Commentary
John’s renewed commission now takes the form of measuring the sanctuary, altar, and worshipers while the outer court and holy city are left to Gentile trampling for a fixed span. Within that same bounded period, the two witnesses prophesy in sackcloth with Moses- and Elijah-like authority, finish their testimony, are killed by the beast from the abyss, and then are vindicated by resurrection and ascension. The seventh trumpet interprets their apparent defeat from heaven’s side: the world’s kingdom belongs to the Lord and his Christ, the time for judgment and reward has arrived, and the opened heavenly temple with the visible ark confirms God’s covenant faithfulness and coming judgment.
Revelation 11:1-19 depicts a measured but exposed people of God whose witness runs through affliction, martyrdom, and vindication, and it declares at the seventh trumpet that God will judge the nations, reward his servants, and publicly establish the reign of the Lord and his Christ.
11:1 Then a measuring rod like a staff was given to me, and I was told, "Get up and measure the temple of God, and the altar, and the ones who worship there. 11:2 But do not measure the outer courtyard of the temple; leave it out, because it has been given to the Gentiles, and they will trample on the holy city for forty-two months. 11:3 And I will grant my two witnesses authority to prophesy for 1,260 days, dressed in sackcloth. 11:4 (These are the two olive trees and the two lampstands that stand before the Lord of the earth.) 11:5 If anyone wants to harm them, fire comes out of their mouths and completely consumes their enemies. If anyone wants to harm them, they must be killed this way. 11:6 These two have the power to close up the sky so that it does not rain during the time they are prophesying. They have power to turn the waters to blood and to strike the earth with every kind of plague whenever they want. 11:7 When they have completed their testimony, the beast that comes up from the abyss will make war on them and conquer them and kill them. 11:8 Their corpses will lie in the street of the great city that is symbolically called Sodom and Egypt, where their Lord was also crucified. 11:9 For three and a half days those from every people, tribe, nation, and language will look at their corpses, because they will not permit them to be placed in a tomb. 11:10 And those who live on the earth will rejoice over them and celebrate, even sending gifts to each other, because these two prophets had tormented those who live on the earth. 11:11 But after three and a half days a breath of life from God entered them, and they stood on their feet, and tremendous fear seized those who were watching them. 11:12 Then they heard a loud voice from heaven saying to them: "Come up here!" So the two prophets went up to heaven in a cloud while their enemies stared at them. 11:13 Just then a major earthquake took place and a tenth of the city collapsed; seven thousand people were killed in the earthquake, and the rest were terrified and gave glory to the God of heaven. 11:14 The second woe has come and gone; the third is coming quickly. 11:15 Then the seventh angel blew his trumpet, and there were loud voices in heaven saying: "The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he will reign for ever and ever." 11:16 Then the twenty-four elders who are seated on their thrones before God threw themselves down with their faces to the ground and worshiped God 11:17 with these words: "We give you thanks, Lord God, the All-Powerful, the one who is and who was, because you have taken your great power and begun to reign. 11:18 The nations were enraged, but your wrath has come, and the time has come for the dead to be judged, and the time has come to give to your servants, the prophets, their reward, as well as to the saints and to those who revere your name, both small and great, and the time has come to destroy those who destroy the earth." 11:19 Then the temple of God in heaven was opened and the ark of his covenant was visible within his temple. And there were flashes of lightning, roaring, crashes of thunder, an earthquake, and a great hailstorm.
Observation notes
- The measuring command follows 10:11, so the act belongs to John’s renewed prophetic task rather than an isolated temple vignette.
- The contrast between what is measured and what is left out suggests differentiation within the holy-city complex: worshipers are marked off while external profanation still occurs.
- The time designations forty-two months, 1,260 days, and the following chapter’s parallel period indicate a bounded season of oppression rather than uncontrolled chaos.
- The witnesses are defined more by function than by biography: they prophesy, testify, suffer, and are vindicated.
- Sackcloth identifies their ministry as mournful prophetic warning, not triumphalist display.
