• The Sign of Revelation 6

    The seven seals in Revelation 6 contains a prophetic description of astronomical events that will only occur in November of 2043, and not again within the space of at least 10,000 years. This is the short summary of my interpretation of the astrological references contained in Revelation 6. There have been many false interpretations of this passage, including some based in astrology. It is easy, then, to discount a new idea. However, I believe the clues for this interpretation are compelling and numerous, and that it explains many details that other interpretations do not. To properly interpret, it is important to go back to the original Greek language of the author and evaluate specific word choices, as well as understand references to ancient astrology and the myths and legends that relate to these symbols and would have been known to the author. This is the short version, and I will lay out the basic interpretation succinctly here. For the full details, please read my blog post here. It contains much more explanation and reasoning behind the interpretation. In my post, I have provided full references to all of the details, so that they can be completely verified as fact. Truth, sometimes, is truly stranger than fiction.

    All of the seals described in Revelation relate to some type of heavenly sign. They are signs that authenticate the divine message of the visions of Revelation. The horses represent planets, and their colors specify which planet. The riders indicate asterisms that for planetary conjunctions for each planet. All of the conjunctions will happen at or around the same time. In November of 2043 the first four seals are fulfilled in the sky.

    Horses and horse-drawn chariots have been used since ancient times as a way to describe of the path of heavenly bodies tracing their path across the sky. Astrological systems have colors that have been used to refer to the planets, with specific color correspondences. These do not all agree, but we have color correspondences dating back to ancient Mesopotamia that were passed to the Greeks and Romans. The ancient Akkadian color references are the most likely source of these colors for the author of Revelation who lived during the Roman Empire, and who made extensive reference to Old Testament prophetic literature written in Ancient Babylon and Mesopotamia. Additionally, various characteristics of the riders are also fit to the planetary assignments, as described in detail in my blog post. An ancient Akkadian tablet K.2346 lists the planets and their colors, which can be used as a decoding key. The tablet reads: “White star = Jupit[e]r, Red star = Mars, Green-yellow star = Venus, Black star = Saturn, var.: Mercury”.

    Seal 1: The White Horse

    Jupiter is the white horse. The rider is given a bow and a crown (actually a wreath-crown). I believe this is a compelling reference to Sagittarius. The fulfillment is clear. Jupiter will be in Sagittarius.

    Seal 2: The Red Horse

    The red horse is of course Mars. The rider is given a great curved knife, a machaira. Most translations here have “sword”, but the specific type of sword is a short, curved blade, akin to a machete. Ancient astrological references to “The Knife” relate to what is known as Leo’s Sickle, which indeed exactly resembles such a blade. In November of 2043, the same time as the other planetary conjunctions, Mars will be in close conjunction with the handle of this blade, the star Regulus.

    Seal 3: The Black Horse

    The black horse is Saturn, most commonly associated with the color black. According to Akkadian astrology, Mercury can also be considered a “black star”. The rider holds a pair of scales, as a clear reference to the constellation Libra. Both Saturn and Mercury, as it happens, will be in Libra in November of 2043.

    Seal 4: The (Yellow-)Green Horse

    The fourth horse is a yellow-green color. The Greek word is chloros (χλωρός). The described hue exactly matches that of the Akkadian text for Venus. References to death relate to the constellation Scorpio. Additionally, the name Venus became known as another name for death in ancient Rome due to the temple of Venus used for funeral arrangements and to collect the death tax. Scorpius is well understood as a symbol of death in ancient astrology. The author John reports that Hades follows after Death. Mercury is the Roman name for the Greek god Hermes, who was known to guide souls through the underworld, Hades. In early November, Venus is in the claws of the constellation Scorpius. A few days later, Mercury advances into Scorpius as well.

    Seal 5: Souls under the Altar

    This seal describes souls that are under the altar who have given up their lives to testify to God and Jesus Christ. I believe the altar refers symbolically to Tul-Ku, meaning “holy mound”, of the ancient Akkadian zodiac and name of their seventh month. Based on its position in the calendar, we can infer that this sign refers to the constellation Libra or an asterism near that location. Each of the souls are given a white robe. The first four seals uniquely describe a single astronomical fulfillment in at least 10,000 years. As a remarkable “coincidence”, at the same exact time as the other seals the periodic comet known as 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann, or SW3, will enter Libra. This is a very unique comet, which has broken into over 34 fragments during its previous passes. It looks exactly like a cluster of stars wearing robes.

    Seal 6: The Sun, Moon and Stars

    The sun, moon and stars will be darkened. I do not think a normal eclipse is sufficient for this event. It is recorded by many Old Testament prophets and repeated by Jesus, and in Revelation. It is a very significant event that will be seen all over the world. I believe that this is not an event we can predict based on the motion of the heavenly bodies, but more likely is caused by a catastrophic event such as a nuclear detonation or astroid. I suspect that November 2043 is the sign of the beginning of the very end, the introduction of the antichrist and a new world order, and a warning that this catastrophic sign follows close behind.

    Seal 7: Silence in Heaven

    This sign is also in heaven, completing the heavenly signs. Silence may refer to an inability to see the stars due to the darkening of the sun, moon and stars in the sixth seal. It shows that the signs have been completed and the sufficiency of the revelation. I suspect this refers to a period of unusual and terrifying darkness, as described elsewhere in Revelation and by the Old Testament prophets.

  • And I saw a beast coming up out of the sea. it had ten horns and seven heads. On its horns were ten crowns, and on its heads were blasphemous names. The beast I saw was like a leopard, its feet were like a bear’s, and its mouth was like a lion’s mouth. The dragon gave the beast his power, his throne, and great authority. Rev 13:1-2

    I saw a woman sitting on a scarlet beast that was covered with blasphemous names and had seven heads and ten horns. The woman was dressed in purple and scarlet, adorned with gold, jewels, and pearls. She had a golden cup in her hand filled with everything detestable and with the impurities of her prostitution. On her forehead was written a name, a mystery: Babylon the Great, the Mother of Prostitutes and of the Detestable Things of the Earth… Rev 17:3-4

    There is a great beast coming. This seven headed beast of Revelation 13 and 17 represents a government that rules the entire world. Many have speculated about the identity of the beast and the whore that rides it. She has a name “Babylon.” Let’s unpack some of the clues we are given.

    Was, is not, and is to come

    The beast that you saw was, and is not, and is about to come up from the abyss and go to destruction. (Rev 17:8)

    This is a mystery. I’m not sure we will fully understand this part until we see it. Babylon “was”, and then “is not” at the time of John’s writing, so possibly this is a resurgence of Babylon. However, as I will discuss further down, Babylon is only one of the heads of the beast. So, this does not fit well as the description for the whole beast. Some believe that the future world order will be a resurgence of the Roman Empire. However, at the time of John’s writing, Rome still existed so does not fit the “is not” clause. I believe this expression signifies a type of world order that was so terribly evil that it had to be wiped out with a flood. I believe the pre-flood civilization will return in its full essence. Across the entire earth, everyone will do whatever is pleasing in their own eyes, and the intent of man will be evil all the time, united together against God with a government that rules and crushes the entire world. We are starting to see this take shape, but in the next two decades we will see the terrifying beast of Satan’s kingdom re-emerge in a way that is only foreshadowed by the previous heads of the beast.

    Daniel’s four beasts in one

    As I described in my previous post, beasts in prophecy represent governments or kingdoms. This beast has parts of four beasts described in Daniel chapter 7. We know from Daniel’s interpretation that these four beasts are governments, and I gave my reasons that these represent the empires turned countries of England (lion), Russia (bear) and Germany (leopard). The first three of Daniel’s beasts have reduced authority but receive a stay of life until the time of the end. This matches their existence as modern countries. The final beast of Daniel is a terrifying beast that also has 10 horns, which matches the 10 horned beast of Revelation. What we find from Revelation, is that there are components of the first three kingdoms in this final beast. The final beast will trample and rule the entire earth (Daniel 7:23). We can infer that it will include Russia, Germany and the UK, which points to a possible European union that will form a basis for the final beast.

    The seven heads of the beast

    Like the leopard with four heads in Daniel, this beast has multiple heads and we can see this either as regions within the kingdom, or as sequential instances of the kingdom. John’s angel provides a riddle with regard to the seven heads of the beast:

    This calls for a mind that has wisdom. The seven heads are seven mountains on which the woman is seated. They are also seven kings: Five have fallen, one is, the other has not yet come, and when he comes, he must remain for only a little while. The beast that was and is not, is itself an eighth king, but it belongs to the seven and is going to destruction.” (Rev 17:9-12)

    So we are told the number seven can be interpreted multiple ways. It is both the number of mountains on which the woman is “seated”, and the number of kings or kingdoms. I believe, then, that the number refers to the number of divisions or regions in this world order (mountains can be represent continents), or possibly it is a clue to the identity of the woman, or both. It is also the number of sequential kingdoms that are types of this world order. We know these are sequential, because five have fallen, one is, and one is to come. Then, the final world order, the beast, is the eighth occurrence of the pattern. They belong together, because they are kingdoms that have common attributes. They represent the world order, led by Satan, the dragon, that opposes God. And they all have a similar relationship with the woman, the prostitute, that rides them.

