruction of this Jewish capital and the Roman-Jewish
war (ch. xxi. and xxii.); to the more extensive spread of the Christian
Church after that catastrophe.
Similar is the interpretation of Wetstein (De Interpretatione libri
Apocalypseos) in his New Testament, II. 889 and following; 1752), who
refers the main contents to the Romish-Jewish war and the contemporary
civil war in Italy, but understands the thousand years (ch. xx.) as the
fifty years after the death of Domitian until the insurrection of the
Jews under Bar Cochba, and takes the heavenly Jerusalem as a type of the
great spread and rest of the Christian Church after the complete
subjection of the Jews.
Further, Johann Christoph Harenberg's (Professor at Brunswick, died
1774) Erklarung der Offenbarung Johannis: Es entwickelt sich zugleich
die Frage, wo wir jetzt in der Zeit der Anzeigen solcher Offenbarung
leben; Braunschw. 1759, 4), which refers all to Jerusalem as far as ch.
xviii., understanding Babylon as that city; but the following chapters
he refers to the development of the Christian Church till the last day.
" (pp. 56-57)
Johann Peter Lange
"VII. Historico-Critical and Rationalistic
Period. Fundamental Tone or Key-note: Predominant
Volatilizing of Apocalyptic Eschatology ; especially the Prophecy of the
Millennial Kingdom ; amid a constantly gaining confounding of such
Prophecy with Chiliasm.
The motive or inciting cause of the period which we are at present
examining—a motive whose sketching by Lucke is not distinguished for
clearness—was, negatively, that system of criticism which maintained
that the Apocalypse consisted of purely supernatural predictions of
Church History and church-historical numbers ; and which applied such
exegesis to the support of chiliastic extravagances. Positively, it was
the felt need of a firm historical and psychological basis for the
prophetic glimpses of futurity. The errors of this new critical bent
were the issue, in part, of the delight which was occasioned by the
novel historical stand-point— historical, it was believed, for the first
time in a true sense. For the rest, these errors proceeded from doubt as
to the Spirit of Prophecy, as to the authenticity of the Apocalypse, as
to the demonic forms of the kingdom of darkness, and as to the reality
of Biblical Eschatology.
According to Lucke, Abauzit of Geneva inaugurated this tendency in his
Essai sur l' Apocalypse. "The Revelation, written probably under Nero,
is nothing—according to its own profession—but une extension de la
prophetic du Sauveur sur la ruine de l' Etat Judaique." The German
Wetstein was guilty of a curtailing and stinting of the Apocalypse,
similar to that attempted by the French Swiss. According to Wetstein,
Gog and Magog made their appearance in the rebellion instigated by
Barcochba. Harenberg took sides with Abauzit, submitting, however, that
the last four chapters of the Apocalypse are eschatological. He believed
the Book to have been originally written in Hebrew. Semler thought that
the true original spirit of the Apocalypse was Jewish chiliastic
fanaticism.
On the common basis of a one-sided criticism, Herder formed an
antithesis to Semler in this question as in other and more general
respects. The contrast is exhibited in his work entitled: Maran-atha,
das buch von der Zukunft des Herrn, des Neuen Testaments Siegel. [Maran-atha;
the Book of the Coming of the Lord: the Seal of the New Testament.] The
historical perspective of this book is, like that of Abauzit, barren and
contracted in the extreme: it consists of Jerusalem and the Jewish war.
The formal treatment of the Apocalyptic theme, on the contrary, is
enthusiastic, full of idealization, and appreciation of the figurative
language of the Orient (see Lucke's commendation). Herder called the
Apocalypse : "A picture-book, setting forth the rise, the visible
existence, and the future of Christ's Kingdom in figures and similitudes
of His first Coming, to terrify and to console." Hartwig, though the
disciple of Herder, abandoned the Oriental view for the Greek, holding,
with Paraeus, that the Apocalypse was a drama. This dramatical view was
subsequently fully carried out by Eichhorn. Others, taking a more
general, poetical view of the Apocalypse, made metrical versions of it;
of these the chief were those of Schreiber and Munter, and one by a
follower of Bengel, Ludwig von Pfeil.
The interpretation already advanced by
many, according to which the Apocalypse depicted the downfall of Judaism
and heathenism, and the tranquility and glory of the Kingdom of Christ,
re-appeared in the writings of Herrenschneider (Tentamen Apocalypseos).
Johannsen, in his Offenbarung Johannes, set forth a similar view.
Thoroughly novel and original, at variance both with the ancient
Church-historical and the modern synchrono-historical view, is the book
which appeared under the title of Briefe uber die Offenbarung
Johannis. Ein Buch fur die Starken, die schwach heissen,
Leipzig, 1784. [Letters on the Revelation of John. A Book for the
Strong, who are called Weak]. "The [anonymous] author interprets all
specials as generals, relative to the laws, arrangements and
developments of nature and of the human life in general; amid, and
according to, which laws, arrangements, and developments, God's Kingdom
on earth shall one day be perfected." Kleuker maintained once more the
eschatological signification of the Revelation (Ueber Ursprung und
Zweck, etc. [On the Origin and Design, etc.]). On the other
hand, Lucke mentions as followers of the bent of Herder and Eichhorn,
Lange, Von Hagen, Lindemann Matthai, Von Heinrichs (p. 1055)." (A
Commentary on the Holy Scriptures pp. 68-69)