Albert Barnes Commentary Revelation 9:6

Albert Barnes Commentary

Revelation 9:6

1798–1870
Presbyterian
Albert Barnes
Albert Barnes

Albert Barnes Commentary

Revelation 9:6

1798–1870
Presbyterian
SCRIPTURE

"And in those days men shall seek death, and shall in no wise find it; and they shall desire to die, and death fleeth from them." — Revelation 9:6 (ASV)

And in those days shall men seek death, and so on. (See Barnes on Revelation 9:5).

It is very easy to conceive of such a state of things as is here described, and, indeed, this has not been very uncommon in the world. It is a state where the distress is so great that men would consider death a relief, and where they anxiously look to the time when they may be released from their sufferings by death.

In the case before us, it is not intimated that they would lay violent hands on themselves, or that they would take any positive measures to end their sufferings; and this, perhaps, may be a circumstance indicating that the persons referred to were servants of God.

When it is said that "they would seek death," it can only mean that they would look out for it—or desire it—as the end of their sorrows. This is descriptive, as we shall see, of a particular period of the world; but the language is beautifully applicable to what occurs in all ages and in all lands.

There is always a great number of sufferers who are looking forward to death as a relief. In cells and dungeons, on beds of pain and languishing, in scenes of poverty and want, in blighted hopes and disappointed affections, how many are there who would be glad to die, and who have no hope of an end of suffering but in the grave!

A few, by the pistol, by the halter, by poison, or by drowning, seek thus to end their woes. A large part look forward to death as a release, when, if the reality were known, death would furnish no such relief, for there are deeper and longer woes beyond the grave than there are this side of it.

(Compare Job 3:20 and following). But to a portion, death will be a relief. It will be an end of sufferings. They will find peace in the grave, and are assured they shall suffer no more. Such bear their trials with patience, for the end of all sorrow to them is near, and death will come to release their spirits from the suffering clay, and to bear them in triumph to a world where a pang shall never be felt, and a tear never shed.