    So, what are these kingdoms? Since one “is”, at the time Revelation was written, we can infer that the sixth kingdom is the Roman Empire. Working backwards, we can identify a series of kingdoms prior to Rome, and most will attribute these to the empires of Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Medo-Persia and Greece which had all “fallen” at the time of John’s writing. But what is the seventh kingdom that is, but only for a short time?

    Most commentators will say the seventh head is the future world order. But they are missing an important clue. “The beast … is itself is an eighth.” (Rev 17:11) The future world order is not the seventh head, but an eighth face of the beast. So, what is the seventh? Temporally, it must be a kingdom that comes after Rome, but before the final world government of the antichrist. Problem is, there are many kingdoms that have come since the fall of Rome, not just one, even if we limit to those that have ruled over Jerusalem. Even if we restrict to those with dominance or influence over Jerusalem, we have at least the Byzantine Empire, multiple Arab Caliphates, including the Ottoman Empire, the British Empire, as well as the Russian and German Empires.

    I believe there is a clear answer to this that connects all the heads and explains why the seventh head remains only for a little while. But first, we need to understand who the great prostitute is, which will make things much clearer.

    The prostitute

    The waters you saw, where the prostitute was seated, are peoples, multitudes, nations, and languages. The ten horns you saw, and the beast, will hate the prostitute. They will make her desolate and naked, devour her flesh, and burn her up with fire. For God has put it into their hearts to carry out his plan by having one purpose and to give their kingdom to the beast until the words of God are fulfilled. And the woman you saw is the great city that has royal power over the kings of the earth. (Rev. 17:15-18, CSB)

    The great city

    The great city is a name that refers to Jerusalem. Jeremiah prophesied against Judah and Jerusalem “Many nations will pass by this city and ask one another, ‘Why did the LORD do such a thing to this great city‘? They will answer, ‘Because they abandoned the covenant of the LORD their God and bowed in worship to other gods and served them.’” (Jer. 22:8) Revelation 11:8 makes it clear that John also refers to Jerusalem as the great city: “Their dead bodies will lie in the main street of the great city, which figuratively is called Sodom and Egypt, where also their Lord was crucified.” There is no doubt that this is Jerusalem, since that is the place of the Lord’s crucifixion.

    Sodom, Egypt and Babylon

    We see that John refers to Jerusalem figuratively by multiple names. Sodom and Egypt. Most claim that the name Babylon clearly refers to Rome. No doubt that the writers of the New Testament also referred to Rome as “Babylon”. But Babylon falls in line with Sodom and Egypt with John’s name calling in Rev. 11:8. These places all have certain things in common. They are places filled with evil practices, that God judged for their sin. They all contained a remnant of God’s people that were spared and called out before the destruction. We see this again in Revelation 18 which describes the fall of Babylon the Great: “Then I heard another voice from heaven: Come out of her, my people, so that you will not share in her sins or receive any of her plagues.” (Rev. 18:4). Just like Sodom. Just like Egypt. There will be persecution of God’s people. The city will be judged. Only a few righteous will be spared the judgement from God that comes upon the city.

    Israel was told to bind God’s commandments to their forehead in the Torah (Deut 6:8, Ex 13:9) This practice is fulfilled literally by wearing tefillin, boxes containing scrolls of scripture. The picture here is notable in its contrast to the Jewish practice. Instead of the name of Yahweh and his commandments, on the prostitute’s forehead is written her true allegiance: “Babylon, mother of prostitutes, and the detestable things of the earth.”

    Jerusalem is the city with royal power

    Jerusalem is to become the center of the new world order, the future capital of the world. We know this, because the antichrist, the man of lawlessness, “will exalt himself above every so-called god or object of worship, so that he sits in God’s temple, proclaiming that he himself is God.” (2 Thess. 2:4) The antichrist is the horn that pushes out three horns of the 10 horned beast of Daniel 7. And he is the mouth of the Beast in Revelation that “utters boasts and blasphemies” and “exercises authority over every tribe, people, language and nation” (Rev 13:5-7). He will rule over the remaining 7 leaders, probably each given a slice of the world pie, and set himself up in the third temple in Jerusalem, that has not yet been built. If the temple in Jerusalem contains his royal throne, then that is clearly to be the great city that will “rule over the kings of the earth.” As the future seat of the antichrist, Jerusalem is the city that will have the royal power over all the kings of the earth.

    Jerusalem is the prostitute

    John references the Old Testament prophets throughout Revelation. And there is a theme when it comes to prostitution. The prophets frequently used prostitution as a metaphor to describe Israel’s spiritual unfaithfulness to God. Hosea was commanded to marry a prostitute as a symbolic act to represent Israel’s spiritual adultery and rejection of God for other gods. Ezekiel uses the same imagery of clothing and jewelry found in Revelation 17 when he describes Israel acting like a prostitute: “But you trusted in your beauty and acted like a prostitute because of your fame. You lavished sexual favors on everyone who passed by… You took some of your clothing and made colorful high places for yourself, and you engaged in prostitution on them. You also took your beautiful jewelry made from the gold and silver I have given you, and you made male images so that you could engage in prostitution with them…”. In Ezekiel 23, he describes two sisters Oholah and Oholibah and their promiscuous activities in great explicit detail. As for their names, “Oholah represents Samaria and Oholibah represents Jerusalem.” Ezekiel 23:4.

    The Bible makes it clear that prostitution is a metaphor for spiritual idolatry. In some cases, this prostitution included false worship that included illicit sexual acts with prophetesses of the foreign gods. But it primarily referred to how Israel sought protection from he kingdoms of the world instead of from God, adopted sinful practices of the cultures around them, and abandoned their obedience to God’s laws.

    So, who did Israel “prostitute itself” with? The kings of the world, the nations that surrounded them. Exactly as it says in Revelation 18:3 with regard to Babylon the Great, “For all the nations have drunk the wine of her sexual immorality, which brings wrath. The kings of the earth have committed sexual immorality with her…”

    What kingdoms? Ezekial names them. Among them include:

    Egypt: “You engaged in promiscuous acts with Egyptian men, your well-endowed neighbors, and increased your prostitution to anger me.” (Ez 16:26).

    Assyria: “Then you engaged in prostitution with Assyrian men because you were not satisfied.” (Ez. 16:28)

    Babylon: “So you extended your prostitution to Chaldea, the land of merchants, but you were not even satisfied with this!” (Ez 16:29)

    Look familiar? The first three heads of the beast. These are three of the kings that the prostitute is said to commit prostitution with in Revelation. And the resulting judgement? The same judgement described in Rev. 17:15-18 and Rev. 18 when the kings of the earth turn against the woman:

    “I am therefore going to gather all the lovers you pleased – all those you loved as well as all those you hated. I will gather then against you from all around and expose your nakedness to them so they see you complete naked. I will judge you the way adulteresses and those who shed blood are judged…. I will hand you over to them, and they will demolish your mounds and tear down your elevated places. They will strip off your clothes, take your beautiful jewelry, and leave you stark naked. They will bring. a mob against you. tostone you and to cut you to pieces with their swords. They will burn your houses and execute judgments against you in the sight of many women… So I will satisfy my wrath against you, and my jealousy will turn away from you.” (Ez. 16:37-42)

    The seven heads: the prostitute’s lovers

    So, now I hope it’s pretty clear that the woman represents Jerusalem (Israel). John uses the same symbol of a woman to represent Israel in Revelation 12, who gives birth to a Son that will rule with an iron rod. So, its all consistent. Now we can understand the heads of the beast. They are Jerusalem’s “lovers”, kingdoms Israel has turned to instead of God.

    The seventh head of the beast is the US

    The seventh head is a kingdom, short lived, that Israel has turned to for protection and adopted sinful practices from after Rome. Like Egypt and Babylon, the Jews have sheltered in this kingdom and adopted its practices. They have received wealth from this kingdom. They have rejected God, and the true Messiah Jesus, and have placed their trust in the protection of this kingdom and in the military strength that this kingdom has provided them. What “kingdom” fits this description? There is only one that fits, and it fits well. Compared to the other kingdoms, it has only lived for a short time, about 250 years. The United States of America is the seventh head of the beast. There are more Jews in the US than there are in Israel. The US is a modern day Egypt to the Jews.

    The conclusion

    Don’t get me wrong, I’m pro-US and I’m pro-Israel. But despite the fact that “In God We Trust” is stamped on our currency, the US has as a nation turned from God both in faith and practice. Israel has also turned from God, when they rejected the true Messiah Jesus. According to Revelation, the end is going to turn out bad for both. Both will receive God’s judgement. Like the other heads of the great beast, the US will turn against Israel and be part of its destruction. God will use the kingdoms of the earth including the US to judge Israel. And then God will judge the kingdoms of the earth. The time is now to repent and turn to God.

  • In my last post, I discussed the vision of the beasts described in Revelation. The first of these beasts has ten horns and seven heads, and characteristics of a leopard, a bear, and a lion (Rev. 13:1-2). To properly interpret this vision, we need to also understand a related prophecy in Daniel that includes the exact same animals. Daniel 7 records a vision of four beasts: a lion with eagle’s wings, a bear gnawing on three ribs, a leopard with four wings and four heads and a fourth “frightening and dreadful” beast with ten horns, iron teeth and claws. We know from Daniel 7:23-24 that the beast represent kingdoms or governments, and that horns represent rulers.