- The imagery of olive trees and lampstands draws attention to divinely supplied witness in God’s presence, not merely to miraculous power.
- Their plague-like powers echo Elijah and Moses, placing their ministry in the line of covenant lawsuit and judgment.
- The beast does not kill them until they have completed their testimony, indicating that hostile power operates only within divine permission and timing.
- The “great city” is morally renamed Sodom and Egypt, while also being the place where their Lord was crucified; the wording loads the city with rebellion, oppression, and covenant infidelity rather than offering a neutral geographical note alone.
- The repeated phrase “those who dwell on the earth” marks the celebrants as the settled rebellious world in Revelation’s moral geography.
- The sequence death-public exposure-resurrection-ascension parallels the pattern of Christ and reinforces that witness may look defeated before final vindication.
- The response in 11:13 is deliberately restrained: survivors are terrified and give glory to the God of heaven, which may indicate genuine repentance or compelled acknowledgment; the text does not fully unpack it here.
- At the seventh trumpet, heaven announces the certainty of the kingdom’s arrival before the later visions depict further conflict; apocalyptic narration is thematic and telescoped, not strictly flat chronological reportage.
- The elders’ hymn joins kingship, wrath, judgment of the dead, reward of servants, and destruction of destroyers, so the trumpet’s significance is comprehensive and climactic.
- The opened heavenly temple and visible ark locate the final assurance of judgment and covenant faithfulness in heaven’s sanctuary, not in earthly security.
Structure
- 11:1-2: John measures the temple, altar, and worshipers, but the outer court is excluded and handed over to Gentile trampling for forty-two months.
- 11:3-6: God appoints two witnesses to prophesy in sackcloth for 1,260 days, identifying them through olive-tree and lampstand imagery and describing their prophetic authority in Elijah- and Moses-like terms.
- 11:7-10: After completing their testimony, the beast from the abyss kills them, and the earth-dwellers celebrate their public humiliation.
- 11:11-13: God reverses the apparent defeat by raising the witnesses, calling them to heaven, and shaking the city with judgment so that survivors are terrified and give glory to God.
- 11:14: Transitional marker announcing the second woe’s completion and the nearness of the third.
- 11:15-18: The seventh trumpet sounds; heavenly voices and the twenty-four elders interpret the event as the arrival of God’s royal reign, judgment of the nations, reward of His servants, and destruction of destroyers of the earth.
- 11:19: The heavenly temple opens, the ark appears, and storm-theophany signals confirm covenantal presence and imminent judgment.
Key terms
metreo
Strong's: G3354
Gloss: measure, mark off
The term likely signals divine ownership, evaluation, and preservation rather than mere architecture; it frames the people associated with true worship as known and set apart by God.
martys
Strong's: G3144
Gloss: witness
The word links prophetic proclamation with suffering fidelity; in Revelation, witness is not only verbal testimony but steadfast allegiance under threat.
martyria
Strong's: G3141
Gloss: testimony, witness
Their mission has a defined content and completion point; the text values fulfilled witness over visible earthly success.
therion
Strong's: G2342
Gloss: beast, monstrous power
This is the first explicit mention of the beast in Revelation, introducing the satanically aligned persecuting power that opposes God’s servants.
abyssos
Strong's: G12
Gloss: deep pit, abyss
The origin of the beast underscores that the opposition is demonic in character, not merely political hostility.
katoikountes epi tes ges
Strong's: G1909
Gloss: earth-dwellers
This phrase functions throughout Revelation as a moral-theological category for the rebellious world aligned against God.
Syntactical features
Imperative plus exclusion contrast
Textual signal: “measure... But do not measure the outer court; leave it out”
Interpretive effect: The paired commands create a deliberate distinction between what is under marked divine regard and what is exposed to trampling.
Divine passive and divine grant language
Textual signal: “it has been given to the Gentiles”; “I will grant my two witnesses”
Interpretive effect: Both oppression and witness occur under God’s sovereign permission, preventing the reader from treating events as outside His rule.
