seven seals

Christianity
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seven seals, in Revelation 5, 6:1–17 and 8:1–6, a set of symbolic seals on a scroll that begin the apocalypse when opened. John of Patmos, who calls himself a “servant” of Jesus, sees the seven seals in a vision, wherein the slain Lamb of God opens each seal, bringing forth a different aspect of the end-time, including the four horsemen of the apocalypse.

The Revelation to John is the only book in the New Testament that is classified as apocalyptic literature rather than history or didacticism, indicating thereby its extensive use of visions, symbols, and allegory, especially in connection with future events. The seven seals are some of the most notable apocalyptic symbols in a book brimming with them. Schools of eschatology, the branch of theology concerned with the end-time, debate their overall meaning as well as what triggers their opening and what each seal brings. Christian preterists and historicists have assigned the breaking of the first four seals to historical eras, particularly during and directly after the latter days of the Roman Empire. Meanwhile, Christian idealists and futurists believe the seven seals to be prophecies of the Last Judgment and have connected them to the societal ills of the modern day.

In John’s vision, the first four seals unleash the four horsemen of the apocalypse. The first seal releases a crowned horseman wielding a bow and riding atop a white horse. Some Christian historicists believe that the first horseman was released upon the death of Christ. Others suggest that the seal was broken upon the end of Rome’s golden age (96–180 ce).

The second seal releases a rider atop a red horse and wielding a sword. Those who believe the second seal to be already broken understand the rider to represent the period of instability and civil war that engulfed imperial Rome after the death of Marcus Aurelius in 180 ce. A more common symbolic reading considers the second seal a personification of the war and slaughter that men who have abandoned Christ commit against one another.

The third seal sends forth a rider atop a black horse and holding a pair of balances. A voice, conceivably this rider’s, recites the worth of wheat and barley. The third horsemen has largely been interpreted to represent famine. Historicists argue that the third seal was broken when famine broke out during the reign of Claudius (41–54 ce). Others interpret the rider as foretelling the time leading up to the Revelation wherein the rich will hoard wealth and others will suffer economic hardship.

The fourth seal issues a horseman named Death, who rides a pale green horse. He is followed by Hell and presumably the beasts that reside in it. In preterist readings, the fourth horseman represents the persecution and mass murder of Jewish people in the Roman Empire. In prophetic eschatologies, he represents the widespread death and suffering that follows war and famine.

Upon the fifth seal’s opening, John sees the souls of Christian martyrs gathered under an altar. They clamour for God’s vengeance upon those who still live on the earth. They are given white robes and told to rest as they wait for the remainder of Christian souls to join them. These verses are understood as a symbol for the continued and forthcoming tribulations faced by all practicing Christians.

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The sixth seal ushers in the final cataclysmic doom of humanity. John sees the Judgment Day; the Sun goes black, the Moon turns red, and the stars fall to earth as a great earthquake rends the landscape. Historicists see the breaking of the sixth seal as the fall of the Western Roman Empire. Preterists read it as God’s vengeance upon those who crucified Christ. To most, the sixth seal holds the return of Christ in the end-time, wherein his challengers and nonbelievers shall be punished.

When the seventh seal is opened, a peace settles over the universe, and there is silence in heaven for a time. Eventually, John sees seven angels with seven trumpets stand before God as another angel spreads incense from a golden censer and prays. The angels conjure fire from the altar and cast it upon earth in a final blow before sounding their instruments, thus concluding the Judgment.

Roland Martin