Listen "Study in Revelation #29"
Episode Synopsis
The third seal in Revelation reveals a black horse symbolizing widespread economic oppression under Roman rule, not due to famine but to unjust fiscal policies, particularly the exploitative taxation enacted by Emperor Caracalla in 212 AD, which burdened provinces with excessive levies after granting them citizenship. The rider's scales represent perverted justice, indicating that while food was available, its exorbitant cost—equivalent to a day's wages for a single quart of wheat—crushed the middle and lower classes, especially Christians, who suffered under these systemic injustices. The divine voice's command to 'hurt not the oil and the wine' is best understood as a call to justice, not mere preservation, highlighting that oppression was not in scarcity but in the corrupt manipulation of resources. The passage underscores that God views taxation not as morally neutral but as a reflection of righteousness or tyranny, and calls believers to prioritize the kingdom of God by sacrificially supporting His work through time, talents, and treasures, echoing the principle that spiritual nourishment demands financial stewardship. Ultimately, the vision warns that national decline stems not from external threats but from internal corruption, and calls for faithful, joyful giving as an act of worship and obedience.
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