The Fifth and Sixth Trumpets of Revelation 9 | Franktown Church
The fifth and sixth trumpets of Revelation 9 — historicist defense of the Saracen and Ottoman fulfillments
Franktown Church · Research Brief

The Fifth and
Sixth Trumpets

The fifth and sixth trumpets: what the critics miss about Ishmael, Constantinople, and August 11, 1840.

Contents

The Thesis

The traditional historicist reading of Revelation 9’s fifth and sixth trumpets is not a quaint nineteenth-century artifact. On this reading, the fifth trumpet describes the rise of Islam through the Saracens (the sons of Ishmael), and the sixth describes the Ottoman Turks. The 150 years run from 1299 to 1449. The 391 years and 15 days run from 1449 to August 11, 1840. The reading falls naturally out of the text. It carries the deepest pedigree in Protestant exegesis, draws on a defensible reading of the historical record, and finds endorsement in Ellen White’s published Great Controversy. The modern revisions offered by Paulien, Stefanovic, and Mueller fail on three counts: they evacuate the time prophecies of meaning, they smuggle idealism into historicism, and they cannot account for what Ellen White actually wrote. The critics are right that some of Uriah Smith’s details were softer than he made them sound. They are wrong about the framework.

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Section 1This Isn’t Uriah Smith’s Idea

Three centuries of Reformation Protestant exegesis read Revelation 9 the same way Smith and Litch did. They did not invent it. They inherited it.

The first thing to clear away is the idea that the Saracen-and-Turk reading of Revelation 9 is some Adventist eccentricity that Uriah Smith dreamed up and Ellen White accidentally endorsed.

The earliest surviving Christian commentary that reads the Apocalypse against the rise of Islam is the Commentaria in Apocalypsin of Beatus of Liébana, an eighth-century Spanish monk writing within roughly seventy years of the Muslim conquest of Spain.1 Beatus did not invent the modern historicist scheme. His reading is more general resistance literature than precise trumpet identification. But he was the first major Christian expositor to read Revelation against Islamic invasion as a present-time fulfillment.2

By the seventeenth century the specific Saracen-and-Turk identification was the dominant Protestant reading. The verifiable expositors who held some form of this position include:

  • John Napier, A Plaine Discovery of the Whole Revelation of Saint John (1593): fifth and sixth trumpets applied to Mohammedans and Ottoman Turks; Mohammed identified as the fallen star.3
  • Joseph Mede, Clavis Apocalyptica (1627): fifth trumpet = Saracens, sixth = Turks, with the Euphratean horsemen’s hour-day-month-year as 396 years from the taking of Baghdad (c. 1057) to the fall of Constantinople (1453).4
  • David Pareus, A Commentary Upon the Divine Revelation (1644): fifth and sixth trumpets as the conquests of Mohammedanism.4
  • Charles Daubuz, A Perpetual Commentary on the Revelation of St. John (1720): supplied the famous identification of the Ottoman uniform colors (scarlet, blue, yellow) with “fire and jacinth and brimstone” of Revelation 9:17.5
  • Sir Isaac Newton, Observations Upon the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse of St. John (1733, posthumous): explicitly identified the fifth trumpet with Islam and the sixth with the Ottoman Empire, and produced a hand-drawn map identifying the four sultanates of the Euphrates as Iconium, Damascus, Mosul, and Miapharekin.6
  • Thomas Newton (Bishop), Dissertations on the Prophecies (1754): fifth trumpet = Saracens, sixth = Turks.7
  • Albert Barnes, Notes on the New Testament: Revelation (1851): “With surprising unanimity, commentators have agreed in regarding this trumpet [the fifth] as referring to the empire of the Saracens, or the rise and progress of the religion and empire set up by Mohammed.”8
  • E. B. Elliott, Horae Apocalypticae (4 vols., 1844; 5th ed. 1862): the most exhaustive nineteenth-century historicist commentary, defending the Saracen-Turk reading at length.9
  • Alexander Keith, Signs of the Times (1832): direct source for much of Uriah Smith’s exposition.10

John Wesley’s Notes on the New Testament on Revelation 9 follows Johann Bengel and identifies the fifth-trumpet locusts as Persians, not Saracens, while assigning the Saracens to the sixth trumpet. That is a different scheme than Mede or Newton.11 Wesley belongs in the historicist tradition, but not in the precise Saracen-fifth-trumpet column. Luther, Foxe, Edwards, and Wycliffe also belong in the broader Protestant historicist tradition for their identification of the Papacy with Antichrist, but their specific identification of the fifth and sixth trumpets is less directly attested in their primary works than secondary Adventist sources sometimes claim.12

What survives, even with the corrections, is this: from at least the 1590s through the 1860s, the dominant Protestant reading of Revelation 9 was that the fifth and sixth trumpets describe the rise of Islamic power against Eastern Rome. Smith and Litch did not invent it. They inherited it.

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Section 2The Historical Argument

Two time prophecies, anchored to specific historical termini in 1299, 1449, and 1840.

The 150 Years (1299–1449)

Revelation 9:5 says the locusts had power “to torment them five months.”13 Five prophetic months at thirty days a month, applied as years per the day-year principle (Numbers 14:34; Ezekiel 4:6),14 gives 150 years.

The starting point claimed in the historicist tradition is the invasion of Nicomedia by Othman (Osman I) on July 27, 1299. The historian Edward Gibbon (no Adventist, no Millerite) recorded the date this way:

“It was on the twenty-seventh of July, in the year twelve hundred and ninety-nine of the Christian era, that Othman first invaded the territory of Nicomedia; and the singular accuracy of the date seems to disclose some foresight of the rapid and destructive growth of the monster.”15

— Edward Gibbon, Decline and Fall, vol. 7, ch. 64

Gibbon’s “singular accuracy” is part of the point. Most medieval invasions are dated by year. This one is dated by day, in an Enlightenment historian who could not help noticing how oddly precise the record was.

Gibbon’s date has been challenged. Joseph von Hammer’s Geschichte des osmanischen Reiches (1827) argued for 1301; modern Ottoman scholarship sometimes prefers 1302 (the Battle of Bapheus, also on July 27).16 But the case for 1299 is not weak. The Greek historian Georgius Pachymeres (1242–1310), a contemporary of Othman who lived in Constantinople through these events, recorded: “On the 27th day of the month of July around Baphcem (this region is the renowned Nicomedia), Athman, together with many thousands of soldiers, advancing suddenly attacked.” The Latinist Petrus Possinus, working from Pachymeres in 1668, placed this in 1299, the fifth year of Boniface VIII and the eighteenth year of Andronicus II. Both regnal markers independently confirm the year.17 The Millerites had Keith’s two-volume work in hand and were aware of Von Hammer’s criticism, but they deliberately chose 1299. The course of events ultimately defended that choice.18

The endpoint is 1449. In late 1448, John VIII Palaeologus, the Byzantine emperor, died without an heir. Constantine XI ascended the throne in 1449, but only by formally requesting and receiving permission from Ottoman Sultan Murad II to do so.19 That single act of asking the Ottomans for permission to rule is the moment the Eastern Roman Empire ceded its sovereignty in fact, even though Constantinople would not fall militarily until 1453.

The 150 years thus run from a Greek loss of territory (1299) to a Greek loss of sovereignty (1449). The prophecy says the locusts would torment but not kill during that period (Rev. 9:5).20 That maps. The Turks harassed but did not extinguish the Greek empire during exactly those years.

The Earlier Saracen Phase and the Abubeker Confirmation

The fifth trumpet covers a broader arc than the 150 years alone. The historicist tradition reads Revelation 9:1–11 as describing the rise of Islamic power generally, beginning with Mohammed and the Saracen conquests of the seventh century. The specific 150-year period of “torment but not conquer” applies to the Ottoman pre-empire phase. The strongest historical confirmation of the prophecy comes not from 1299 but from 632 AD, the moment the Saracen armies first set out from Medina to conquer Syria.