Temporal clauses marking divinely fixed sequence
Textual signal: “for forty-two months,” “for 1,260 days,” “when they have completed their testimony,” “after three and a half days”
Interpretive effect: The narrative is structured by measured periods and completion formulas, showing that suffering and vindication unfold according to divine timing.
Presentive identification formula
Textual signal: “These are the two olive trees and the two lampstands”
Interpretive effect: The clause directs interpretation through symbolic identification rather than through biographical description of the witnesses.
Repetitive conditional warning
Textual signal: “If anyone wants to harm them... If anyone wants to harm them”
Interpretive effect: The repetition intensifies the inviolability of the witnesses during their appointed mission.
Textual critical issues
Singular or plural in the heavenly proclamation of 11:15
Variants: Some witnesses read “the kingdom of the world” while others reflect a plural sense, “the kingdoms of the world.”
Preferred reading: “the kingdom of the world”
Interpretive effect: The singular presents the world-order as one corporate dominion now claimed by the Lord and His Christ; the theological point is not materially changed if the plural is read.
Rationale: The singular has strong textual support and fits Revelation’s tendency to speak of the world system as a unified rebellious realm.
Hearing or seeing in 11:12
Variants: Some manuscripts read “I heard a loud voice from heaven,” others “they heard a loud voice from heaven.”
Preferred reading: “they heard a loud voice from heaven”
Interpretive effect: The plural better suits the narrative focus on the witnesses’ vindication by direct heavenly summons.
Rationale: The reading coheres with the immediate antecedent and likely avoids scribal assimilation to Johannine first-person hearing formulas elsewhere.
Old Testament background
Ezekiel 40:3-5; 42:20
Connection type: pattern
Note: Temple measuring evokes prophetic marking out of sacred space, suggesting divine ownership and ordered distinction.
Zechariah 2:1-5
Connection type: pattern
Note: Measuring imagery can signify God’s claim and protection, though here protection coexists with partial trampling.
Zechariah 4:2-14
Connection type: allusion
Note: The two olive trees and lampstand imagery most directly informs the identity of the witnesses as divinely supplied servants standing before the Lord.
1 Kings 17:1; James 5:17
Connection type: echo
Note: The shutting of the sky recalls Elijah’s prophetic judgment and frames the witnesses in a prophetic-confrontational role.
Exodus 7-11
Connection type: echo
Note: Turning water to blood and striking the earth with plagues aligns the witnesses with exodus-style covenant judgments.
Interpretive options
Identity of the two witnesses
- Two future individual prophets, possibly Moses and Elijah or figures in that mold.
- A symbolic representation of the witnessing church, especially in its prophetic vocation under persecution.
- A composite reading in which two eschatological prophets represent the church’s witness while also functioning as concrete end-time agents.
Preferred option: A symbolic representation of the witnessing church, possibly expressed through two prophetic figures that embody that vocation.
Rationale: The lampstand imagery elsewhere in Revelation points toward churches, the number two suits valid testimony, and the passage’s burden falls on the pattern of faithful witness, suffering, and vindication rather than on personal biography; yet the symbolism need not exclude a more concrete historical embodiment at the end.
Meaning of the measured temple
- A future literal Jerusalem temple rebuilt in the end times.
- A symbolic depiction of the people of God in their worshiping identity.
- A mixed reference in which temple imagery may include a literal setting but chiefly communicates divine distinction and preservation of true worshipers.
Preferred option: A symbolic depiction of the people of God in their worshiping identity, with temple language carrying covenantal and sanctuary associations.
Rationale: The command includes measuring worshipers, not only structures, and the vision’s symbolic texture encourages reading the temple as a theological image of the worshiping community under divine regard.
Sense of the survivors who “gave glory to the God of heaven”
- A genuine, though limited, repentance in response to judgment.
- A coerced acknowledgment of God’s power without saving repentance.
- An intentionally ambiguous response left unresolved at this point.
Preferred option: An intentionally ambiguous response left unresolved at this point.