    This is what he said: ‘The fourth beast will be a fourth kingdom on the earth, different from all the other kingdoms. it will devour the whole earth, trample it down, and crush it. The ten horns are ten kings who will rise from this kingdom….’ (Dan. 7:23-24, CSB)

    There is a well established interpretation, which I believe is false. I will address this traditional view first, and then give an interpretation I believe is more faithful to the text and what we know of history.

    Four challenges to the traditional interpretation

    The traditional interpretation of Daniel 7 identifies the lion as the Babylonian Empire, the bear as the Medo-Persian Empire, the leopard as the Greek Empire, and the fourth beast as the Roman Empire. This is such a widely held view that it is often presented as fact. One of the reasons the traditional view seems compelling is because of the vision of a statue of a man in Daniel 2, in which the body parts of different materials also represent four kingdoms, leading to an easy assumption that these are the same four visions in Daniel 7. In the vision of chapter 2, we are told the head of gold represents King Nebuchadnezzar II who ruled the Babylonian Empire and the other three kingdoms made of lesser valued metals (silver, bronze and iron) are inferior kingdoms that will follow. Since we know the initial kingdom is Babylon, identification of the remaining three follow naturally. This is made even easier with the vision of a ram and a goat in chapter 8 in which the angel identifies Medo-Persia and Greece as the next two kingdoms to follow Babylon. A rock hewn by God smashes the feet of iron mixed with clay and destroys the statue, creating a new and final kingdom that will last forever. This rock is no doubt the Messiah, referenced in the New Testament as the stumbling stone (1 Corinthians 8:9). Jesus declared the Kingdom of God began with his ministry, and thus the prophecy of Daniel 2 is fulfilled with Jesus’ ministry and his Church. The new kingdom is spreading over the whole world, and is smashing the kingdom of darkness. In similar fashion, the end of Daniel 7 lapses into descriptions of an antichrist figure who is eventually overcome by the Son of Man, one of the names Jesus often used for himself. It all seems so nice and consistent. But, for those that are open to receive it, I give five challenges to the traditional view of Daniel 7, which taken together I believe are sufficient to completely discredit it.

    Challenge 1: The final beast has not been fulfilled

    The Roman Empire has come and gone, but we do not see a clear fulfillment of the final beast with ten horns, or the remainder of the vision regarding the horn that wages war against the saints, the judgement of the Ancient of Days and the appearance of the Son of Man. While the impact of the Roman Empire was great, it did not “devour the whole earth, trample it down, and crush it.” (Daniel 7:23) History records seven kings of the Roman Kingdom, not ten, starting with Romulus and ending with Tarquinius Superbus. There have been multiple antichrist figures, but these did not change the set times and laws, the holy ones weren’t handed over for a time, times, and half a time, and they weren’t conquered by the Messiah. In short, it is a force-fit to describe the final beast in Daniel 7 as the Roman Empire. To overlook the inconsistencies is to simply be dishonest in our reading and interpretation of scripture. When we get to the point we are overlooking details or force-fitting them, we are interpreting something incorrectly.

    Some futurists that hold to the traditional view of Daniel 7 consider these details as being fulfilled in a future revived Roman Empire. No doubt some future kingdom may resemble the Roman Empire, but there have been many kingdoms in the span between the fall of the Roman Empire and today. So even if we identify the final beast with a future kingdom, we still have to deal with all of the kingdoms in between. There have been many leading up to the modern State of Israel including the Byzantine Empire, the Arab Caliphates, the Crusader Kingdoms, the British Empire, and the Ottoman Empire, even if we only consider those with direct influence over Jerusalem. So, where are all of those kingdoms in the vision?

    Challenge 2: The visions are redundant

    Traditionalists point to the other visions of the statue in Daniel 2, and the ram and the goat in Daniel 8 to support the identity of the beasts with the kingdoms that immediately followed Daniel. However, I see this as a strong objection. Why would Daniel need to receive three completely different visions that declared the same set of events? And if these visions communicated the same basic information he had previously, why would Daniel be so disturbed by the details of the visions that he became pale and lay sick for days? (Dan 7:28, 8:27)

    Challenge 3: The symbolism is inconsistent

    Daniel 8 contains a vision of a ram and a goat. In this case, an angel provides the interpretation that specifically identifies the ram with the Medo-Persian Empire and the goat with Greece (Dan. 8:20-21). Why have different beasts symbolizing the same entities? If Medo-Persia is represented as a ram in the vision of chapter 8, why is it represented as a bear in Chapter 7? And if the Greek Empire is represented as a goat in chapter 8, why is it represented as a leopard with four heads in chapter 7? Sure, it’s possible, but it raises obvious questions as to why the visions would not use a consistent representation.

    Traditionalists often point to ancient images of lions with wings in reference to ancient Babylon and use these images in their elaborate charts. Although the Lion of Babylon is a famous unwinged symbol of Babylon, the winged lion is an Assyrian symbol and not found in Babylonian culture. There is therefore no clear explanation for why the lion would have wings in the traditional view. In the vision, the wings are plucked from the lion and the lion is caused to stand like a man. This is generally taken to refer to the story of King Nebuchadnezzar from Daniel 4 in which he loses reason and authority for a time and is restored. The plucking of the wings is thus taken to symbolize a loss of power or pride. However, the transformation of Nebuchadnezzar was from a man to a beast and back again, not of a beast who becomes a man.

    The traditional view cannot well explain why the bear is on one side, and there is debate over the significance of the three ribs. There is no clear reason to associate a leopard with Greece, other than its speed, and the wings of the leopard are generally explained only as to the swiftness of the expanse of the kingdom. The wings of the leopard are thus not given the same meaning as the wings of the lion. Prophetic vision literature of the prophets is surprisingly consistent in ascribing specific symbols to specific types of entities, such as beasts, horns, etc. Although scripture is less definitive regarding what some symbols mean, like heads and wings, the traditional view throws consistency out the window.

    Challenge 4: The beasts are future to Daniel

    In Daniel 7:17, the angel declares that the four beasts are four kingdoms who “will rise from the earth”. The most natural reading captured by most translations implies that all four beasts are future to the time of Daniel. Daniel records the vision as occurring in the first year of King Belshazzar of Babylon, so at the time writing the first beast would have already risen according to the traditional view. This is admittedly not quite as strong an objection as it might seem. The Hebrew word for arise here is in the imperfect tense. This tense is used to indicate continuous, incomplete or open-ended action occurring in present or future. An alternate translation might then read that the four beasts “are rising from the earth”. However, this seems like a very awkward reading, and since some of the beasts are clearly not yet risen does not seem to fit well to the sense of the passage. The most natural interpretation is that these kingdoms are future events that continue over an unspecified or open-ended time. Thus, the first beast represents a kingdom that exists after the fall of Babylon.

    Challenge 5: The beasts have not remained alive

    This objection, I believe, is the strongest as it involves direct contradiction of scripture. We are told by Daniel that the first three beasts will exist at the time that the final beast is destroyed, and will continue to exist for some time but with diminished authority. This is a critical point that clearly contradicts the traditional interpretation:

    I watched, then because of the sound the arrogant words the horn was speaking. As I continued watching, the beast was killed and its body destroyed and given over to the burning fire. As for the rest of the beasts, their dominion was removed, but an extension of life was granted to them for a certain period of time. I continued watching in the night visions, and suddenly one like a son of man was coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was escorted before him. (Dan 7:11-13)

    Of the first three kingdoms identified by the traditional view, only Greece has some reasonable representation today. The original Babylonian Empire no longer exists today. Of course there are modern day countries that occupy the same territory. But the beasts are not still alive. Where is ancient Babylon but a tourist site? The country of Iran, while rich with Persian influence, is distinctly different than the Persian Empire.

    The modern interpretation

    I believe the three beasts are three empires that have directly given rise to modern day countries and can be reasonably said to represent them in some form of reduced dominion. I will refer to this as the modern interpretation, since it interprets the beasts with kingdoms that occurred in more recent history than those of the traditional view, and that continue to exist in some form today. I do not come to this conclusion alone. Others have described a similar idea that these beasts are modern countries. The symbolism for each animal fits well with how these countries have been depicted in literature and modern culture, and is consistent with known historical events.

    As we will see, the modern interpretation provides a much clearer, complete and consistent explanation of symbolic details than the traditional view.

    Lion: The British Empire

    The first was like a lion but had eagle’s wings. I continued watching until its wings were torn off. It was lifted up from the ground, set on its feet like a man, and given a human mind. (Daniel 7:4, CSB)

    The first beast, the lion, represents the British Empire which began around 1583 AD. The lion has been associated with England, and is represented on its coat of arms. The wings here represent the English colonies in the new world, that were removed when the United States won its war for independence in 1776. Wings as symbols that represent colonies or remote territories makes sense from an expansion or geographical perspective. In this case, the wings of an eagle carry additional significance as a national symbol of the US. The lion is set on its feet like a man and given a human mind. This is an interesting symbolic detail that fits perfectly with the age of reason, or enlightenment period, that began in England in the 18th century with Thomas Paine’s influential pamphlet Age of Reason published in 1790.