Revelation 9:4 specifies the scope of the locusts’ assault: “they were commanded not to harm the grass of the earth, or any green thing, or any tree, but only those men who do not have the seal of God on their foreheads.”21 This is a peculiar specification. Locusts in nature destroy grass and green things; that is what locusts do. A commander telling locusts not to harm vegetation is conspicuous. And the specification narrows the target further: only the unsealed.

Edward Gibbon (again, not a Christian, not a Millerite) preserved the circular command Abubeker, the first caliph after Mohammed, dispatched to the Saracen armies as they prepared to invade Syria. The command, recorded in Decline and Fall chapter 51, paragraph 10:

“Remember, that you are always in the presence of God, on the verge of death, in the assurance of judgment, and the hope of paradise. Avoid injustice and oppression… When you fight the battles of the Lord, acquit yourselves like men, without turning your backs; but let not your victory be stained with the blood of women and children. Destroy no palm trees, nor burn any fields of corn. Cut down no fruit trees, nor do any mischief to cattle, only such as you kill to eat… As you go on, you will find some religious persons who live retired in monasteries, and propose to themselves to serve God that way: let them alone, and neither kill them nor burn their monasteries.22

— Abubeker (Abu Bakr), first caliph, 632 AD, in Gibbon, Decline and Fall, ch. 51

The first thing the caliph commanded was to spare the trees and the sincere religious recluses, and to attack the corrupted state-church that had marked itself with apostasy. He issued this command at the moment of launching the conquest that would devastate the Eastern Roman Empire. Compare Revelation 9:4 again: “not to harm the grass of the earth, or any green thing, or any tree, but only those men who do not have the seal of God on their foreheads.”

Alexander Keith caught the magnitude of this in 1832:

“It is not said in prophecy or in history that the more humane injunctions were as scrupulously obeyed as the ferocious mandate. But it was so commanded them. And the preceding are the only instructions recorded by Gibbon, as given by Abubeker to the chiefs whose duty it was to issue the commands to all the Saracen hosts. The commands are alike discriminating with the prediction; as if the caliph himself had been acting in known as well as direct obedience to a higher mandate than that of mortal man — and in the very act of going forth to fight against the religion of Jesus, and to propagate Mahommedanism in its stead, he repeated the words which it was foretold in the Revelation of Jesus Christ that he would say.”23

— Alexander Keith, Signs of the Times (1832), vol. 1, p. 272

This is the strongest single piece of historical evidence for the historicist reading of Revelation 9. The prophecy specifies what would be spared. The caliph specifies the same thing, in language that closely tracks the prophecy, at the moment the conquest begins. He was not reading Revelation. He was issuing a military order on Islamic theological grounds, and the order matched a prophecy that had been written six centuries earlier.

That historical fit also has another consequence, which we will return to in Section 5: it shows that the “seal of God” of Revelation 9:4 was operative in 632 AD, at the moment the Saracen invasion began. Whatever the seal of God means, it cannot be exclusively eschatological. People had it, and were spared by it, in the seventh century.

The 391 Years and 15 Days (1449–1840)

Revelation 9:15 introduces the second time prophecy: “So the four angels, who had been prepared for the hour and day and month and year, were released to kill a third of mankind.”24

Applied to prophetic time at the day-year ratio:

  • A year = 360 days = 360 years
  • A month = 30 days = 30 years
  • A day = 1 day = 1 year
  • An hour = 1/24 day ≈ 15 days

Total: 391 years and 15 days.

Starting from July 27, 1449 (the close of the first period), 391 years and 15 days ends on August 11, 1840. Litch published this calculation in 1838 in Christ’s Second Coming, two years before the event.25 On August 1, 1840, ten days before the predicted date, he sharpened the prediction in print:

“Allowing the first period, 150 years, to have been exactly fulfilled before Deacozes ascended the throne by permission of the Turks, and that the 391 years, fifteen days, commenced at the close of the first period, it will end on the 11th of August, 1840, when the Ottoman power in Constantinople may be expected to be broken. And this, I believe, will be found to be the case.”26

— Josiah Litch, Signs of the Times, August 1, 1840

(“Deacozes” is a misspelling of Dragases, the second name of Constantine XI Palaeologus. The error was perpetuated through Litch’s source and Smith’s reproduction.27)

What Actually Happened on August 11, 1840

The historical setting: Mehemet Ali, the Pasha of Egypt, had been waging war against the Ottoman Sultan since 1839. Egyptian forces under Ibrahim Pasha decisively defeated the Ottomans at the Battle of Nezib on June 24, 1839.28 The Ottoman fleet defected to Egypt. By mid-1840 the Ottoman Empire was, on its own resources, on the verge of complete collapse. The Sultan was a teenager (Abdülmecid I, age 16). The empire could not save itself.

On July 15, 1840, the Convention for the Pacification of the Levant was signed in London by the United Kingdom, Austria, Prussia, Russia, and the Ottoman plenipotentiary Şekib Efendi.29 The four Christian powers offered to enforce a settlement on Egypt that preserved the Ottoman Empire, but only if the Sultan accepted their protection.

On August 5, 1840, the Sultan dispatched his ambassador, Rifaat Bey, on a government steamer from Constantinople carrying the ultimatum to be delivered to Mehemet Ali at Alexandria.30

On August 11, 1840, the day Litch had specified ten days earlier, Rifaat Bey arrived at Alexandria with the ultimatum. The arrival is recorded in the contemporary correspondence of the London Morning Chronicle (September 18, 1840) reporting from Constantinople, and is reproduced in nineteenth-century diplomatic records.31 On August 19, the formal written communication was delivered to Mehemet Ali; on August 28 he rejected the conditions; on November 27, after the bombardment of Beirut and the fall of Acre, he formally accepted.32

The critics’ challenge: nothing of definitive significance happened on the exact day of August 11. Why pick that date as the prophetic terminus?

August 11 marks the operative moment when the Ottoman state was no longer acting as an independent sovereign. The very ultimatum Rifaat Bey carried had been written in London, not Constantinople. The Sultan was acting as the agent of a European concert that had taken control of his foreign policy. From August 1840 forward, the Ottoman Empire is universally described by historians as the “Sick Man of Europe,” dependent on European preservation;33 the Crimean War (1853–56) was fought by Britain and France to preserve Turkey from Russia;34 and by the end of World War I, the empire was carved up by the very powers whose protection it had accepted in 1840.35

Critics raise a second objection. Reverend O. E. Daggett and James Hazen, contemporary critics in 1840–1841, argued that Turkey did not “fall.”36 They were factually correct that the Ottoman Empire continued to exist for nearly a century more. But Litch never predicted that the empire would cease to exist on August 11, 1840. He predicted that Ottoman supremacy, the empire’s standing as a sovereign and independent power, would end. The empire’s continued physical existence does not refute that prediction. What historians describe as the “Sick Man of Europe” limped on for decades under European protection: exactly the condition Litch’s reading described.

Litch’s own statements shifted between August and November of 1840. On August 15 he claimed war was now inevitable. By November he had returned to August 11 as the day of “voluntary surrender of Turkish supremacy in Constantinople to Christian influence.”37 The November formulation aligns with what later historiography universally describes.

His longer trajectory is more striking still. He never became a Seventh-day Adventist. After the Great Disappointment of 1844 he aligned with the Evangelical Adventists, served as president of the American Millennial Association, and eventually founded his own organization, the Messianians. Late in life (1873) he substantially modified his Revelation 9 interpretation, abandoning the day-year application of verse 15. By 1877 he described himself as a futurist rather than a historicist. In 1878 he attended the dispensationalist Prophetic Conference at the Church of the Holy Trinity in New York City. He died in 1886, having spent his last decades within the very interpretive school the historicist tradition stands against.38

None of this bears on whether the 1840 prediction was vindicated. A prediction is matched against the events, not against the proponent’s biography. Ellen White expanded her treatment of Litch in the 1888 edition of Great Controversy, two years after Litch’s death and well after his turn to futurism was public, and described the event as a “remarkable fulfillment of prophecy” that “exactly fulfilled the prediction.”

