The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse :: Dr Nathan E Jones and Pete Garcia

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse :: Dr Nathan E Jones and Pete Garcia

[Note: Our guest contributor, Pete Garcia, is a retired military combat veteran and aviator. He is also a gifted writer, researcher, speaker, and teacher of Bible prophecy and apologetics. His insightful writings are distributed via rev310.substack.com.]

Few images in Scripture capture the imagination and warn the soul like the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Ominous and mysterious, these riders stand as harbingers of divine judgment, poised on the horizon of history awaiting their appointed release upon an unsuspecting world.

To skeptics, they are merely dramatic literary devices, ancient apocalyptic imagery meant to provoke emotion but lacking substance. To Preterists, Amillennialists, and Postmillennialists, they belong entirely to the past, fulfilled in earlier historical events. To many average churchgoers, they represent a topic best avoided, too controversial, unsettling, or complex to study.

But to the watchful believer, the Four Horsemen are neither relics of history nor symbolic abstractions. They remind us that human history is not random or endless. It is moving toward a divinely appointed climax.

Within a Pre-Tribulation framework, these riders cannot appear until after the Church has been caught up to Heaven. Their release follows the removal of the restraining presence of the Church and begins the events of Daniel’s “seventieth week.” In that sense, the thunder of their hooves is not merely symbolic—it is prophetic.

Parallels

Some believe the Four Horsemen correspond to the horses seen in Zechariah’s visions. However, their purposes and colors differ, making it unlikely that they represent the same events as those described in Revelation 6.

Others attempt to interpret the horsemen as symbolic representations of modern crises—such as Islam, communism, COVID-19, or global capitalism. Yet once the horsemen are removed from the framework of Daniel’s seventieth week, interpretation becomes entirely subjective. Revelation would effectively become a “choose-your-own-adventure” prophecy where meaning shifts with each generation.

While Islam may play a role in end-times events, many of its militant elements could be neutralized during the horrific Gog-Magog conflict described in Ezekiel 38–39. If that battle occurs shortly after the Rapture but before the seventieth week, militant Islam would likely cease to be a major geopolitical force thereafter.

Speculation about modern parallels will always exist. But Scripture must interpret Scripture. The prophetic timeline will unfold in one coherent way that aligns with the rest of the Bible.

Ownership of the Judgments

Revelation was given to John in signs and symbols (Rev. 1:1), but those symbols are not arbitrary. Their meaning is rooted in Old Testament prophetic imagery, which had clearly defined meanings.

The Apostle John was given the Revelation by Jesus Christ on the island of Patmos in 95 AD, which, as the early church father Irenaeus noted, was written toward the end of the reign of Emperor Domitian. Domitian only reigned from 81-96 AD. Moreover, Irenaeus would know because he was the disciple of Polycarp, who was the disciple of John himself, which trumps any later “expert.”

We will not, however, incur the risk of pronouncing positively as to the name of Antichrist; for if it were necessary that his name should be distinctly revealed in this present time, it would have been announced by him who beheld the apocalyptic vision. For it was seen not very long time since, but almost in our own generation, toward the end of the reign of Domitian. — Against Heresies 5.30.3

Jesus Himself provided the outline of the book: “Write the things which you have seen, and the things which are, and the things which will take place after this” (Rev. 1:19).

Chapter 1 records John’s vision of the glorified Christ. Chapters 2–3 contain the letters to the Seven Churches, representing the present Church Age. Beginning in chapter 4, the narrative shifts to events that occur after the Church Age. In fact, the Church (Ecclesia) is no longer mentioned in the narrative.

Chapters 4 and 5 reveal the throne room of Heaven. John describes the sea of glass, the twenty-four elders, the redeemed, myriads of angels, and the four living creatures—cherubim who surround the throne of God. These living creatures will later summon the Four Horsemen.

At the center of this heavenly scene lies a sealed scroll containing God’s judgments upon the earth. No one in Heaven or on Earth is found worthy to open it until Jesus Christ—the Lion of the tribe of Judah steps forward.

This detail is important.

The Seal Judgments are not the wrath of man or Satan; they are the judgments of Christ Himself. Only He is worthy to open the seals because He alone fulfilled God’s righteousness and became humanity’s Kinsman-Redeemer (Lev. 25; Ruth 4).

When Christ opens the scroll, the final seven-year period of human history begins—fulfilling Daniel’s Seventieth Week.

The Seal Judgments are the first of three series of judgments in that period, followed by the Trumpet and Bowl Judgments.

The First Seal: The Rider on the White Horse

“I looked, and behold, a white horse. He who sat on it had a bow; and a crown was given to him, and he went out conquering and to conquer” (Rev. 6:2).

When the First Seal is opened, a rider appears on a white horse. One of the four living creatures summons him with the command, “Come.” The rider carries a bow but no arrows and wears a crown. He rides forth as a conqueror.

This figure is commonly confused with Jesus Christ, who also returns on a white horse in Revelation 19. But the differences are significant. Christ returns with a sword proceeding from His mouth, symbolizing the authority of His word. He wears many royal crowns (diadems), not the victor’s wreath (stephanos) worn by the rider in Revelation 6.

The rider of the First Seal is the Antichrist—who will rule over the final human political system that brings him to power. Daniel described him centuries earlier as “the prince who is to come” (Dan. 9:26), emerging from territories once belonging to the Roman Empire.

The bow without arrows likely symbolizes conquest achieved through intimidation, diplomacy, and political maneuvering rather than immediate warfare. Daniel describes this leader as cunning and deceptive, causing deceit to prosper under his rule (Dan. 8:25). He will divide “the land,” likely Israel, for political gain and ultimately exalt himself above God.

