Testimony symbol plate. Two parallel lines cross the same boundary without fusing. Each remains independently traceable.
Full-resolution image for Testimony.

Dictionary entry 25 of 137 · Counter-symbols

Testimony

Primary textCounter-symbol

Preserved witness under pressure: a record that remains available for public challenge and memory.

Complete dictionary reading

Context, form, interpretation, and limits

Principal source or earliest context

Revelation centers testimony, witnesses, martyrs, books, and public proclamation; Revelation 11 dramatizes two witnesses under coercive pressure.

Historical interpretations

Christian reception treats testimony as confession, witness, memory, evidence, and fidelity. Civic traditions likewise depend on archives, journalism, affidavits, dissent, and independent records.

Visual anatomy

Two parallel lines cross the same boundary without fusing. Each remains independently traceable.

Antichrist.net visual convention: Two parallel lines crossing one boundary without fusion.

Antichrist.net reading

The civic reading is durable attestation: preserve what was said, by whom, under what conditions, and allow competing evidence to remain visible.

Misuse warning

Testimony is not automatically true; it requires corroboration, context, and fair review.

What this symbol does not prove

It does not prove a claim merely because it is sincere, dramatic, persecuted, or repeated.

Disputed readings and unresolved questions

Traditions differ over literal and symbolic identities of Revelation’s witnesses; the civic analogy concerns independent attestation, not prophetic identity.

Suggested comparison or manuscript example

Add MS 19896, folios 8r–9r, offers a major manuscript sequence.

Source discipline

Source notes

  1. Revelation 11 USCCB Bible

    Two witnesses, testimony, pressure, death, and vindication.

  2. Add MS 19896: Apocalypse Picture Book British Library

    Fifteenth-century illustrated cycle documenting dragon, beasts, mark, Babylon, witnesses, Lamb, books, and New Jerusalem.

  3. Editorial Policy

    Source labeling, uncertainty, anti-targeting, and moderation boundaries.