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THE  FIFTH  TRUMPET  --  or  FIRST  WOE

     “And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit. And he opened the bottomless pit; and there arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace; and the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit. And there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth: and unto them was given power, as the scorpions of the earth have power. And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree; but only those men which have not the seal of God in their foreheads. And to them it was given that they should not kill them, but that they should be tormented five months: and their torment was as the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man. And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find it; and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them. And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared unto battle; and on their heads were as it were crowns like gold, and their faces were as the faces of men. And they had hair as the hair of women, and their teeth were as the teeth of lions. And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron; and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle. And they had tails like unto scorpions, and there were stings in their tails; and their power was to hurt men five months. And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon.  One woe is past; and, behold, there come two woes more hereafter.” Revelation. 9:1-12.



GREAT NATIONS OF TODAY, Chapter 8, p 60-71, by Alonso T. Jones.
     AFTER the Fourth Trumpet had ended its sounding, and before the Fifth Trumpet began to sound, the prophet "beheld and heard an angel flying through the midst of heaven, saying with a loud voice, Woe, woe, woe, to the inhibitors of the earth by reason of the other voices of the trumpet of the three angels, which are yet to sound." Rev. 8:13. Each of the last three of the Seven Trumpets is a woe, even as compared with the dreadful times of the first four of them. The reasons of this can be seen in the course of these last three trumpets.  
     As the first four of the Seven Trumpets mark the ruin of the Western Empire of Rome, and the planting, in its place, of the peoples that form the nations of Western Europe to-day; so the Fifth and Sixth Trumpets mark the ruin of the Eastern Empire of Rome, and introduce the peoples by whom that ruin was accomplished; and who are the modern nations of Eastern Europe and of Asia.  
     "And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit. And he opened the bottomless pit; and there arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace; and the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit. And there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth: and unto them was given power, as the scorpions of the earth have power. And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree; but only those men which have not the seal of God in their foreheads. And to them it was given that they should not kill them, but that they should be tormented five months: and their torment was as the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man. And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find it; and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them. And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared unto battle; and on their heads were as it were crowns like gold, and their faces were as the faces of men. And they had hair as the hair of women, and their teeth were as the teeth of lions. And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron; and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle. And they had tails like unto scorpions, and there were stings in their tails; and their power was to hurt men five months. And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon ["that is to say, a destroyer," margin]." Rev. 9:1-11.  
     This trumpet covers a period of eight hundred and seventeen years, -- A. D. 632-1449, -- and shows the rise and work of the Mohammedans in the destruction of Eastern Rome -- first the Arabian Mohammedans and later the Turkish Mohammedans. Of this Albert Barnes remarks that, "with surprising unanimity, commentators have agreed in regarding this as referring to the empire of the Saracens, or to the rise and progress of the religion and the empire set up by Mohammed." We can not see how anyone who will read the prophecy, and Gibbon's history of Mohammed and his successors in the light of it, can disagree with the application of the prophecy to the Mohammedans.  
     The term "bottomless pit," which denotes the place of their rise, is from the Greek word abussos, and signifies a waste, desolate region. And a brief sketch of Arabia makes plain the significance and aptness of the term as applied to that country.  
     Arabia is about fifteen hundred miles in extreme length; is about half this distance in width at the middle; but its extreme width on the Indian Ocean is a thousand miles. "The entire surface of the peninsula exceeds in a fourfold proportion that of Germany or France; but the far greater part has been justly stigmatized with the epithets of the stony and the sandy. Even the wilds of Tartary are decked, by the hand of nature, with lofty trees and luxuriant herbage; and the lonely traveler derives a sort of comfort and society from the presence of vegetable life. But in the dreary waste of Arabia, a boundless level of sand is intersected by sharp and naked mountains; and the face of the desert, without shade or shelter, is scorched by the direct and intense rays of the tropical sun. Instead of refreshing breezes, the winds, particularly from the southwest, diffuse a noxious vapor; the hillocks of sand which they alternately raise and scatter, are compared to the billows of the ocean, and whole caravans, whole armies, have been lost and buried in the whirlwind. The common benefits of water are an object of desire and contest; and such is the scarcity of wood, that some art is requisite to preserve and propagate the element of fire.  
     "Arabia is destitute of navigable rivers, which fertilize the soil, and convey its produce to the adjacent regions; the torrents that fall from the hills are imbibed by the thirsty earth; the rare and hardy plants, the tamarind or the acacia, that strike their roots into the clefts of the rocks, are nourished by the dews of the night; a scanty supply of rain is collected in cisterns and aqueducts; the wells and springs are the secret treasure of the desert; and the pilgrim of Mecca, after many a dry and sultry march, is disgusted by the taste of the waters, which have rolled over a bed of sulphur or salt. Such is the general and genuine picture of the climate of Arabia." -- Gibbon, Chap. L, par. 2. Along the coast there is a narrow region of fertile land, which is distinguished from the great body of the country by the term of "the happy."  
     "While the State was exhausted by the Persian war, and the Church was distracted by the Nestorian and Monophysite sects, Mahomet, with the sword in one hand and the Koran in the other, erected his throne on the ruins of Christianity and of Rome. The genius of the Arabian prophet, the manners of his nation, and the spirit of his religion, involve the causes of the decline and fall of the Eastern Empire; and our eyes are curiously intent on one of the most memorable revolutions which have impressed a new and most lasting character on the nations of the globe." -- Id., par. 1.  
     The vast hordes of the Mohammedans are signified by the symbol of a cloud of locusts; and in verses 7-9 the meaning of the symbol is made plain: "The shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared unto battle; . . . and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle."  
     "Arabia, in the opinion of the naturalist, is the genuine and original country of the horse; the climate most propitious, not indeed to the size, but to the spirit and swiftness of that generous animal. The merit of the Barb, the Spanish, and the English breed, is derived from a mixture of the Arabian blood; and the Bedoweens preserve with superstitious care the honors and the memory of the purest race. These horses are educated in the tents, among the children of the Arabs, with a tender familiarity, which trains them in the habits of gentleness and attachment. They are accustomed only to walk and to gallop; their sensations are not blunted by the incessant use of the spur and whip; their powers are reserved for the moment of flight and pursuit; but no sooner do they feel the touch of the hand or the stirrup, than they dart away with the swiftness of the wind."
     "And on their heads were, as it were, crowns like gold." When Mahomet entered Medina (A. D. 622), and was first received as its prince, "a turban was unfurled before him to supply the deficiency of a standard." The turbans of the Saracens, like unto a coronet, were their ornament and their boast. The rich booty abundantly supplied and frequently renewed them. To assume the turban, is proverbially to turn Mussulman. And the Arabs were distinguished by the miters which they wore, in which yellow was the most prominent color.  
     The Mohammedan era began July 16, A. D. 622. In the ten years that passed between that date and the day of his death, June 7, A. D. 632, Mahomet made the conquest, and secured the allegiance, of Arabia. He was immediately succeeded by Abubeker as Khalif, Caliph, or Commander of the Faithful; and with his accession the real conquests and spread of Mohammedanism began. And as to that which "was commanded them," it is found in the speech of Abubeker to the first army of Mohammedans that he sent forth. For "no sooner had Abubeker restored the unity of faith and government than he dispatched a circular letter to the Arabian tribes" as follows: --  
     "This is to acquaint you that I intend to send the true believers into Syria to take it out of the hands of the infidels, and I would have you know that the fighting for religion is an act of obedience to God."  
     "His messengers returned with the tidings of pious and martial ardor, which they had kindled in every province; the camp of Medina was successively filled with the intrepid bands of the Saracens, who panted for action, complained of the heat of the season and the scarcity of provisions, and accused, with impatient murmurs, the delays of the caliph. As soon as their numbers were complete, Abubeker ascended the hill, reviewed the men, the horses, and the arms, and poured forth a fervent prayer for the success of their undertaking. His instructions to the chiefs of the Syrians were inspired by the warlike fanaticism which advances to seize, and affects to despise, the objects of earthly ambition."  
     To the assembled hosts, Abubeker said: --  
     "Remember that you are always in the presence of God, on the verge of death, in the assurance of judgment, and the hope of paradise. Avoid injustice and oppression, consult with your brethren, and study to preserve the love and confidence of your troops. When you fight the battle of the Lord, acquit yourselves like men, without turning your backs; but let not your victory be stained with the blood of women and children. Destroy no palm trees nor burn any fields of corn. Cut down no fruit trees, nor do any mischief to cattle, only such as you kill to eat. When you make any covenant or article, stand to it, and be as good as your word. As you go on, you will find some religious persons who live retired in monasteries, and propose to themselves to serve God that way: let them alone, and neither kill them nor burn their monasteries. And you will find another sort of people, that belong to the synagogue of Satan, who have shaven crowns; be sure you cleave their skulls, and give them no quarter till they either turn Mohammedan or pay tribute." -- "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire," Chap. LI, par. 10.
     Abubeker died, July 24, A. D. 634, and was succeeded by Omar; and in the ten years of his administration, "the Saracens reduced to his obedience thirty-six thousand cities or castles, destroyed four thousand churches or temples of the unbelievers, and erected fourteen hundred mosques, for the exercise of the religion of Mahomet. One hundred years after his flight from Mecca, the arms and the reign of his successors extended from India to the Atlantic Ocean, over the various and distant provinces which may be comprised under the names of, I. Persia; II. Syria; III. Egypt; IV. Africa; and V. Spain." -- Id., Chap. LI, par. 3. The consequence was that "at the end of the first century of the Hegira, the Caliphs were the most potent and absolute monarchs of the globe . . . .  
     "Under the last of the Ommiades [A. D. 750], the Arabic Empire extended two hundred days' journey from east to west, from the confines of Tartary and India to the shores of the Atlantic Ocean. And if we retrench the sleeve of the robe, as it is styled by their writers, the long and narrow province of Africa, the solid and compact dominion from Fargana to Aden. from Tarsus to Surat, will spread on every side to the measure of four or five months of the march of a caravan. We should vainly seek the indissoluble union and easy obedience of Augustus and the Autonines; but the progress of the Mahometan religion diffused over this ample space a general resemblance of manners and opinions. The language and laws of the Koran were studied with equal devotion at Samarcand and Seville; the Moor and the Indian embraced as countrymen and brothers in the pilgrimage of Mecca; and the Arabian language was adopted as the popular idiom in all the provinces to the westward of the Tigris." -- Id., Chap. LI, last paragraph.  
     And, says the Scripture, "Their power was to hurt men five months." Five months are one hundred and fifty days; this, being prophetic time, -- a day for a year (Eze. 4:3-6), -- equals one hundred and fifty years, during which they were to hurt men.  
     This one hundred and fifty years is to be counted from the time when they first had a king over them, as verse 11: "They had a king over them, . . . whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon ["a destroyer," margin]." For more than six hundred years the Mohammedans had no regularly organized government, and recognized no such dignitary as that which answers to the title of king. "The authority of the companions of Mahomet expired with their lives; and the chiefs or emirs of the Arabian tribes left behind, in the desert, the spirit of equality and independence." -- Gibbon, Id. Each tribe, under its own chief, was independent of all the others, and came and went as it pleased. While this was the case, it is evident, as it is the truth, that their character as "a destroyer" was not, and could not be, such as it was after they were solidly united in one government under the sway of a ruler recognized by all.  