    Currently, this empire continues to exist as the United Kingdom. The transition from empire to kingdom fits perfectly with the description of dominion being removed and an extension of life being granted (Daniel 7:12).

    Bear: The Russian Empire

    Suddenly, another beast appeared, a second one, that looked like a bear. It was raised up on one side, with three ribs in its mouth between its teeth. It was told, ‘Get up! Gorge yourself on flesh.’ (Daniel 7:5, CSB)

    The Russian Empire was founded in 1721. The bear became a widely recognized symbol for the Russian Empire and Russia in general. The picture of the bear laying on its side fits geographic depictions, such as the one shown in a 1914 humorous world atlas shown here.

    The Illustration of The Great European War No.16. – A humorous Atlas of the World. (Printing 13.09.1914)

    The Russian Empire was characterized by massive early expansion, and certainly fits the depiction of a gorging bear. The ravenous nature of the bear also fits the continued aggressive and expansive nature of Russian imperialism that continued into the Soviet Union and post-Soviet eras and have been a key feature of Russian policy. The three ribs between its teeth can be seen to represent three territories of Russian occupation: Moldova, Georgia and Ukraine. At the time of this writing Russia continues to gnaw on Ukraine.

    Leopard: The German Empire

    After this, while I was watching, suddenly another beast appeared. It was like a leopard with four wings of a bird on its back. It had four heads, and it was given dominion. (Daniel 7:6, CSB)

    The German Empire began in 1871 and existed until the end of World War I in 1918. While the leopard is not as clearly identified as a nation symbol of Germany or the German Empire, it can be connected with the German Leopard and Panther tanks and it also characterizes the swiftness of German invasions. The four heads may represent the four constituent kingdoms that made up the German Empire: Bavaria, Prussia, Saxony and Württemberg. It may also represent the successive German Reichs, plus the current German Federal Republic. In keeping with the interpretation of the “wings” of the British Empire, the four wings can be interpreted as the multiple colonies of the German Empire, of which there were four principal colonies acquired in Africa: German East Africa, German South West Africa, Cameroon, and Togoland. The symbolism of the bird also fits Germany’s heraldic symbol which is a black eagle with red beak.

    Why does this matter?

    The interpretation of Daniel 7 affects how we understand the first beast from the sea in Revelation, and potential future events, since this beast includes parts from each of the Daniel 7 beasts. If the four beasts of Daniel are in the past, this supports either the preterist view that the events of Revelation are fulfilled at the time of the Roman Empire, or the idealist view that all the kingdoms past and future are represented in the east in some allegorical way. But understanding that the beasts in Daniel 7 continue to live as modern countries provides us with an understanding that their inclusion in Revelation 13 indicates that these countries are part of the future beast. And a clear and consistent symbology demonstrated in Daniel’s beast prophecies helps us to understand what these symbols mean when we see them in the Revelation passage.

    In a future post, I will dive into future clues for the Revelation beast of the sea, and the seventh head of the beast that I believe exists today.


  • The Nature of the Beast

    The beast is one of the most prominent symbols in Revelation, and there have been numerous theories as to its identity and the mark of the beast that is to be taken by those who worship the beast.

    There is no rest day or night for those who worship the beast and its image, or anyone who receives the mark of its name. (Rev 14:11, CSB)

    So who or what is the beast?

    There are actually two beasts in Revelation, three if you count the dragon. Revelation 13:1-10 describes a first beast that comes up out of the sea with ten horns and seven heads. It is like a leopard, has the feet of a bear, and the mouth of a lion. It suffers what appears to be a fatal wound to one of its heads, but is healed. The whole earth is “amazed” at the beast and follows it. It is given a mouth to utter boasts and blasphemies against God. It wages war against the saints, followers of God, whose names are written in the Book of Life. Everyone else will worship the beast, but the dragon (identified as Satan in Rev. 12:9) who gives the beast power and authority over every tribe, people, language and nation. Those who do not worship the beast are taken captive and killed.

    The second beast is described as coming up out of the earth (Rev 13:11-18). It has two horns like a lamb, but speaks like a dragon. It performs signs, causes fire to come down from heaven in front of people. Later, in Revelation 19:20, this beast is called the false prophet. It deceives people and has them make an image of the first beast. The image is given breath so that it can speak and cause those who do not worship the first beast to be killed. The second beast, or possibly the image, makes everyone receive a mark on their hand or forehead. No one can buy or sell without the mark.

    There are many ideas that have been suggested as to the identity of these beasts. To name a few:

    • The Antichrist
    • The Roman Empire or Emperor Nero
    • A future revived Roman Empire
    • Muhammad or Islam
    • The Catholic Church or the Papacy
    • The United States
    • Any kingdom in opposition to God

    What interpretation you choose generally depends on how you view Revelation. Preterists interpret Revelation along with other Biblical prophecies as referring to past events. This view of prophecy generally identifies the beasts as referring to the Roman Empire and the seven heads its emperors, with Emperor Nero as the antichrist. A futurist view, however, sees the prophetic events as occurring in the future. This view generally interprets the beasts as referring to a future government or world order. Idealists interpret the prophecies more allegorically, with the beasts referring more generally to all kingdoms past and future, or any system of the world that is opposed to God.

    To properly interpret the symbolism of the beasts, we need to understand the “prophetic language” of vision prophecies recorded in the Old Testament. The book of Revelation contains an estimated 400 to 1000 references to the Old Testament, and many of these are to the book of Daniel. Daniel records multiple visions of wild beasts. Daniel 7 describes four beasts. Combined, these fit characteristics of the beast in Revelation: a lion, a bear and a leopard and a fourth terrible beast with ten horns. In Daniel’s visions, we are told that a beast or animal represents a kingdom (Dan 7:17-23, 8:20-22) and horns represent rulers (Dan 7:24). We are not explicitly told what heads represent. We will need to infer that from context, but since the horns represent rulers, the heads must represent something else, like regions or dynasties. We can already rule out the notion that the heads represent emperors of Rome. And in this light we can also rule out the notion that at least the first beast is a religion, such as Islam, or a religious organization such as the Catholic Church. Based on Daniel 7, the fourth beast is a “kingdom on the earth, different form all the other kingdoms. It will devour the whole earth, trample it down, and crush it.” This fits Revelation 13:7 which says “it was also given authority over every tribe, people, language, and nation.” The beast is a kingdom or government that is given authority over the entire world. It has authority over the nations. So, the beast is not a nation, like the United States.

    Nor is the beast every nation or kingdom that opposes God. Daniel makes it clear there are a series of future kingdoms with a final kingdom that will trample the entire world. It may be legitimate to see a deeper allegorical truth embodied by the beast, but there is clearly a specific kingdom that is being referred to here. Since we haven’t seen such a kingdom that rules the entire world, we should expect a future fulfillment that will match the prophecies of Revelation and Daniel.

    There are many curious clues as to the identity of the beast of the sea and its heads from Daniel and Revelation. Revelation 17 gives us more of these in a description of a prostitute who rides the beast, and has on her forehead written the name Babylon the Great (Rev 17:5). The beast “was, and is not, and is about to come up from the abyss and go to destruction.” (Rev 17:8). The seven heads represent seven mountains on which the woman is seated, and also seven “kings” or “kingdoms” of which five have fallen. Of these kings, “five have fallen, one is, the other has not yet come, and when he comes, he must remain for only a little while.” (Rev 17:10). The beast is itself an eighth king or kingdom (Rev 17:11).

    From this we can see that there is a temporal nature to the heads of the beast, as they come after one another. We can see them as different faces of a common type of ruling power, and in that way I believe the passage supports the spiritual truth of the idealist – that there is a common thread that ties multiple governments or empires together. This thread is the authority granted to them by Satan. The beast reflects the character of its true authority, that of the dragon, and each of its heads are a representation or a face of a common system that is opposed to God. But I think Daniel and Revelation makes it clear that there will be a future embodiment in the form of a world government that controls all the nations of the world. And this is the beast itself, a final representation of this world order.

    In my next post, I will lay out these clues to examine possible specific explanations for the four beasts of Daniel 7, the beasts of the sea and the land in Revelation, and the 7 heads of the beast of the sea.

  • The Seven Seals and the Sign of the Apocalypse

    An Astrological Interpretation

    Then I saw in the right hand of the one seated on the throne a scroll with writing on both sides, sealed with seven seals. (Rev 5:1, CSB)

    In the book of Revelation, John describes a vision of a scroll in the hand of someone who is seated on a heavenly throne. The scroll contains writing on both sides and is sealed with seven seals. As the seals are opened, John records a series of calamities that unfold on the earth. For each of the first four seals, a horse is identified by color, with a rider who is given specific weapons, objects or powers to wield in judgement. These “horsemen of the apocalypse” have been a source of much speculation and an inspiration for all kinds of fiction. Assuming against a literal interpretation of demonic horse riders flying through the sky, what do these horsemen signify? Do they represent future rulers? Catastrophic events? A traditional futurist interpretation of Revelation treats them as figuratively representing Conquest, War, Famine and Death – events or judgements that will occur at the end of days. But why the elaborate and colorful imagery in which these events are depicted as horses and riders? Is this only a literary device to capture the imagination of the reader, or is there more specific meaning behind each of the symbols in the vision? Many of the details run contrary to what one would expect. Why do only the first four seals in John’s vision contain horses? Why not all seven? And why is the rider named Death riding a green horse instead of the black one? According to the pattern of prophetic interpretation in the Bible, symbols in visions refer to specific persons, places or events. In Daniel, parts of a statue and various beasts refer to specific kingdoms that were to come. In the first chapter of Revelation, John sees seven golden lamp stands and seven stars, which we are told represent the seven churches and their angels (Rev 1:20). We should therefore expect a meaningful and concrete explanation for each symbolic detail in the vision of the seals.  A correct interpretation should fit like a key – fully explaining all of the salient details and contradicting none. If no explanation fits this well, we most likely lack the perspective required to fully interpret the passage in question. But, let’s not beat a dead horse, so to speak.

