Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
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The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are mentioned in the Bible in chapter six of the Book of Revelation. The four horsemen are traditionally named Pestilence, War, Famine, and Death. However, this is slightly at odds with the conventional interpretation of the Bible, which actually only directly names the fourth: "Death".
Consequently, it is not possible to definitively state the intended interpretation of the horsemen; in fact, interpretations frequently reflect contemporary values and issues.
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[edit] Horses and their riders
In summary, the horses and their riders as described in the Bible are as follows:
Horse | Horse Represents | Rider | Power | Rider Represents |
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White | False peace | Carries bow; wears crown | Conquers | Antichrist, The False Prophet, False Religion |
Red | Blood spilt on the battlefield | Carries sword | Brings war | War, Destruction, intimacy |
Black | Black, barren fields | Carries scales | Scarcity of food | Famine, Unfair Trade |
Pale (or green) | Paleness of skin in death, decay | Followed by Hades | Kills by war, hunger, plagues, etc. | Death |
It should be noted that while the rider of the white horse is often interpreted as the Antichrist, he is not named such in Revelation.
The word used to describe the color of the 'pale' horse is the Greek word chloros or green. It is meant to convey the sickly green tinge of the deathly ill or recently dead. Since the literal translation 'green' does not carry these connotations in English the word is rendered 'pale' in most English translations.
[edit] Original text
From the King James Version of the Bible, Revelation chapter 6, verses 1 to 8 (emphasis added):
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[edit] Interpretations
[edit] White Horse
Opinions differ on whether the first horseman, riding the white horse represents the Antichrist, or the False Prophet, but the general consensus of conservative Biblical scholars is that he is the Antichrist, in light of the seemingly peaceful work of the Antichrist seen in the first half of his rule. The lack of arrows is thought to indicate he will conquer without the use of force. Additionally, the greek word for the crown he wears is Στέφανος (Stephanos), which is a "victor's crown", such as might be given to a victorious athlete or general. It is not the crown of royalty (greek "diadem") which we would expect Christ to wear.
Historically, the view of Christ as the rider of the white horse was a minority opinion but was still held for a time by such men as Jonathan Edwards. [1] Arguments against this horseman representing Christ include the release of each horsemen due to the opening of a seal opened by Christ and the unambiguous description of his return in Revelation 19:11-16. An argument that it might be Christ states that the Horsemen represent events which happen in specific time, as the seals represent things that should be opened in specific time.
Other scholars do not interpret this figure as either Christ or Antichrist. M. Eugene Boring's commentary on Revelation suggests that the image is drawn from the current events of the first century which the Christians in the Roman Empire would have recognized (see also Preterism). In AD 62, the Parthians had beaten a Roman army in the Tigris valley and people throughout the empire viewed them with the same unrealistic dread as westerners in modern times had for the yellow peril. The Parthians were the only mounted archers of the 1st century, and white horses were their mount of choice. The passage can thus be interpreted as "conquest from without" without assigning any specific identity to the rider.
Yet other Christians see a similarity between events of the four horsemen and those of the beginning of birth pains which Jesus described in the Olivet Discourse, (Matthew 24:7-8). This view holds that the events of the four horsemen, once begun, will lead quickly to the end of the age and the return of Christ.
[edit] Red Horse
The rider of the second horse is generally held to represent War. The red color of his horse represents blood spilled on the battlefield. He carries a great sword, which represents battle and fighting. The Red Horse is also said to represent the Planet Mars. It is red because it is rich in iron(III) oxide, more so than the Earth. According to astrological beliefs, Mars has quite an ill effect on the Earth when its position is behind us to the Sun, especially when the Moon, The Pale Horse, is between Mars and the Earth. The red planet also represents the God of War in many pre-Christian religions.
[edit] Black Horse
The third horseman, riding the black horse, is popularly called Famine. The black color of the third horse could be a symbol of famine. Its rider was holding a scale, which means scarcity of food, higher prices, and famine, likely as a result of the wars from the second horseman. Food will be scarce, but luxuries such as wine and oil will still be readily available.
The "a measure of wheat for a penny" from the King James Version might not sound like a famine to modern ears, but in the NIV we read "a quart of wheat for a day's wages", which is a little clearer.
[edit] Pale Horse
The fourth horseman (on the pale, or sickly horse, which may be the source of the notion of "pestilence" as a separate horseman) is explicitly named Death. Although Death is popularly represented carrying a scythe, this is not mentioned in the original text.