     This is made more apparent when it is seen what was to be destroyed by this "destroyer." The first four trumpets show the ruin of the Western Empire of Rome; and the fifth relates to the destruction of the Eastern Empire. And it is in the character of the destroyer of the last remains of the Roman Empire that this power acts. It was not as a destroyer of men as such, for of them it is said "that they should not kill them, but that they should be tormented five months," "and their power was to hurt men five months." It is evident, then, that this character and work as "a destroyer," relates to the final destruction of the Roman Empire, which was then represented in the Eastern Empire, with the capital at New Rome -- Constantinople.  
     Othman was the caliph who established the organized government of the Mohammedans; and thus it is from him that there has descended the name and title of the Ottoman Empire. It was under the organized power of Othman that the work of the destroyer began. In closing his account of the devastating rage of the Moguls and Tartars under Zingis Khan and his generals, Gibbon says: "In this shipwreck of nations [A. D. 1240-1304], some surprise may be excited by the escape of the Roman Empire, whose relics, at the time of the Mogul invasion, were dismembered by the Greeks and Latins." -- Id., Chap. LXIV, par. 31.   But when the decline of the Moguls gave free scope to the rise of the Moslems, under Othman, of this he says: "He was situate on the verge of the Greek Empire; the Koran sanctified his gazi, or holy war, against the infidels; and their political errors unlocked the passes of Mount Olympus, and invited him to descend into the plains of Bithynia . . . .It was on July 27, A. D. 1299, that Othman first invaded the territory of Nicomedia; and the singular accuracy of the date seems to disclose some foresight of the rapid and destructive growth of the monster." -- Id., par. 14.  
     Several points in this quotation must be noticed: --  
     1. Othman was the man who succeeded in bringing the disjointed elements of the Mohammedan power into a compact and distinctly organized governmental shape. From him dates the time when, as never before, "they had a king over them."  
     2. Note the expression of the historian -- "the destructive growth of the monster." Thus he distinguishes the very characteristic of "destroyer," which is predicted of it in the Scriptures.  
     3. The historian emphasizes "the singular accuracy of the date." In the original documents from which he drew his material, he found this date made so specific that he himself is forced to remark its "singular accuracy." Yet to those who recognize God's dealings with the nations and kingdoms, and who consider that from the time when these had a king over them, a period of a hundred and fifty years is given in which to do a certain work, it is not surprising that the date should be indicated with such singular accuracy.  
     The work of destruction, then, which was to subvert the last remains of the Roman Empire, began July 27, 1299, and was to continue one hundred and fifty years, which would reach to July 27, A. D. 1449. November, 1448, the Greek Emperor John Paleolagus died. There were rival claimants to the succession -- Demetrius and Constantine. Demetrius was present to seize the throne; Constantine was absent. "The Empress-mother, the Senate, and soldiers, the clergy, and people were unanimous in the cause of the lawful successor," Constantine. Yet with all this power in his favor there was at that moment another power that must be consulted -- the Turkish Sultan, Amurath II. Accordingly in 1449, an ambassador was sent to the Court of Amurath at Adrianople. "Amurath received him with honor, and dismissed him with gifts; but the gracious approbation of the Turkish Sultan announced his SUPREMACY, and the approaching downfall of the Eastern Empire." -- Id., Chap. LVII, par. 14.  
     And "one woe is passed; and, behold there come two woes more hereafter."


THE THREE WO TRUMPETS. WO! WO!! WO!!!,  p 1-3, by Josiah Litch, (also quoted in The Midnight Cry, January 6, 1843, p 7-8).
     Rev. 8:13.  "Wo [sic], wo, wo to the inhibitors of the earth, by reason of the other voices of the trumpet of the three angels which are yet to sound."
     Rev. 9:1.  "And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth; and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit."
     A star, in the figurative language of Revelation, is a minister of religion.  See Rev. 1:20....  A fallen star, then would signify a fallen or heretical minister of religion.  This was undoubtedly the Arabian imposter, Mahomet. [Mohammed]  There is so general an agreement among Christians, especially protestant commentators, that the subject of this prediction is Mahom-medism [Islam], I shall not enter into the argument at large to prove it; but in passing, shall merely give a brief exposition of the emblems used, and their application in the text.
     Verse 2: "And he opened the bottomless pit; and there arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace; and the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit. . . . "
     The smoke was the cloud of errors which arose through his instrumentality, darkening the sun, (gospel light,) and the air, (the influence of Christianity on the minds of men.)  In this enterprise, he and his followers were so successful that the light of Christianity almost disappeared wherever he gained an influence; and the smoke of the pit produced nearly total darkness throughout the eastern church.
     Verse 3:  "And there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth; and unto them was given power as scorpions of the earth have power. . . . "
     That these locusts were emblems of an army, is clear. . . :  "And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared unto battle; and on their heads were crowns like gold, and their faces were the faces of men.  And they had hair like the hair of women, and their teeth were as the teeth of lions,"  &c. . . .  Such is the description of a Mahommedan [Muslim] horseman prepared for battle.  A horse, a rider with a man's face, long flowing beard, woman's hair, flowing or plaited, and the head encircled with a yellow turban, like gold.
     "Was given power, as the scorpions of the earth have power. . . ."  Martinicus says, Scorpions have nippers, or pincers, with which they keep hold of what they seize, after they have wounded it with their sting.... "
     Like the scorpion, Mahomet stung the subjects of his proselytism, and infused the poison of his doctrines, and continued to hold them by the force of arms, until it had affected the whole man, and the subject settled down in the belief of his delusive errors. . . .  Wherever his arms triumphed, there his religion was imposed on men, whether they believed it or not. . . .
     "The successors of the prophet propagated his faith and imitated his example; and such was the rapidity of their progress, that in the space of a century, Persia, Syria, Egypt, Africa, and Spain had submitted to the victorious arms of the Arabian and Saracen conquerors." Ruter.
     Verse 4:  "And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass of the earth neither any green thing, neither any tree; but only those men which have not the seal of God in their foreheads. "
     "Grass, green thing, and tree" are here put in opposition to those men who have not the seal of God, &c.  If so, they must mean those who have the seal of God - his worshipers.
     ". . .Infidels, who rejected the Christian religion, and also all idolaters, they forced to receive the Mahommedan religion [Islam], upon pain of death.  But Jews and Christians, who had their Bibles and their religion, they left to the enjoyment of them, upon their paying large sums, which they exacted.  But where the payment of such sums was refused, they must either embrace the new religion or die."  Smiths Key to Revelation.
     Verse 5:  "And to them it was given that they should not kill them, but that they should be tormented five months."
     As the language thus far has been figurative, so it must be here also.  To kill, signifies, a political death, or subjection.  The nation of Christians who were the subjects of this plague were to be tormented five months, but not politically slain.  Five months is one hundred and fifty days; each day a full solar year; the whole time, one hundred and fifty years.
     Verse 6:  "And in those days men shall seek death, and shall not find it; and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them."
     This, of course, is the same death as that in verse 5, viz., political.  Such was the misery of the Greeks, occasioned by the wars in which they were almost continually embroiled with the Mahommedan powers, that very many would have preferred an entire subjection of the empire to them, to the protracted miseries the war occasioned.  But this was not permitted; political death fled from them.

THE EXTERMINATOR TORMENTS THE GREEKS ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS
     Verse 10:  "Their power was to hurt men five months. "
     1.  The question arises.  What men were they to hurt five months?  Undoubtedly the same they were afterwards to slay; (See verse 15.)  "The third part of the men,"  or third of the Roman empire - the Greek division of it.
     2.  When were they to begin their work of torment?  The 11th verse answers the question: "They had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek hath his name Apollyon."
     a.  "They had a king over them."   From the death of Mahomet. . .the Mahommedans were divided into various factions, under several leaders, with no general civil government extending over them all.  Near the close of the 13th century, Othman founded a government, which has since been known as the Ottoman government, or empire, extending over all the principal Mahommedan tribes, consolidating them into one grand monarchy.
     b.  The character of the king.  "Which is the angel of the bottomless pit."   An angel signifies a messenger, or minister, either good or bad; not always a spiritual being. "The angel of the bottomless pit,"  or chief minister of the religion which came from hence when it was opened.  That religion is Mahommedism [Islam], and the Sultan is its chief minister.
     "The Sultan, or Grand Signior, as he is indifferently called, is also Supreme Caliph, or high priest, uniting in his person the highest spiritual dignity with the supreme secular authority."  Perkins, "World as it is,"  p. 361....
     3.  His name.  In Hebrew, "Abaddon,"  the destroyer; in Greek, "Apollyon,"  one that exterminates or destroys.  Having two different names in the two languages, it is evident that the character rather than the name of the power is intended to be represented. . . .  Such has always been the character of the Ottoman government. . . .
     But when did Othman make his first assault on the Greek empire?  According to Gibbon ("Decline & Fall,"  &c.) "Othman first entered the territory of Nicomedia on the 27th day of July, 1299. . . ."
     "And their power was to torment men five months. . . ."  Commencing July 27th, 1299, the one hundred and fifty years reach to 1449.  During that whole period the Turks were engaged in an almost perpetual war with the Greek empire, but yet without conquering it.  They seized upon and held several of the Greek provinces, but still Greek independence was maintained in Constantinople.  But in 1449, the termination of the one hundred and fifty years, a change came.  Before presenting the history of that change, however, we will look at verses 12-15...


REVIEW AND HERALD, vol 12, July 22, 1858, #10, & July 29, #11, p 73-75 & 82.
     "There is scarcely so uniform an agreement among interpreters concerning any part of the apocalypse as respecting the application of the fifth and sixth trumpets, or the first and second wo, to the Saracens and Turks.  It is so obvious that it can scarcely be misunderstood.  Instead of a verse or two designating each, the whole of the ninth chapter of the Revelation, in equal portions, is occupied with a description of both.
     "The Roman empire declined, as it arose, by conquest; but the Saracens and the Turks were the instruments by which a false religion became the scourge of an apostate church; and hence, instead of the fifth and sixth trumpets, like the former, being marked by that name alone, they are called woes.  It was because the laws were transgressed, the ordinances changed, and the everlasting covenant broken, that the curse came upon the earth or the land.
     "We have passed the period, in the political history of the world, when the western empire was extinguished; and the way was thereby opened for the exaltation of the papacy.  The imperial power of the city of Rome was annihilated, and the office and the name of the emperor of the west was abolished for a season.  The trumpets assume a new form, as they are directed to a new object, and the close coincidence, or rather express identity between the king of the south, or the king of the north, as described by Daniel, and the first and second wo, will be noted in the subsequent illustration of the latter.  The spiritual supremacy of the pope, it may be remembered, was acknowledged and maintained, after the fall of Rome, by the emperor Justinian.  And whether in the character of a trumpet or a wo, the previous steps of history raise us, as on a platform, to behold in a political view the judgments that fell on apostate Christendom, and finally led to the subversion of the eastern empire."