    Before diving into the imagery of each seal, let’s first consider the purpose of seals on scrolls in ancient Rome. Seals served to validate and authenticate the rightful owner of an important document. The scroll would have been rolled and tied, and wax seals would have been stamped by signet rings of the author and various witnesses. The seals would be broken and verified at the time the property was to be claimed, and verified by the witnesses that had sealed the scroll to affirm that its contents were authentic and untampered1. Some have speculated that this scroll represents either the property deed or a will that bestows the inheritance of the future kingdom of the earth to Lamb who was slain, an obvious reference to Jesus. In the vision, only the Lamb has the right to break the seals that bring forth the events of the vision and declare his rightful ownership over the world, the saints, and his future kingdom.

    I propose that each of the seven seals describes a celestial observation and a set of events that will occur at or around the time of the observation. In computer terms, I think that the events of the vision are astronomically time-stamped. As I will show, this interpretation provides a concrete symbolic explanation for the four horses, their specific colors and the particulars of their riders which is faithful to the original language and follows reasonable clues that can be found in the text. If this is true, celestial signs will serve to validate and authenticate the divine authorship of the vision since only God could arrange heavenly events to coincide with earthly ones. This fits exactly with the spirit and purpose of seals on ancient scrolls, by providing the assurance of authenticity and authorship, as well as the manner in which they are broken at a specific time. I do not suggest the astronomical signs are the only purpose of the passage, but rather that the celestial signs of the seals support and validate the multilayered meaning of the text.

    Despite the similarity of objects held by the riders to astrological symbols, I may be the first to propose such an interpretation. That, on the face of it, should make it suspect. How could any plausible idea really come to light after nearly two thousand years of study by millions of Biblical scholars? However, it is possible that the full meaning of this passage may not have been meant to be understood until a time near the end. Only within the last few decades have computers and planetary ephemeris software become widely available so that someone could compute the date of such celestial alignments. If this is a code hidden in Revelation for the final age, it was arguably not meant to be decoded until the technology became available, and the events of the passage were about to unfold. As I will show, we are within a generation of a unique astronomical occurrence described by the symbols in this vision.

    Some may balk at the idea of astrological references hidden within the pages of scripture due to their association with pagan religion and divination practices. Modern astrology and horoscopes not only lack scientific basis, but are a form of divination, which is prohibited by Old Testament law and based in a form of pantheistic mythology that runs counter to the Bible. Nevertheless, there are a number of reasons to consider astrology as a relevant language for prophetic visions. Ancient civilizations did not distinguish between astronomy and astrology, and a heritage of storytelling using the sun, moon and stars has been handed down since at least the time of our earliest records. The Old Testament makes multiple references to the constellations, including Ursa Major, Orion, Pleiades (Job 9:9; 38:31, Amos 5:8, Is 13:10). The Hebrew word mazzaroth (מַזָּרוֹת) in Job 38:32 likely refers to the constellations of the zodiac. Scripture does not forbid the association of stars with earthly events. Yes, it speaks against the forms of astrology practiced by the Babylonians (Is 47:13), but no more so than it does of the sacrifices of the Israelites that although prescribed by God were devoid of true worship (Amos 5:21-24, Hosea 6:6, Is 1:11-31). In Genesis 1:14, God states that the sun, moon and stars “will serve as signs for the appointed times and for days and years”, and Psalms 19:1 states that “the heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims his handiwork.” In Matthew 2, the wise men followed a star to find Jesus in Bethlehem. In this example, God used the stars to tell his story, and the wise men appear commended by Matthew for using an astrological sign to identify and locate the Messiah. Finally, Jesus and the prophets stated explicitly that there would be signs in the heavens in the last days: “Then there will be signs in the sun, moon and stars; and there will be anguish on the earth among the nations bewildered by the roaring of the sea and the waves.” (Luke 21:25-27) 

    Horses and Planets

    I propose that horses of the seven seals prophecy symbolize planets. The identities of the planets are indicated by the color of the horse, as well as various characteristics of the rider. The riders and the objects that they carry also represent a specific constellation or asterism, and thus a planetary conjunction with the asterism. This idea is inspired by:

    • Ancient mythologies have associated celestial bodies with chariots and horses. For example, the Sumerian, Babylonian and Greek solar deities are depicted as driving a chariot with a team of horses across the sky.
    • The passage contains multiple symbols known to be associated with asterisms or constellations, including the scales (Libra), the bow (Sagittarius) and the crown (Corona Australis). 
    • Astrological systems have associated planets with specific colors, due in part to their physical appearance and also according to characteristics of the deities ascribed to each planet. 

    I focus on astrological associations that would have been known to John. Even assuming the divine origin of the vision, it seems reasonable that God would use symbols that John would understand. These include those of ancient Greek and Roman astrology, but also those of ancient Babylon and Egypt, from which their astrology was largely influenced. Most of the astrology used by the Greeks and Romans was not their own, but rather a retelling and adaptation of symbols, myths and legends that were much older. John’s revelation contains common symbolic references as those of Old Testament prophets including Daniel and Zechariah. For example, Zechariah also describes a vision containing colored horses, possibly with a common symbolic representation. It seems reasonable, then, that Revelation may include prophetic symbols known to the ancient Mesopotamian astrologers as well.

    Ancient astronomers knew only of the five planets that are visible with the naked eye, since Uranus and Neptune were not discovered until after the invention of the telescope. A Late Babylonian cuneiform tablet K.2346 (The British Museum, 2025)2 contains an inscription identifying the planets with the exact colors of the horses in Revelation. The inscription and its translation read as follows (Reiner & Pingree, 1998, 248, K.2346+:54)3, quoted in (Makrû – ASE, 2025)4:

    Inscription:

    mulBABBAR mulSAG.ME.[G]AR
    mulSA5 Ṣal-bat-a-nu
    mulSIG7 dDil-bat
    mulMI dSAG.UŠ: dGUD.UD

    Translation:

    White star = Jupit[e]r,
    Red star = Mars,
    Green-yellow star = Venus,
    Black star = Saturn, var.: Mercury 

    This is not the only inscription which contains these color references for the planets, but this tablet is notable in that it includes all of them in a single inscription, much like a cipher or decoding key. If one examines the original meanings of each word and symbol between the Greek and Akkadian symbols, the colors in this Babylonian text align perfectly with those of the horses in Revelation right down to the specific tint or hue.

    The First Seal: A White Horse

    Then I saw the Lamb open one of the seven seals, and I heard one of the four living creatures say with a voice like thunder, “Come!” I looked, and there was a white horse. Its rider held a bow; a crown was given to him, and he went out as a conqueror in order to conquer. (Rev 6:1-2, CSB)

    Jupiter has been associated most consistently with the color white across many astrological systems due to its bright appearance. There are other symbolic clues that point to Jupiter. The rider of the white horse is given a crown, and goes forth to conquer. Jupiter is associated with deities that rule other deities. In ancient Babylonia, the planet Jupiter was associated with the god Marduk, the chief god of Babylon, also known as Bel, or Lord. In Roman mythology, Jupiter is the supreme god, and corresponds to Zeus in Greek mythology. Jupiter represents kingship. And a white horse is a fitting color of steed for royalty. 

    The rider holds a bow. As a distance weapon, this seems a highly unusual choice for a king, particularly for a conqueror, who might be pictured as leading the charge into battle. Arguably, the natural choice would have been a sword. If we consider the symbolism here as merely abstract, or as a literary device, the choice of weapon is not well explained. The rider with a bow and crown, however, provides a strong and somewhat obvious astrological reference to Sagittarrius. In Babylonian astrology, Sagittarius was associated with a mounted archer, identified with the god Nergal. The Greeks depicted Sagittarius as a centaur archer, sometimes identified with the myth of Chiron, and included within Sagittarius the neighboring constellation of Corona Australis as a wreath-like crown. Corona Australis is also associated with the myth of Dionysus, the god of wine, who is often depicted wearing a wreath. In one story, the god Dionysus made a wreath of myrtle leaves and gave it to Hades in return for his dead mother after retrieving her from the underworld. Chart XV of the Uranographia of Johann Bode (1801) shows Sagittarius drawing his bow. By his forefeet is the constellation Corona Australis depicted as a wreath.

