The black horse of Revelation
The World Food Programme has predicted the onslaught of
famines of “biblical proportions”
—a term used to describe terrible calamities.
Yet even though biblical imagery is used to describe the
scale of coming famines,
the irony is that the solution to famines is “biblical”--meaning it can be found in the Holy Bible. But most ignore it completely. The Bible explains
why famines will come
and what they mean prophetically.
One of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse is a “black horse,”
and it represents end-time famine.
The rider is described as having a
"pair of scales in his hand,” and he is told to measure a
"quart of wheat” and “three quarts of barley”
for a “denarius,” but at the
same time to
"not harm the oil and the wine”
(Revelation 6:5-6).
You can learn more about the four horsemen in our article
“What Are the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse?”
The sale of such small quantities of wheat and barley for a denarius indicate a severe famine, where food is eaten by weight due to its scarcity.
According to many commentators, a denarius was roughly the equivalent of a working man’s daily wage. The “quart of wheat” was enough to feed a single person, but not an entire family. The “three quarts of barley” indicates that the inferior and less desirable barley could be bought for a day’s wages—probably to feed a family.
In the future,
food will become so scarce that individuals or families will likely have to spend a day’s wage for just one meal.This shows us that in the future, food will become so scarce that individuals or families will likely have to spend a day’s wage for just one meal.
In the Old Testament God warned that one of the national curses for disobedience would be people having to eat bread “by weight” and not having enough to be satisfied (Leviticus 26:26). Beyond that, we also read that even greater disobedience would lead to famines so destructive that people would resort to cannibalism to survive (verses 27-29).
It may be easier to imagine these kinds of conditions occurring in developing nations, but these prophecies apply more directly to the modern-day descendants of Israel (which include the United States, United Kingdom and other wealthy Western nations).
Yes, if these nations don’t repent of their sins and turn to God and His Word, famine of this magnitude will come on them. To learn why, download our free booklet The United States, Britain & the Commonwealth in Prophecy.
Sadly, this won’t be the only kind of famine the world will experience in the end time. The Bible also predicts another type of famine.
A famine of hearing
The Bible prophesies a coming famine “of hearing the words of the LORD” (Amos 8:11). Notice that Amos prophesied of a famine of “hearing” God’s words—not necessarily a famine of availability of God’s words.
This may mean that God’s Word will be available, yet people will refuse to hear, read or respond to it.
We are seeing this famine getting worse and worse in our Western societies as people who have easy access to the Bible are increasingly ignorant of it. Studies show that even people who attend church regularly don’t read the Bible regularly. A recent LifeWay survey found only one third of those regular churchgoers read the Bible daily.
We also see church attendance on the wane and atheism on the rise. When we look closer at the world of Christianity, we see churches that teach doctrines contrary to the Bible. To learn more, read “How to Spot a Counterfeit Church.”
How can you come out of this famine?
Seek God and His Word
now...
Jesus Christ described a Christian as someone who lives by “every word that proceeds from the mouth of God” (Matthew 4:4). God’s Word is likened to spiritual food, needed for eternal life (John 6:51, 63).
While in this physical existence we get hungry quite quickly,
God wants people who will “hunger and thirst for righteousness”—describing people who
seek God’s Word to meet their spiritual needs,
just as they seek food and drink to satisfy their
hunger and thirst.
(Acts 9:2).
Right now, hearing God’s Word and living His way is possible.
But there is coming a time when “they shall go to seek the LORD,
but they will not find Him; He has withdrawn Himself”
(Hosea 5:6).
Now is the time to heed the prophet Isaiah’s
encouragement to
“seek the LORD while He may be found,
call upon Him while He is near”
(Isaiah 55:6).