     Chap.ix,1.  "And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit."
     "Constantinople was besieged for the first time after the extinction of the western empire, by Chosroes, the king of Persia."
     "A star fell from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit."
     "`While the Persian monarch contemplated the wonders of his art and power, he received an epistle from an obscure citizen of Mecca, inviting him to acknowledge Mahomet as the apostle of God.  He rejected the invitation, and tore the epistle.  "It is thus," exclaimed the Arabian prophet, "that God will tear the kingdom, and reject the supplication of Chosroes."  Placed on the verge of these two empires of the east, Mahomet observed with secret joy the progress of mutual destruction; and in the midst of the Persian triumphs he ventured to foretell, that, before many years should elapse, victory should again return to the banners of the Romans.'  `At the time when this prediction is said to have been delivered, no prophecy could be more distant from its accomplishment(!) since the first twelve years of Heraclius announced the approaching dissolution of the empire.'
     "It was not, like that designative of Attila, on a single spot that the star fell, but upon the earth.
     "Chosroes subjugated the Roman possessions in Asia and Africa.  And `the Roman empire,' at that period, `was reduced to the walls of Constantinople, with the remnant of Greece, Italy, and Africa, and some maritime cities, from Tyre to Trebisond, of the Asiatic coast.  The experience of six years at length persuaded the Persian monarch to renounce the conquest of Constantinople, and to specify the annual tribute or the ransom of the Roman empire: a thousand talents of gold, a thousand talents of silver, a thousand silk robes, a thousand horses, and a thousand virgins.  Heraclius subscribed these ignominious terms.  But the time and space which he obtained to collect those treasures from the poverty of the east, was industriously employed in the preparations of a bold and desperate attack.'
     "The king of Persia despised the obscure Saracen, and derided the message of the pretended prophet of Mecca.  Even the overthrow of the Roman empire would not have opened a door for Mahommedanism, or for the progress of the Saracenic armed propagators of an imposture, though the monarch of the Persians and chagan of the Avars (the successor of Attila) had divided between them the remains of the kingdom of the Caesars.  Chosroes himself fell.  The Persian and Roman monarchies exhausted each other's strength.  And before a sword was put into the hands of the false prophet, it was smitten from the hands of those who would have checked his career, and crushed his power.
     "Since the days of Scipio and Hannibal, no bolder enterprise has been attempted than that which Heraclius achieved for the deliverance of the empire.  He permitted the Persians to oppress for a while the provinces, and to insult with impunity the capital of the east; while the Roman emperor explored his perilous way through the Black Sea and the mountains of Armenia, penetrated into the heart of Persia, and recalled the armies of the great king to the defense of their bleeding country.  The revenge and ambition of Chosroes exhausted his kingdom.  The whole city of Constantinople was invested - and the inhabitants descried with terror the flaming signals of the European and Asiatic shores.  In the battle of Nineveh, which was fiercely fought from daybreak to the eleventh hour, twenty-eight standards, besides those which might be broken or torn, were taken from the Persians; the greatest part of their army was cut in pieces, and the victors, concealing their own loss, passed the night on the field.  The cities and palaces of Assyria were open for the first time to the Romans.
     "`The Greeks and modern Persians minutely described how Chosroes was insulted, and famished, and tortured by the command of an inhuman son, who so far surpassed the example of his father: but at the time of his death, what tongue could relate the story of the parricide? what eye could penetrate into the tower of darkness?  The glory of the house of Sassan ended with the life of Chosroes; his unnatural son enjoyed only eight months' fruit of his crimes; and in the space of four years the regal title was assumed by nine candidates, who disputed, with the sword or dagger, the fragments of an exhausted monarchy.  Every province and every city of Persia was the scene of independence, of discord, and of blood, and the state of anarchy continued about eight years longer, till the factions were silenced and united under the common yoke of the Arabian Caliphs.'
     "The Roman emperor was not strengthened by the conquests which he achieved; and a way was prepared at the same time, and by the same means, for the multitude of Saracens from Arabia, like locusts from the same region, who, propagating in their course the dark and delusive Mahometan creed, speedily overspread both the Persian and Roman empires.
     "More complete illustration of this fact could not be desired than is supplied in the concluding words of the chapter from Gibbon, from which the preceding extracts are taken."
     "`Yet the deliverer of the east was indigent and feeble.  Of the Persian spoils the most valuable portion had been expended in the war, distributed to the soldiers, or buried by an unlucky tempest in the waves of the Euxine.  The loss of two hundred thousand soldiers, who had fallen by the sword, was of less fatal importance than the decay of arts, agriculture, and population, in this long and destructive war: and although a victorious army had been formed under the standard of Heraclius, the unnatural effort seems to have exhausted rather than exercised their strength.  While the emperor triumphed at Constantinople or Jerusalem, an obscure town on the confines of Syria was pillaged by the Saracens, and they cut in pieces some troops who advanced to its relief - an ordinary and trifling occurrence, had it not been the prelude of a mighty revolution.  These robbers were the apostles of Mahomet; their fanatic valor had emerged from the desert; and in the last eight years of his reign, Heraclius lost to the Arabs the same provinces which he had rescued from the Persians.'
     "`The spirit of fraud and enthusiasm, whose abode is not in the heavens,' was let loose on earth.  The bottomless pit needed but a key to open it; and that key was the fall of Chosroes.  He had contemptuously torn the letter of an obscure citizen of Mecca.  But when from his `blaze of glory' he sunk into `the tower of darkness' which no eye could penetrate, the name of Chosroes was suddenly to pass into oblivion before that of Mahomet; and the crescent seemed but to wait its rising till the falling of the star.  Chosroes, after his entire discomfiture and loss of empire, was murdered in the year 628; and the year 629 is marked by `the conquest of Arabia,' `and the first war of the Mahometans against the Roman empire.'  And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit.  And he opened the bottomless pit.  He fell unto the earth.  When the strength of the Roman empire was exhausted, and the great king of the east lay dead in his tower of darkness, the pillage of an obscure town on the borders of Syria was `the prelude of a mighty revolution.'  `The robbers were the apostles of Mahomet, and their fanatic valor emerged from the desert.'
     "A more succinct, yet ample, commentary may be given in the words of another historian.
     "`While Chosroes of Persia was pursuing his dreams of recovering and enlarging the empire of Cyrus, and Heraclius was gallantly defending the empire of the Caesars against him; while idolatry and metaphysics were diffusing their baneful influence through the church of Christ, and the simplicity and purity of the gospel were nearly lost beneath the mythology which occupied the place of that of ancient Greece and Rome, the seeds of a new empire, and of a new religion, were sown in the inaccessible deserts of Arabia.'
     "The first wo arose at a time when transgressors had come to the full, when men had changed the ordinances and broken the everlasting covenant, when idolatry prevailed, or when tutelar saints were honored - and when the `mutual destruction' of the Roman and Persian empires prepared the way of the fanatic robbers - or opened the bottomless pit, from whence an imposture, which manifests its origin from the `father of liars,' spread over the greater part of the world.
     "And there arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace, and the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit.  Like the noxious and even deadly vapor which the winds, particularly from the south-west, diffuse in Arabia, Mahommedanism spread from thence its pestilential influence - and arose as suddenly, and spread as widely, as smoke arising out of the pit, the smoke of a great furnace.  Such is a suitable symbol of the religion of Mahomet, of itself, or as compared with the pure light of the gospel of Jesus.  It was not, like the latter, a light from heaven; but a smoke out of the bottomless pit.
     "`Mahomet alike instructed to preach and to fight; and the union of these opposite qualities, while it enhanced his merit, contributed to his success; the operation of force and persuasion, of enthusiasm and fear, continually acted on each other, till every barrier yielded to their irresistible power.' `The first caliphs ascended the pulpit to persuade and edify the congregation.'
     "`While the state was exhausted by the Persian war, and the church was distracted by the Nestorian and Monophysite sects, Mahomet, with the sword in one hand, and the Koran in the other, erected his throne on the ruins of Christianity and of Rome.  The genius of the Arabian prophet, the manners of his nation, and the spirit of his religion, involve the causes of the decline and fall of the eastern empire; and our eyes are curiously intent on one of the most memorable revolutions which have impressed a new and most lasting character on the nations of the globe."
     "Mahomet, it may be said, has heretofore divided the world with Jesus.  He rose up against the Prince of princes.  A great sword was given him.  His doctrine, generated by the spirit of fraud and enthusiasm, whose abode is not in the heavens, as even an unbeliever could tell, arose out of the bottomless pit, spread over the earth like the smoke of a great furnace, and the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit.  It spread from Arabia, over great part of Asia, Africa and Europe.  The Greeks of Egypt, whose numbers could scarcely equal a tenth of the nation, were overwhelmed by the universal defection.  And even in the farthest extremity of continental Europe, the decline of the French monarchy invited the attacks of these insatiate fanatics.  The smoke that arose from the cave of Hera was diffused from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean.  But the prevalence of their faith is best seen in the extent of their conquests."
     Verse 3.  "And there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth; and unto them was given power, as the scorpions of the earth have power."
     "A false religion was set up, which, although the scourge of transgressions and idolatry, filled the world with darkness and delusion; and swarms of Saracens, like locusts, overspread the earth, and speedily extended their ravages over the Roman empire, from east to west.  The hail descended from the frozen shores of the Baltic; the burning mountain fell upon the sea, from Africa: and the locusts (the fit symbol of the Arabs) issued from Arabia, their native region.  They came, as destroyers, propagating a new doctrine, and stirred up to rapine and violence by motives of interest and religion.
     "`In the ten years of the administration of Omar, the Saracens reduced to his obedience thirty-six thousand cities or castles, destroyed four thousand churches or temples of the unbelievers, and erected fourteen hundred mosques, for the exercise of the religion of Mahomet.  One hundred years after his flight for Mecca, the arms and the reign of his successors extended from India to the Atlantic Ocean.
     "`At the end of the first century of the Hegira, the caliphs were the most potent and absolute monarchs of the globe.  The regal and sacerdotal characters were united in the successors of Mahomet.  Under the last of the Ommiades, the Arabic empire extended two hundred days' journey from east to west, from the confines of Tartary and India to the shores of the Atlantic Ocean.  And if we retrench the sleeve of the robe, as it is styled by their writers, the long and narrow province of Africa, the solid and compact dominion from Fargana to Aden from Tarsus to Surat, will spread on every side to the measure of four or five months of the march of a caravan.  The progress of the Mahometan religion diffused over this ample space a general resemblance of manners and opinions; the language and laws of the Koran were studied with equal devotion at Sarmacand and Seville: the Moor and the Indian embraced as countrymen and brothers in the pilgrimage of Mecca; and the Arabian language was adopted as the popular idiom in all the provinces to the westward of the Tigris.'
     "A still more specific illustration may be given, of the power, like unto that of scorpions, which was given them.  Not only was their attack speedy and vigorous, but `the nice sensibility of honor, which weighs the insult rather than the injury, sheds its deadly venom on the quarrels of the Arabs: - an indecent action, a contemptuous word, can be expiated only by the blood of the offender; and such is their patient inveteracy, that they expect whole months and years the opportunity of revenge.'"