    Sagittarius, the centaur-like archer, shown drawing his bow on Chart XV of the Uranographia of Johann Bode (1801). By his forefeet is the constellation Corona Australis.
    Sagittarius, the centaur-like archer, shown with bow and wreath on Chart XV of the Uranographia of Johann Bode (1801).5

    Thus, Sagittarius can account perfectly for both the bow and crown in John’s vision. Wait, but can a wreath really fit the description of the crown in John’s vision? In fact, yes, it absolutely does. The specific word John uses for crown here is stephanos (στέφανος), a woven wreath or garland such as those handed out to the winners of the ancient Greek games, rather than diadema (διάδημα), the royal crown of sovereignty. An alignment of Jupiter with Sagittarius, then, works exceedingly well to satisfy an astrological interpretation of this seal. So John’s use of stephanos here is a perfect fit both to Sagittarius and to a conquering ruler.

    John’s use of stephanos over diadema may imply the rider is victorious in battle, gaining or increasing his power through conquest, but it does not preclude a notion of kingship. John also uses stephanos in his depiction of the Son of Man when he is seated on the cloud and holding a sickle prepared to harvest the earth (Rev 14:14). Elsewhere, however, he uses diadema when he refers to the crowns on the heads of the beast and the dragon (Rev 12:3, 13:1), and for another rider of a white horse, the Faithful and True King of Kings and Lord or Lords when he returns to war against the Beast and his armies, and to rule with an iron rod (Rev 19:12). 

    The Second Seal: A Red Horse

    When he opened the second seal, I heard the second living creature say, “Come!” Then another horse went out, a fiery red one, and its rider was allowed to take peace from the earth, so that people would slaughter one another. And a large sword was given to him. (Rev 6:3-4, CSB)

    Mars is well known as the red planet due to its physical appearance. Babylonian astrology connected Mars with the Sumerian fire god Girra, leading to an association to both fire and the color red. Babylonian cuneiform uses the symbol mulSA5 to indicate not only red, but specifically a “fiery red”, and also as another name for Mars (SA5 – ASE, 2025)6. The association of the planet with fiery red color is supported by inscriptions such as:  mulma-ak-ru-u = tam-šil dGirru(GIŠ.BAR) “Red star = likeness of Girru (= Fire),” quoted in (Makrû – ASE, 2025).

    This provides a striking point of correspondence between the astrological symbolism for the planet of Mars and the Revelation 6 passage. While there are multiple Greek words for red, the one used in Revelation 6 is pyrrhos (πυρρός) with the gloss “fiery red, the color of fire” (Mounce, “pyrros”)7. John does distinguish between shades of red, since in Revelation 17:3 he uses kokkinos (κόκκινος) meaning scarlet. 

    Since earliest recorded times, Mars has been associated with war. Babylonians also associated Mars with their god of war, Nergal. This association with the planet was carried to the Greeks, in the form of Ares and the Romans as Mars. So, in addition to the color symbolism, the depiction of war or violence is a good fit to Mars.

    For most modern readers, a sword readily brings to mind the constellation Orion. Orion was not always depicted as carrying a sword, however. In Babylonian astrology, the constellation Orion was known as “The Heavenly Shepherd”, or “The True Shepherd of Anu” and was depicted as carrying a lock and key rather than a sword. The Greek’s depicted Orion as a giant hunter. While some descriptions include a sword in his belt, his most prevalent features were a club and a lion’s skin. In any case, Orion is too far from the ecliptic for Mars to ever reach it.

    However, there is one interpretation that fits perfectly. We can find an additional clue if we go back to the original Greek text. John says the rider of the red horse was given a machaira megas (μάχαιρα μεγάλη). Megas means great, or large. But there are two Greek words for sword that are used in the New Testament. The machaira is a knife or short sword with a single edged curved blade, much like a modern machete. The rhomphaia (ῥομφαία) is a longer, often double-edged blade used for thrusting. Some claim that the New Testament authors made no distinction, and machaira is used to refer to a sword generically. This is not supported here, however, since John uses both machaira and rhomphaia, making it clear that he does distinguish between the two. A reference to rhomphaia occurs later in the same passage (Rev 6:8), where it describes the forms of death associated with the fourth seal. Pairing megas with machaira, then, is something of an oxymoron. Rather than describing a great broadsword as we might at first imagine, it is instead describing something akin to a “great curved knife”. 

    So, is there a great curved machete represented in the stars? Yes, in fact, there is just that. It’s known as Leo’s Sickle, and refers to an asterism in the constellation Leo consisting of six stars that form a backward question mark representing the head and shoulders of the lion, with the star Regulus as the handle. The connection of this asterism to a curved blade has been made since ancient times as well. In a list of constellations, the Roman philosopher Pliny the Elder describes this group of stars as “The Sickle”. The Akkadians referred to it as Gis-mes, the “Curved Weapon,” and in northeastern Persia it was called Khamshish, the “Scimitar.” In the earliest records, the Egyptians referred to this asterism as the “Knife.” (Allen, 1963, 253-255)8 quoted by (Thayer, 2025)9. Thus, a conjunction of Mars with Leo’s Sickle, and particularly with the handle of the Sickle, the star Regulus, provides an excellent astrological fit to the imagery represented by the second seal.

    The Third Seal: A Black Horse

    When he opened the third sea, I heard the third living creature say, “Come!” And I looked, and there was a black horse. Its rider held a set of scales in his hand. Then I heard something like a voice among the four living creatures say, “A quart of wheat for a denarius, and three quarts of barley for a denarius, but do not harm the oil and the wine. (Rev 6:5-6, CSB)

    Babylonian astrologers associated the color black with both Mercury and Saturn, possibly due to their faint appearance. Mercury and Saturn are the two hardest planets to find and identify with the naked eye. In the K.2346 inscription, they are listed together as variants of the term “black-star”. Either planet, therefore, could be a reasonable interpretation for the black horse. Since Jupiter and Mars were associated with various characteristics fitting to their riders, it makes sense to consider whether Mercury or Saturn have associations similarly aligned to the rider of the black horse.

    Mercury is the fastest moving planet in the sky. Consequently, it was commonly considered a divine messenger to the gods. For the Babylonians, this was Nabu, the god of scribes, literacy and wisdom. The Greeks called their messenger to the gods Hermes, known to the Romans as Mercury, from which we get the name of the planet. In addition to his role as messenger, Mercury was associated with finance, commerce, travel and deception. 

    In contrast to Mercury, Saturn is the slowest visible planet in the sky. Thus, ancient astrologers associated Saturn with stability, constancy, and the passage of time. In addition to “SAG.UŠ”, another  Babylonian name for Saturn is “TUR.DIŠ” which literally means “constant, unchanging, lasting”, and reflects the slow character of Saturn’s motion relative to the stars (SAG.UŠ – ASE, 2025)10. The planet’s slow and steady pace may have led to its association with agriculture, due either to the slow and steady growth of crops or the marking of seasons critical to determining times to plant and harvest. The Babylonians most often associated Saturn with Ninurta (or Ninib), who was attributed a strong influence on agriculture (Scott, n.d.)11. Because Saturn follows a similar path to the sun, the Babylonians also associated it with the sun and their sun god Shamash, even referring to Saturn as “sun-star” (Jastrow, 1910). 

    The Greeks associated Saturn with Chronos, the personification of time in Greek mythology and the origin of our concept of Father Time, who is often depicted as holding a scythe. This scythe is a remnant of the association of Chronos to agriculture and harvesting.The Roman counterpart to Chronos is the god Saturn, from which the planet gets its name. Similarly, Saturn was considered a god of time, wealth and agriculture (Saturn (Mythology) – Wikipedia)12.

    Traditional interpretations of the black horse associate it with famine and/or extreme inflation, since a quart of wheat is about enough to feed one person for a day, and a denarius is equivalent to a day’s wage. The price of goods described in John’s vision of the black horse bear striking resemblance to ancient Babylonian omens predicting cereal grain prices from observations of planets relative to zodiacal constellations and other phenomena. Both Saturn and Mercury were referenced in such omens, see (Hunger, 1976, 94:7, 15, 47)13, cited by (SAG.UŠ – ASE, 2025), and (Hunger, 1976, 94:24, 28), cited by (GU4.UD – ASE, 2025)14. Saturn, associated with agriculture, aligns well with the concept of famine, but Mercury, associated with commerce, to the concept of inflation.The pair scales held by the rider can be seen as an obvious reference to the constellation Libra. In Babylonian astronomy, Libra was known as “The Scales” or “Balance”, and connected to the god Shamash, a patron of truth and justice. A conjunction of Libra with Saturn and possibly Mercury would represent an astrological fulfillment of the symbolism of the black horse. The two black planets, two sides of the scale, and a pairing between produce and their monetary value suggests the potential of a triple conjunction including both Saturn and Mercury within Libra. In this case, Saturn would represent the agricultural side of the balance, and Mercury the economic side.

    The Fourth Seal: A Green Horse

    When he opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth living creature say, “Come!” And I looked, and there was a pale green horse. Its rider was named Death, and Hades was following after him. They were given authority over a fourth of the earth, to kill by the sword, by famine, by plague, and by the wild animals of the earth. (Rev 6:7-8, CSB)

    While the fourth horse has often been associated with plague, this interpretation directly overlooks the other three causes of death mentioned by John, and the fact that plague as a cause of death is mentioned next to last in the list, after both sword and famine. Rather, the primary aspect highlighted by this horse is the vast number of those who have been killed, a quarter of the earth’s population. In this way, the fourth horse can be seen to summarize the deaths related to the first three horses.