The endorsement was retained in the 1911 revision against explicit scholarly challenge. W.W. Prescott, then editor of the Review and Herald and one of the most prominent Adventist scholars of his generation, submitted approximately 105 suggested corrections for the new edition, including specific objections to the Litch passage on page 334. Some factual details were softened in response: the 1888 phrase “specifying not only the year but the very day on which this would take place” became the more careful 1911 wording that cites Litch’s August 1, 1840 article. But Prescott’s broader push to remove or downgrade the endorsement was not accepted. The core language stood.39 The prediction made in 1838 and vindicated in 1840 stands as a historicist landmark independently of where Litch ended up.

The terminology Ellen White uses is precise to what happened on August 11, 1840: “Turkey, through her ambassadors, accepted the protection of the allied powers of Europe, and thus placed herself under the control of Christian nations.”40 What ended on that date was Ottoman sovereignty, not Ottoman existence. The critics’ second objection mistakes one for the other.

Litch’s own story stands as its own warning: he was given great light, and he turned against it. The light remained where he left it.

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Section 3The Theological Argument

Trumpets are martial in the Old Testament. The seal of God is whole-Bible, not end-time-only. When judgment falls on apostate covenant communities, those marked are spared.

The Trumpets Are Martial Imagery, Not Philosophical Imagery

The critics’ fundamental move is to spiritualize the fifth and sixth trumpets. Stefanovic says the fifth trumpet “refers to the spiritual condition in the secular world and the consequences of such conditions from the eighteenth century to our time.”41 Paulien argues that “the ‘historical’ events for which we are looking are not as likely to deal with politics and nations and ethnic groups as with ideas and philosophies and great trans-national movements throughout the NT era.”42

This is exegetically backward.

Trumpets in the Old Testament are martial. Numbers 10:9: “When you go to war in your land against the enemy who oppresses you, then you shall sound an alarm with the trumpets.”43 Joshua 6: trumpets bring down Jericho.44 Judges 7: trumpets rout the Midianites.45 2 Chronicles 13:12: trumpets call for divine intervention against an attacking army.46 Joel 2:1: a trumpet alarm for the day of the Lord, depicted as a literal invading force.47

When John uses trumpets in Revelation, he is drawing on this entire tradition. According to Alberto Treiyer’s account of Daniel and Revelation Committee discussions, Gerhard Hasel responded to Paulien’s proposal with the formula: “the trumpets are armies, not philosophies.”48 This is not a partisan preference. The Old Testament background demands it. The Paulien-Stefanovic move requires that the fifth and sixth trumpets serve as martial imagery for non-martial things. Historicism exists to resist exactly that kind of spiritualization.

The Seal of God Is a Whole-Bible Category, Not Only an End-Time Mark

A separate but related theological move that the new view depends on concerns the “seal of God” specified in Revelation 9:4. Some interpreters argue that because Adventist theology ties the climactic sealing of the 144,000 to the end-time message, the fifth and sixth trumpets that fall on those without the seal must therefore also be end-time. The argument is structurally tidy: no completed sealing, no available unsealed group for the trumpets to torment, therefore no trumpet judgments yet.

The argument fails because the seal of God is not a category restricted to the final generation. Scripture uses sealing language for God’s ownership of His people across every age.

Paul tells the Ephesians, in past tense, that they “were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise” the moment they believed (Ephesians 1:13).49 He warns them: “do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption” (Ephesians 4:30).50 He tells the Corinthians, again past tense: God “has also sealed us and given us the Spirit in our hearts as a guarantee” (2 Corinthians 1:22).51 To Timothy he writes that “the solid foundation of God stands, having this seal: ‘The Lord knows those who are His'” (2 Timothy 2:19); Paul is quoting Numbers 16:5, where the principle is already established.52 First-century believers were already sealed. The seal is a present possession of every believer in every age.

The Old Testament parallel makes this even clearer. Ezekiel 9 is the foundational passage. God commands the man with the writer’s inkhorn to “go through the midst of the city, through the midst of Jerusalem, and put a mark on the foreheads of the men who sigh and cry over all the abominations that are done within it” (Ezekiel 9:4).53 Then to the six destroyers He says, “Go after him through the city, and kill… but do not come near anyone on whom is the mark; and begin at My sanctuary” (Ezekiel 9:5–6).54

The marking and the destruction belong to a single redemptive moment. The marker is dispatched first, the destroyers go after him through the same city, and they kill those without the mark. Those marked are spared. The marking and the slaughter are not separated by centuries. They are sequential moves within the same prophetic event: the judgment on Jerusalem that came to historical fulfillment in 586 BC, only a few years after Ezekiel’s vision. The marking does not have to be globally completed before the judgment can begin to fall. It has to identify, in the moment, those who will be spared.

Revelation 9:4 describes exactly this. The locusts attack only those without the seal. The text is specifying who is affected, not when the trumpet is allowed to begin sounding. Whenever the trumpet falls, whether seventh century or twenty-first, the principle applies: the sealed are not the target of the judgment.

The seal does not promise physical immunity. Hebrews 11 catalogs faithful who “escaped the edge of the sword” alongside faithful who were “stoned… sawn in two… slain with the sword” (Heb. 11:34, 37).55 Both bore the seal. Both are commended. The seal marks ownership: the Lord knows those who are His (2 Tim. 2:19) and will keep them for the day of redemption (Eph. 4:30). It also directs God’s judgments: the destroyers of Ezekiel 9 are told, “do not come near anyone on whom is the mark.” That instruction governs the judgment, not every event of history.

As Section 2 has already shown, the historical record itself confirms this is how Revelation 9:4 was actually fulfilled. Abubeker’s command of 632 AD instructed the Saracens not to harm the trees, not to harm the sincere religious recluses, but to attack only the apostate state-church Christianity that had marked itself with idolatry and image-veneration.56 The Saracen conquest in fact treated the Eastern Christian groups that had retained more biblical practice, including the Nestorians, the Syriac-speaking churches, and the Sabbath-keeping communities of the East, with comparative leniency. These groups often became the doctors and scholars of the early caliphate.57 The corrupted state-church of Constantinople and Rome bore the brunt of the discipline. That matches the pattern Revelation 9:4 specifies. It matches the pattern Ezekiel 9 establishes. And it happened in real history, in the seventh century, demonstrating that the seal of God was operative, and protective, long before the final generation.

Time Prophecies Demand Historicist Reading

Revelation 9 is unique among the trumpets in containing two specific, calculable time periods: the 150 days/years (vv. 5, 10) and the 391 years and 15 days (v. 15). No other trumpet has this. That alone tells us something. John is signaling that this section, more than any other, is to be read against the historical calendar.

If the time prophecies are merely literary devices, why are they so specific? The day-year ratio John expects us to use is established in Numbers 14:34 (forty days of spying = forty years of wandering) and Ezekiel 4:6 (“I have laid on you a day for each year”).58 This is the same ratio that makes Daniel 9’s seventy weeks come out to the time of Christ.59 Drop the day-year ratio in Revelation 9 and you imperil the day-year ratio in Daniel 9.

The Paulien-Stefanovic reading does not seriously interpret the time prophecies. It treats them as a difficulty to be acknowledged and bypassed. Angel Manuel Rodriguez, formerly the director of the Biblical Research Institute, identified this concern in his 2012 Ministry article: “Probably the most significant challenge that this view confronts is to provide a valid interpretation to the time elements mentioned in the two trumpets.”60 He never answered the challenge. He only observed that it existed.

The Pattern Is Judgment on Apostate Christianity

The trumpet prophecies follow a consistent pattern. They are judgments on the section of Christendom that had become apostate.

  • The first four trumpets describe the barbarian invasions that brought down Western Rome, which had become the apostate Roman Catholic Christianity that the Reformation would identify as Babylon.
  • The fifth and sixth trumpets describe the rise of Islam, which devastated Eastern Rome, which had become apostate Greek Orthodox Christianity, sunk in image-veneration.
  • The seventh trumpet announces the consummation.