The Greek word interpreted here as "pale" is elsewhere in the New Testament translated as "green." The horse is sometimes translated as "pale," "pale green," or "green." The pale greenish color of the fourth horse could mean fear, sickness, decay, and death.
[edit] Alternative interpretations
An alternate interpretation holds the first Horseman to represent War or the Antichrist, the second to represent Pestilence (sometimes called Plague), while the third and fourth riders remain Famine and Death, respectively, though this interpretation is often considered flawed.
Another challenged interpretation is that the white horse represents foreign warfare or conquest ("went forth conquering, and to conquer"), the red represents civil war or domestic strife ("that they should kill one another"), the black represents famine ("A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine"), and the pale represents pestilence or disease in its various forms (" to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth").
Yet another interpretation is that the Four Horsemen are the Four Beasts mentioned in the visions of The Book of Daniel, representing four kings (or kingdoms), the last of which devours the world. The more conventional integration of this portion of Daniel with Revelation, however, is that the eleventh king (arising in the fourth kingdom) is the Antichrist.
Some Christian scholars do not interpret Revelation as prophecy of future events so much as a revealing of God's presence in the current events of the first century. While Rome appears to be all powerful and in control, the images of the horsemen are a grim reminder that even the powerful persecutor is helpless before the power of God.
In this sense the white horseman is a symbol for a conquering force from without. This is symbolized using the image of the feared Parthian mounted archer on his white horse and given the crown of a conqueror. The red rider who takes peace from the earth is the civil strife that ended the pax romana. The black rider is the famine that follows anytime there is foreign invasion or civil war. The final rider is the death that accompanies conflict and famine and the pestilence that springs up in the aftermath of these other tragedies.
While these images, and especially the Parthians, are specific to the Roman Empire of the early Christian era, there is a universality about them. Each new century, Christian interpreters see ways in which the horsemen, and Revelation in general, speaks to contemporary events. Some who believe Revelation applies to modern times can interpret the horses based on various ways their colors are used. Red, for example, often represents Communism, while Black has been used as a symbol of Capitalism. Pastor Irvin Baxter Jr. of Endtime Ministries espouses such a belief. [2]
[edit] Zechariah's Horses
Four sets of horses were also mentioned in The Book of Zechariah. The coincidence of the location of the passage, Chapter 6 verses 1-8, is notable to some commentators. (The original writers, of course, did not use the chapter and verse designations of modern Bibles.) The text is as follows, drawn from the King James Version.
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[edit] Relationship to the Four Horsemen
Zechariah is quoted in the Book of Revelation more than any other book in the Old Testament. The first nine chapters are considered apocalyptic (although the book itself is not) like the Book of Revelation. It is also quoted frequently by many other New Testament authors. These verses are sometimes used to determine whether or not the rider of the white horse is the Antichrist. In Zechariah, all of the horse and riders are servants of the Lord. If these are the same four horses and riders as the Four Horsemen, it would suggest that rider of the white horse is not the Antichrist.
In the King James version, all of the horses are possibly the same color.[citation needed] The fourth set, grisled and bay, are the ones seeing debate. Other translations use the word dapple (or bay) to describe their color. The word grisled is defined by the OED as being "awe-inspiring; horrible; grisly", closer to the "pale" mentioned in Revelation 6:8.
[edit] The "Fifth" Horseman, Christ
Christ's return riding on a white horse and wearing diadems (rather than a stephanos) is described in Revelation chapter 19, verses 11 to 16:
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A similar occurrence happens in Hinduism. It is believed that at the end of the current Kali Age, the god Vishnu will incarnate as a rider on a white horse called Kalki to destroy evil and uphold good.
Although the concept of,"On his robe and on his thigh was inscribed king of kings and Lord of Lords," is popular, translation has been proven that the actual statement from aramaic is "On his robe and his (banner) he had a name inscribed, King of Kings and Lord of Lords."
[edit] Cultural references to the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
[edit] See also
- Antichrist
- Apocalypse
- Book of Revelation
- Death
- Death (personification)
- Eschatology
- Famine
- Horsemen of Apocalypse (comics)
- Pestilence
- Summary of Christian eschatological differences
- War
[edit] Notes
- ^ Kreider, Glenn. Jonathan Edwards' Interpretation of Revelation 4:1-8:1. Univ. Press of America, 2004.
- ^ Baxter, Irvin. Arafat and Jerusalem: The Palestinian Perspective. Endtime Ministries. Retrieved on 2006-12-05.