    The fourth cause of death described here is often translated as “wild animals” or “wild beasts”. However, the original text only uses the word therion (θηρίον), translated elsewhere in Revelation simply as “beast” (Rev 13:1, 13:11). The phrase “of the earth” and the context of death has most likely led translators to adding the interpretive word “wild” here, assuming it refers to animal attacks. Except for some very bizarre scenarios, it is highly unlikely that deaths by wild animals could in any substantial way contribute to billions of fatalities across the planet. Either this includes some type of disease spread by animals, or else beast here refers to the prophetic therion of the earth (kingdoms, nations or rulers) as in Rev 13:11: “Then I saw another beast coming up out of the earth”.

    The word used for the color of the fourth horse, chloros (χλωρός), is most commonly translated as either green, or yellow-green, and often refers to the color of fresh vegetation. There are other Koine Greek words that could have been used here, such as prasinos (πρᾰ́σῐνος), meaning leak green, a bolder, possibly darker and less yellowish green than chloros. The word chloros is used four times in the New Testament. The first use is in Mark 6:39, when Jesus tells the people to sit in groups on the green grass before multiplying the five loaves and two fish. The remaining cases are in Revelation, where it refers explicitly to the color of vegetation, trees, plants and grass that are either burned up (Rev. 8:7) or preserved (Rev. 9:4). In the Greek Septuagint, the word is used 16 times. In all cases it is used as the color of vegetation, plants or the like (Krins, n.d.)15.

    Green seems an unnatural color for a horse. Thus, most translators for this verse have selected a secondary and much less common gloss for the word chloros: “pale, greenish gray” (Arndt, 2000, 1085)16. Other than the immediate passage, this secondary gloss is supported only by non-Biblical Greek texts. Some of these use the word as an epithet for fear. Others use it medically, such as to describe abnormal skin coloration due to disease. Neither of these uses precludes the implication of a yellow or green tint. The supporting reference from Hippocrates’ Prognostics17 reads “the color of the whole face being green, black, livid, or lead-colored” (Hippocrates, Part 2). Elsewhere Hippocrates uses chloros to specifically refer to a greenish or yellowish hue, as in describing abnormal coloration of spit: “a certain degree of yellowness should appear strongly mixed up with the sputum…that which is very green and frothy is bad…” (Hippocrates, Part 14). If this is the sense of the word here, then a horse of a sickly yellowish green color is implied, possibly without hair, not one that is simply gray. 

    In Akkadian cuneiform, as well as Greek, there are different color terms that map to what is today referred to as “green” in English. In the previously mentioned Babylonian text, Venus is referenced as mulSIG7, or “(yellow-)green-star”. In Sumerian cuneiform, MUL (𒀯) signifies “star”, “constellation” or “planet”. SIG7 is a color reference. In a table of equivalent color terms for ancient languages, Warburton identifies the Sumerian symbol SIG7 as corresponding to the Greek 1st millennium word “xlōros” (chloros) (Warburton, 2016)18. This provides a direct tie between the color reference used for Venus in the Babylonian text, and that used for the fourth horse of the apocalypse.

    For the first three horses, we observed that various astrological or mythological associations of the planets fit those of the rider and their corresponding predicted events. So, besides the color association, does Venus fit additional characteristics related to the green horse? Our name for Venus comes from the Roman deity associated with love and beauty, known to the Greeks as Aphrodite. This certainly does not fit the connotation of Death. However, there is another Roman goddess also associated with Venus. Her name is Libitina, and she was the ancient Roman goddess of funerals and burial. Her name was used metonymically to mean “death” itself, and undertakers were referred to as libitinarii. The sacred grove of Libitini on Esquiline Hill, served as a headquarters for funeral arrangements. This grove contained the Temple of Venus, which collected a “death tax” in the form of a coin for each Roman who died. Consequently, the name Libitinaan was used as another epithet for Venus. During a plague in 65 AD, 30000 deaths were recorded at the Temple of Venus (Grant, n.d.)19. This plague occurred in John’s lifetime and likely before he penned Revelation on the Island of Patmos. The rider of the fourth horse is the only one that John gives a name to. So it seems notable that the rider is said to be named Death, and Libitina is used as another name for death and also for Venus.

    There is another possible connection between Venus and death. The Babylonians associated Venus with the goddess Ishtar. In Mesopotamian mythology, Ishtar descends into the underworld, which was ruled by her sister Ereshkigal. At each of seven gates, she is slowly disrobed of articles of clothing, corresponding to her divine powers. When she finally arrives before her sister, naked and powerless, Ereshkigal kills her. She is later rescued by the god Enki, with a price that includes being replaced by her husband. The death and resurrection of Ishtar is often seen as reflecting the cycles of nature, and sometimes interpreted as a symbol of the planet’s cycle as it descends below the horizon as an evening star and reappears as the morning star. 

    If the fourth seal represents an astrological event, in keeping with the first three horsemen we would expect, then, a convergence of Venus with some constellation associated with death. The rider is named Death. John uses the Greek word thanatos, which is a personification of death, and hades can refer to the Greek god of the underworld, or the realm of the dead. The constellation most associated with death in ancient astrology as well as today is Scorpius. In Greek mythology, the constellation Scorpius is primarily known for its role in the death of Orion, the great hunter. The scorpion was sent to kill Orion after he boasted that he could defeat all the beasts of the earth. Zeus then placed both Orion and the scorpion in the sky as constellations, positioned on opposite sides. 

    In the vision, Hades follows Death, which implies a potential secondary mover. Is Hades on another horse? In Greek mythology, Hades is the god of the underworld, the realm of the dead. Hades was also used as a general term for the grave or the abode of the dead. This could be seen as a possible reference to Mercury, the Roman equivalent to Hermes. In addition to being the messenger of the gods, Hermes was believed to guide souls through the underworld.

    In Egyptian astrology, Scorpius was associated with both death and the goddess Serket, often depicted with a scorpion on her head. She served a role of guardian in the afterlife, protecting the souls of the deceased as they journeyed through the underworld. This role is similar to that of Hades in Greek mythology, who was also thought to rule over the Greek underworld. The ancient Babylonians also saw this constellation as a scorpion and called the constellation MUL.GIR.TAB, which translates to “the creature with a burning sting”. It was associated with the Scorpion Men (Aqrabuamelu) fierce warriors and guardians of the sun, and the underworld. They associated Scorpius with the concepts of death and rebirth, as well as the power of darkness and the decline of the sun’s power after the autumnal equinox.

    The Astrological Sign of the Horses

    Given such an interpretation, then, we can consider when a convergence of the four (or five) visible planets and their respective constellations will occur. The specific planets representing each horse, and the asterisms or constellations associated with each of the riders are as follows:

    HorseRiderPlanetAsterism
    WhiteConqueror, given a bow and crownJupiterSagittarius
    RedTakes peace from the earth, given a swordMarsLeo’s Sickle (Regulus)
    BlackHolding scales, price of wheat and barleySaturn and MercuryLibra
    GreenDeath and HadesVenusScorpius

    Separately, these conjunctions are not infrequent. A conjunction involving all four horses and their respective asterisms at the same time, however, is an extremely rare phenomenon. The determination of when this sign will occur is a relatively simple matter given modern computers and tools for calculating the trajectories of the celestial bodies. Using the Skyfield Python library, I wrote a script to identify dates of such a conjunction. I recommend visualizing these events using Stellarium. The convergence of Jupiter in Sagittarius, Mars in Leo, Saturn in Libra, and Venus in Scorpio occurs only 13 times in the 10,000 year span starting at 0 AD. For all but 4 of these occurrences, Mars is greater than 6 degrees from Regulus, and thus cannot really be seen to be “given the sword” of Leo’s Sickle. Mercury is in Libra along with Saturn for only 4 of the 13 times, and only one of these times does Mars come within 6 degrees of the Sickle. But this single occurrence is the closest that Mars gets to Regulus for all of the 13 occurrences.

    On November 3, 2043, all of these signs align perfectly. Jupiter will be in Sagittarius, Mars will be only 1.26 degrees from Regulus, Saturn and Mercury will both be in Libra, and Venus will be in Scorpius.  This is the only time all of these alignments occur together in the space of 10,000 years! Mars actually gets slightly closer to Regulus (1.21 degrees) a day later, but November 3 provides the best alignment with the handle of the Sickle. Additionally, if you advance the clock a few days starting around November 8 Mercury can be seen to follow Venus through Scorpio just as it says in Rev. 6: “and Hades was following after him.”

    The image below was generated using Stellarium showing the convergence. 