     Verse 4.  "And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree; but only those men which have not the seal of God in their foreheads."
     On the sounding of the first angel, the third part of the trees was burnt up, and all green grass was burnt up.
     After the death of Mahomet, he was succeeded in the command by Abubeker, A. D. 632, who, as soon as he had fairly established his authority and government, dispatched a circular letter to the Arabian tribes, of which the following is an extract: "This is to acquaint you that I intend to send the true believers into Syria to take it out of the hand of the infidels, and I would have you know that the fighting for religion is an act of obedience to God."
     "His messengers returned with the tidings of pious and martial ardor, which they had kindled in every province; the camp of Medina was successively filled with the intrepid bands of the Saracens, who panted for action, complained of the heat of the season and the scarcity of provisions, and accused, with impatient murmurs, the delays of the caliph.  As soon as their numbers were complete, Abubeker ascended the hill, reviewed the men, the horses, and the arms, and poured forth a fervent prayer for the success of their undertaking.  His instructions to the chiefs of the Syria were inspired by the warlike fanaticism which advances to seize, and affects to despise, the objects of earthly ambition.  `Remember,' said the successor of the prophet, `that you are always in the presence of God, on the verge of death, in the assurance of judgment, and the hope of Paradise: avoid injustice and oppression; consult with your brethren, and study to preserve the love and confidence of your troops.  When you fight the battles of the Lord, acquit yourselves like men, without turning your backs; but let not your victory be stained with the blood of women or children.  Destroy no palm-trees, nor burn any fields of corn.  Cut down no fruit-trees, nor do any mischief to cattle, only such as you kill to eat.  When you make any covenant or article, stand to it, and be as good as your word.  As you go on, you will find some religious persons who live retired in monasteries, and propose to themselves to serve God that way; let them alone, and neither kill them nor destroy their monasteries; and you will find another sort of people that belong to the synagogue to Satan, who have shaven crowns; be sure you cleave their skulls, and give them no quarter till they either turn Mahometans or pay tribute.'
     "It is not said in prophecy or in history that the more humane injunctions were as scrupulously obeyed as the ferocious mandate.  But it was so commanded them.  And the preceding are the only instructions recorded by Gibbon, as given by Abubeker to the chiefs whose duty it was to issue the commands to all the Saracen hosts.  The commands are alike discriminating with the prediction; as if the caliph himself had been acting in known as well as direct obedience to a higher mandate than that of mortal man - and in the very act of going forth to fight against the religion of Jesus, and to propagate Mahommedanism in its stead, he repeated the words which it was foretold in the Revelation of Jesus Christ, that he would say."
     Verse 5.  "And to them it was given that they should not kill them, but that they should be tormented five months; and their torment was as the torment of a scorpion when he striketh a man."
     "Their constant incursions into the Roman territory, and frequent assaults on Constantinople itself, were an unceasing torment throughout the empire, which yet they were not able effectually to subdue, notwithstanding the long period, afterwards more directly alluded to, during which they continued, by unremitting attacks, grievously to afflict an idolatrous church, of which the pope was the head.  Their charge was to torment, and then to hurt but not to kill, or utterly destroy.  The marvel was that they did not.  To repeat the words of Gibbon: `The calm historian of the present hour must study to explain by what means the church and state were saved from this impending, and, as it should seem, from this inevitable danger.  In this inquiry I shall unfold the events that rescued our ancestors of Britain, and our neighbors of Gaul, from the civil and religious yoke of the Koran; that protected the majesty of Rome, and delayed the servitude of Constantinople; that invigorated the defense of the Christians, and scattered among their enemies the seeds of division and decay.'  Ninety pages of illustration follow, to which we refer the readers of Gibbon.
     Verse 6.  "And in those days shall men seek death, but they shall not find it; and shall desire to die, but death shall flee from them."
     "Men were weary of life, when life was spared only for a renewal of wo, and when all that they accounted sacred was violated, and all that they held dear constantly endangered; and when the savage Saracens domineered over them, or left them only to a momentary repose, ever liable to be suddenly or violently interrupted, as if by the sting of a scorpion.  They who tormented men were commanded not to kill them.  And death might thus have been sought even where it was not found.  `Whosoever falls in battle,' says Mahomet, `his sins are forgiven at the day of judgment: at the day of judgment his wounds shall be resplendent as vermilion, and odoriferous as musk, and the loss of his limbs shall be supplied by the wings of angels and cherubim.'  The intrepid souls of the Arabs were fired with enthusiasm: the picture of the invisible world was strongly painted on their imagination; and the death which they always despised became an object of hope and desire."
     Verse 7.  "And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared unto battle."
     "Arabia, in the opinion of the naturalist, is the genuine and original country of the horse; the climate most propitious, not indeed to the size, but to the spirit and swiftness of that generous animal.  The merit of the Barb, the Spanish, and the English breed, is derived from a mixture of the Arabian blood; the Bedouins preserve with superstitious care the honors and the memory of the purest race.  These horses are educated in the tents, among the children of the Arabs, with a tender familiarity, which trains them in the habits of gentleness and attachment.  They are accustomed only to walk and to gallop: their sensations are not blunted by the incessant use of the spur and the whip; their powers are reserved for the moments of flight and pursuit; but no sooner do they feel the touch of the hand or the stirrup, than they dart away with the swiftness of the wind.
     "The Arabian horse takes the lead throughout the world; and skill in horsemanship is the art and science of Arabia.  And the barbed Arabs, swift as locusts and armed like scorpions, ready to dart away in a moment, were ever prepared unto battle.
     "And on their heads were, as it were, crowns like gold.  When Mahomet entered Medina, (A. D. 622,) and was first received as its prince, `a turban was unfurled before him to supply the deficiency of a standard.'  The turbans of the Saracens, like unto a coronet, were their ornament and their boast.  The rich booty abundantly supplied and frequently renewed them.  To assume the turban, is proverbially to turn Mussulman.  And the Arabs were anciently distinguished by the mitres which they wore.
     "And their faces were as the faces of men.  `The gravity and firmness of the mind of the Arab is conspicuous in his outward demeanor - his only gesture is that of stroking his beard, the venerable symbol of manhood.'  `The honor of their beards is most easily wounded.'
     Verse 8.  "And they had hair as the hair of women."
     "Long hair is esteemed an ornament by women."  The Arabs, unlike to other men, had their hair as the hair of women, or uncut, as their practice is recorded by Pliny and others.  But there was nothing effeminate in their character, for, as denoting their ferocity and strength to devour, their teeth were as the teeth of lions.
     Verse 9.  "And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron."
     "The cuirass (or breastplate) was in use among the Arabs in the days of Mahomet.  In the battle of Ohud (the second which Mahomet fought) with the Koreish of Mecca, (A. D. 624,) `seven hundred of them were armed with cuirasses.'  And in his next victory over the Jews, `three hundred cuirasses, five hundred pikes, a thousand lances, composed the most useful portion of the spoil.'  After the defeat of the imperial army of seventy thousand men, on the plain of Aiznadin, (A. D. 633,) the spoil taken by the Saracens `was inestimable; many banners and crosses of gold and silver, precious stones, silver and gold chains, and innumerable suits of the richest armor and apparel.  The seasonable supply of arms became the instrument of new victories.'"
     Verse 9.  "And the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle."
     "The charge of the Arabs was not like that of the Greeks and Romans, the efforts of a firm and compact infantry: their military force was chiefly formed of cavalry and archers; and the engagement was often interrupted, and often renewed by single combats and flying skirmishes, &c.  The periods of the battle of Cadesia were distinguished by their peculiar appellations.  The first, from the well-timed appearance of six thousand of the Syrian brethren, was denominated the day of succor.  The day of concussion might express the disorder of one, or perhaps of both the contending armies.  The third, a nocturnal tumult, received the whimsical name of the night of barking, from the discordant clamors, which were compared to the inarticulate sounds of the fiercest animals.  The morning of the succeeding day determined the fate of Persia.'  With a touch of the hand, the Arab horses darted away with the swiftness of the wind.  The sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle.  Their conquests were marvelous, both in rapidity and extent, and their attack was instantaneous.  Nor was it less successful against the Romans than the Persians.  `A religion of peace was incapable of withstanding the fanatic cry of "Fight, fight!  Paradise, paradise!" that re-echoed in the ranks of the Saracens.'"
     Verse 10.  "And they had tails like unto scorpions: and there were stings in their tails; and their power was to hurt men five months."
     "The authority of the companions of Mahomet expired with their lives: and the chiefs or emirs of the Arabian tribes left behind in the desert the spirit of equality and independence.  The legal and sacerdotal characters were united in the successors of Mahomet; and if the Koran was the rule of their actions, they were the supreme judges and interpreters of that divine book.  They reigned by the right of conquest over the nations of the east, to whom the name of liberty was unknown, and who were accustomed to applaud in their tyrants the acts of violence and severity that were exercised at their own expense.'"
     "Thus far Keith has furnished us with illustrations of the sounding of the first five trumpets.  But here we must take leave of him, and, in applying the prophetic periods, pursue another course.
     Verse 10: "Their power was to hurt men five months."
     1.  The question arises, What men were they to hurt five months?  Undoubtedly, the same they were afterwards to slay; [see verse 15.]  "The third part of men," or third of the Roman empire - the Greek division of it.
     2.  When were they to begin their work of torment?  The 11th verse answers the question:- "They had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek hath his name Apollyon."
     1.  "They had a king over them."  From the death of Mahomet until near the close of the 13th century, the Mahommedans were divided into various factions, under several leaders, with no general civil government extending over them all.  Near the close of the 13th century, Othman founded a government, which has since been known as the Ottoman government, or empire, extending over all the principal Mahommedan tribes, consolidating them into one grand monarchy.
     2.  The character of the king.  "Which is the angel of the bottomless pit."  An angel signifies a messenger, or minister, either good or bad; not always a spiritual being.  "The angel of the bottomless pit," or chief minister of the religion which came from thence when it was opened.  That religion is Mahommedanism, and the Sultan is its chief minister.  "The Sultan, or Grand Signior, as he is indifferently called, is also Supreme Caliph, or high priest, uniting in his person the highest spiritual dignity with the supreme secular authority."*
     When the address of "The World's Anti-Slavery Convention" was presented to Mehemet Ali, he expressed his willingness to act in the matter, but said he could do nothing: they "must go to the heads of religion at Constantinople," that is, the Sultan.
     3.  His name.  In Hebrew, "Abaddon," the destroyer; in Greek, "Apollyon\," one that exterminates or destroys.  Having two different names in the two languages, it is evident that the character, rather than the name of the power, is intended to be represented.  If so, in both languages he is a destroyer.  Such has always been the character of the Ottoman government.
     Says Perkins, - "He," the Sultan, "has unlimited power over the lives and property of his subjects, especially of the high officers of state whom he can remove, plunder or put to death at pleasure.  They are required submissively to kiss the bow-string which he sends them, wherewith they are to be strangled."
     All the above marks apply to the Ottoman government in a striking manner.
     But when did Othman make his first assault on the Greek empire?  According to Gibbon, ("Decl. and Fall," &c.)  "Othman first entered the territory of Nicomedia on the 27th day of July, 1299."