Some have attempted to identify this rider with a pope or other religious figure, but false spiritual leaders have existed throughout Church history. If the First Seal merely describes a recurring pattern of deception, the specific sequence of the Seal Judgments loses its meaning. Scripture instead anticipates a singular climactic deceiver—the final counterfeit Christ.

The Second Seal: The Rider on the Red Horse

“Another horse, fiery red, went out. And it was granted to the one who sat on it to take peace from the earth” (Rev. 6:4).

The second living creature summons the next rider. His mission is direct and terrifying: to remove peace from the earth.

The twentieth century was the bloodiest in human history, claiming more lives through war and genocide than the previous twenty centuries combined. Even today, dozens of active conflicts rage across the globe. Yet the violence of the Second Seal will exceed anything humanity has experienced thus far.

According to 2 Thessalonians 2:7, a restraining influence currently limits the full eruption of lawlessness that the world might otherwise experience. When the Church is removed at the Rapture, that restraint will vanish. The sudden disappearance of millions will ignite global panic and political instability. Adding fuel to the fire of global chaos will (possibly) be the arrival of thousands of interdimensional craft and Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena suddenly appearing overhead that will litter the skies as Satan desperately attempts to obfuscate the Rapture of the Church.

Governments will face immediate internal chaos—riots, looting, assassinations, and border conflicts. To maintain control, authorities will likely impose unprecedented restrictions and consolidate power as quickly as possible to minimize societal collapse. However, by the time the Red Rider goes forth, the kingdom of the Beast should already control much of the world.

Thus, the “great sword” given to this rider represents organized warfare and mass bloodshed against any remaining nation, tribe, or tongue that will not bend the knee to the Antichrist’s system. Violence will become systemic rather than sporadic.

War has always been part of human history; however, the Second Seal describes something different: a concentrated global eruption of violence unlike anything previously witnessed.

The Third Seal: The Rider on the Black Horse

“A quart of wheat for a denarius, and three quarts of barley for a denarius…” (Rev. 6:6).

The Third Horseman arrives carrying scales that symbolize economic collapse and food scarcity.

Even before the Tribulation, the global financial system is showing signs of instability. Decades of debt expansion, fiat currencies, and fiscal mismanagement have created fragile economic structures. The financial crises of 2001 and 2008 revealed just how thin the margin of stability truly is.

The Rapture alone would trigger massive economic shockwaves. Supply chains would collapse overnight. Labor forces would vanish. Markets would panic. After that, sustained and systemic warfare by the previous horsemen would certainly amplify the economic pains already being experienced by most of Earth’s inhabitants. Sorry, there will no longer be a middle class anywhere. You are either extremely rich or extremely poor.

The Third Horseman intensifies that instability into widespread famine. The prices described in Revelation indicate extreme inflation—an entire day’s wage for a single meal. People will work constantly simply to survive. Basic necessities will consume nearly all income.

Yet the rider is also commanded not to harm the oil and wine, which suggests that luxury goods remain available, implying that the wealthy elite retain access to resources while the majority struggle for survival.

Economic desperation often drives populations to surrender freedoms for security. In that climate, the Antichrist will introduce a controlled financial system—the mark of the beast—offering stability at the cost of allegiance.

The Fourth Seal: The Pale Horse

“And the name of him who sat on it was Death, and Hades followed with him” (Rev. 6:8).

The Fourth Horseman rides a pale, sickly green horse. His name is Death, and Hades follows close behind.

Here, the cumulative effects of conquest, war, and famine produce catastrophic mortality. Disease spreads rapidly among weakened populations.

Modern history has already demonstrated how vulnerable global civilization is to pandemics. Dense urban populations and international travel allow diseases to spread faster than ever before. COVID-19 illustrated how quickly a regional outbreak can become a worldwide crisis.

Antibiotic resistance and viral mutation further complicate the problem. Pathogens continually evolve, often faster than medical systems can respond. In the environment described by Revelation, war-torn infrastructure, famine-weakened populations, and collapsing healthcare systems—disease would spread unchecked.

Revelation states that authority is given to kill a fourth of the earth’s population through sword, famine, plague, and wild beasts. With today’s global population over eight billion, that proportion would equal roughly two billion deaths.

The scale is staggering. Throughout human history, war and conquest have claimed perhaps 500–800 million lives. The Fourth Seal alone surpasses that many times over.

Entire regions would be depopulated. Economies would collapse. Infrastructure would fail. The psychological shock will reshape civilization into a one-world government.

Conclusion

The Four Horsemen do not represent isolated disasters but a cascading chain of events:

  • Conquest destabilizes the global order.
  • War spreads violence across nations.
  • Famine follows economic collapse.
  • Disease and death flourish in the aftermath.

Each judgment intensifies the next, forming a rapid sequence that dismantles humanity’s illusion of control. World wars, economic crises, and pandemics have already given humanity glimpses of how fragile modern civilization truly is. Yet those events occurred within functioning governments and relatively stable systems.

The judgments described in Revelation occur during a far more concentrated and unrestrained collapse. The early Seal Judgments are not symbolic exaggerations of ordinary history. They describe a specific future period when global violence, famine, pestilence, and societal breakdown converge at a scale never before experienced—apart from the Flood in Noah’s day.

The sobering conclusion is this: the early Seal Judgments are not symbolic exaggerations of ordinary history. They describe a distinct and unparalleled period in which global violence, starvation, pestilence, and systemic collapse converge at a scale never before witnessed by mankind, with the exception of the Flood of Noah’s generation. Besides that, what history has shown us are only the tremors. According to the Holy Text, what is coming is the first in an increasingly intensifying series of devastating calamities.

 

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