    The Fifth Seal: Souls of Martyrs under the Altar

    When he opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of those who had been slaughtered because of the word of God and the testimony they had been given. They cried out with a loud voice, “Lord, the one who is holy and true, how long until you judge those who live on the earth and avenge our blood?” So they were each given a white robe, and they were told to rest a little while longer until the number would be completed of their fellow servants and their brothers and sisters, who were going to be killed just as they had been. (Rev 6:9-11, CSB)

    Astrological symbolism is less apparent in the fifth seal. But, since the sixth seal refers explicitly to the sun, moon and stars (Rev 6:12-13), and the seventh seal is silence in the heavens, it raises the question whether potentially all the seals refer to celestial events. In the fifth seal, John sees an altar and souls under the altar which represent martyrs who have been killed because of their testimony to the word of God. There is a lot of rich spiritual significance in the symbolism here that goes back to the Old Testament sacrificial system and the first fruits offerings. The martyrs in Christ are a kind of first fruits offering (Jam 1:18), thus tying this seal to the concept of a final harvest of the earth in which the wheat will be separated from the tares at the end of the age (Matt. 13:24-30). The harvest is a theme throughout Revelation, and all of Scripture in fact, which is why the Son of Man is depicted as holding a sickle and is told to reap for the time of the harvest is come (Rev 14:14). This is all too much to go into detail here, but I don’t want the reader to miss the relevance of the symbolism that extends well beyond any astrological reference. But, for the current discussion let’s focus on a possible astrological sign that could fit this passage as well.

    An obvious choice of an astrological reference is the constellation Ara, Latin for Altar. It is a southern constellation located between Sorpius, Telescopium and Norma. The Greeks identified it with various mythological stories, including an altar used by the Greek gods to swear an oath of allegiance against Chronos and the Titans. It is too far from the ecliptic for any planetary convergence. But as there are no horses referred to in this seal, a planetary conjunction would contradict our horse-planet hypothesis in any case. The souls are given white robes. The altar is near the Milky Way, which could be considered tone-like, but since the location of the Milky Way in relation to the stars is static from our perspective, this does not make much of a sign.

    Digging a little deeper into the history of Ara, however, it turns out that what is currently identified as Ara is not the original asterism known as an Alter from antiquity. Rather, there are numerous points of evidence that the Greeks or Romans adopted the concept of an Altar from ancient Akkadian astronomy and moved it from its original location near the ecliptic. Possibly the modern location wasn’t set until the 18th century. As one point of evidence among others, the Akkadian words for the months are based on an ancient form of the zodiac. The seventh month is Tul-Ku, meaning “holy mound” or altar, which would indicate its original position to be near the current location of Libra. Libra was not identified as the Scales by the Akkadians, but the concept of weighing of souls in the underworld appears to be tied to Akkadian mythology of the altar, or sacred mound, and later similar concepts of souls being weighed for their earthly deeds naturally became associated with Libra, the Balance or Scales and to concepts of justice and fairness. It seems appropriate, then, to look near Libra for fulfillment of this sign rather than Ara since the Libra asterism has association to both the altar and the concept of justice and fairness for souls after death. The souls of the martyrs here call out for justice as they are weighed because their blood was shed unjustly for their testimony to the truth of God’s word. 

    So what celestial phenomenon looks like a robe, moves in relation to the stars, and is not a planet? A comet!  Actually, multiple comets. At the precise time of convergence as the previous four seals, early November 2043, a periodic comet known as 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann will be swinging into Libra. And this is not a typical comet. During its previous few passes by earth every 5.4 years the comet has broken into multiple pieces, now over 34 fragments each with a glowing comet tail. Each time this fragmentation happens there appears to be an increase in brightness. Currently, there are now over thirty “comet-lets”, as can be seen in this Hubble image. Undoubtedly, these do look like images of multiple stars with robes. Note that stars are one of the symbols associated with God’s saints (Phil. 2:15).

    Image Credit: NASA, ESA, H. Weaver (APL/JHU), M. Mutchler and Z. Levay (STScI)20

    Here is the dated view of the sky forecasted by Stellarium showing the 73P fragments as they enter the region of Libra in 2043. 

    The presence of such an unusual comet at this exact time and location already identified by the four horsemen provides an amazing additional verification of the deeper meaning behind the vision of the seals. The first four seals are enough to uniquely identify a single date in all of human history. I will leave it to the reader to consider the improbable likelihood of a robe-like comet show occurring by chance on top of these previous signs.

    The Sixth Seal: Sun, Moon and Stars

    Then I saw him open the sixth seal. A violent earthquake occurred; the sun turned black like sackcloth made of hair; the entire moon became like blood; the stars of heaven fell to teh earth as a fig tree drops its unripe figs when shaken by a high wind; the sky was split apart like a scroll being rolled up; and every mountain and island was moved from its place. (Rev 6:12-14)

    The sixth seal contains direct reference to a celestial event involving the sun, moon and stars. I interpret this to be literal, and like the other seals reference signs in the sky. There are many references to this same event throughout scripture. Presumably, this event will occur soon after the previous sign, or in conjunction. Based on the events described in the sixth seal, and the seventh trumpet, it may well be caused by a major catastrophic event such as an astroid collision or a nuclear detonation, and referenced by the star Wormwood falling from heaven like a torch. The sign is one that Jesus referenced as directly preceding his second coming (Matt. 24:29). An observant reader will identify many similar event occur in both the sixth seal and the vision of the trumpets. As a point of discussion for another day, I do not see the seals occurring before the trumpets, but rather at the same time. The seals are a perspective of the same end-times events as the trumpets, but in relation to the celestial signs and they tie the judgements to the signs in the heavens.

    The Seventh Seal: Silence in Heaven

    When he opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven for about half an hour. (Rev 8:1)

    Given the way the chapters have been grouped, many take the seventh seal to include the vision of the seven trumpets that follows directly in chapter 8. Note, however, that chapter breaks are not inspired and were added by scholars much later than the original text. I take a less common view that this verse is the totality of the seventh seal. After all the signs have been displayed, there is now silence in heaven. Mic drop. But in any case, note that the seventh seal is also a heavenly sign. The Greek word for heaven can mean sky or a spiritual abode. Maybe it means both here, given the other celestial signs. What it means for the sky to be silent for half an hour may simply be the result of the sixth seal in which the signs placed in the sky (sun, moon and stars) are darkened for a half hour of prophetic time, which is much longer than natural time and probably hard to say exactly how long. There are at least two types of prophetic time. If one day equals a thousand years (2 Peter 3:8) then a half hour is around 21 years. If a day equals a 360 day prophetic year, then a half hour is 7.5 days. Or, this may refer to a solar eclipse, with totality that lasts for about 30 actual minutes. Solar eclipses are not rare, and occur about every year, so I would lean to the prior explanation. Or, possibly, this refers to a completely different type of sign that we could not predict but we will know when the time comes.

    A Point of Clarification

    In the interpretation I have put forth, I base the planetary conjunctions on astrological symbols associated with each horse in the same passage in Revelation 6. Another popularized view ascribes them based on the living creatures that call forth each horseman, where the living creatures are taken to be cardinal signs of the zodiac21. This alternate interpretation yields a date in 81AD that supports a preterist interpretation of Revelation as describing past events. The notion that the four living creatures, also described in Ezekial, refer to zodiacal signs has been around for a long time but is a problematic one. While some of the living creatures are similar to zodiac signs, such as the one with the face of an ox, others appear force-fit. The one with a face of a man is taken as Aquarius. There are many signs which have been depicted with human form, so why this specific sign? The creature appearing as an eagle is assigned to Scorpius, yet another constellation is actually known as the Eagle (Aquila) and the association of Scorpius with an eagle is tenuous at best. Scorpius has been associated with a scorpion since at least as far back as the ancient Akkadian texts. The creatures are not specified in Revelation 6, so it cannot be determined which creature calls which horseman. Most importantly, perhaps, this alternate view does not give explanation to the other symbolic details of the vision including the astrological symbols of the bow, the crown, and the scales since they are not used to identify the planetary alignments.

    Conclusion

    Go your way, Daniel, because the words are rolled up and sealed until the time of the end. Many will be purified, made spotless and refined, but the wicked will continue to be wicked. None of the wicked will understand, but those who are wise will understand. (Dan 12:9-10, NIV)

    There remains ambiguity as to what the date of this alignment represents. Dates derived from Biblical prophecy should be regarded with a healthy dose of skepticism and distrust, particularly for future dates. Eventually, these are usually proven wrong, and in the meantime they can generate a great deal of false hype. With regards to the date of his second coming, Jesus himself warned that “no one knows the day and the hour when these things will happen, not even the angels in heaven or the Son himself. Only the Father knows” (Matthew 24:36). Regarding whether we can know the date and time, we are thus fairly cautioned. I do not claim this is the date of Christ’s second coming. It may relate to events of the apocalypse that precede his return. While the time of this astronomical event may be calculated to an exact time of closest convergence the planets move relatively slowly. Thus, this astronomical timestamp does not give us the day or the hour, or even the exact month of any event, only the approximate time to a period of days or weeks. But when it comes, I expect that we will be able to understand its significance. Jesus indicated we could and should know the season of his return. In Luke 29, he described the parable of the fig tree, and the ability to identify the season of figs based on the time the leaves emerge. “In the same way, when you see these things happening, recognize that the kingdom of God is near” (Luke 29:31). Luke 29:28 says “But when these things begin to take place, stand up and lift your heads, because your redemption is near.”

    At the time of this writing, there is war in Israel in Ukraine and some points of interpretation may be even more clear in the near future.  We should be vigilant and ready to understand the significance of the events when the time occurs, and ready to give testimony to the truth. These prophecies are intentionally obscure (sealed) so that at the right time, and by the right people, they can be used to authenticate and provide perspective and instruction for a generation that needs them. At the appointed time, it will be clear to those who are wise.  May God give you the wisdom to understand, and may you find your hope and salvation in the return of our Savior.

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