     The calculations of some writers have gone upon the supposition that the period should begin with the foundation of the Ottoman empire; but this is evidently an error: for they not only were to have a king over them, but were to torment men five months.  But the period of torment could not begin before the first attack of the tormentors, which was as above, July 27th, 1299.
     The calculation which follows, founded on this starting point, was made and published in "Christ's Second Coming," &c., by the author, in 1838.
     "And their power was to torment men five months."  Thus far their commission extended, to torment, by constant depredations, but not politically to kill them.  "Five months;" that is, one hundred and fifty years.  Commencing July 27th 1299, the one hundred and fifty years reach to 1449.  During that whole period the Turks were engaged in an almost perpetual war with the Greek empire, but yet without conquering it.  They seized upon and held several of the Greek provinces, but still Greek independence was maintained in Constantinople.  But in 1449, the termination of the one hundred and fifty years, a change came.  Before presenting the history of that change, however, we will look at verses 12-15.


DANIEL AND REVELATION, Chapters 8 & 9, p 493-507, by Uriah Smith.
     Fearful as were the calamities brought upon the empire by the first incursions of these barbarians, they were comparatively light as contrasted with the calamities which were to follow.  They were but as the preliminary drops of a shower before the torrent which was soon to fall upon the Roman world.  The three remaining trumpets are overshadowed with a cloud of woe, as set forth in the following verses.
     "VERSE 13.  And I beheld, and heard an angel flying through the midst of heaven, saying with a loud voice, Woe, woe, woe, to the inhibitors of the earth by reason of the other voices of the trumpet of the three angels, which are yet to sound."
     This angel is not one of the series of the seven trumpet angels, but simply one who announces that the three remaining trumpets are woe trumpets, on account of the more terrible events to transpire under their sounding.  Thus the next, or fifth trumpet, is the first woe;  the sixth trumpet, the second woe;  and the seventh, the last one in this series of seven trumpets, is the third woe.
     "VERSE 1. And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth:  and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit."
     For an exposition of this trumpet, we shall again draw from the writings of Mr. Keith.  This writer truthfully says:  "There is scarcely so uniform an agreement among interpreters concerning any other part of the Apocalypse as respecting the application of the fifth and sixth trumpets, or the first and second woes, to the Saracens and Turks.  It is so obvious that it can scarcely be misunderstood.  Instead of a verse or two designating each, the whole of the ninth chapter of the Revelation in equal portions, is occupied with a description of both.
     "The Roman empire declined, as it arose, by conquest;  but the Saracens and the Turks were the instruments by which a false religion became the scourge of an apostate church;  and hence, instead of the fifth and sixth trumpets, like the former, being designated by that name alone, they are called woes.
     "Constantinople was besieged, for the first time after the extinction of the Western empire, by Chosroes, the king of Persia."
     "A star fell from heaven unto the earth;  and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit."
     "While the Persian monarch contemplated the wonders of his art and power, he received an epistle from an obscure citizen of Mecca, inviting him to acknowledge Mohammed as the apostle of God.  He rejected the invitation, and tore the epistle.  'It is thus,' exclaimed the Arabian prophet, 'that God will tear the kingdom, and reject the supplication of Chosroes.'  Placed on the verge of these two empires of the East, Mohammed observed with secret joy the progress of mutual destruction;  and in the midst of the Persian triumphs he ventured to foretell, that, before many years should elapse, victory would again return to the banners of the Romans.  'At the time when this prediction is said to have been delivered, no prophecy could be more distant from its accomplishment (!) since the first twelve years of Heraclius announced the approaching dissolution of the empire.'
     "It was not, like that designative of Attila, on a single spot that the star fell, but UPON THE EARTH.
     "Chosroes subjugated the Roman possession is Asia and Africa.  And 'the Roman empire,' at that period, 'was reduced to the walls of Constantinople, with the remnant of Greece, Italy, and Africa, and some maritime cities, from Tyre to Trebizond, of the Asiatic coast.  The experience of six years at length persuaded the Persian monarch to renounce the conquest of Constantinople, and to specify the annual tribute of the ransom of the Roman empire, - a thousand talents of gold, a thousand talents of silver, a thousand silk robes, a thousand horses, and a thousand virgins.  Heraclius subscribed to these ignominious terms.  But the time and space which he obtained to collect those treasures from the poverty of the East were industriously employed in the preparation of a bold and desperate attack.'
     "The king of Persia despised the obscure Saracen, and derided the message of the pretended prophet of Mecca.  Even the overthrow of the Roman empire would not have opened a door for Mohammedanism, or for the progress of the Saracenic armed propagators of an imposture, though the monarch of the Persians and chagan of the Avars (the successor of Attila) had divided between them the remains of the kingdoms of the Caesars.  Chosroes himself fell. The Persian and Roman monarchies exhausted each other's strength.  And before a sword was put into the hands of the false prophet, it was smitten from the hands of those who would have checked his career and crushed his power.
     "'Since the days of Scipio and Hannibal, no bolder enterprise has been attempted than that which Heraclius achieved for the deliverance of the empire. He explored his perilous way through the Black Sea and the mountains of Armenia, penetrated into the heart of Persia, and recalled the armies of the great king to the defense of their bleeding country.'"
     "In the battle of Nineveh, which was fiercely fought from daybreak to the eleventh hour, twenty-eight standards, besides those which might be broken or torn, were taken from the Persians;  the greatest part of their army was cut in pieces, and the victors, concealing their own loss, passed the night on the field.  The cities and palaces of Assyria were opened for the first time to the Romans."
     "The Roman emperor was not strengthened by the conquests which he achieved;  and a way was prepared at the same time, and by the same means, for the multitudes of Saracens from Arabia, like locusts from the same region, who, propagating in their course the dark and delusive Mohammedan creed, speedily overspread both the Persian and the Roman empire.
     "More complete illustration of this fact could not be desired than is supplied in the concluding words of the chapter from Gibbon, from which the preceding extracts are taken."  "Although a victorious army had been formed under the standard of Heraclius, the unnatural effort seems to have exhausted rather than exercised their strength.  While the emperor triumphed at Constantinople or Jerusalem, an obscure town on the confines of Syria was pillaged by the Saracens, and they cut in pieces some troops who advanced to its relief, - an ordinary and trifling occurrence, had it not been the prelude of a mighty revolution.  These robbers were the apostles of Mohammed;  their frantic valor had emerged from the desert;  and in the last eight years of his reign, Heraclius lost to the Arabs the same provinces which he had rescued from the Persians."
     "'The spirit of fraud and enthusiasm, whose abode is not in the heavens,' was let loose on earth. The bottomless pit needed but a key to open it, and that key was the fall of Chosroes.  He had contemptuously torn the letter of an obscure citizen of Mecca.  But when from his 'blaze of glory' he sunk into the 'tower of darkness' which no eye could penetrate, the name of Chosroes was suddenly to pass into oblivion before that of Mohammed;  and the crescent seemed but to wait its rising till the falling of the star. Chosroes, after his entire discomfiture and loss of empire, was murdered in the year 628;  and the year 629 is marked by 'the conquest of Arabia,' and 'the first war of the Mohammedans against the Roman empire.'  'And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth;  and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit.  And he opened the bottomless pit.'  He fell unto the earth.  When the strength of the Roman empire was exhausted, and the great king of the East lay dead in his tower of darkness, the pillage of an obscure town on the borders of Syria was 'the prelude of a mighty revolution.'  'The robbers were the apostles of Mohammed, and their frantic valor emerged from the desert.'"
     The Bottomless Pit. - The meaning of this term may be learned from the Greek, which is defined "deep, bottomless, profound," and may refer to any waste, desolate, and uncultivated place.  It is applied to the earth in its original state of chaos.  Gen.1:2.  In this instance it may appropriately refer to the unknown wastes of the Arabian desert, from the borders of which issued the hordes of Saracens like swarms of locusts.  And the fall of Chosroes, the Persian king, may well be represented as the opening of the bottomless pit, inasmuch as it prepared the way for the followers of Mohammed to issue from their obscure country, and propagate their delusive doctrines with fire and sword, till they had spread their darkness over all the Eastern empire.
     "VERSE 2.  And he opened the bottomless pit;  and there arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace;  and the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit."
     "Like the noxious and even deadly vapors which the winds, particularly from the southwest, diffuse in Arabia, Mohammedanism spread from thence its pestilential influence, - arose as suddenly and spread as widely as smoke arising out of the pit, the smoke of a great furnace.  Such is a suitable symbol of the religion of Mohammed, of itself, or as compared with the pure light of the gospel of Jesus.  It was not, like the latter, a light from heaven, but a smoke out of the bottomless pit."
     "VERSE 3.  And there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth:  and unto them was given power, as the scorpions of the earth have power."
     "A false religion was set up, which, although the scourge of transgressions and idolatry, filled the world with darkness and delusion;  and swarms of Saracens, like locusts, overspread the earth, and speedily extended their ravages over the Roman empire from east to west.  The hail descended from the frozen shores of the Baltic;  the burning mountain fell upon the sea from Africa;  and the locusts (the fit symbol of the Arabs) issued from Arabia, their native region.  They came as destroyers, propagating a new doctrine, and stirred up to rapine and violence by motives of interest and religion.
     "A still more specific illustration may be given of the power like unto that of scorpions, which was given them.  Not only was their attack speedy and vigorous, but 'the nice sensibility of honor, which weighs the insult rather than the injury, shed its deadly venom on the quarrels of the Arabs;  an indecent action, a contemptuous word, can be expiated only by the blood of the offender;  and such is their patient inveteracy, that they expect whole months and years the opportunity of revenge.'"
     "VERSE 4.  And it was commanded from them that they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree;  but only those men which have not the seal of God in their foreheads."
     After the death of Mohammed, he was succeeded in the command by Abubekr, A.D. 632, who, as soon as he had fairly established his authority and government, dispatched a circular letter to the Arabian tribes, from which the following is an extract:-
     "'When you fight the battles of the Lord, acquit yourselves like men, without turning your backs;  but let not your victory be stained with the blood of women and children.  Destroy no palm-trees, nor burn any fields of corn.  Cut down no fruit-trees, nor do any mischief to cattle, only such as you kill to eat.  When you make any covenant or article, stand to it, and be as good as your word.  And as you go, you will find some religious persons who live retired in monasteries, and propose to themselves to serve God that way;  let them alone, and neither kill them nor destroy their monasteries.  And you will find another sort of people that belong to the synagogue of Satan, who have shaven crowns;  be sure you cleave their skulls, and give them no quarter till they either turn Mohammedans or pay tribute.'
     "It is not said in prophecy or in history that the more humane injunctions were as scrupulously obeyed as the ferocious mandate;  but it was so commanded them.  And the preceding are the only instructions recorded by Gibbon, as given by Abubekr to the chiefs whose duty it was to issue the commands to all the Saracen hosts.  The commands are alike discriminating with the prediction, as if the caliph himself had been acting in known as well as direct obedience to a higher mandate than that of mortal man;  and in the very act of going forth to fight against the religion of Jesus, and to propagate Mohammedanism in its stead, he repeated the words which it was foretold in the Revelation of Jesus Christ that he would say."
