Heck, if hubby asks me to study, you guys get to study along with me, too. This week we are studying the first paragraphs of Chapter 22, "The First Woe - Locusts" from the study book, "Revelation, It's Grand Climax at Hand". I can't pass paragraph six without commenting.
First of all, here's the paragraph in its entirety. Weep for me, I type this by hand. Colored highlighting mine.
6 Revelation, written some 26 years after Jerusalem’s destruction, also describes that plague. What does it add to Joel's description? Let us take up the record, as reported by John "And the fifth angel blew his trumpet. And I saw a star that had fallen from heaven to the earth, and the key of the pit of the abyss was given him." (Revelation 9:1)
This "star" is different from that at Revelation 8:10 that John saw in the act of falling. He sees "a star that had fallen from heaven" and that now has an assignment with respect to this earth. Is this a spirit or fleshly person? The holder of his "key of the pit of the abyss" is later described as hurling Satan into "the abyss." (Revelation 20:1-3) So he must be a mighty spirit person. At Revelation 9:11, John tells us that the locusts have "a king, the angel of the abyss" Both verses must refer to the same individua l, since the angel holding the key of the abyss would logically be the angel of the abyss. And the star must symbolize Jehovah's appointed King, since anointed Christians acknowledge only one angelic King, Jesus Christ - Colossians 1:13; 1 Corinthians 15:25.
Note how vehement the Watchtower language becomes, the more shaky the conclusion. I’ve highlighted the series of assumptions that lead to Jesus Christ. I am surprised that current literature continues to assert that Jesus is an angel.
By comparison, here is another commentary on the same verse. Note the careful use of language. No "musts" or "logical" here. A prophetic vision, by it’s nature, will have a cautious interpretation. Unless you are Daniel, the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, or JCanon of course.
It is not complimentary to put Jesus in charge of a great, dark cloud. As the linked commentary points out so well, darkness is the opposite of light.
Heck, it’s not complimentary to compare the great crowd of Witnesses, swarming from door to door with their message, as locusts. Locusts destroy all that is in their path. They are a dreaded plague on the earth.