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The first woe is past. Behold, there are still two woes coming after this.
Verse Takeaways
1
A Pause in the Storm
Commentators agree that this verse acts as a clear structural marker in Revelation. It's a dramatic pause, announcing the completion of the first 'Woe' (the demonic locusts) and preparing the reader for the two even more severe judgments that will follow. This brief statement helps organize the flow of the visions and builds suspense.
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Book Overview
Revelation
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6
18th Century
Theologian
Their commission was expressly against those men who had not the seal of God in their foreheads (See Barnes on Revelation 9:4).<…
The first woe (η ουα η μια). Note feminine gender ascribed to the interjection ουα as in 11:14, perhaps because θλιψις is feminine…
19th Century
Bishop
THE SIXTH TRUMPET—THE SECOND WOE TRUMPET—The first point that will strike the reader is that the plague under this trumpet resembles the last, thou…
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This verse is transitional, indicating that the “first woe” (fifth trumpet) is finished and two woes are yet to come (presumably the sixth and seve…
17th Century
Pastor
One woe is past One of the three woe trumpets, the first of them; that is, in the vision which John had of it, not t…
Minister
Upon the sounding of the fifth trumpet, a star fell from heaven to the earth. Having ceased to be a minister of Christ, he who is represented by th…
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