     The Seal of God in Their Foreheads. - In remarks upon chapter 7:1-3, we have shown that the seal of God is the Sabbath of the fourth commandment;  and history is not silent upon the fact that there have been observers of the true Sabbath all through the present dispensation.  But the question has here arisen with many, Who were those men who at this time had the seal of God in their foreheads, and who thereby became exempt from Mohammedan oppression?  Let the reader bear in mind the fact, already alluded to, that there have been those all through this dispensation who have had the seal of God in their foreheads, or have been intelligent observers of the true Sabbath;  and let them consider further that what the prophecy asserts is that the attacks of this desolating Turkish power are not directed against them, but against another class.  The subject is thus freed from all difficulty;  for this is all that the prophecy really asserts.  Only one class of persons is directly brought to view in the text;  namely, those who have not the seal of God in their foreheads;  and the preservation of those who have the seal of God is brought in only by implication.  Accordingly, we do not learn from history that any of these were involved in any of the calamities inflicted by the Saracens upon the objects of their hate.  They were commissioned against another class of men.  And the destruction to come upon this class of men is not put in contract with the preservation of other men, but only with that of the fruits and verdure of the earth;  thus, Hurt not the grass, trees, nor any green thing, but only a certain class of men.  And in fulfilment, we have the strange spectacle of an army of invaders sparing those things which such armies usually destroy, namely, the face and productions of nature;  and, in pursuance of their permission to hurt those men who had not the seal of God in their foreheads, cleaving the skulls of a class of religionists with shaven crowns, who belonged to the synagogue of Satan.
     These were doubtless a class of monks, or some other division of the Roman Catholic Church.  Against these the arms of the Mohammedans were directed.  And it seems to us that there is a peculiar fitness, if not design, in describing them as those who had not the seal of God in their foreheads; inasmuch as that is the very church which has robbed the law of God of its seal, by tearing away the true Sabbath, and erecting a counterfeit in its place.  And we do not understand, either from the prophecy or from history, that those persons whom Abubekr charged his followers not to molest were in possession of the seal of God, or necessarily constituted the people of God.  Who they were, and for what reason they were spared, the meager testimony of Gibbon does not inform us, and we have no other means of knowing;  but we have every reason to believe that none of these who had the seal of God were molested, while another class, who emphatically had it not, were put to the sword;  and thus the specifications of the prophecy are amply met.
     "VERSE 5.  And to them it was given that they should not kill them, but that they should be tormented five months;  and their torment was as the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man."
     "Their constant incursions into the Roman territory, and frequent assaults on Constantinople itself, were an unceasing torment throughout the empire;  and yet they were not able effectually to subdue it, notwithstanding the long period, afterward more directly alluded to, during which they continued, by unremitting attacks, grievously to afflict an idolatrous church, of which the pope was the head.  Their charge was to torment, and then to hurt, but not to kill, or utterly destroy.  The marvel was that they did not."  (In reference to the five months, see on verse 10.)
     "VERSE 6.  And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find it;  and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them."
     "Men were weary of life, when life was spared only for a renewal of woe, and when all that they accounted sacred was violated, and all that they held dear constantly endangered, and the savage Saracens domineered over them, or left them only to a momentary repose, ever liable to be suddenly or violently interrupted, as if by the sting of a scorpion."
     "VERSE 7.  And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared unto battle;  and on their heads were as it were crowns like gold, and their faces were as the faces of men."
     "The Arabian horse takes the lead throughout the world;  and skill in horsemanship is the art and science of Arabia.  And the barbed Arabs, swift as locusts and armed like scorpions, ready to dart away in a moment, were ever prepared unto battle.
     "'And on their heads were as it were crowns like gold.'  When Mohammed entered Medina (A.D. 622), and was first received as its prince, 'a turban was unfurled before him to supply the deficiency of a standard.'  The turbans of the Saracens, like unto a coronet, were their ornament and their boast..  The rich booty abundantly supplied and frequently renewed them.  To assume the turbans is proverbially to turn Mussulman.  And the Arabs were anciently distinguished by the miters which they wore.
     "'And their faces were as the faces of men.'  'The gravity and firmness of the mind of the Arab is conspicuous in his outward demeanor;  his only gesture is that of stroking his beard, the venerable symbol of manhood.'  'The honor of their beards is most easily wounded.'"
     "VERSE 8.  And they had hair as the hair of women, and their teeth were as the teeth of lions."
     "Long hair" is esteemed an ornament by women.  The Arabs, unlike other men, had their hair as the hair of women, or uncut, as their practice is recorded by Pliny and others.  But there was nothing effeminate in their character;  for, as denoting their ferocity and strength to devour, their teeth were as the teeth of the lions.
     "VERSE 9.  And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron;  and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle."
     The Breastplate. - "The cuirass (or breastplate) was in use among the Arabs in the days of Mohammed.  In the battle of Ohud (the second which Mohammed fought) with the Koreish of Mecca (A.D. 624), 'seven hundred of them were armed with cuirasses.'"
     The Sound of Their Wings. - "The charge of the Arabs was not, like that of the Greeks and Romans, the efforts of a firm and compact infantry;  their military force was chiefly formed of cavalry and archers.  With a touch of the hand, the Arab horses darted away with the swiftness of the wind.  "The sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle."  Their conquests were marvelous both in rapidity and extent, and their attack was instantaneous.  Nor was it less successful against the Romans than the Persians."
     "VERSE 10.  And they had tails like unto scorpions, and there were stings in their tails:  and their power was to hurt men five months.
     "VERSE 11.  And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon."
     Thus far, Keith has furnished us with illustrations of the sounding of the first five trumpets.  But we must now take leave of him, and proceed to the application of the new feature of the prophecy here introduced;  namely, the prophetic periods.
     Their Power Was to Hurt Men Five Months. - 1.  The question arises, What men were they to hurt five months? - Undoubtedly the same they were afterward to slay (see verse 15);  "The third part of men," or third of the Roman empire, - the Greek division of it.
     2.  When were they to begin their work of torment?  The 11th verse answers the question.
     (1)  "They had a king over them."  From the death of Mohammed until near the close of the thirteenth century, the Mohammedans were divided into various factions under several leaders, with no general civil government extending over them all.  Near the close of the thirteenth century, Othman founded a government which has since been known as the Ottoman government, or empire, which grew until it extended over all the principal Mohammedan tribes, consolidating them into one grand monarchy.
     (2)  The character of the king.  "Which is the angel of the bottomless pit."  An angel signifies a messenger, a minister, either good or bad, and not always a spiritual being.  "The angel of the bottomless pit," or chief minister of the religion which came from thence when it was opened.  That religion is Mohammedanism, and the sultan is its chief minister.  "The Sultan, or grand Seignior, as he is indifferently called, is also Supreme Caliph, or high priest, uniting in his person the highest spiritual dignity with the supreme secular authority." - World As It Is, p.361.
     (3)  His name.  In Hebrew, "Abaddon," the destroyer;  in Greek, "Apollyon," one that exterminates, or destroys.  Having two different names in two languages, it is evident that the character, rather than the name of the power, is intended to be represented.  If so, as expressed in both languages, he is a destroyer.  Such has always been the character of the Ottoman government.
     But when did Othman make his first assault on the Greek empire? - According to Gibbon, Decline and Fall, etc., "Othman first entered the territory of Nicomedia on the 27th day of July, 1299."
     The calculations of some writers have gone upon the supposition that the period should begin with the foundation of the Ottoman empire;  but this is evidently an error;  for they were not only to have a king over them, but were to torment men five months.  But the period of torment could not begin before the first attack of the tormentors, which was, as above stated, July 27, 1299.
     The calculation which follows, founded on this starting-point, was made and published in a work entitled, Christ's Second Coming, etc., by J. Litch, in 1838.
     "And their power was to hurt men five months."  Thus far their commission extended, to torment by constant depredations, but not politically to kill them.  "Five months," thirty days to a month, give us one hundred and fifty days;  and these days, being symbolic, signify one hundred and fifty years.  Commencing July 27, 1299, the one hundred and fifty years reach to 1449.  During that whole period the Turks were engaged in an almost perpetual warfare with the Greek empire, but yet without conquering it.  They seized upon and held several of the Greek provinces, but still Greek independence was maintained in Constantinople.  But in 1449, the termination of the one hundred and fifty years, a change came, the history of which will be found under the succeeding trumpet.


THE SOUNDING OF THE SEVEN TRUMPETS OF REVELATION 8  AND 9, p 30-50, by James White.
     "There is scarcely so uniform an agreement among interpreters concerning any part of the apocalypse as respecting the application of the fifth and sixth trumpets, or the first and second wo, to the Saracens and Turks.  It is so obvious that it can scarcely be misunderstood.  Instead of a 'verse of two designating each, the whole of the ninth chapter of the Revelation, in equal portions, is occupied with a description of both.
     "The Roman empire declined, as it arose, by conquest; but the Saracens and the Turks were the instruments by which a false religion became the scourge of an apostate church; and hence, instead of the fifth and sixth trumpets, like the former, being marked by that name alone, they are called woes.  It was because the laws were transgressed, the ordinances changed, and the everlasting covenant broken, that the curse came upon the earth or the land.
     "We have passed the period, in the political history of the world, when the western empire was extinguished; and the way was thereby opened for the exaltation of the papacy.  The imperial power of the city of Rome was annihilated, and the office and the name of the emperor of the west was abolished for a season.  The trumpets assume a new form, as they are directed to a new object, and the close coincidence, or rather express identity between the king of the south, or the king of the north, as described by Daniel, and the first and second wo, will be noted in the subsequent illustration of the latter.  The spiritual supremacy of the pope, it may be remembered, was acknowledged and maintained, after the fall of Rome, by the emperor Justinian.  And whether in the character of a trumpet or a wo, the previous steps of history raise us, as on a platform, to behold in a political view the judgments that fell on apostate Christendom, and finally led to the subversion of the eastern empire."
     Chap. 9, 1.  "And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit."
     "Constantinople was besieged for the first time after the extinction of the western empire, by Chosroes, the king of Persia."
     "A star fell from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit."
     "'While the Persian monarch contemplated the wonders of his art and power, he received an epistle from an obscure citizen of Mecca, inviting him to acknowledge Mahomet as the apostle of God.  He rejected the invitation, and tore the epistle.  "It is thus," exclaimed the Arabian prophet, "that God will tear the kingdom, and reject the supplication of Chosroes."  Placed on the verge of these two empires of the east, Mahomet observed with secret joy the progress of mutual destruction; and in the midst of the Persian triumphs he ventured to foretell, that, before many years should elapse, victory should again return to the banners of the Romans.'  'At the time when this prediction is said to have been delivered no prophecy could be more distant from its accomplishment(!) since the first twelve years of Heraclius announced the approaching dissolution of the empire.'
     "It was not, like that designative of Attila, on a single spot that the star fell, but upon the earth.
