Thursday, April 18, 2024

James L. Papandrea (Catholic) on the Two Witnesses of Revelation 11 being Actual People

  

The two witnesses speak words from God that destroy the arguments of their enemies (Rev 11:5, an allusion to Elijah’s ability to bring down fire from heaven to silence the false prophets; 1 Kings 18;22-39; cf. also 2 Kings 1:9-14 and Jeremiah 5;14). They also have the power to stop the rain (Rev 11:6, an allusion to a drought caused by Elijah; 1 Kings 17:1; cf. Luke 4:25 and James 5:17) and to turn water into blood, as well as being about other plagues (an obvious connection to Moses; Exodus 7:20). It is not clear who the witnesses are, but what is clear is that John wants the reader to think of them in terms that remind one of Old Testament figures whom God had chosen to do his work, such as Moses and Elijah. However, they are not characters from the Old Testament, because Revelation 11:8 describes the city where the two witnesses died as the place, “where their Lord was crucified.” Therefore, these are Christian evangelists, followers of Jesus who lived in the first century and who might have been killed by the Roman legions during the fall of Jerusalem (Rev 11:7). (James L. Papandrea, The Wedding of the Lamb: A Historical Approach to the Book of Revelation [Eugene, Oreg.: Pickwick Publications, 2011], 74)

 

We can safely assume that the two witnesses join the other souls who have been martyred. In chapter 6, John sees the souls of the martyrs under the altar of heaven. The fact that they are “under” the altar is a reference to the Old Testament practice of pouring out the blood of a sacrifice on the base of the altar (Exodus 29:12; Leviticus 4:7). (Ibid., 121)

 

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