Rationale: The phrase can denote true turning or compelled recognition; the text records fear and glorifying language but does not explicitly state enduring repentance.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read as the continuation of John’s recommissioning in 10:11 and as preparation for the conflict visions that follow in chapter 12; isolated literalism misses its discourse role.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: high
Note: Temple, lampstands, olive trees, beast, and city labels are apocalyptic symbols with referential weight; interpretation must neither demythologize them nor flatten them into crude one-to-one literalism.
prophetic
Relevance: high
Note: The unit uses prophetic time periods, covenant-judgment imagery, and heavenly interpretation; prophetic idiom governs how sequences and symbols should be handled.
christological
Relevance: medium
Note: The witnesses’ death, public humiliation, vindication, and ascension-like exaltation are framed in relation to “their Lord,” so the passage should be read in light of the Lamb’s pattern of conquering through faithful suffering.
chronometrical_dispensational
Relevance: medium
Note: The repeated periods are meaningful and bounded, but the interpreter should resist forcing every number into a wooden timetable detached from the vision’s pastoral and symbolic function.
Theological significance
- God marks out his worshipers as his own even while outer space is profaned and the holy city is trampled.
- Witness in this passage is God-given, time-bounded, and not subject to premature silencing; the beast acts only after the testimony is complete.
- The death of the witnesses is not the collapse of God’s mission but part of the pattern by which faithful testimony is vindicated.
- The beast’s violence is real and demonic, yet it remains derivative, permitted, and limited in duration.
- The seventh trumpet joins judgment and reward: the dead are judged, God’s servants are rewarded, and destroyers are themselves destroyed.
- The reign of God and of his Christ is presented as one royal claim over the rebellious world-order.
- The opened heavenly temple and visible ark ground coming judgment in God’s holy presence and covenant faithfulness rather than in arbitrary force.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The vision advances through compressed symbols—measuring, trampling, sackcloth prophecy, public exposure, resurrection, and enthronement. Its vocabulary assigns significance from God’s side of history: the decisive moment is not when the witnesses are killed, but when their testimony is completed and then vindicated.
Biblical theological: Temple, exodus-plague, prophetic, and kingdom motifs converge here. The witnesses stand in the line of Zechariah’s Spirit-supplied servants and of Moses- and Elijah-like judgment, while their death and vindication echo the pattern of the crucified and exalted Lord named in the passage.
Metaphysical: The passage portrays history as governed rather than self-explanatory. Time periods, beastly aggression, prophetic suffering, resurrection life, and final kingship all unfold within limits set by God; evil can wound and shame, but it cannot define the final meaning of events.
Psychological Spiritual: The chapter contrasts two moral worlds: sackcloth witness that endures costly obedience, and earth-dwellers who turn the silencing of truth into a festival. Their celebration collapses the moment God gives life again to the witnesses, exposing how fragile public verdicts are when set against divine judgment.
Divine Perspective: God preserves what belongs to him, appoints the duration of witness and trampling, permits the beast no final victory, and answers raging nations with judgment, reward, and reign. The heavenly hymn makes plain that history is not waiting for God to become king; it is moving toward the public manifestation of a rule he has now taken in power.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: God fixes the span of trampling, testimony, death, resurrection, and trumpet consummation, displaying exhaustive providence over the conflict.
Category: character
Note: He appears here as both righteous judge of the nations and faithful rewarder of prophets, saints, and those who fear his name.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: The opened heavenly temple and visible ark disclose that his covenant fidelity and holiness stand behind the coming judgment.
- God measures and preserves his worshipers, yet he does not spare the outer court from trampling or the witnesses from death.
- The witnesses are conquered in public, yet that very defeat becomes the stage for their vindication.
- The seventh trumpet announces the kingdom’s arrival in climactic terms, yet later visions continue to unfold conflict before the end is fully displayed.
Enrichment summary
The imagery here is governed by temple and prophetic symbolism rather than by flat architectural or biographical reporting. Measuring marks out what belongs to God, yet the excluded outer court shows that preservation does not mean exemption from pressure. The witnesses are framed through the scriptural patterns of valid testimony, Zechariah’s olive-tree imagery, and Moses/Elijah-style judgment, so the scene is larger than either private spirituality or mere speculation about two end-time celebrities. When the seventh trumpet sounds, heaven supplies the verdict: the beast’s temporary victory never overturns God’s claim on his people, his control of the times, or the certainty of his reign.
