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Rome quitted as capital by Christian
emperors, iii. 110

its revival by Antichrist foretold
by Hippolytus', iii. 114

Christian, extinction of its imperial
sun, i. 359-361

Papal, profligacy of, in 9th and
10th centuries, i. 447

early venality of, ii. 18, 26
identified with the AаTEιa of
Apoc. xi. 8, ii. 390, 391

ring of espousal with the church
worn by the Pope, ii. 52

Apocalyptic Beast, or Popes, tied
to, ii. 96

mother and mistress, iv. 94-96
as woman riding on Beast, ibid.
Romanists in Rome, but not of Rome,
iii. 55, 56, 248

Roman Catholics, appeal to, iv. 294
Rosary, the revival of, in 1460, ii. 23, 24
Russia, its last war with Turks, iii. 400

S

Sabbatism, millennary, iv. 218, 255
Sacraments, early unscriptural notion of,
i. 261

Paulikian doctrine, respect-

ing, 309-313.
Saints, synonymous with the 144,000 or
sealed ones, i. 237-241, 254–257,
272-275, 305; iii. 259; iv. 113

blasphemed and made war on by
Popes, ii. 19, 27, 378; ii. 158, 159.
(See Witnesses.)

relics of, hawked for gain, i. 309;
Church built over, 315
Saint-worship, prevalence of in the 5th
Century, i. 306-316; Gibbon's sketch
of, i. 308; in 10th Century, i. 460

sanctioned by Gregory,
Thaumaturgos, and Gregory 1st, i.
310, 381

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Salvation, Papal decree declaring it im
possible without subjection to the Ro-
man Pontiff, ii. 85.
Satan, meaning of, ii. 440

bound 1000 years, iv. 176; loosed
to deceive the nations, 246; cast into
lake of fire, 247, 248

Saracens, invasion of Christendom by, i.
414, 416-418, 424-427; aggression
on, by the Christians, i. 438; decline
of their power, i. 439, 441
Savanorola, his martyrdom, ii. 28
Scene, symbolic, of primary Apocalyptic
vision of the things that are," i. 72

-76

Scenery, Apocalyptic, of the visions of
the future, i. 97-103

Schlegel's Philosophy of History, iv. 271
Scripture, reading and preaching in pri-
mitive Christian worship, ii. 154
Scriptures, reading of, by laics, forbidden

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- 6,

i. 141-146

i. 147-170

i. 170-180

i. 180-210

i. 210-226

7, opening of, i. 293–295
Σεβασμα Σεβαστος, iii. 82, 148
Secession, Scotch, iv. 287

Secular Western Empire, not the first
Beast, iii. 92, 159

"Seed of the Woman," promise of, the
germ of all the promises, iv. 194
Seleucia, the site of Bagdad, iii. 391
Seleucidæ, their contests with the Pto-
lemies. iv. 122-139
Semler, iv. 479

Septuagint, Chronology of, iv. 259-261
Sergius, the Paulikian, account of his
conversion, ii. 238–241; extracts from
his writings, ii. 242, 243

Serenus, (of Marseilles) a protestor
against Image worship, ii. 214.

Seven hills, the seat of the Harlot, iv. 101
Seven Seals, &c. See Seals, Trumpets,
and Vials.

Sign, anμetov, meaning of, iii. 6
Signs of the times, iv. 263

Silence, the half-hour's, in heaven, i.
294-302

Societies, Missionary and Bible, iii. 434
Sodom figurative of Rome, ii. 386, 392
"Son of," the Hebraism illustrated, ii.
201; iii. 80

Son of perdition, iii. 80

Souls under the altar, i. 183, 198

of the martyrs enthroned at the
Millennium, iv. 176

Song of the Lamb's opening the book,
i. 95

Song of the temple-harpers, iii. 267

of Moses and the Lamb, iii. 424
Spanish Colonies, Revolution of, iii. 330
Spener, iii. 272

Spirit, being in the, what ? i. 71; iv. 101
Star, the fallen, (Apoc. ix. 1) explained,

i. 419-423

of Balaam's prophecy, iii. 296
Stars, symbol of, explained. i. 75, 221

the twelve of the Woman's coronal
(Apoc. xii.) iii. 9
Staupitz, ii. 94

Erepavos, Roman imperial badge, i. 130
-131; contrasted with diadnμa, 131
iii. 106

Steuchus, Augustus, iii. 113, 114.
Structure of Apocalypse, i. 104, 105; iii.
1-5; iv. 242

Sulpicius Severus, inclined to saint wor-
ship, i. 309; expectations of Anti-
christ, 368