This pattern matches Old Testament prophetic precedent exactly. Babylon was God’s instrument against apostate Judah; Jeremiah 25:9 calls Nebuchadnezzar God’s “servant.”61 Assyria was God’s instrument against apostate Israel; Isaiah 10:5 calls Assyria “the rod of My anger.”62 God using a pagan power to discipline an apostate covenant people is the standard prophetic shape, not an invention of Revelation 9. The dynamic is consistent across these precedents. When God brings the foreign power against the apostate community, the truly faithful within that community are not destroyed alongside the apostates. They are identified, sealed, and preserved: Jeremiah in Jerusalem, Daniel in Babylon, the marked in Ezekiel 9, the sincere religious recluses spared by Abubeker.

The Ishmael Connection

The fifth trumpet’s locusts come from “the bottomless pit” (Rev. 9:1–2), the abyssos; and Joel 1–2 supplies the imagery of locust armies arising from the desert.63 The Saracens (Arab Muslims) came from exactly that direction: the Arabian desert.

Genesis 16:11–12 prophesies of Ishmael: “He shall be a wild man; his hand shall be against every man, and every man’s hand against him; and he shall dwell in the presence of all his brethren.”64 Mohammed traced his descent through Ishmael; the Quraysh tribe of which he was a member traced their lineage through Ishmael.65

The fifth trumpet’s locusts have “faces as the faces of men” but “hair as the hair of women” (Rev. 9:7–8), a description that fits the bearded Arab cavalry with long flowing hair, in contrast to clean-shaven Roman soldiers. They come from the desert. Their leader is named “Destroyer” (Abaddon/Apollyon, Rev. 9:11). The identification fits the historical record at every point.66 Stefanovic’s reading of the fifth trumpet as “the spiritual condition in the secular world” cannot account for any of these specific textual features.

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Section 4The Modern Pushback

Six serious objections from Paulien, Stefanovic, LaRondelle, Mueller, and Pfandl.

The strongest forms of the modern objection come from Jon Paulien, Ranko Stefanovic, Hans LaRondelle, Ekkehardt Mueller, and (more cautiously) Gerhard Pfandl.67 Their argument has these moving parts:

  1. Recapitulation challenge: The seven trumpets recapitulate the seven seals, which recapitulate the seven churches. So the trumpets cover the whole Christian era, not isolated periods.68
  2. The fifth seal connection: The trumpets answer the cry of the martyrs in the fifth seal (Rev. 6:9–11), so they are about the experience of God’s people, not about geopolitics.69
  3. OT temple imagery: The trumpets sounded at the close of the daily temple service, so they are liturgical, not military.70
  4. Date weaknesses: The 1299, 1449, and 1840 dates each have historical complications.71
  5. Ellen White is not authoritative for exegesis: Her statement in Great Controversy 334–335 is historical reportage of what the Millerites believed, not endorsement of their exegesis.72
  6. The sealing requirement: Revelation 9:4 specifies that the trumpet falls only on those without the seal of God. Adventist eschatology ties the seal to the end-time sealing message and the 144,000. Therefore the fifth and sixth trumpets must be future, awaiting the completion of the eschatological sealing.73
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Section 5What the Critics Are Missing

Seven points where the new view does not survive contact with the data.

Missing #1They Mistake Recapitulation for Re-coverage

It is true that the trumpets recapitulate the seals, broadly speaking. But recapitulation in Revelation does not mean “covers the same span.” It means “presents the same span from a different angle.” The seals view history from the church’s experience. The trumpets view the same history from the angle of God’s providential judgments on persecuting powers. The bowls view it from the angle of final wrath.74

That different angle is the entire point. The Paulien move collapses the angles. If trumpets must be “about the church’s experience” because they answer the fifth seal, then trumpets and seals are the same thing, and recapitulation has done nothing.

The historicist reading preserves both the recapitulation (same historical span) and the distinct angle (judgments on persecuting powers). On the new view, the angle collapses into spiritualized church-experience.

Missing #2They Treat the Time Prophecies as Decorative

Revelation 9 contains the only specific, calculable time periods in the fifth and sixth trumpets. On the new view, these periods do no work. That is a tell. When an interpretation can run the same regardless of whether the text contains a time prophecy or not, the interpretation is not actually engaging the text.

The historicist reading uses the time prophecies to ground the identification. Idealist readings cannot. Whose hands are full of the actual textual data?

Missing #3They Confuse the Critic’s Burden

The pushback often runs: “Litch’s date does not perfectly match, therefore the historicist view is wrong.” But that is not how the burden works. The historicist view does not claim Litch was infallible. It claims the prophecy pointed to events around 1840 that were significant for the loss of Ottoman sovereignty. That claim is met whether the precise day is August 11 or August 19.

To overturn the historicist view, the critic would need to show one of two things: (1) that the events of 1840 were not historically significant for Ottoman independence, or (2) that the time prophecies of Revelation 9 are not real time prophecies. Neither has been shown. The critics have shown only that some details are softer than Smith made them sound, which the historicist tradition has always allowed.

Missing #4They Underread Ellen White

Paulien’s claim that Great Controversy 334–335 is “historical reporting, not theological endorsement”75 cannot survive the actual text:

“In the year 1840 another remarkable fulfillment of prophecy excited widespread interest. Two years before, Josiah Litch, one of the leading ministers preaching the second advent, published an exposition of Revelation 9, predicting the fall of the Ottoman empire… At the very time specified, Turkey, through her ambassadors, accepted the protection of the allied powers of Europe, and thus placed herself under the control of Christian nations. The event exactly fulfilled the prediction.”76

— Ellen G. White, The Great Controversy (1911), pp. 334–335

The language is theological, not merely historical.

First, the words “remarkable fulfillment of prophecy.” A historian recording Litch’s prediction would write “Litch’s prediction came to pass.” Ellen White writes “fulfillment of prophecy,” locating the event in the category of divinely confirmed Scripture, not human guesswork.

Second, the words “exactly fulfilled the prediction.” This is the language of vindication, not detached observation.

Third, the immediate sequel: “When it became known, multitudes were convinced of the correctness of the principles of prophetic interpretation adopted by Miller and his associates, and a wonderful impetus was given to the advent movement.”77 This is endorsement of the method, not just the event. The Paulien reading requires that Ellen White’s published, edited, deliberately retained words mean something other than what they say. That is a high cost.

Missing #5They Treat Idealism as Historicism

The most serious problem with the Paulien-Stefanovic-Mueller view is that it does not operate as historicism. It operates as idealism dressed in historicist vocabulary.

True historicism reads apocalyptic prophecy as covering the actual span of history from the prophet to the second advent, fulfilled in identifiable events involving identifiable powers. It demands referents.

On the new view, the fifth trumpet stands for secularism since the eighteenth century. Such a reading has no specific referents. When does it begin? The French Revolution? Voltaire? Spinoza? When does it end? The trumpet does not end. What specific event corresponds to the locusts’ five months? Nothing in particular.

Historicism was developed to resist exactly this kind of fuzzy correspondence. Reading the fifth trumpet as the rise of the Saracens (with the 150 years running 1299–1449) gives you a beginning, middle, and end. The new reading gives you “the spiritual condition of the secular world,” which has no testable reference at all.

Rodriguez raised this concern: “the question is whether this interpretation remains compatible with the historicist approach… The apparent problem is that this view identifies the powers described in the fifth and sixth trumpets with philosophical and spiritual movements rather than with particular empires or nations.”78 He was being diplomatic. The substance of his concern is decisive.

Missing #6They Misread the Sealing Specification

The sealing argument runs as follows: the fifth and sixth trumpets must be future because they fall only on those without the seal of God, and the seal is given at the end. Of all the futurist objections, this one runs cleanest. The actual data also defeats it most decisively.

The argument fails at three points, each independently sufficient.

First, the seal of God is a Pauline category for every believer in every age. As Section 3 has documented, Paul tells first-century Christians that they “were sealed” the moment they believed (Eph. 1:13), that they should not grieve the Spirit “by whom you were sealed” (Eph. 4:30), that God “has also sealed us” (2 Cor. 1:22), and that “the Lord knows those who are His” is the “seal” of the foundation of God (2 Tim. 2:19). The end-time sealing of the 144,000 is the climactic generation of a much larger sealed company stretching back through history. Revelation 7:9 makes this explicit: immediately after the 144,000 are sealed, John sees “a great multitude which no one could number, of all nations, tribes, peoples, and tongues, standing before the throne.” That great multitude is the saved of all ages, already sealed, already God’s. The seal does not appear for the first time in the last generation.