     "Chosroes subjugated the Roman possessions in Asia and Africa.  And 'the Roman empire,' at that period, 'was reduced to the walls of Constantinople, with the remnant of Greece, Italy, and Africa, and some maritime cities, from Tyre to Trebisond, of the Asiatic coast.  The experience of six years at length persuaded the Persian monarch to renounce the conquest of Constantinople, and to specify the annual tribute or the ransom of the Roman empire: a thousand talents of gold, a thousand talents of silver, a thousand silk robes, a thousand horses, and a thousand virgins.  Heraclius subscribed these ignominious terms.  But the time and space which he obtained to collect those treasures from the poverty of the east, was industriously employed in the preparations of a bold and desperate attack.'
     "The king of Persia despised the obscure Saracen, and derided the message of the pretended prophet of Mecca.  Even the overthrow of the Roman empire would not have opened a door for Mahometanism, or for the progress of the Saracenic armed propagators of an imposture, though the monarch of the Persians and chagan of the Avars (the successor of Attila) had divided between them the remains of the kingdom of the Caesars.  Chosroes himself fell.  The Persian and Roman monarchies exhausted each other's strength.  And before a sword was put into the hands of the false prophet, it was smitten from the hands of those who would have checked his career, and crushed his power.
     "Since the days of Scipio and Hannibal, no bolder enterprise has been attempted than that which Heraclius achieved for the deliverance of the empire.  He permitted the Persians to oppress for a while the provinces, and to insult with impunity the capital of the east; while the Roman emperor explored his perilous way through the Black Sea and the mountains of Armenia, penetrated into the heart of Persia, and recalled the armies of the great king to the defense of their bleeding country.  The revenge and ambition of Chosroes exhausted his kingdom.  The whole city of Constantinople was invested--and the inhabitants descried with terror the flaming signals of the European and Asiatic shores.  In the battle of Nineveh, which was fiercely fought from daybreak to the eleventh hour, twenty-eight standards, besides those which might be broken or torn, were taken from the Persians; the greatest part of their army was cut in pieces, and the victors, concealing their own loss, passed the night on the field.  The cities and palaces of Assyria were open for the first time to the Romans.
     "'The Greeks and modern Persians minutely described how Chosroes was insulted, and famished, and tortured by the command of an inhuman son, who so far surpassed the example of his father: but at the time of his death, what tongue could relate the story of the parricide? what eye could penetrate into the tower of darkness?  The glory of the house of Sassan ended with the life of Chosroes; his unnatural son enjoyed only eight months' fruit of his crimes; and in the space of four years the regal title was assumed by nine candidates, who disputed, with the sword or dagger, the fragments of an exhausted monarchy.  Every province and every city of Persia was the scene of independence, of discord, and of blood, and the state of anarchy continued about eight years longer, till the factions were silenced and united under the common yoke of the Arabian Caliphs.'
     "The Roman emperor was not strengthened by the conquests which he achieved; and a way was prepared at the same time, and by the same means, for the multitude of Saracens from Arabia, like locusts from the same region, who, propagating in their course the dark and delusive Mahometan creed, speedily overspread both the Persian and Roman empires.
     "More complete illustration of this fact could not be desired than is supplied in the concluding words of the chapter from Gibbon, from which the preceding extracts are taken."
     "'Yet the deliverer of the east was indigent and feeble.  Of the Persian spoils the most valuable portion had been expended in the war, distributed to the soldiers, or buried by an unlucky tempest in the waves of the Euxine.  The loss of two hundred thousand soldiers, who had fallen by the sword, was of less fatal importance than the decay of arts, agriculture, and population, in this long and destructive war: and although a victorious army had been formed under the standard of Heraclius, the unnatural effort seems to have exhausted rather than exercised their strength.  While the emperor triumphed at Constantinople or Jerusalem, an obscure town on the confines of Syria was pillaged by the Saracens, and they cut in pieces some troops who advanced to its relief--an ordinary and trifling occurrence, had it not been the prelude of a mighty revolution.  These robbers were the apostles of Mahomet; their fanatic valor had emerged from the desert; and in the last eight years of his reign, Heraclius lost to the Arabs the same provinces which he had rescued from the Persians.'  " ' The spirit of fraud and enthusiasm, whose abode is not in the heavens,' was let loose on earth.  The bottomless pit needed but a key to open it; and that key was the fall of Chosroes.  He had contemptuously torn the letter of an obscure citizen of Mecca.  But when from his 'blaze of glory' he sunk into 'the tower of darkness' which no eye could penetrate, the name of Chosroes was suddenly to pass into oblivion before that of Mahomet; and the crescent seemed but to wait its rising till the falling of the star.  Chosroes, after his entire discomfiture and loss of empire, was murdered in the year 628; and the year 629 is marked by 'the conquest of Arabia,'  'and the first war of the Mahometans against the Roman empire.'  And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth:  and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit. And he opened the bottomless pit. He fell unto the earth. When the strength of the Roman empire was exhausted, and the great king of the east lay dead in his tower of darkness, the pillage of an obscure town on the borders of Syria was 'the prelude of a might revolution.'  'The robbers were the apostles of Mahomet, and their fanatic valor emerged from the desert.'
     "A more succinct, yet ample, commentary maybe given in the words of another historian.
     "'While Chosroes of Persia was pursuing his dreams of recovering and enlarging the empire of Cyrus, and Heraclius was gallantly defending the empire of the Caesars against him; while idolatry and metaphysics were diffusing their baneful influence through the church of Christ, and the simplicity and purity of the gospel were nearly lost beneath the mythology which occupied the place of that of ancient Greece and Rome, the seeds of a new empire, and of a new religion, were sown in the inaccessible deserts of Arabia.'
     "The first wo arose at a time when transgressors had come to the full, when men had changed the ordinances and broken the everlasting covenant, when idolatry prevailed, or when tutelar saints were honored--and when the 'mutual destruction' of the Roman and Persian empires prepared the way of the fanatic robbers--or opened the bottomless pit, from whence an imposture, which manifests its origin from the 'father of lairs,' spread over the greater part of the world.
     "And there arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace, and the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit.  Like the noxious and even deadly vapor which the winds, particularly from the south-west, diffuse in Arabia, Mahometanism spread from thence its pestilential influence--and arose as suddenly, and spread as widely, as smoke arising out of the pit, the smoke of a great furnace.  Such is a suitable symbol of the religion of Mahomet, of itself, or as compared with the pure light of the gospel of Jesus.  It was not, like the latter, a light from heaven; but a smoke out of the bottomless pit.
     "'Mahomet alike instructed to preach and to fight; and the union of these opposite qualities, while it enhance his merit, contributed to his success; the operation of force and persuasion, of enthusiasm and fear, continually acted on each other, till every barrier yielded to their irresistible power.'  'The first caliphs ascended the pulpit to persuade and edify the congregation.'
     "'While the state was exhausted by the Persian war, and the church was distracted by the Nestorian and Monophysite sects, Mahomet, with the sword in one hand and the Koran in the other, erected his throne on the ruins of Christianity and of Rome.  The genius of the Arabian prophet, the manners of his nation, and the spirit of his religion, involve the causes of the decline and fall of the eastern empire; and our eyes are curiously intent on one of the most memorable revolutions which have impressed a new and most lasting character on the nations of the globe."
     "Mahomet, it may be said, has heretofore divided the world with Jesus.  He rose up against the Prince of princes.  A great sword was given him.  His doctrine, generated by the spirit of fraud and enthusiasm, whose abode is not in the heavens, as even an unbeliever could tell, arose out of the bottomless pit, spread over the earth like the smoke of a great furnace, and the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit.  It spread from Arabia, over great part of Asia, Africa and Europe.  The Greeks of Egypt, whose numbers could scarcely equal a tenth of the nation, were overwhelmed by the universal defection.  And even in the farthest extremity of continental Europe, the decline of the French monarchy invited the attacks of these insatiate fanatics. The smoke that arose from the cave of Hera was diffused from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean.  But the prevalence of their faith is best seen in the extent of their conquests."
     Verse 3.  "And there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth; and unto them was given power, as the scorpions of the earth have power."
     "A false religion was set up, which, although the scourge of transgressions and idolatry, filled the world with darkness and delusion; and swarms of Saracens, like locusts, overspread the earth, and speedily extended their ravages over the Roman empire, from east to west.  The hail descended from the frozen shores of the Baltic; the burning mountain fell upon the sea, from Africa: and the locusts (the fit symbol of Arabs) issued from Arabia, their native region.  They came, as destroyers, propagating a new doctrine, and stirred up to rapine and violence by motives of interest and religion.
     "'In the ten years of the administration of Omar, the Saracens reduced to his obedience thirty-six thousand cities or castles, destroyed four thousand churches or temples of the unbelievers, and erected fourteen hundred mosques, for the exercise of the religion of Mahomet.  One hundred years after his flight from Mecca, the arms and the reign of his successors extended from India to the Atlantic Ocean.
     "'At the end of the first century of the Hegira, the caliphs were the most potent and absolute monarchs of the globe. The regal and sacerdotal characters were united in the successors of Mahomet.  Under the last of the Ommiades, the Arabic empire extended two hundred days' journey from east to west, from the confines of Tartary  and India to the shores of the Atlantic Ocean.  And if we retrench the sleeve of the robe, as it is styled by their writers, the long and narrow province of Africa, the solid and compact dominion from Fargana to Aden, from Tarsus to Surat, will spread on every side to the measure of four or five months of the march of a caravan.  The progress of the Mahometan religion diffused over this ample space a general resemblance of manners and opinions; the language and laws of the Koran were studied with equal devotion at Sarmacand and Seville: the Moor and the Indian embraced as countrymen and brothers in the pilgrimage of Mecca; and the Arabian language was adopted as the popular idiom in all the provinces to the westward of the Tigris.'
     "A still more specific illustration may be given of the power, like unto that of scorpions, which was given them.  Not only was their attack speedy and vigorous, but 'the nice sensibility of honor, which weighs the insult rather than the injury, sheds its deadly venom on the quarrels of the Arabs:--an indecent action, a contemptuous word, can be expiated only by the blood of the offender; and such is their patient inveteracy, that they expect whole months and years the opportunity of revenge.'"
     Verse 4.  "And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree; but only those men which have not the seal of God in their foreheads."
     On the sounding of the first angel, the third part of the trees was burnt up, and all green grass was burnt up.
     After the death of Mahomet, he was succeeded in the command by Abubeker, A. D. 632, who, as soon as he had fairly established his authority and government, despatched a circular letter to the Arabian tribes, of which the following is an extract:--"This is to acquaint you that I intend to send the true believers into Syria to take it out of the hand of the infidels, and I would have you know that the fighting for religion is an act of obedience to God."