Sun, symbolic, of rulers in the Apocalyp-
tic heaven, i. 102; in 6th Seal dark-
ened, 219-221; in 4th Trumpet, its
third part eclipsed, 359-361; in 5th
Trumpet darkened by the smoke of
the pit, 423; 4th Vial on the, iii. 340

of Righteousness, Christ, as re-
vealed to Luther, ii. 96

Angel, standing in, iv. 113
Sun-clothed woman, iii. 8, 9.
Zuvekonμot, in sense of "fellow-exiles,"
an appellation of the Paulikian minis-
ters, ii. 313

Superstition advances towards; see Sa-
crament, Saint-worship, Purgatory, &c.
Symbolic character, St. John's, i. 268-
272, ii. 112-114, iii. 260, iv. 235
Symbols, Scripture, appropriateness of,
i. 394-406; iii. 14; the principle ap-
plied in explanation of the 5th Trum-
pet, i. 406-424, &c.

Sword, the Roman military badge, i.
142-146

T

Tabernacles, Jewish feast of, i. 324

antitypical feast of, i. 324
Teλeσwσiv drav, Apoc. xi. 7, difficulties
about, ii. 367; explained, 368-372
Temple, the symbolic, i. 97, 98; see
Altar; opened in Heaven, ii. 438; iii.
281, 282, 403, 405; fulfilled, 433

of God, Antichrist sitting in, jii. 82
Ten horns of the Beast, iii. 115-125
(see Beast:) hate the whore, 354
Tertullian, his testimony to the Apoca-
lypse, i. 27; his apology, 194; his
views of the Apocalyptic prophecy,
207, 209; iv. 309
Tetzel, ii. 67-69

Theodosius, Gothic tempests hushed dur-
ing his reign, i. 301; "the great eagle,"
iii. 44; destroys Paganism and Arian-
ism, 44-47
Theodosian code, iii. 140

Theophilus, Bishop of Antioch, his tes-
timony to the Apocalypse, i. 26.
"Third Part," the Apocalyptic, i. 333
-341; iii. 14

"This generation shall not have passed,"
&c., iv. 266

Thogrul Beg, chief of the Seljukian
Turks, i. 469; his invasion of Eastern
Christendom, i. 494-498; ceremony
of his investment at Bagdad, i. 496
Thousand, the 144. See Hundred, and
Saints.

Throne of God, man-child caught up to,
iii. 12

of the Beast, or Rome, yielded to
Beast by Dragon, iii. 95-98; fifth
Vial poured out on, 346-352
Thunders and lightnings from the
throne, i. 107; before first Trumpet,
343; on seventh Trumpet's sounding,
ii. 438, iii. 286; on seventh Vial, iv. 89
the seven (Apoc. x), explained,
ii. 103-111

Thunderbolts, the Papal, iii. 179
Tiara, Papal. See Triregno.
Time, the," shall not yet be" (Apoc. x.
5), ii. 122, 123; iv. 265

of the end, iv. 161, 163-167, 169
of trouble, iv. 169

the standard of the declaration,
"Five have fallen and one is," iii. 71,
94

Times, the seven of Nebuchadnezzar, iii.
227

Daniel's 3, iv. 166, &c. (See Year-
day.)
Toleration, Galerius' edict of, iii. 16
Traditio instrumenti. See Ordination.
Trajan, his conquests, i. 127; his rescript
concerning Christians, i. 192-195
Transubstantiation, ii. 161; iii. 153, 179,
180; iv. 94

Tribulation, the great (Apoc. vii. 14),
i. 277

Tripartition of Roman empire, iii. 16
of the Popedom, under 7th

Vial, 490
Triregno, the Papal super-imperial crown,
ii. 51; iii. 143, 161, 174
Triumvirs, no proper head to Roman
Beast, iii. 100

Trumpet-soundings, the meaning of, i.
321-324

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Trumpet, the seventh, sounding of, ii. 434;
importance of, 434-437; general view
of, iii. 277; developed in the seven
Vials, 281; noted as quickly following
after the passing away of the second
Woe, 283

Turks, executors of the second Woe, i.
468, 501; the Seljukians commissioned
from the Euphrates, 469, 470; Seleu-
cian local origin of, iii. 388; continued
in the Othmans, 473-478; numbered
by "myriads," 479-481; Apocalyp-
tic colouring of their dress, 481, 482;
their artillery answering to the fire,
smoke, and sulphur, 483; the horsetail
standards of their Pashas, 485-488;
their Pashas' oppressive rule, 488, 489;
Constantinople taken by, after the
hour, day, month, and year," i. 501

no longer a Woe, made evident
just before French Revolution, iii. 289;
rapid wasting of, begun 1820, A.D. (at
the ending of the 2300 year-days of
Dan. viii), 396-401; last war with
Russia, iii. 400

163

Contest with Pasha of Egypt, iv.

