And huge hailstones, about one hundred pounds each,
came down from heaven upon men; and men blasphemed God because of
the plague of the hail, because its plague was
extremely severe. -Revelation 16:21
The plagues, judgments, and disasters in the
Book of Revelation and in other biblically
prophetic passages are not understood by some as literally
descriptive of miraculous events that God will bring one day upon
mankind. Instead, non-literal interpreters of these passages say that
these descriptions are either symbolic for a
non-historical event or they insist on a naturalistic
interpretation. Such approaches have a difficult time accepting
the fact that God will actually throw 100
pound hailstones at mankind during a future
tribulation judgment. What are passages like Revelation 16:21 saying? Is
this to be seen as a future supernatural event
or is it best understood naturalistically as a
past event?
Preterist Sophistry
"It is quite impossible that such gargantuan
hailstones can be accounted for under the most
aggravated of meteorological conditions," declares Dr. Kenneth
Gentry."Yet Josephus records for us an event so visually and effectually
similar that what he records must be the
fulfillment of the Revelational prophecy."[1]Dr. Gentry's belief that
Revelation 16:21 was fulfilled in the first century,
as recorded by Josephus, is further explained in the following:
Not only is the size mentioned the same (one
talent, . . .), but the boulders thrown by the
Roman catapults were white colored, as are hailstones. Would not the
effect of the catapulting stones be virtually that of a hailstorm
of such proportions?
.. . Revelation's prophecies find an impressive fulfillment in almost
literal fashion in the Jewish War.[2]
Scripture Interprets Scripture
Dr .Gentry believes, at least in theory, that,
"Scripture interprets Scripture."[3]Yet when it comes to dealing with
this particular item, Dr. Gentry prefers
Josephus to God's Word. This is true, in spite of the fact that
Scripture has a fair amount to say about this
subject. However, when one takes into account
what Scripture actually says on this matter, it does not support
preterism. This is likely the reason why Josephus is to be preferred by
Dr. Gentry and so many preterists.
It is interesting to note that Dr. Gentry
chops his quote of Josephus and does not
include the part where Josephus says that when the Romans left their
stones white, the Jews saw them coming and
were able to dodge them. It was only after the
Romans blackened the stones that they were able to inflict damage on the
Jews.[4] Thus, in the later and effective use
of the stones by the Romans, they did not actually resemble white
hailstones as Dr. Gentry contends. Is this
what Dr. Gentry means when he says the prophecies
of Revelation were fulfilled "in almost literal fashion in the
Jewish War?" Hardly! When biblical prophecy is fulfilled, it is always
clearly and evidently fulfilled.
Scripture and Hailstones
What does the Bible have to say about the Lord
fighting with hailstones? First of all, the
oldest book in the canon of Scripture says, "Have you entered the
storehouses of the snow, or have you seen the storehouses of the
hail, which I have reserved for the time of
distress, for the day of war and battle?" (Job38:22-23) This passage
clearly teaches that God has a storehouse of hail,
specifically for "the time of distress," and "for the day of war
and battle." Is this just metaphor or "almost literal" language?
When you start looking at instances in the
Bible where God uses hail against Israel's
enemies they start to add up. God used hail against Egypt during the
seventh plague (Exod. 9:22-26). In this instance it was clearly
literal hail and not just a metaphor for bad
weather. This plague was not a result of human
agency. Only God was involved in fighting for Israel against Egypt.
There area number of Old Testament passages that refer to God's use of
hail in a battle context (Psa. 18:12-13;
78:47-48; 105:32; 148:8; Isa. 28:17; 30:30; 32:19;Ezek. 13:11-13;
38:22).
Meteorologist and Bible teacher Charles Clough
says, "The proper way to understand prophecies
of catastrophes is to follow the apostle Peter's approach and look at
the true record of God's past historical
judgments (2 Pet. 3:5-7)."[5] The most
significant passage for our study is the hailstone incident in Joshua
10. The passage says, "And it came about as they fled from before
Israel, while they were at the descent of
Beth-horon, that the Lord threw large stones from heaven on them as far
as Azekah, and they died; there were more who
died from the hailstones than those whom the
sons of Israel killed with the sword." (Joshua 10:11) This is a clear
example of the implementation of the purpose stated in Job, that
the Lord has a storehouse of hail for the very
purpose of "the time of distress" and "for the
day of war and battle." Here God fights with divinely directed
hailstones during a time of distress and on
the day of war and battle on behalf of Israel.