Second, the marking-then-judgment pattern of Ezekiel 9 happens within a single historical moment, not across millennia. The man with the writer’s inkhorn marks the foreheads of the faithful in 593 BC. The destruction of Jerusalem follows in 586 BC. Marking and judgment belong to the same redemptive event, separated by years rather than centuries. The grammar of Revelation 9:4 follows the same pattern. The text specifies who is the target of the judgment (the unsealed) and who is not (the sealed). It does not specify a delay until the sealing is universally completed. Whenever the trumpet falls, in whatever century, the principle holds: the unsealed are the target of the judgment, the sealed are not.

Third, the historical record positively confirms how the fifth trumpet was fulfilled. The futurist reading requires that no historical fulfillment matched Revelation 9:4’s specification. Section 2 has already established that the historical fulfillment matched the specification with extraordinary precision. Abubeker, the first caliph after Mohammed, dispatched his armies in 632 AD with a circular command preserved by Gibbon. The command was written six centuries after the Apocalypse and thirteen centuries before the Adventist movement. It instructed the Saracens to spare the trees, to spare the sincere religious recluses, and to attack only the apostate state-church. The prophecy specifies what would be spared. The caliph specifies the same thing in language that closely tracks the prophecy. Alexander Keith’s observation stands: it is “as if the caliph himself had been acting in known as well as direct obedience to a higher mandate than that of mortal man — and in the very act of going forth to fight against the religion of Jesus, and to propagate Mahommedanism in its stead, he repeated the words which it was foretold in the Revelation of Jesus Christ that he would say.”79

The futurist must claim that this seventh-century fulfillment was a coincidence. The historicist claims it was the fulfillment. One of these positions accounts for the data. The other does not.

Missing #7They Don’t Reckon With the Pedigree

The Saracen-and-Turk reading of the fifth and sixth trumpets is not the position of one denomination’s nineteenth-century evangelist. Napier, Mede, Pareus, Daubuz, Newton, Bishop Newton, Barnes, Elliott, Keith, and the entire mainstream Reformation Protestant historicist tradition held it before any Adventist did. Sir Isaac Newton, who spent more pages on Daniel and Revelation than on the Principia,80 not only held this view but produced a hand-drawn map of the four sultanates.81

When a new generation proposes that the previous three centuries got it wrong, and that the right reading is “secularism,” the burden falls on that new generation to overturn a cumulus of exegesis built by some of the most careful readers Christianity has produced. Saying that Newton, Mede, Barnes, and the Adventist pioneers all missed it, and that the right reading is the very modern one that empties the text of historical referents, is a sweeping claim. The new view has not produced enough to support it.

§

Section 6The Synthesis

Read together: rise of Islam, Ottoman supremacy, end of Eastern Christian sovereignty.

The fifth trumpet describes the rise of Islam under the Saracens. The locust imagery comes from Joel; the desert origin matches Arabia; the descent through Ishmael matches Genesis 16; the “five months” of torment maps onto the 150 years from 1299 to 1449 during which the Turks harassed but did not extinguish the Greek empire. The most distinctive feature of the prophecy is its specification that the locusts would spare the trees and the sealed of God. That feature was historically fulfilled at the moment Abubeker launched the Saracen conquest in 632, with a recorded command that closely tracks Revelation 9:4.

The sixth trumpet describes the Ottoman Empire’s emergence and dominance. The four angels bound at the Euphrates correspond to four principal Sultanates. Newton named them Iconium, Damascus, Mosul, and Miapharekin; Smith named them Aleppo, Iconium, Damascus, and Baghdad. The variation reflects different historical reconstructions of the same underlying insight: the Ottoman power consolidated four prior centers along the Euphrates.82 The 391 years and 15 days ran from the loss of Byzantine sovereignty in 1449 to the loss of Ottoman sovereignty on August 11, 1840, when the Sultan’s ambassador, carrying terms set by Christian powers, arrived in Alexandria with the ultimatum that placed the Ottoman state under European protection.

The first four trumpets executed judgment on apostate Western Christianity. The fifth and sixth executed judgment on apostate Eastern Christianity. The seventh announces the consummation. Throughout these centuries of judgment, the principle of Revelation 9:4 (and of Ezekiel 9 before it) held: those marked of God were spared, and those unmarked were tormented.

What scholars miss is not a fact but a framework. They have taken a martial metaphor and spiritualized it. They have taken time prophecies the text plainly contains and treated them as decorative. They have read Ellen White’s published endorsement as casual reportage. They have replaced three centuries of Protestant exegesis with twentieth-century idealism wearing a historicist label. Smith sometimes overtidied his details. Litch tied himself too tightly to August 11. The framework absorbs those corrections. Wholesale replacement by its opposite is the one thing it cannot absorb.

§

Section 7What Follows

Implications for prophecy, the seal of God, the Adventist movement, and Christian mission to the Muslim world.

If the fifth and sixth trumpets are the rise of Ishmael and the fall of Constantinople fulfilled on a specific date in 1840, then several things follow for the church right now.

First, prophecy works. Not as a vague background mood about good and evil, but as actual, calculable, testable prediction. Litch named a date two years out. The date came. Six centuries earlier, Abubeker dispatched an army with instructions that matched the words of Revelation 9:4. These are the kinds of things that, if true, anchor the conscience to Scripture in a way nothing else can.

Second, the Adventist movement was raised up at a moment of confirmed prophetic fulfillment. The 1840 event was not a coincidence the Millerites stumbled into. It was the climax of a calculation made from Scripture. When that calculation came true, it gave the movement confidence to proceed to 1844 and to receive what 1844 actually meant. Take away 1840, and the foundation of confidence under 1844 weakens, which may be exactly why some are eager to take 1840 away.

Third, historicism, properly understood, is not a relic but the method that produces this kind of result. The pioneers were not unsophisticated. They were doing what Newton and Mede and Barnes had done, and they were doing it well.

Fourth, the seal of God on the foreheads of His people is not an end-time novelty but a continuous protection: the same seal that marked those who sighed and cried over Jerusalem’s abominations in Ezekiel’s day, the same seal Paul says first-century Ephesians already carried, the same mark Abubeker’s Saracens were directed to honor. Every generation of God’s faithful has worn it. The 144,000 will be the last generation to be sealed before the final winds blow, but the company they join is the great multitude that no one can number, drawn out of every age. Adventist preaching about the seal of God does not announce something brand new. It announces the fulfillment of what Ezekiel saw, what Paul knew, and what Abubeker’s command was made to confirm almost in spite of itself.

Fifth, the rise of Islam, on this reading, is not a matter for fear or for crusader politics but a matter for understanding. Islam was God’s discipline on a Christianity that had become idolatrous, and in His providence Islam is also a field of mission. Adventists who grasp Revelation 9 should be among the gentlest Christians toward the Muslim world, the most informed about Islamic history, and the readiest to share the gospel.

The same prophecy that names Islam as God’s instrument of judgment names a King over the bottomless pit, the Destroyer, who is not Mohammed and not the Sultan but Satan himself, working through history.83 The conflict has never been between Christianity and Islam. It has been between Christ and Satan, with both Christianity and Islam standing under judgment for what each has done with the light God has given.

That framework holds. The scholars who think they have replaced it have not.

Footnotes

Sources verified against primary texts where possible. Click the ↩ arrow at the end of any footnote to return to its citation in the body.