U

"Unam Sanctam," the famous bull of
Boniface VIII., adopted by Pope Leo
X., ii. 85; iii. 158

United Brethren, Papal persecution of,
ii. 28, 394

Universal preaching of the Gospel, a
sign of the times, iv. 267
Union among Christians, to be sought,
iv. 292

Unity of the Church, early unscriptural
view of, iii. 137; Papal, ii. 84; scrip-
tural, iv. 216

V

Val Louise, extirpation of its Christian
inhabitants, ii. 29

Valentinian's decree in favour of Pope,
iii. 135

Vandals, conquests of the, under Gense-
ric, i. 349-358

a horn of the Beast, iii. 119, 122;
plucked up, 142

Van Mildert, Bishop, his opinion, that
Popery is the great predicted Apos-
tacy, iii. 160

Venn, Rev. H. iii. 272

Vial, a frequent Scripture emblem, iii.
302

Vials, the seven, development of the 7th
Trumpet, iii. 281; signification of, 301;
remarks on, 302

Vial 1, iii. 301-326, 306; ulcer of (a
not unfrequent emblem) 324; spreads
over European kingdoms, 325

2, iii. 327-332; fulfilled, 334

3, iii. 332 340; fulfilled, 334
4, iii. 340-346

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undue exaltation of, resisted
by the Paulikians, ii. 305–309.
winking images, iii. 368, 369
undue veneration of, affected
by the Oxford Tractarians, iv. 49
Voice from heaven, "Blessed are the
dead," &c. iv. 73

Voice from the throne, iv. 111. See
Altar.

Voices of many waters, iii. 266

in heaven proclaim the kingdom
of Christ, iii. 283

Volcanic eruptions, before French Revo-
lution, iii. 294

eruption predicted to break up
the earth's crust, like that of Sodom,
iv. 228

fire, symbol of the Vandal, i.
354-356

-eruption of, in Auvergne (A.D.
458), i. 354

Voltaire and the infidel philosophers, iii.
293

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Whitfield, iii. 272

White robes, of martyrs, i. 208-210, iii.
25, of neophytes, i. 229, 254; of
Christ's saints, 249 256

horse, i. 126, 129; iv. 112
Whitby's theory of Millennium refuted,
iv. 184-216

Wickliff, ii. 21; his probable connexion
with the Waldenses, ii. 381
Wilberforce, iii. 430-440
Wilfrid, or Boniface, iii. 171, 172
Wine-press trodden without the city, iv.
84, 116

Winds, four Angels of the, i. 232

silence of the, i. 298

Wings, two, of great eagle, iii. 40-42
Witnesses, the two, (Apoc. xi.) retro-
spective view of, ii. 193-406

described in prophecy, ii.
198-206, their personality, 198; cha-
racter, 199; emblems, 200; number,
(why only two) 202; condition, 203;
avenging power, ib.; commencement
of their testimony, 205; its comple-
tion, 367-375

earlier Western, ii. 206-233
earlier Eastern, (or Pauli-

kian, ii. 233-246

-315

-364
379

-joint middle age, ii. 247-275
the Paulikians true, ii. 275

the Waldenses true, ii. 347
Papal war against, ii. 365—

death of, ii. 379 397; and
Papal exultation thereupon, ii. 397–
401

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Woe, the first (or Saracenic) origin of, i.
406-424; progress of, 424-429

chronology of, and limits to,
429-439; total termination of, 444
the second (or Turco-Moslem), oc-
casion of, i. 454–460; origin of, 468;
chronology of, 488-501

cessation of, ii. 431-

433; iii. 286
Woman, the faithful Church, travailing,
iii. 7, 10-12; brings forth manchild,
18; persecuted by Dragon, 30; flight
to, and sojourn in, wilderness, 33, 53
-57

Woman, the harlot Church, holding out
cup of her apostacy, iv. 93-95
Worship, object of, or σeßaoua, iii. 82
"Write" and "write not," (Apoc. x)
meaning of, ii. 106, 107, 117

Writing within and without, i. 104; iii.
4, 281

Wormwood, the star, iii. 333

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250

general à priori evidence for,
miniature time of miniature symbol
answering to longer time of thing sym-
bolized; exemplified, 224; specific
year-day scale, otherwise probable
from Scripture analogy, actually laid
down by God, 227, 228; veil of the
time of the end, arising from the year-
day prophetic periods, consistent with
Christ's declaration, "Not yours to
know times and seasons," and intended
to keep the Church watching, 233

objections to, answered, iii.
232-250; year-days symbolic, as the
rest of symbol, 233; chain of authori-
ties recognizing it, Cyprian, Prosper,
Tichonius, Primasius, Ambrose, Ans-
bert, Berengaud, Bruno, Joachim, Al-
bertus Magnus, 233 238; also Jew-
ish Rabbins, ancient, and of middle
ages, 240; discrepancies of year-day
expositors equalled by those of the

604

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