     "His messengers returned with the tidings of pious and martial ardor, which they had kindled in every province; the camp of Medina was successively filled with the intrepid bands of the Saracens, who panted for action, complained of the heat of the season and the scarcity of provisions, and accused, with impatient murmurs, the delays of the caliph.  As soon as their numbers were complete, Abubeker ascended the hill, reviewed the men, the horses, and the arms, and poured forth a fervent prayer for the success of their undertaking.  His instructions to the chiefs of the Syria were inspired by the warlike fanaticism which advances to seize, and affects to despise, the objects of earthly ambition.  'Remember,' said the successor of the prophet, 'that you are always in the presence of God, on the verge of death, in the assurance of judgment, and the hope of Paradise:  avoid injustice and oppression; consult with your brethren, and study to preserve the love and confidence of your troops.  When you fight the battles of the Lord, acquit yourselves like men, without turning your backs; but let not your victory be stained with the blood of women or children.  Destroy no palm-trees, nor burn any fields of corn. Cut down no fruit-trees, nor do any mischief to cattle, only such as you kill to eat.  When you make any covenant or article, stand to it, and be as good as your word.  As you go on, you will find some religious persons who live retired in monasteries, and propose to themselves to serve God that way;  let them alone, and neither kill them nor destroy their monasteries; and you will find another sort of people that belong to the synagogue of Satan, who have shaven crowns; be sure you cleave their skulls, and give them no quarter till they either turn Mahometans or pay tribute.'
     "It is not said in prophecy or in history that the more humane injunctions were as scrupulously obeyed as the ferocious mandate.  But it was so commanded them.  And the preceding are the only instruction recorded by Gibbon, as given by Abubeker to the chiefs whose duty it was to issue the commands to all the Saracen hosts.  The commands are alike discriminating with the prediction; as if the caliph himself had been acting in known as well as direct obedience to a higher mandate than that of mortal man--and in the very act of going forth to fight against the religion of Jesus, and to propagate Mahometanism in its stead, he repeated the words which it was foretold in the Revelation of Jesus Christ, that he would say."
     Verse 5.  "And to them it was given that they should not kill them, but that they should be tormented five months; and their torment was as the torment of a scorpion when he striketh a man."
     "Their constant incursions into the Roman territory, and frequent assaults on Constantinople itself, were an unceasing torment throughout the empire, which yet they were not able effectually to subdue, notwithstanding the long period, afterwards more directly alluded to, during which they continued, by unremitting attacks, grievously to afflict an idolatrous church, of which the pope was the head.  Their charge was to torment, and then to hurt but not to kill, or utterly destroy.  The marvel was that they did not.  To repeat the words of Gibbon: 'The calm historian of the present hour must study to explain by what means the church and state were saved from this impending, and, as it should seem, from this inevitable danger.  In this inquiry I shall unfold the events that rescued our ancestors of Britain, and our neighbors of Gaul, from the civil and religious yoke of the Koran; that protected the majesty of Rome, and delayed the servitude of Constantinople; that invigorated the defense of the Christians, and scattered among their enemies the seeds of division and decay.'  Ninety pages of illustration  follow, to which we refer the readers of Gibbon.
     Verse 6.  "And in those days shall men seek death, but they shall not find it; and shall desire to die, but death shall flee from them."
     "Men were weary of life, when life was spared only for a renewal of wo, and when all that they accounted sacred was violated, and all that they held dear constantly endangered; and when the savage Saracens domineered over them, or left them only to a momentary repose, ever liable to be suddenly or violently interrupted, as if by the sting of a scorpion.  They who tormented men were commanded not to kill them.  And death might thus have been sought even where it was not found.  'Whosoever falls in battle,' says Mahomet, 'his sins are forgiven at the day of judgment: at the day of judgment his wounds shall be resplendent as vermilion, and odoriferous as musk, and the loss of his limbs shall be supplied by the wings of angels and cherubim.'  The intrepid souls of the Arabs were fired with enthusiasm: the picture of the invisible world was strongly painted on their imagination; and the death which they always despised became an object of hope and desire."
     Verse 7.  "And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared unto battle."
     "Arabia, in the opinion of the naturalist, is the genuine and original country of the horse; the climate most propitious, not indeed to the size, but to the spirit and swiftness of that generous animal.  The merit of the Barb, the Spanish, and the English breed, is derived from a mixture of the Arabian blood; the Bedouins preserve with superstitious care the honors and the memory of the purest race.  These horses are educated in the tents, among the children of the Arabs, with a tender familiarity, which trains them in the habits of gentleness and attachment.  They are accustomed only to walk and to gallop:  their sensations are not blunted by the incessant use of the spur and the whip; their powers are reserved for the moments of flight and pursuit; but no sooner do they feel the touch of the hand or the stirrup, then they dart away with the swiftness of the wind.
     "The Arabian horse takes the lead throughout the world; and skill in horsemanship is the art and science of Arabia.  And the barbed Arabs, swift as locusts and armed like scorpions, ready to dart away in a moment, were ever prepared unto battle.
     "And on their heads were, as it were, crowns like gold.  When Mahomet entered Medina, (A. D. 622,) and was first received as its prince, 'a turban was unfurled before him to supply the deficiency of a standard.'  The turbans of the Saracens, like unto a coronet, were their ornament and their boast.  The rich booty abundantly supplied and frequently renewed them.  To assume the turban is proverbial to turn Mussulman. And the Arabs were anciently distinguished by the mitres which they wore.
     "And their faces were as the faces of men. 'The gravity and firmness of the mind of the Arab is conspicuous in his outward demeanor--his only gesture is that of stroking his beard, the venerable symbol of manhood.'  'The honor of their beards is most easily wounded.'
     Verse 8. "And they had hair as the hair of women."
     "Long hair is esteemed an ornament by women."  The Arabs, unlike to other men, had their hair as the hair of women, or uncut, as their practice is recorded by Pliny and others.  But there was nothing effeminate in their character, for, as denoting their ferocity and strength to devour, their teeth were as the teeth of lions.
     Verse 9. "And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron."
     "The cuirass (or breastplate) was in use among the Arabs in the days of Mahomet. In the battle of Ohud (the second which Mahomet fought) with the Koreish of Mecca, (A.D. 624,) 'seven hundred of them were armed with cuirasses.'  And in his next victory over the Jews, 'three hundred cuirasses, five hundred pikes, a thousand lances, composed the most useful portion of the spoil.'  After the defeat of the imperial army of seventy thousand men, on the plain of Aiznadin, (A. D. 633,) the spoil taken by the Saracens 'was inestimable; many banners and crosses of gold and silver, precious stones, silver and gold chains, and innumerable suits of the richest armor and apparel.  The seasonable supply of arms became the instrument of new victories.'"
     Verse 9.  "And the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle."
     "The charge of the Arabs was not like that of the Greeks and Romans, the efforts of a firm and compact infantry: their military force was chiefly formed of cavalry and archers; and the engagement was often interrupted, and often renewed by single combats and flying skirmishes, &c.  The periods of the battle of Cadesia were distinguished by their peculiar appellations.  The first, from the well-timed appearance of six thousand of the Syrian brethren, was denominated the day of succor.  The day of concussion might express the disorder of one, or perhaps of both the contending armies.  The third, a nocturnal tumult, received the whimsical name of the night of barking, from the discordant clamors, which were compared to the inarticulate sounds of the fiercest animals.  The morning of the succeeding day determined the fate of Persia.  With a touch of the hand, the Arab horses darted away with the swiftness of the wind.  The sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle.  Their conquests were marvelous, both in rapidity and extent, and their attack was instantaneous.  Nor was it less successful against the Romans than the Persians.  'A religion of peace was incapable of withstanding the fanatic cry of "Fight, fight!  Paradise, paradise!" that reechoed in the ranks of the Saracens.'"
     Verse 10.  "And they had tails like unto scorpions: and there were stings in their tails; and their power was to hurt men five months."
     "The authority of the companions of Mahomet expired with their lives: and the chiefs or emirs of the Arabian tribes left behind in the desert the spirit of equality and independence.  The legal and sacerdotal characters were united in the successors of Mahomet; and if the Koran was the rule of their actions, they were the supreme judges and interpreters of that divine book.  They reigned by the right of conquest over the nations of the east, to whom the name of liberty was unknown, and who were accustomed to applaud in their tyrants the acts of violence and severity that were exercised at their own expense.'"
     "Thus far Keith has furnished us with illustrations of the sounding of the first five trumpets.  But here we must take leave of him, and, in applying the prophetic periods, pursue another course.

THE TORMENT OF THE GREEKS ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS.
     Verse 10: "Their power was to hurt men five months."
     1. The question arises, What men were they to hurt five months?  Undoubtedly, the same they were afterwards to slay; [see verse 15.]  "The third part of men," or third of the Roman empire--the Greek division of it.
     2. When were they to begin their work of torment?  The 11th verse answers the question:--"They had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek hath his name Apollyon."
     1.  "They had a king over them."  From the death of Mahomet until near the close of the 13th century, the Mahometans were divided into various factions, under several leaders, with no general civil government extending over them all.  Near the close of the 13th century, Othman founded a government, which has since been known as the Ottoman government, or empire, extending over all the principal Mahometan tribes, consolidating them into one grand monarchy.
     2. The character of the King.  "Which is the angel of the bottomless pit."  And angel signifies a messenger, or minister, either good or bad; not always a spiritual being.  "The angel of the bottomless pit," or chief minister of the religion which came from thence when it was opened.  That religion is Mahometanism, and the Sultan is its chief minister. "The Sultan, or Grand Signior, as he is indifferently called, is also Supreme Caliph, or high priest, uniting in his person the highest spiritual dignity with the supreme secular authority."*
     When the address of "The World's Anti-Slavery Convention" was presented to Mehemet Ali, he expressed his willingness to act in the matter, but said he could do nothing; they "must go to the heads of religion at Constantinople," that is, the Sultan.
     3.  His name. In Hebrew, "Abaddon," the destroyer; in Greek, "Apollyon," one that exterminates or destroys.  Having two different names in the two languages, it is evident that the character, rather than the name of the power, is intended to be represented.  If so, in both languages he is a destroyer.  Such has always been the character of the  Ottoman government.
     Says Perkins,--"He," the Sultan, "has unlimited power over the lives and property of his subjects, especially of the high officers of state whom he can remove, plunder or put to death at pleasure.  They are required submissively to kiss the bow-string which he sends them, wherewith they are to be strangled.

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* See Perkins' "World as it is," p. 361.

     All the above marks apply to the Ottoman government in a striking manner.
     But when did Othman make his first assault on the Greek empire?  According to Gibbon, ("Decl. and Fall," &c.)  "Othman first entered the territory of Nicomedia on the 27th day of July, 1299."
     The calculations of some writers have gone upon the supposition that the period should begin with the foundation of the Ottoman empire; but this is evidently an error: for they not only were to have a king over them, but were to torment men five months. But the period of torment could not begin before the first attack of the tormentors, which was as above, July 27th, 1299.
     The calculation which follows, founded on this starting point, was made and published in "Christ's Second Coming," &c., by the author, in 1838.
     "And their power was to torment men five months."  Thus far their commission extended, to torment, by constant depredations, but not politically to kill them.  "Five months;" that is, one hundred and fifty years.  Commencing July 27th, 1299, the one hundred and fifty years reach to 1449.  During that whole period the Turks were engaged in an almost perpetual war with the Greek empire, but yet without conquering it.  They seized upon and held several of the Greek provinces, but still Greek independence was maintained in Constantinople.  But in 1449, the termination of the one hundred and fifty years, a change came.  Before presenting the history of that change, however, we will look at verses 12-15.
     Verse 12:  "One woe is past; and behold, there come two woes more hereafter."