Traditions of men check
A triumphalist assumption that faithful ministry should look publicly successful and socially celebrated.
Why it conflicts: The witnesses are faithful precisely while clothed in sackcloth, opposed by enemies, and finally killed after finishing their mission.
Textual pressure point: 11:3, 7-10 shows that divinely approved witness may provoke hatred rather than applause.
Caution: This should not be used to romanticize failure or excuse unfaithfulness; the text commends completed testimony, not mere marginality.
A reduction of Revelation to a newspaper code focused only on speculative identification of end-time personalities.
Why it conflicts: The passage’s symbolic identifications and theological interpretation place the accent on the nature of faithful witness and God’s kingdom, not on satisfying curiosity.
Textual pressure point: 11:4 identifies the witnesses through olive-tree and lampstand imagery, and 11:15-18 gives heaven’s interpretation of history.
Caution: Specific future fulfillment may still be involved; the correction is against speculation that eclipses the passage’s pastoral burden.
A soft ecclesiology that treats worship as private spirituality untouched by cosmic conflict.
Why it conflicts: The measured worshipers stand in a vision where sanctuary, witness, beastly opposition, and kingdom judgment are all interconnected.
Textual pressure point: 11:1-2 joins worship and trampling, showing that true worship exists within contested history.
Caution: Do not collapse every institutional struggle into apocalyptic fulfillment; the point is theological, not sensational.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: temple_cultic_frame
Why It Matters: Measuring the sanctuary, altar, and worshipers marks out a sphere claimed by God, while the unmeasured outer court remains exposed to trampling. The image distinguishes divine ownership from visible security.
Western Misread: Treating the scene mainly as an architectural puzzle about a building and overlooking that worshipers are included in what is measured.
Interpretive Difference: The passage speaks of covenantal preservation within affliction: God knows and claims his worshiping people even while profanation and pressure continue.
Dynamic: prophetic_witness_frame
Why It Matters: Sackcloth, plague imagery, drought, and the finishing of testimony cast the witnesses as covenant prosecutors in the mold of Moses and Elijah. Their role is confrontational and judicial, not merely informative.
Western Misread: Reducing witness to private belief or polite persuasion, with little place for prophetic warning or public contradiction of idolatry.
Interpretive Difference: Here witness is a God-authorized public testimony that exposes rebellion, endures retaliation, and is vindicated by God rather than by immediate success.
Dynamic: apocalyptic_heavenly_verdict
Why It Matters: The seventh trumpet interprets earthly events from heaven’s side before later visions continue the conflict in other images. Revelation often announces the end’s significance before narrating more of its outworking.
Western Misread: Insisting that once the trumpet sounds no subsequent chapter may portray struggle, as though the book moved only by strict linear sequence.
Interpretive Difference: The trumpet is climactic without requiring a flattened chronology; it declares the certainty and scope of God’s reign, judgment, and reward.
Idioms and figures
Expression: the two olive trees and the two lampstands that stand before the Lord of the earth
Category: metaphor
Explanation: The witnesses are identified through Zechariah-shaped imagery of servants supplied by God and stationed in his presence. In Revelation, lampstands also carry witness-bearing associations already linked to the churches.
Interpretive effect: The image shifts attention away from bare biography toward vocation: these figures embody God-sustained public testimony.
Expression: fire comes out of their mouths
Category: metaphor
Explanation: The phrase depicts destructive prophetic judgment issuing from their witness, echoing scriptural patterns in which God’s word consumes opponents. The force lies in the efficacy of their testimony, not necessarily in literal flame.
Interpretive effect: It prevents the reader from domesticating their speech into harmless commentary while also discouraging crude literalism.