  1. 1 Beatus of Liébana, Commentaria in Apocalypsin, written c. 776 and revised in 784 and 786. Twenty-nine illustrated manuscripts of his commentary survive from the 9th–13th centuries. See John Williams, The Illustrated Beatus, 5 vols. (London: Harvey Miller, 1994–2003); UNESCO Memory of the World, “The Manuscripts of the Commentary to the Apocalypse (Beatus of Liébana) in the Iberian Tradition.” Beatus’s interpretation reads the Beast as the Muslim Caliphate (Córdoba replacing Rome) — the earliest documented Christian application of Apocalyptic imagery to Islamic invasion.
  2. 2 For the broader historicist tradition treating Beatus as the starting point of the application, see Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary, vol. 7 (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1957), p. 791. Beatus’s specific identification of locusts with Saracens is more general than Smith’s; precise trumpet identifications come later in the tradition.
  3. 3 John Napier, A Plaine Discovery of the Whole Revelation of Saint John (Edinburgh: Robert Waldegrave, 1593), Propositions 3 and 4. Napier identified Mohammed as the fallen star of Rev. 9:1.
  4. 4 Joseph Mede, Clavis Apocalyptica (Cambridge, 1627; English translation The Key of the Revelation, London, 1643). Mede’s 396-year period (365+30+1) ran from the taking of Baghdad (c. 1057) to the fall of Constantinople (1453). David Pareus, In Divinam Apocalypsin S. Apostoli et Evangelistae Johannis Commentarius (1618; English translation A Commentary Upon the Divine Revelation, Amsterdam, 1644).
  5. 5 Charles Daubuz, A Perpetual Commentary on the Revelation of St. John (London, 1720), p. 508, quoted in E. B. Elliott, Horae Apocalypticae, 5th ed. (London: Seeley, 1862), vol. 1, ch. 7. The exact Daubuz formulation: “From their first appearance the Ottomans have affected to wear warlike apparel of scarlet, blue, and yellow: a descriptive trait the more marked from its contrast to the military appearance of Greeks, Franks, or Saracens contemporarily.”
  6. 6 Sir Isaac Newton, Observations Upon the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse of St. John (London: J. Darby and T. Browne, 1733), published posthumously six years after Newton’s death. Newton’s hand-drawn map of the fifth and sixth trumpets, dating to 1670/1680, identifying the four sultanates as Iconium, Damascus, Mosul, and Miapharekin, is preserved at the National Library of Israel and is reproduced in the National Library’s online exhibit, “The Inner Workings of the Mind of Isaac Newton” (Google Arts & Culture). Newton’s calculation of 390 years from Alp Arslan’s first conquest on the Euphrates (AD 1063) to the fall of Constantinople (1453) differs from Litch’s calculation but operates within the same framework.
  7. 7 Thomas Newton, Dissertations on the Prophecies, Which Have Remarkably Been Fulfilled, and at This Time Are Fulfilling in the World, 3 vols. (London, 1754), Dissertation XXV.
  8. 8 Albert Barnes, Notes, Explanatory and Practical, on the Book of Revelation (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1851), p. 254.
  9. 9 E. B. Elliott, Horae Apocalypticae; or, A Commentary on the Apocalypse, Critical and Historical, 4 vols. (London: Seeley, 1844; 5th ed. 1862). Charles Spurgeon called Elliott’s work “the standard” historicist commentary in his Comments on the Commentaries. Volume 1 of Horae Apocalypticae defends the Saracen-Turk reading at length; Volume 4 contains “History of Apocalyptic Interpretation,” surveying every major commentator from John to the 1860s.
  10. 10 Alexander Keith, The Signs of the Times, as Denoted by the Fulfillment of Historical Predictions (Edinburgh, 1832; expanded 1840). Uriah Smith’s Daniel and the Revelation quotes Keith extensively page after page in its exposition of the trumpets.
  11. 11 John Wesley, Explanatory Notes Upon the New Testament, on Revelation 9, following Johann Albrecht Bengel’s Gnomon Novi Testamenti (1742). Wesley identifies the fifth-trumpet locusts as Persians, with the Saracens at the sixth trumpet — a Bengelian rather than Mede-Newtonian scheme. Available in standard editions of Wesley’s works.
  12. 12 Luther, Foxe, Calvin, and Edwards consistently identified the Papacy as Antichrist (a position well-attested in their primary writings); their specific identification of the fifth and sixth trumpets is harder to document directly. The list of historicist worthies given in some Adventist sources (e.g., Maxwell, God Cares, vol. 2) is partly based on E. B. Elliott’s Horae Apocalypticae vol. 4 survey but should be checked individually before being claimed strongly.
  13. 13 Revelation 9:5, NKJV: “And they were not given authority to kill them, but to torment them for five months. Their torment was like the torment of a scorpion when it strikes a man.”
  14. 14 Numbers 14:34, NKJV: “According to the number of the days in which you spied out the land, forty days, for each day you shall bear your guilt one year, namely forty years, and you shall know My rejection.” Ezekiel 4:6, NKJV: “I have laid on you a day for each year.”
  15. 15 Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol. 7, ch. 64 (London, 1788). Quoted in Uriah Smith, Daniel and the Revelation (Nashville: Southern Publishing, 1944 ed.), pp. 506–507.
  16. 16 Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall, Geschichte des osmanischen Reiches, 10 vols. (Pest, 1827–1835), vol. 1, p. 68. For modern scholarship favoring 1302 (the Battle of Bapheus on July 27, 1302) as the more secure starting date, see Halil İnalcık, The Ottoman Empire: The Classical Age 1300–1600 (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973).
  17. 17 Georgius Pachymeres, De Andronico Palaeologo, Book IV, in Corpus Scriptorum Historiae Byzantinae (Bonn ed., 1835), vol. 2. Petrus Possinus, Observationum Pachymerianarum (Rome, 1668). Pachymeres (1242–1310) was a contemporary of Othman and a state and church official in Constantinople. The chronological synchronisms are summarized in T. M. French, “Gibbon’s July 27, 1299, Date Sustained,” Ministry (February 1933).
  18. 18 T. M. French, “A Landmark of History,” Ministry (June 1944), reviewing the Millerite handling of Von Hammer’s criticism.
  19. 19 Smith, Daniel and the Revelation, p. 510: “In the year 1449, John Palaeologus, the Greek emperor, died, but left no children to inherit his throne, and Constantine, his brother, succeeded to it. But he would not venture to ascend the throne without the consent of Amurath, the Turkish sultan. He therefore sent ambassadors to ask his consent, and obtained it before he presumed to call himself sovereign.” For modern confirmation of Murad II’s authorization of Constantine XI’s accession, see John W. Barker, Manuel II Palaeologus (1391–1425): A Study in Late Byzantine Statesmanship (New Brunswick: Rutgers, 1969), and Donald M. Nicol, The Last Centuries of Byzantium 1261–1453, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), pp. 369–70.
  20. 20 Revelation 9:5, NKJV (cited above). The contrast between “torment but not kill” in the fifth trumpet and “slay the third part of men” in the sixth (v. 15) is structurally significant in the historicist reading.
  21. 21 Revelation 9:4, NKJV.
  22. 22 Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol. 5, ch. 51, par. 10 (London, 1788). Reproduced in Smith, Daniel and the Revelation, p. 502, and in Alexander Keith, Signs of the Times, vol. 1 (1832), p. 271.
  23. 23 Alexander Keith, Signs of the Times, as Denoted by the Fulfillment of Historical Predictions, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1832), p. 272. Quoted in Uriah Smith, Daniel and the Revelation, p. 502, and reproduced in numerous nineteenth-century historicist works.
  24. 24 Revelation 9:15, NKJV.
  25. 25 Josiah Litch, The Probability of the Second Coming of Christ About A.D. 1843 (Boston: David H. Ela, 1838). The original 1838 calculation predicted the fall of the Ottoman Empire in August 1840 without yet specifying August 11.
  26. 26 Josiah Litch, “Fall of the Ottoman Power in Constantinople,” Signs of the Times, and Expositor of Prophecy (Boston), August 1, 1840. The full text of this article is preserved in the Adventist Heritage archive and reproduced in several modern treatments. Litch’s caveat in the same article: “But still there is no positive evidence that the first period was exactly to a day, fulfilled; nor yet that the second period began to a day, where the first closed.”
  27. 27 The misspelling “Deacozes” for “Dragases” (Constantine XI Palaeologus’s second name) was perpetuated through Litch’s source — likely a Latin rendering of the Greek Δραγασησ — and reproduced in Smith’s Daniel and the Revelation and Ellen White’s Great Controversy quotation of Litch.
