They had tails with stingers like scorpionsThe imagery of scorpions is significant in biblical literature, often symbolizing danger and judgment. In the ancient Near East, scorpions were feared for their painful and sometimes deadly sting. This description emphasizes the torment and suffering inflicted by these creatures. The use of "tails with stingers" suggests a method of attack that is both unexpected and difficult to defend against, highlighting the relentless nature of the judgment being described. This imagery connects to the locusts in
Joel 1:4, where locusts are also used as instruments of divine judgment.
which had the power to injure people
The power to injure indicates a limited but significant authority granted to these creatures. This power is not to kill but to cause suffering, reflecting a period of intense trial and testing. The limitation on their power suggests divine control over the extent of the judgment, aligning with the theme of God's sovereignty throughout Revelation. This echoes the plagues in Egypt (Exodus 10:12-15), where God used natural phenomena to demonstrate His power and call for repentance.
for five months
The specific time frame of five months is noteworthy, as it corresponds to the typical lifespan of a locust from May to September in the Middle East. This period signifies a complete cycle of torment, yet it is temporary, indicating that the suffering has an end. The number five, often associated with grace in biblical numerology, may suggest that even in judgment, there is an opportunity for repentance and redemption. This time limitation is reminiscent of the restraint shown in other biblical judgments, such as the forty days of rain during the flood (Genesis 7:12) or the seventy years of Babylonian captivity (Jeremiah 25:11).
Persons / Places / Events
1.
The LocustsThese are symbolic creatures described in
Revelation 9, representing a form of divine judgment. They are not ordinary locusts but are given power to torment those who do not have the seal of God on their foreheads.
2.
The AbyssThe locusts emerge from the Abyss, a place often associated with the abode of demonic forces or the dead. It signifies a realm of chaos and evil.
3.
The Five MonthsThis specific time period during which the locusts have the power to torment is significant. It suggests a limited duration of suffering, indicating God's control over the judgment.
4.
The StingersThe tails with stingers like scorpions symbolize the painful and tormenting nature of the judgment. In the ancient world, scorpion stings were known for their intense pain.
5.
The UnsealedThose who are tormented are specifically those who do not have the seal of God, indicating a distinction between the faithful and the unfaithful.
Teaching Points
Understanding Divine JudgmentThe imagery of locusts with scorpion-like stingers highlights the severity and reality of divine judgment. It serves as a reminder of the consequences of sin and rebellion against God.
The Importance of God's SealThe distinction between those who are sealed by God and those who are not emphasizes the importance of belonging to God. It encourages believers to seek assurance of their faith and relationship with God.
God's Sovereignty Over TimeThe specified period of five months for the locusts' torment underscores God's control over time and events. It reassures believers that even in judgment, God’s purposes are precise and measured.
Spiritual Warfare AwarenessThe tormenting power of the locusts serves as a metaphor for spiritual attacks. Believers are called to be vigilant and equipped with the armor of God to withstand spiritual warfare.
Bible Study Questions and Answers
1.What is the meaning of Revelation 9:10?
2.How do the locusts' "tails like scorpions" symbolize spiritual warfare in our lives?
3.What does Revelation 9:10 teach about the nature of God's judgment?
4.How can we prepare spiritually for trials described in Revelation 9:10?
5.Connect Revelation 9:10 with other scriptures about God's protection during tribulation.
6.How does understanding Revelation 9:10 impact our daily walk with Christ?
7.What is the significance of the scorpions' tails in Revelation 9:10?
8.How do the five months in Revelation 9:10 relate to biblical prophecy?
9.Why are locusts described with scorpion-like tails in Revelation 9:10?
10.What are the top 10 Lessons from Revelation 9?
11.How can the 'locusts' with scorpion-like stings (Revelation 9:3-10) be taken literally given their bizarre hybrid descriptions?
12.Why would John be commanded to eat a scroll (Revelation 10:9), given no clear precedent in mainstream historical or cultural records?
13.Why would God allow such torment from these creatures for exactly five months (Revelation 9:5) without any mention of redemption?
14.Luke 10:19 - If authority over snakes and scorpions was literal, why isn't there consistent historical evidence of Christians demonstrating this without harm?What Does Revelation 9:10 Mean
They had tailsRevelation 9:10 opens with a startling picture: “They had tails….” The “they” are the demonic locusts released at the fifth trumpet (Revelation 9:1-4). Scripture presents them as literal beings—supernatural, yet real—tasked with judgment.
• Their tails set them apart from ordinary insects, underlining that this plague surpasses the natural swarms God used against Egypt (Exodus 10:14-15).
• John’s wording echoes Joel’s prophecy of a devastating, other-worldly army (Joel 2:4-6), reminding us that earlier revelations point to a future, climactic fulfillment.
