Apocalipsis 6:16

16 Y decían á los montes y á las peñas: Caed sobre nosotros, y escondednos de la cara de aquél que está sentado sobre el trono, y de la ira del Cordero:

Apocalipsis 6:16 Meaning and Commentary

Revelation 6:16

And said to the mountains and rocks, fall on us
They chose death rather than life. Dioclesian being invited by Constantine to a marriage feast, excused himself by reason of his old age; but receiving threatening letters, the historian F20 says, in which he was charged with having favoured Maxentius, and with favouring Maximinus, he poisoned himself; and others of the emperors are said to lay violent hands upon themselves:

and hide us from the face of him that sitteth upon the throne, and
from the wrath of the Lamb;
thus they owned the proper deity, and almighty power of God, and Christ, which they dreaded; so Maximinus being afflicted with a most horrible disease, of which he died, asked pardon of the God of the Christians, and owned that he suffered justly, for his reproaches of Christ F21 Licinius, who sometimes pretended to be a Christian, and joined with Constantine, but afterwards revolted and fought against him, being conquered and taken, was put to death; at which time he, and they that suffered death with him, confessed that the God of Constantine was the only true God F23. This passage shows, that Christ, God's firstborn, is higher than the kings of the earth; yea, that he is equal with him that sits upon the throne, with God his Father, since his wrath is equally dreaded as his; and that, though he is a Lamb, mild, meek, and gentle, yet there is wrath, fury, and indignation in him, against his enemies, which is very dreadful and intolerable; see ( Psalms 2:12 ) .


FOOTNOTES:

F20 Aurel. Victor. Epitome.
F21 Euseb. Hist. l. 9. c. 10. & de Vita Constantin. l. 1. c. 59.
F23 Euseb. de Vita Constantin. l. 2. c. 18.

Apocalipsis 6:16 In-Context

14 Y el cielo se apartó como un libro que es envuelto; y todo monte y las islas fueron movidas de sus lugares.
15 Y los reyes de la tierra, y los príncipes, y los ricos, y los capitanes, y los fuertes, y todo siervo y todo libre, se escondieron en las cuevas y entre las peñas de los montes;
16 Y decían á los montes y á las peñas: Caed sobre nosotros, y escondednos de la cara de aquél que está sentado sobre el trono, y de la ira del Cordero:
17 Porque el gran día de su ira es venido; ¿y quién podrá estar firme?
The Reina-Valera Antigua (1602) is in the public domain.