Revelation 19:10 - Exposition
And I fell at his feet to worship him. The same thing happens again in Revelation 20:7 , Revelation 20:8 , and this makes it improbable that St. John imagined the angel to be Christ himself, as some think. More probably (as Alford, Bengel, Vitringa, Wordsworth, and others) St. John was so overwhelmed with the tremendous character of the revelation just made to him, that in his humility he pays undue reverence to the angel who had communicated it to him. This reverence may not have been exactly of the nature of that which he would render to God; but it is evident, from the reproof of the angel, that it was more than could be becomingly and safely paid to a created being. And he said unto me, See thou do it not: I am thy fellow-servant, and of thy brethren that have the testimony of Jesus; saith … I am a fellow servant with thee and with thy brethren, etc. So the apostles styled themselves ( Romans 1:1 ; 2 Peter 1:1 , etc.). (On "hold the testimony of Jesus," see Revelation 1:2 , Revelation 1:9 ; Revelation 12:17 .) Worship God. Such also is the command of our Lord ( Matthew 4:10 ). For the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy. Like the words of verse 8, these words are probably an explanation added by St. John. To prophesy is to understand and proclaim the truth concerning God, especially in the face of prevalent ignorance or opposition; this is also what is meant by holding "the testimony of Jesus." The angel in revealing these visions, the martyrs in openly professing Christ, St. John in receiving and handing on the Apocalypse, were prophesying. Thus it was that the angel announces himself to be the fellow servant of St. John, and a fellow servant with the prophets, and with those "who keep the sayings of this book" ( Revelation 22:9 ).
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