• By granting these creatures a distinctive anatomy, God makes it clear that He, not human imagination, defines the terms of end-time events (Isaiah 46:9-10).
with stingers like scorpionsThe tails carry “stingers like scorpions.” Anyone who has felt a scorpion’s jab in desert lands knows its intense, burning pain (Luke 10:19).
• In Scripture, scorpions symbolize painful discipline (Deuteronomy 8:15;Ezekiel 2:6). Here they picture judgment so severe that people will “seek death and will not find it” (Revelation 9:6).
• The likeness (“like scorpions”) says these creatures are not figurative scorpions but employ a comparable method of torment—sharp, piercing, unforgettable.
• Jesus promised authority over “scorpions” to His followers (Luke 10:19). That protection reappears when the locusts are forbidden to harm those sealed by God (Revelation 9:4).
which had the power to injure peopleThe sting has “power to injure”—literally to torment without killing (Revelation 9:5).
• Judgment targets only the unrepentant, underscoring God’s precision (Revelation 9:4), much like the Passover distinction between Egypt and Israel (Exodus 11:7).
• Even in wrath God imposes limits; Satan could not touch Job beyond the boundaries God set (Job 1:12; 2:6). Here too the demonic are leashed, showing divine sovereignty.
• The injury serves a redemptive aim: driving people to repentance before the more severe trumpet and bowl judgments arrive (Revelation 9:20-21).
for five monthsThe torment lasts “five months,” roughly the natural life span of a locust from May to September in the Middle East.
• This time frame matches Noah’s floodwaters prevailing 150 days (Genesis 7:24), another season-long judgment demonstrating God’s control over days and seasons.
• Limiting the ordeal shows mercy amid wrath: God’s aim is correction, not annihilation (2 Peter 3:9).
• A defined period reassures believers that suffering—whether disciplinary or eschatological—has an endpoint fixed by God (Revelation 2:10).
summaryRevelation 9:10 portrays a literal demonic army whose tails carry scorpion-like stingers. God allows them to inflict agonizing, non-lethal torment on the unsealed for five months. The verse teaches that divine judgment is real, precise, limited in duration, and designed to call the rebellious to repentance while preserving those who belong to the Lord.
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And they had tails . . .--Better,
And they have tails like to scorpions, and stings, and in their tails is their power to hurt men five months. In this verse the secret of their power is mentioned: they have tails like scorpions' tails, and stings which wound and so cause agony to men. On the period of five months, see
Revelation 9:5. In the exposition of this passage it is utterly vain to look for features of the ordinary natural locust corresponding to the several particulars set forth by the sacred seer: this is admitted even by those who seem anxious to find such counterparts. "We must regard the comparison as rather belonging to the supernatural portion of our description." The rule is a good one. Like the description of the Divine Presence in Revelation 4, most of the visions of the book are incapable of pictorial realisation without incongruities which would be grotesque and profane; nor need we be surprised, since the principles and truths are the main points with the writer. This general rule must be kept in mind if we would avoid the danger of dwelling too much on the bearing of details. It is not in the locust that we shall find even the suggestive basis of the details in the description here. The smoke rises from the pit of the abyss; the heaven is darkened, and out of the smoke emerges the pitchy cloud of locusts. The seer then adds certain characteristics of this locust plague, partly drawn from the earlier prophets, but, as his custom is, with some original additions. They are locusts, but they have the malice of scorpions; they advance like horse-soldiers to battle; they wear crowns; they bear a resemblance to men; there is something womanlike also in their appearance, and in their voracity they are as lions. The exigencies of the symbolism are quite beyond the features of the ordinary locust: the sacred writer shows us a plague in which devastation, malice, kinglike authority, intelligence, seductiveness, fierceness, strength, meet together under one directing spirit, to torment men. Some parts may be purely graphic, as Alford says, but surely the vision shows us a great symbolical army multitudinous as locusts, malicious as scorpions, ruling as kings, intelligent as men, wily as womanhood, bold and fierce as lions, resistless as those clad in iron armour. The symbolism of course must not be pressed too closely, but its meaning must be allowed to widen as new elements are added, especially when those elements are not suggested by anything in the locust itself, but are additions clearly designed to give force to the symbol employed. The locust-like army has characteristics partly human, partly diabolical, partly civilised, partly barbarous. They have been variously interpreted: the historical school have seen in them the Saracens under Mohammed, who gave to them a religion which was "essentially a military system;" others are inclined to refer them to "the hordes of Goths and others whose unkempt locks and savage ferocity" resemble this locust host. There is a good ground for taking the vision to prefigure the hosts of a fierce invading army. Even those who believe that Joel's prophecy foretold a plague of literal locusts, yet acknowledge that these "may in a subsidiary manner" represent "the northern, or Assyrian enemies of Judah" (Introduction to Joel,
Speaker's Commentary). But, as the writer there says, these were "themselves types of still future scourges;" so may we see here a vision which neither the history of the Zealots, nor that of Gothic hordes, nor of Saracens, have exhausted, but one which draws our thoughts mainly to its spiritual and moral bearing, and teaches us that in the history of advancing truth there will come times when confused ideas will darken simple truth and right, and out of the darkness will emerge strange and mongrel teachings, with a certain enforced unity, but without moral harmony, a medley of fair and hideous, reasonable and barbarous, dignified and debased, which enslave and torment mankind. The outcome of these teachings is oftentimes war and tyrannous oppression; but the sacred seer teaches us distinctly that those who hold fast by the seal of God are those who cannot be injured, for he would have us remember that the true sting of false conceptions is not in the havoc of open war, but in the wounded soul and conscience. Nor is it altogether out of place to notice (by way of one example) that the power of Mohammed was more in a divided and debased Christendom than in his own creed or sword; the smoke of ill-regulated opinions and erroneous teachings preceded the scourge. Here, as in other parts of the book, we may notice that subtle, plausible errors pave the way for dire troubles and often sanguinary revolutions. Falsehoods and false worships that have been diffused over the world become "the forerunners and foretellers of a conflict between the powers of good and evil." Yet as the trumpet sounds we know that every battle is a step towards the end of a victorious war.