  28. 28 Battle of Nezib (Nizip), June 24, 1839. See William Lewis Cleveland, A History of the Modern Middle East, 5th ed. (Boulder: Westview, 2013), pp. 80–82.
  29. 29 Convention for the Pacification of the Levant, signed at London, July 15, 1840, between the United Kingdom, Austria, Prussia, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire. Full text in U.S. Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States 1879, document 518, pp. 1019ff. See also “Convention of London (1840),” Encyclopaedia Britannica; M. S. Anderson, The Eastern Question 1774–1923 (London: Macmillan, 1966), ch. 4.
  30. 30 U.S. State Department, Foreign Relations of the United States 1879, document 518, p. 1022, note: “After the convention of the 15th July, the Sublime Porte sent Rifaat Bey to Alexandria, who, with the consuls of England, Russia, Austria, and Prussia, presented himself to M. Ali, to propose to him the hereditary rule of Egypt and the Acre Pashalic.” The dispatch of August 5 from Constantinople is documented in contemporary correspondence reproduced in Great Nations of To-day (a 19th-century compilation).
  31. 31 London Morning Chronicle, September 18, 1840, quoting a correspondent in Constantinople dated August 27, 1840. Reproduced in Great Nations of To-day (Battle Creek: Review and Herald, 1908; later cited in EGW writings index), pp. 79–81.
  32. 32 U.S. State Department, Foreign Relations of the United States 1879, doc. 518: “a communication to him in writing to this effect was made on the 19th of August, 1840. On the 28th August M. Ali rejected the conditions proposed to him.” Mehemet Ali formally accepted the convention on November 27, 1840, after the bombardment of Beirut (September 11) and the fall of Acre (November 3).
  33. 33 The “Sick Man of Europe” attribution to Tsar Nicholas I dates to 1853, in conversations with Sir George Hamilton Seymour. See Harold Temperley, England and the Near East: The Crimea (London: Longmans, 1936), pp. 272ff.
  34. 34 Orlando Figes, The Crimean War: A History (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2010).
  35. 35 Treaty of Sèvres (August 10, 1920) and Treaty of Lausanne (July 24, 1923). See Margaret MacMillan, Paris 1919: Six Months That Changed the World (New York: Random House, 2002).
  36. 36 Reverend O. E. Daggett’s and James Hazen’s contemporary objections are summarized in critical Adventist analyses such as those archived at nonegw.org and at Andrews University, “the History of the Adventist Interpretation of Revelation 9” (MA thesis, accessible at digitalcommons.andrews.edu).
  37. 37 Litch’s evolving statements appear in Signs of the Times, especially “The Eleventh of August, 1840. Fall of the Ottoman Empire,” Signs of the Times, February 1, 1841, p. 161 (six months after the predicted date).
  38. 38 Litch’s later trajectory is documented in Daniel David Royo, “Josiah Litch: His Life, Work, and Use of His Writings, on Selected Topics, by Seventh-day Adventist Writers” (MA thesis, Andrews University, 2008), available at digitalcommons.andrews.edu/theses/51, and in Jerry Moon, “Josiah Litch,” in Ellen G. White Encyclopedia, ed. Denis Fortin and Jerry Moon (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2014). After the Great Disappointment of October 22, 1844, Litch attended the Albany Conference of 1845 (the gathering of Millerites opposed to the shut-door doctrine), aligned with the Evangelical Adventists, served as president of the American Millennial Association, and founded his own organization, the Messianians, with branches in Pennsylvania and Canada. He never joined the Seventh-day Adventist movement that crystallized in the late 1840s. His 1873 abandonment of the day-year application of Rev. 9:15 in favor of a single-day reading is documented in his late writings. By 1877 he had described himself to Dudley M. Canright as a futurist rather than a historicist; he attended the Niagara/Holy Trinity Prophetic Conference (October 30 – November 1, 1878) in New York City, a foundational gathering of American dispensational premillennialism. Litch died on January 31, 1886.
  39. 39 W.W. Prescott (1855–1944) served as president of Battle Creek College, Walla Walla College, and Avondale College, and as editor of the Review and Herald (1909–1915). In April 1910, in connection with the planned re-typesetting of The Great Controversy under W.C. White’s coordination, Prescott submitted approximately 105 suggested corrections, of which slightly more than half were accepted. His specific criticism of p. 334 was that Litch had not named “August 11” until very close to the event, and not in the original 1838 publication. The 1888 wording “specifying not only the year but the very day on which this would take place” was modified accordingly in 1911. Prescott’s broader objections to the framework of the passage were not accepted; the core endorsement language was retained. The full record of Prescott’s suggestions and the editorial responses is preserved in the White Estate document “W. W. Prescott and the 1911 Edition of The Great Controversy,” available at whiteestate.org. The White Estate’s summary states: “the Prescott suggestions which would have resulted in sweeping changes in the book were, after careful consideration, rejected outright.”
  40. 40 Ellen G. White, The Great Controversy (1911 ed.), p. 335. The phrasing in Ellen White (“accepted the protection of the allied powers of Europe… placed herself under the control of Christian nations”) is precise to the actual diplomatic situation created by the July 15 Convention and the August dispatch of Rifaat Bey.
  41. 41 Ranko Stefanovic, Revelation of Jesus Christ: Commentary on the Book of Revelation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 2002; 2nd ed. 2009), p. 308. Quoted also in the Sabbath School Quarterly (First Quarter 2019) and in Ángel M. Rodríguez, “Issues in the Interpretation of the Seven Trumpets of Revelation,” Ministry (January 2012).
  42. 42 Jon Paulien, “Interpreting the Seven Trumpets” (paper prepared for the Daniel and Revelation Committee of the General Conference, 1986), pp. 6–7. Paulien’s published version is Decoding Revelation’s Trumpets: Literary Allusions and Interpretations of Revelation 8:7-12, Andrews University Seminary Doctoral Dissertation Series, vol. 11 (Berrien Springs: Andrews University Press, 1988).
  43. 43 Numbers 10:9, NKJV.
  44. 44 Joshua 6:1–20.
  45. 45 Judges 7:15–22.
  46. 46 2 Chronicles 13:12–15, NKJV: “Now look, God Himself is with us as our head, and His priests with sounding trumpets to sound the alarm against you.”
  47. 47 Joel 2:1, NKJV: “Blow the trumpet in Zion, and sound an alarm in My holy mountain! Let all the inhabitants of the land tremble; for the day of the LORD is coming, for it is at hand.”
  48. 48 Alberto R. Treiyer, recounting Daniel and Revelation Committee (DARCOM) discussions, cites Gerhard F. Hasel as having said in response to Paulien’s proposal: “the trumpets are armies, not philosophies.” The attribution appears in Treiyer’s online responses to the trumpet debate at great-controversy-movie.com. As an oral citation rather than a published Hasel work, this should be treated as Treiyer’s recollection of committee discussion. The substance of Hasel’s published work on Revelation supports this position; see Gerhard F. Hasel, Understanding the Living Word of God (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1980).
  49. 49 Ephesians 1:13, NKJV: “In Him you also trusted, after you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation; in whom also, having believed, you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise.”
  50. 50 Ephesians 4:30, NKJV: “And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption.”
  51. 51 2 Corinthians 1:21–22, NKJV: “Now He who establishes us with you in Christ and has anointed us is God, who also has sealed us and given us the Spirit in our hearts as a guarantee.”
  52. 52 2 Timothy 2:19, NKJV: “Nevertheless the solid foundation of God stands, having this seal: ‘The Lord knows those who are His,’ and, ‘Let everyone who names the name of Christ depart from iniquity.'” Paul is quoting Numbers 16:5, where Moses uses the same formula in the context of identifying the true Levites against Korah’s rebellion. The seal-as-divine-ownership pattern is established in the Old Testament.
  53. 53 Ezekiel 9:4, NKJV.
