2. "All the world" wonders after the first Beast, Rev. 13:3. Compare 2 Thess. 2:11,12 - "And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie; that they all might be damned" etc.
3. The first Beast is "worshipped" Rev. 13:4. Compare 2 Thess.2:4 - "he as God sitteth in the temple of God."
4. The first Beast has a mouth "speaking great things" Rev. 13:5. Compare 2 Thess.2:4 - "who** exalteth himelf above all that is called God."
5. The first Beast makes war upon the saints Rev.13:7. Compare 2 Thess2:4 -
"Who opposeth **all that is called God," that is, he will seek to
exterminate and obliterate everything on earth which bears God's name.
From these five points of analogy it seems
clear that the first Beast of Rev.13 and the Man of Sin of 2Thess.2 are one and
the same person.
In the fifth place, that the second
"Beast" is not "the Man of Sin" appears from the fact that the second
Beast causeth the earth to worship the first Beast (Rev.13:12), whereas
the Man of Sin "exalteth himself" (2 Thess.2:4), and compare Dan. 11:36
- "And he exalteth himself."
Again,; it has been generally recognized by
prophetic students that our Lord referred to the Anti-christ when He said, "I
am come in My Father's name, and ye receive Me not: if another shall come in
his own name, him ye wlll receive" (John 5:43). If the one here mentioned
as coming "in his own name" is the Anti-christ then it is certain that
the second Beast of Rev. 13 cannot be the Anti-christ for he does
not come "in his own name." On the contrary, the second Beast comes in the
name of the first Beast as is clear from Rev. 13:12-15. Just as the Holy
Spirit - the third person in the Holy Trinity - speaks "not of Himself"
(John 16:13) but is here to glorify Christ, so the second Beast - the
third person in the Evil Trinity - seeks to glorify the first Beast, the
Anti-christ.
If it should be objected that the second Beast is
represented as working miracles (Rev.13:13,14) andthat as the Man of Sin
is also said to come "after the working of Satan with all power and signs and
lying wonders" (2 Thess.2:9) therefore the second Beast must be the
Anti-christ, the answer is, This by no means follows. The power to work
miracles is common to each person in the Trinity of Evil. Just as God
the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, each perform miracles, so
does the Dragon, the Beast, andthe False Prophet. Three things are said in
connectin with the second Beast which correspond closely with the work of the
Holy Spirit. First, "he maketh fire come down from heaven" (Rev. 13:13),
compare Acts 2:1-4. Second, "he had power to give life unto the image
of the Beast" (Rev.13:15), compare John 3:6 - "born of the Spirit." Third, "he
causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive
a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads" (Rev.13:16), compare
Eps. 4:30 - "Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed
unto the day of redemption.
Finally; the second Beast is clearly
subordinate to the first Beast. But would the Jews receive as their
Messiah and King one who was himself the vassal of a Roman? Was not this the
very reason why the Jews of old rejected the Lord Jesus, i.e., Because
He was subject to Caesar and because He refused to deliver the Jews
from the Romans!
In the sixth place, as we have seen, in Dan.
11:36 the Anti-christ is termed "the king" and if a king he must posses a
kingdom, and can there be any doubt as to the identity of this kingdom? Will
not Anti-christ's kingdom be the very one which Satan offered in vain to
Christ? namely, "all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them" (Matt.
4:8). That the kingdom of the Anti-christ will be much wider than Palestine
appears from Dan. 11:40-42 - "And at the time of the end shall the king of the
south push at him (the Anti-christ_: and the king of the north shall come
against him (the Anti-christ) like a whirlwind, with chariots, and with
horsemen, and with many ships; and he (the Anti-christ) shall enter into the
countries, and shall overflow and pass over. He (the Anti-christ) shall enter
also into the glorious land, and many countries shall be overthrown: but these
shall escape out ofhis (the Anti-christ's) hand, even Edom, and Moab, and the
chief of the children of Ammon (compare other Old Testament prophecies
concerning these three powers). He (the Anti-christ) shall stretch forth his
hand upon the countries: and the land of Egypt shall not escape." From this
Scripture it is also clear that the Anti-christ will be at the head of a great
army and therefore a political ruler as well as a religious chief.
In the seventh place, it is generally agreed
among those students of prophecy who belong to the Futurist school that the
rider upon the four horses of Rev. 6 is the Anti-christ. If this be the case
then we have further proof that the Anti-christ and the Head of the
revived Roman empire is one and the same person. This may be seen by comparing
three Scriptures. In Rev. 6:8, of the rider on "the pale horse," we read, "His
name that sat on him was Death and Hell followed with him." In
Isaiah 28:18, those who will be in Jerusalem during the Tribulation period are
addressed by Jehovah as follows: "And your covenant with Death shall be
disannulled, and your agreement with Hell shall not stand." What
"covenant" can this be except the one mentioned in Dan. 9:27 where we read of
the Roman Prince (the Head of the revived Roman empire) confirming the covenant
with the many for seven years. Now reverse the order of these three passages,
and what do we learn? In Dan. 9:27 we learn that the head of the Roman empire
makes a "covenant" with the Jews. In Isaiah 28:18 this "covenant" is said to
have been made with "Death and Hell." While in Rev. 6:8 the rider on the pale
horse (which it is generally admitted is the Anti-christ) is named "Death and
Hell." Hence, from whatever angle we approach the subject it is seen that the
Anti-christ is the Head of the fourth world-kingdom.
Finally, we wish to call attention to the
employment of the definite article in connection with the two "Beasts" of Rev.
13. Wherever we read of the Beast, it is the Anti-christ who is in
view. In 13:1 we read, "And I stood upon the sand of the sea, and saw a
beast rise up out of the sea, having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his
horns ten crowns, and upon his heads the name of blasphemy" - this is the
empire itself with its seven mountains and ten kings (see 17:9,12). But from
13:2-8 it is always "the Beast," the Head of the empire, the
Anti-christ. So in 19:20 and and 20:10. The Anti-christ is termed The Beast in
contradistinction to Jesus Christ who is denominated "The Lamb."