Verse 10. -
And they had tails like unto scorpions, and there were stings in their tails;and they have tails like unto scorpions, and stings (Revised Version). The next words are included in the following clause. Not that their tails possessed the appearance of scorpions (as Bengel, Hengstenberg, and others), but that their tails were like the tails of scorpions in respect of having stings in them. Cf.
2 Samuel 22:34;
Psalm 18:33, "He maketh my feet like hands" (omit "feet"); also
Revelation 13:11, "Two horns like a lamb" (see the description of the scorpion quoted above, under ver. 3).
And their power was to hurt men five months;and in their tails is their power to hurt, etc. (Revised Version) (see the preceding clause). As no Greek manuscript gives the reading of the Textus Receptus followed by the Authorized Version, the probability is that this is an example of a passage in which the Greek of his edition was supplied by Erasmus, by the simple process of retranslating into Greek the Vulgate Version. By the possession of the noxious sting, the locusts here described are represented as being yet more terrible than the natural locusts. (See the description of the locusts given under ver. 3. For the signification of the "five months," see on ver. 5.) They limit the period of this judgment to the time of man's existence on this earth.
Parallel Commentaries ...
Greek
They hadἔχουσιν(echousin)Verb - Present Indicative Active - 3rd Person Plural
Strong's 2192:To have, hold, possess. Including an alternate form scheo skheh'-o; a primary verb; to hold.tailsοὐρὰς(ouras)Noun - Accusative Feminine Plural
Strong's 3769:A tail. Apparently a primary word; a tail.withκαὶ(kai)Conjunction
Strong's 2532:And, even, also, namely.stingersκέντρα(kentra)Noun - Accusative Neuter Plural
Strong's 2759:A sting, goad; met: of death. From kenteo; a point, i.e. A sting or goad.likeὁμοίας(homoias)Adjective - Accusative Feminine Plural
Strong's 3664:Like, similar to, resembling, of equal rank. From the base of homou; similar.scorpions,σκορπίοις(skorpiois)Noun - Dative Masculine Plural
Strong's 4651:A scorpion. Probably from an obsolete skerpo; a 'scorpion'.[which]οὐραῖς(ourais)Noun - Dative Feminine Plural
Strong's 3769:A tail. Apparently a primary word; a tail.hadαὐτῶν(autōn)Personal / Possessive Pronoun - Genitive Feminine 3rd Person Plural
Strong's 846:He, she, it, they, them, same. From the particle au; the reflexive pronoun self, used of the third person, and of the other persons.theἡ(hē)Article - Nominative Feminine Singular
Strong's 3588:The, the definite article. Including the feminine he, and the neuter to in all their inflections; the definite article; the.powerἐξουσία(exousia)Noun - Nominative Feminine Singular
Strong's 1849:From exesti; privilege, i.e. force, capacity, competency, freedom, or mastery, delegated influence.to injureἀδικῆσαι(adikēsai)Verb - Aorist Infinitive Active
Strong's 91:To act unjustly towards, injure, harm. From adikos; to be unjust, i.e. do wrong.peopleἀνθρώπους(anthrōpous)Noun - Accusative Masculine Plural
Strong's 444:A man, one of the human race. From aner and ops; man-faced, i.e. A human being.for fiveπέντε(pente)Adjective - Accusative Masculine Plural
Strong's 4002:Five. A primary number; 'five'.months.μῆνας(mēnas)Noun - Accusative Masculine Plural
Strong's 3376:A (lunar) month. A primary word; a month.
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NT Prophecy: Revelation 9:10 They have tails like those of scorpions (Rev. Re Apocalypse)