Information Related to "Three of the First Horns Plucked Out by the Roots"
Good News subscriptionAudio/Video
view Beyond Today
World News & Prophecy Online
September/October 2008
¬ Not by Might or by Power
¬ Restoration: Enduring Words
¬ Georgia on Moscow's Mind
¬ Europe and the Church, Part 5: The Identity of the Little Horn
  Three of the First Horns Plucked Out by the Roots
¬ The Rapture—A Popular but False Doctrine
¬ This Is the Way... Immanuel—"God Is With Us"
   
 
From the publisher of The Good News magazine.
Request the World News & Prophecy
Related Resources
The Middle East in Bible Prophecy
The United States and Britain in Bible Prophecy
You Can Understand Bible Prophecy
Are We Living in the Time of the End?
The Book of Revelation Unveiled
------------------------------
 

Three of the First Horns Plucked Out by the Roots

In Daniel 7:8 the prophet Daniel writes: "I was considering the horns, and there was another horn, a little one, coming up among them, before whom three of the first horns were plucked out by the roots."

As we have learned in the accompanying article, the "little" horn is the papacy. Who, then, are the three horns plucked up by the roots before the rise of the papacy?

The expression "plucked up by the roots" suggests that these horns were not there long enough to put down deep roots. Again, history helps us understand this prophecy.

In the fifth century, the same century in which the Western Roman Empire collapsed, we read of three barbarian leaders who took control of the city of Rome. The term barbarian was used by the Romans to describe all non-Romans.

The Roman Empire in the West fell in A.D. 476. Prior to its fall, Rome had been sacked by the Vandals in A.D. 455.

Another invasion came in 476 when a German chief, Odoacer, led his army into Rome, deposing the last Western emperor, Romulus Augustulus. The previous year Odoacer had been chosen by contingents of three barbarian tribes, the Scyri, Heruli and Rugii, to be their leader. After successfully conquering Rome, he had himself "proclaimed king in the barbaric fashion, and governed Italy with moderation under the theoretical tutelage of the emperor of the East" (Encyclopaedia Britannica, article, "Ancient Rome").

Odoacer's deposing of the last emperor is the official end of the Western Empire. The Eastern Roman Empire ruled from Byzantium, founded by Constantine in the early part of the fourth century, was to continue until 1453.

Odoacer was overthrown by Theodoric the Great, king of the Ostrogoths, at the request of the Eastern Emperor Zeno. Theodoric had himself proclaimed king of Italy at Ravenna in A.D. 494, ruling until 526, a long reign that secured tranquility and prosperity for his subjects. "His Goths, few in number, were established in the north; elsewhere he preserved the old imperial administration, with senators as prefects" (ibid.).

Read the full article at www.wnponline.org/wnp/wnp0809/horns-roots.htm


Related Information on UCG Sites:


Church and state:

Roman Empire: Beast power: Search Our Site
Key Subjects Index
General Topics Index
Biblical References Index
Good News Magazine Index
Booklets and All Literature Index
Home Page of this site