  54. 54 Ezekiel 9:5–6, NKJV. The vision is dated by Ezekiel 8:1 to “the sixth year, in the sixth month, on the fifth day of the month” of the exile of Jehoiachin — i.e., approximately September 592 BC. Jerusalem fell to Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BC, six years later. The marking-and-judgment sequence of the vision is therefore historically realized within the same generation as the seer who saw it.
  55. 55 Hebrews 11:34, 37, NKJV: “escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong”; “They were stoned, they were sawn in two, were tempted, were slain with the sword.” The catalog of the faithful in Hebrews 11 includes both those who were preserved physically through trial and those who were martyred. Both groups are commended as “all having obtained a good testimony through faith” (Heb. 11:39).
  56. 56 Gibbon, Decline and Fall, vol. 5, ch. 51, par. 10, cited above (n. 22). Keith’s commentary on the fit between the Abubeker command and Rev. 9:4 is in Signs of the Times, vol. 1, p. 272 (n. 23).
  57. 57 For the comparative leniency of early Islamic rule toward Eastern Christian groups (Nestorian, Syriac, Coptic) that had not aligned with Constantinople or Rome, see Sidney H. Griffith, The Church in the Shadow of the Mosque: Christians and Muslims in the World of Islam (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008); Philip Jenkins, The Lost History of Christianity: The Thousand-Year Golden Age of the Church in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia—and How It Died (New York: HarperOne, 2008). The Nestorian Christians in particular became prominent in the early Abbasid caliphate as physicians, scholars, and translators.
  58. 58 Numbers 14:34 and Ezekiel 4:6 (cited above, n. 14). For the standard SDA defense of the day-year principle, see William H. Shea, Selected Studies on Prophetic Interpretation, Daniel and Revelation Committee Series, vol. 1 (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1982), ch. 4.
  59. 59 Daniel 9:24–27. The 70 weeks (490 days) read as 490 years from the decree to restore Jerusalem (Artaxerxes’ decree, 457 BC) gives AD 27 for the appearance of Messiah and AD 31 for His being “cut off” — the keystone application of the day-year principle in historicist exegesis.
  60. 60 Ángel M. Rodríguez, “Issues in the Interpretation of the Seven Trumpets of Revelation,” Ministry (January 2012). Rodríguez was Director of the Biblical Research Institute, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.
  61. 61 Jeremiah 25:9, NKJV: “I will… take all the families of the north, says the LORD, and Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, My servant, and will bring them against this land.”
  62. 62 Isaiah 10:5, NKJV: “Woe to Assyria, the rod of My anger and the staff in whose hand is My indignation.”
  63. 63 Joel 1:6 and Joel 2:1–11. The locust imagery in Joel is itself prophetic of an invading army from the north/northeast.
  64. 64 Genesis 16:11–12, NKJV.
  65. 65 Mohammed’s traditional genealogy traces through Adnan, son of Ishmael, son of Abraham. Standard Islamic genealogy preserved in Ibn Ishaq’s Sirat Rasul Allah (8th century), translated as A. Guillaume, The Life of Muhammad (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1955). Christian and Jewish sources agree on the Ishmaelite descent of the Arab peoples.
  66. 66 Abaddon (Hebrew אַבַדּוֹן, “destruction”) appears in Job 26:6, Job 28:22, Job 31:12, Psalm 88:11, and Proverbs 15:11, 27:20. Apollyon (Greek Απολλυων, “destroyer”) is the Greek translation. Smith follows Mede, Newton, and Daubuz in seeing both names as descriptive of the destroying character of the power, not of literal Mohammed or Othman.
  67. 67 Hans K. LaRondelle, How to Understand the End-Time Prophecies of the Bible: The Biblical/Contextual Approach (Sarasota, FL: First Impressions, 1997). Ekkehardt Mueller, “Recapitulation in Revelation 4–11,” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society 9, no. 1 (1998): 260–277. Gerhard Pfandl, in various BRI publications, took a more cautious mediating position.
  68. 68 For the recapitulation argument, see Mueller, “Recapitulation in Revelation 4–11,” and Paulien, “Seals and Trumpets: Some Current Discussions,” in Symposium on Revelation—Book I, ed. Frank B. Holbrook (Silver Spring, MD: Biblical Research Institute, 1992), pp. 183–198.
  69. 69 Paulien, Decoding Revelation’s Trumpets, on the structural significance of Rev. 8:13 and its connection to the “those who live on the earth” of Rev. 6:9–11.
  70. 70 Stefanovic, Revelation of Jesus Christ, on the daily tamid service and its connection to the trumpet sequence.
  71. 71 For the most thorough scholarly compilation of these critiques, see Heidi Heiks, Satan’s Counterfeit Prophecy (Brushton, NY: TEACH Services, 2010), challenging the traditional dating of all three transition points.
  72. 72 Jon Paulien, “Ellen White and the Trumpets,” Ellen White and Bible Interpretation series (EWB 14), accessible at revelation-armageddon.com (January 2021).
  73. 73 The sealing argument as a basis for futurist or end-time-shifted readings of the trumpets appears in various forms across the independent Adventist literature, including the Davidian (Shepherd’s Rod) tradition initiated by Victor Houteff, and in certain end-time-focused independent ministries. A representative articulation is V. T. Houteff, The Shepherd’s Rod, vol. 2 (Waco: Universal Publishing, 1932). The argument is also raised, in milder form, in some commentary at threeangelsherald.org and similar sites. The structure is the same in each case: Rev. 9:4 specifies a sealed/unsealed distinction, the Adventist sealing message is end-time, therefore the trumpet must wait for that sealing.
  74. 74 For the historicist understanding of recapitulation as same-span/different-angle, see C. Mervyn Maxwell, God Cares, vol. 2 (Boise, ID: Pacific Press, 1985), pp. 35–37; William H. Shea, “The Parallel Literary Structure of Revelation 12 and 20,” Andrews University Seminary Studies 23, no. 1 (1985): 37–54.
  75. 75 Paulien, “Ellen White and the Trumpets” (EWB 14): “Since the comment is confined to a personal letter and is not intentionally included in her published works, she does not appear to be attaching any great significance to it… It is probably better to understand her account as a historical report and not a theological endorsement.”
  76. 76 Ellen G. White, The Great Controversy Between Christ and Satan (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1911), pp. 334–335. This passage was added in the 1888 edition (replacing the briefer 1884 treatment) and retained in the 1911 revision. Ellen White’s writings are public domain (released by the White Estate); citations follow standard Great Controversy page numbering.
  77. 77 White, Great Controversy, p. 335.
  78. 78 Rodríguez, “Issues in the Interpretation of the Seven Trumpets,” Ministry (January 2012).
  79. 79 Keith, Signs of the Times, vol. 1, p. 272 (full citation, n. 23).
  80. 80 Estimates of Newton’s prophetic writings vary from 1.3 to 4.4 million words. See Sarah Dry, The Newton Papers: The Strange and True Odyssey of Isaac Newton’s Manuscripts (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014). Frank E. Manuel, The Religion of Isaac Newton (Oxford: Clarendon, 1974), gives a detailed treatment of Newton’s prophetic interpretation.
  81. 81 National Library of Israel, Newton Manuscripts collection. Newton’s “Map of the Fifth and Sixth Trumpets” (c. 1670/1680) is reproduced in the National Library’s online exhibit “The Inner Workings of the Mind of Isaac Newton” (Google Arts & Culture). The four sultanates Newton identified are Iconium, Damascus, Mosul, and Miapharekin.
  82. 82 Smith, Daniel and the Revelation, p. 508: “These were the four principal sultans of which the Ottoman empire was composed, located in the country watered by the great river Euphrates. These sultans were situated at Aleppo, Iconium, Damascus, and Bagdad.” Compare Newton’s Iconium, Damascus, Mosul, Miapharekin (n. 6 above). Both lists identify four principal Islamic centers along or near the Euphrates that the Ottomans consolidated; the variation reflects differing periodizations of which sultanates were considered principal at the time of Ottoman ascendancy.
  83. 83 Revelation 9:11, NKJV: “And they had as king over them the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in Hebrew is Abaddon, but in Greek he has the name Apollyon.”

Bibliography

Primary Adventist Sources

Primary Historical Sources

Pre-Adventist Historicist Tradition

Modern Adventist Scholarship — Defending the Traditional View

Modern Adventist Scholarship — Challenging the Traditional View

Modern Historical Scholarship

Specialized Adventist Studies