John Calvin notes:
In the second slaughter the hand of God
appeared more clearly, when the enemy were
destroyed by hail. And it is distinctly stated that more were destroyed
by hail than were slain by the sword, that
there might be no doubt of the victory having
been obtained from heaven. Hence again it is gathered that this was not
common hail, such as is wont to fall during storms. For, in the
first place, more would have been wounded or
scattered and dispersed than suddenly destroyed;
and secondly, had not God darted it directly, part would have
fallen on the heads of the Israelites. Now,
when the one army is attacked separately, and
the other, kept free from injury, comes forward as it were to join
auxiliary troops, it becomes perfectly clear
that God is fighting from heaven. To the same
effect it is said that God threw down great stones of hail from heaven:
for the meaning is that they fell with extraordinary force, and
were far above the ordinary size.[6]
A point of similarity between Joshua 10:11 and Revelation 16:21 is found
in the fact that both passages describe the
hailstones as large in size. They are said to
be "large" in Joshua and "huge" in Revelation. Clearly Joshua 10:11 is
a supernatural event and I believe that Revelation 8:7 and 16:21
will prove to also be direct miracles from the
hand of God.
Naturalistic vs. Supernatural
Preterists like Dr. Gentry, not only mistake
what will be in the future to be a past event.
They also make what will be supernatural to be the result of a
naturalistic cause. When it comes to interpreting the details of
Revelation, preterists, more often then not,
pull out the equivalence of their
first-century newspapers-Josephus-and start reading the headlines to
find a correspondence which they say has
already fulfilled this passage. Inevitably,
such an interpretation is a naturalistic one that does not require God
to do anything. In this instance they say that
it was the Romans who fulfilled what the Bible
says God did.
Such first-century newspaper exegesis is
similar in approach to that which preterists
criticize some futurists in our own day who attempt to correlate
Bible prophecy with current events. Yet they do the very same
thing. The only difference between preterists
and those they criticize is about 2,000 years in
time.
The only similarity between Revelation 16:21
and an event recorded by Josephus in his Wars
of the Jews is the phrase "one talent." Yet
preterists latch onto that similarity, in spite ofthe fact that there is
no contextual correspondence between Josephus and the
other words and phrases in the passage. E. W. Bullinger notes
that, "Josephus says that stones of a talent's
weight were thrown by the Romans against
Jerusalem (Wars iii. vii. 9).Surely God can send from heaven what man
could send on earth."[7] In fact, earlier in
Revelation God used hail and fire as a judgment upon mankind. "And the
first sounded, and there came hail and fire,
mixed with blood, and they were thrown to the earth; and a third of the
earth was burned up, and a third of the trees
were burned up, and all the green grass was
burned up." (Rev. 8:7) Was this also recorded somehow as fulfilled by an
event from Josephus?
Both Revelation 8:7 and 16:21 will be real,
supernatural events since both correspond to the regional plague ofhail
in Exodus 9:22-26. As Bullinger reasons, "The plague of hail in Egypt
was real (Ex. ix. 18-21). So is this. Why
not?"[8] Apparently the reason why this event
would not be a future supernatural event is because of the
preterist assumption.
Revelation 16:21, labels this event a
"plague," just like in Exodus. How could the use of catapults by the
Romans in a.d. 70 be viewed as a plague
from God? Every plague that God sends, either in Exodus or
Revelation is something that God does himself.
Not one plague in either Exodus or Revelation
is said to be mediated through human agency. All are direct, miracles
wrought by God Himself. The preterist,
naturalist interpretation shifts the glory from
God to man. Not a good thing for anyone to do!
Dr. Gentry's naturalism is evident when he
said, "It is quite impossible that such
gargantuan hailstones can be accounted for under the most
aggravated of meteorological conditions."[9] Quite right! These
are specially prepared hailstones from the heavenly storehouse in
heaven as Job38:22-23 tells us. Scientist Dr. Henry Morris says of
Revelation 16:21, "This hail will not be the
usual form of hail-that is, ice produced by violent
updrafts in atmospheric storm cells."[10] If anyone has a problem
with such a view, then they would likely have
a problem with the other miraculous events of
the Bible, both past and future.
