Apocalypse 12:2

2 Elle était enceinte, et elle criait, étant en travail et souffrant des douleurs de l'enfantement.

Apocalypse 12:2 Meaning and Commentary

Revelation 12:2

And she being big with child
Which may be expressive of the fruitfulness of the church in bearing and bringing forth many souls to Christ, and which were very numerous in this period of time, when it was said of Zion that this and that man was born in her; and particularly of her pregnancy with the kingdom of Christ, to be brought forth, and set up in the Roman empire, under the influence of a Roman emperor: and this being her case, she

cried, travailing in birth, and pained to be delivered;
which are metaphors taken from a woman in travail; and may either denote the earnest cries and fervent prayers of the members of the church, and the laborious and painful ministrations of the preachers of the Gospel for the conversion of souls, and especially for the setting up of the kingdom of Christ in the empire of Rome; or else the sore and grievous persecutions which attended the apostles of Christ, and succeeding ministers of the word, throughout the times of the ten Roman emperors, and especially under Dioclesian; when the church was big, and laboured in great pain, and the time was drawing on apace that a Christian emperor should be brought forth, who should be a means of spreading the Gospel, and the kingdom of Christ, all over the empire; see ( Jeremiah 30:6 Jeremiah 30:7 ) ( Matthew 24:8 ) ; so the Targumist frequently explains the pains of a woman in travail in the prophets by (aqe) , "tribulation"; see the Targum on ( Isaiah 13:8 ) ( 26:18 ) ( 66:7 ) .

Apocalypse 12:2 In-Context

1 Or, il parut un grand signe dans le ciel, une femme revêtue du soleil, et ayant la lune sous ses pieds, et sur sa tête une couronne de douze étoiles.
2 Elle était enceinte, et elle criait, étant en travail et souffrant des douleurs de l'enfantement.
3 Il parut aussi un autre signe dans le ciel: voici un grand dragon couleur de feu, ayant sept têtes et dix cornes, et sur ses têtes, sept diadèmes;
4 Et sa queue entraînait la troisième partie des étoiles du ciel, et elle les jeta sur la terre. Puis le dragon s'arrêta devant la femme qui allait accoucher, afin de dévorer son enfant quand elle aurait enfanté.
5 Or, elle enfanta un fils, qui devait gouverner toutes les nations avec un sceptre de fer, et son enfant fut enlevé vers Dieu et vers son trône;
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.