Expression: the great city that is symbolically called Sodom and Egypt, where their Lord was also crucified
Category: symbolic renaming
Explanation: John overlays the city with scriptural names of corruption, oppression, and covenant hostility, while also linking it to the place of Jesus’ crucifixion. The description is theological and moral before it is geographical.
Interpretive effect: The city functions as concentrated opposition to God’s witnesses, not merely as a neutral location on a map.
Expression: those who dwell on the earth
Category: metonymy
Explanation: In Revelation this phrase regularly names the settled rebellious world in its allegiance and outlook rather than simply humanity as such.
Interpretive effect: Their celebration over the witnesses is framed as the response of a world-order at home in rebellion.
Application implications
- Churches should judge their life together by whether they keep bearing truthful witness, not by whether they remain unopposed or culturally impressive.
- The sackcloth of the witnesses warns against a polished triumphalism that cannot grieve, warn, or confront rebellion.
- When witness provokes hostility, believers should not assume the mission has failed; in this passage hatred intensifies precisely as testimony runs its appointed course.
- Corporate worship matters here because the measured sanctuary includes worshipers themselves; holy identity is not detachable from gathered allegiance to God.
- Public turmoil and hostile power should be read through the fixed periods and heavenly hymn of this chapter, which forbid both panic and naïve optimism.
- Service rendered in reverence to God’s name is not erased by apparent defeat, because the seventh trumpet binds reward to final judgment.
Enrichment applications
- Churches should measure success less by public approval than by whether they complete the witness entrusted to them.
- Prophetic preaching that confronts idolatry and false security may feel like torment to those settled in rebellion; that reaction does not by itself invalidate the message.
- The chapter binds worship, witness, and endurance together, so a privatized spirituality detached from the gathered people of God is too thin for its vision of faithfulness.
Warnings
- The symbolism of the temple and the witnesses remains debated, so conclusions should track the passage’s own signals and avoid false precision.
- The chapter should not be forced into a strictly linear chronology; the seventh trumpet is climactic, yet later visions continue to unfold the conflict from other vantage points.
- The statement that survivors gave glory to God should not be made to prove either definite conversion or mere empty acknowledgment without further argument.
- Future intensification or concrete fulfillment may be possible, but the passage’s pastoral and symbolic force for the church must not be eclipsed by speculative reconstruction.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not insist that the two witnesses are only symbolic or only two future individuals; the passage leaves room for debate, even if its internal imagery leans strongly toward a symbolic-ecclesial reading.
- Do not build an overconfident timetable from the repeated periods; their clearest function is to mark oppression and witness as divinely bounded.
- Do not turn the city language into an anti-Jewish reading; the labels condemn covenant-breaking hostility to God and his witnesses, not an ethnic people as such.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Assuming that being measured by God guarantees visible safety, public honor, or freedom from death.
Why It Happens: Readers collapse divine preservation into immediate earthly protection.
Correction: The chapter deliberately combines preservation with trampling and martyrdom. God keeps his people as his own and vindicates them, but he does not promise exemption from suffering in the meantime.
Misreading: Reducing the chapter to the identification of two future individuals and a rebuilt temple, as though that settled the passage’s whole meaning.
Why It Happens: The scene contains concrete details and has often been read through narrowly futurist expectations.
Correction: Concrete future fulfillment may still be possible, but the chapter’s own symbolism—measured worshipers, lampstands, olive trees, and completed testimony—pushes the reader to see a broader pattern of the church’s witness, suffering, and vindication.
Misreading: Reading the survivors who gave glory to God as an unambiguous mass conversion.
Why It Happens: The phrase can sound like straightforward repentance when isolated from Revelation’s wider judgment scenes.
Correction: The response is better left open. The text reports fear and glorifying language, but it does not clearly state whether this becomes enduring repentance.
Misreading: Forcing the seventh trumpet into a rigid sequence that leaves no room for later chapters to depict conflict.
Why It Happens: Apocalyptic visions are often expected to move like a single uninterrupted timeline.
Correction: The trumpet announces the certainty and climactic scope of God’s kingdom, judgment, and reward; later visions may still revisit the same end-complex from different angles.