Dr. Gentry's naturalistic, and thus symbolic
interpretation is questionable because of
another textual factor. Dr. Robert Thomas notes, "it is doubtful that
men would blaspheme God because of something
symbolic only. The Egyptian plague of hail was
literal, so this one must be too."[11] Preterism totally
fails in their interpretation of this text to explain more than
one aspect of the passage, let alone the
entire verse.
Conclusion
We have seen that Revelation 16:21 is an
interesting test case of the naturalistic interpretative
approach of preterism, verses the supernatural understanding of
the text by futurists. By letting Scripture
interpret Scripture we must conclude with Dr.
Thomas who says, "The Egyptian plague of hail was literal, so this one
must be too."[12] That's right! Because the
Lord threw down great hailstones from heaven
hitting only the Amorites in the days of
Joshua provides a precedent that He does such things. The fact that
these great hailstones in the battle of Joshua
only hit the enemy and not the Israelites is
further proof of God's divine intervention. It would also be the
envy of modern smart weapons technology.
Charles Clough concludes, "The same fire,
smoke, hail, thunder, plague, and earthquake of the Old Testament
judgments once again appear in Revelation 6-18. These terms are
not exaggerations and metaphors. They point to
a final culmination in God's program of
separating good from evil throughout all creation. God's past judgments
thus model His future judgments."[13]
Even if we did not have the Old Testament
precedent of Job, the Exodus, Joshua, etc., I believe the
passage in Revelation 16:21 is clear enough to take it as a
literal, future, supernatural event. With the
Old Testament support, it is mere sophistry to
attempt any other interpretation. Maranatha!
Endnotes
[1] Kenneth L. Gentry, Jr., Before Jerusalem Fell:
Dating the Book of Revelation(Atlanta: American Vision, 1998), p.
246.
[2] Gentry, Before Jerusalem Fell, p.246.
[3] Kenneth L. Gentry, Jr., He Shall Have
Dominion: A Postmillennial Eschatology (Tyler, TX: Institute for
Christian Economics, 1992), p. 160.
[4] Flavius Josephus, The Wars of the Jews, book V, chapter VI,
paragraph 3.
[5] Charles Clough, "God's Pattern of Judgment," in the
Tim LaHaye Prophecy Study Bible,NKJV (Chattanooga, TN: AMG,
2001), p. 1470.
[6] John Calvin, Calvin's Commentaries, 22 vols. (Grand Rapids: Baker,
1979), vol. iv,p. 151-52.
[7] E. W. Bullinger, Commentary on Revelation (Grand Rapids: Kregel,
[1935] 1984), p. 493.
[8] Bullinger, Revelation, p. 492.
[9] Gentry, Before Jerusalem Fell, p.246.
[10] Henry M. Morris, The Revelation Record: Ascientific and devotional
commentary on the prophetic book of the end times (Wheaton: Tyndale,
1983), p. 322.
[11] Robert L. Thomas, Revelation 8-22: An
Exegetical Commentary (Chicago:Moody Press, 1995), p. 277.
[12] Thomas, Revelation 8-22, p. 277.
[13] Clough, "God's Pattern of Judgment," p. 1470.
___________________
When I was a kid if you had said I would see
hailstones the size of a tennis ball one day, I would have thought
you were ready for a rubber room. Now, it is common place to see storms where huge hail stones fall. Not like the rice grain size hail stones which were the only ones ever noticed when I was a youngster. Recently there was a storm in Perth Western Australia. Here's a few pictures from it. Does it take a lot of imagination to believe the Bible's account of 45kg hailstones falling on men in judgement from God one day? Not for this bloke it doesn't. Hailstones from rice grain size to golf balls, from golf ball size to tennis balls, from tennis ball size to 45kg in size? Seems like a progression happening here. Of course the Bible is a fairy story tho isn't it? mmmmmm! Oh let's forget it. Here, have a drink. Like ice with that?? Keygar |