CHAPTER FIFTEEN. ANTICHRIST AND BABYLON.
In the last chapter we confined ourself to the Old
Testament, in this and the one that follows we shall treat mainly of Babylon in Rev. 17
and 18, though, of necessity, we shall examine these in the light of Old Testament
passages. In the previous chapter, we briefly reviewed the Old Testament evidence which
proves there is to be a re-built Babylon, over which the Antichrist shall reign during the
Time of the End. Now as both the Old and New Testaments have one and the same Divine
Author, it cannot be that the latter should conflict with the former. "If the Old and
New Testaments treat of the circumstances which are immediately to precede the Advent of
the Lord in glory, the substantive facts of that period must be alike referred to in both.
If the Old Testament declares that Babylon and `the land of Shinar' is to be the focus of
influential wickedness at the time of the end, it it impossible that the Revelation, when
professedly treating of the same period, should be silent respecting such wickedness, or
respecting the place of its concentration. If the Old Testament speaks of an individual of
surpassing power who will connect himself with this wickedness, and be the king of
Babylon, and glorify himself as God, it is not to be supposed that the Revelation should
treat of the same period and be silent respecting such an event. If, therefore, in the Old
Testament, the sphere be fixed - the locality named - the individual defined - it is
impossible that the Revelation, when detailing the events of the same period, should alter
the localities, or change the individuals. There cannot be two sovereign individuals, nor
two sovereign cities in the same sphere at the same time. If the mention of the "Land
of Shinar', and of Assyria", and of "the king of Babylon", be intended in
the Old Testament to render our thoughts fixed and definite, why should similar terms,
applied in the Revelation to a period avowedly the same, be less definite?"
(B.W.Newton).
Of Rev. 17 and 18 it has been well said, "There is,
perhaps, no section of the Apocalypse more fraught with difficulty than the predictions
concerning Babylon. Enigmatical and inconsistent with each other as, at first sight, they
seem to be, we need to give careful attention to every particular, and much patient
investigation of other scriptures, if we would penetrate their meaning and possess
ourselves of their secret" (Mr. G.H. Pember, M.A.). In prosecuting our present study
we cannot do better than borrow again from the language of Mr. Pember, "Nor is the
present necessarily brief and imperfect essay written in any spirit of dogmatic certainty
that it solves the mystery; but only as the conclusion, so far as light has been already
vouchsafed, to one who, having received mercy of the Lord, has been led to much
consideration of this and kindred subjects".
An exposition of the Revelation or any part thereof should
be the last place for dogmatism. Both at the beginning and close of the book the Holy
Spirit expressly states that the Apocalypse is a "prophecy" (1:3; 22:19), and
prophecy is, admittedly, the most difficult branch of Scripture study. It is true that
during the last century God has been pleased to give His people not a little light upon
the predictive portions of His Word, nor is the Apocalypse to be excepted. Yet, the more
any one reads the literature on the subject, the more should he become convinced that
dogmatism here is altogether unseemly. During the last fifteen years the writer has made
it a point to read the Revelation through carefully at least three times a year, and
during this period he has also gone through over thirty commentaries on the last book of
the Bible. A perusal of the varied and conflicting interpretations advanced have taught
him two things. First, the wisdom of being cautious in adopting any of the prevailing
views; second, the need of patient and direct waiting on God for further light. To these
may be added a third, namely, the possibility, yea, the probability, that many of the
prophecies of the Revelation are to receive a double, and in some cases, a treble,
fulfillment.
"All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is
profitable". This applies equally to the Prophets as to the Epistles, and it was just
as true five hundred years ago as it is today. That being so, the right understanding of
the final fulfillment of the prophecies in the Revelation cannot be the only value that
book possesses. There must also be that in it which had a pertinent and timely message for
the people of God of this dispensation in each generation. There must be that in which
strengthened the faith of those saints who read it during the "Dark Ages", and
that which enabled them to detect and keep clear from the which opposed to God and His
Christ. In other words, its prophecies must have received a gradual and partial
fulfillment all through the centuries of the Christian era, though their final fulfillment
be yet future. Such is the case with Rev. 17 and 18. Ever since John received the
Revelation there has always existed a system which, in its moral features, has
corresponded to the Babylon of the 17th chapter. There exists such a system today; there
will exist such a system after the Church is raptured to heaven. And there will also come
into existence another and final system which will exhaust the scope of this prophecy.
The position which the Apocalypse occupies in the Sacred
Canon is surely indicative of the character of its contents. The fact that it is placed at
the close, at once suggests that it treats of that which concerns the end of things.
Moreover, it is taken for granted that the student of this sixty-sixth book of the Bible
is already acquainted with the previous sixty-five books. Scripture is self-interpreting,
and we may rest assured that whatever appears vague or difficult in the last book of
Scripture is due to our ignorance of the meaning of the books preceding, and particularly
of the Prophets. In the Apocalypse the various streams of prediction, which may be traced
through the Old Testament Scriptures, are seen emptying themselves in the sea of
historical accomplishment. Or, to change the figure, here we are given to behold the last
act of the great Dispensational Drama, the earlier acts of which were depleted in the
writings of the seers of Israel. And yet, as previously intimated, these final scenes have
already had a preliminary rehearsal during the course of the Christian centuries.
It will thus be seen that we are far from sharing the views
of those who limit the prophecies of the Revelation to a single fulfillment. We believe
there is much of truth in both the Historical and Futurist interpretations. We are in
entire accord with the following words from the pen of our esteemed brother, Mr. F.C.
Jennings: "How many of the controversies that have ruled, alas, amongst the Lord's
people, have been due to a narrow way of limiting the thoughts of God, and seeking to
confine or bend them by our own apprehension of them. How often two, or more, apparently
opposing systems of interpretation may really both be correct; the breadth, the length,
and height, and depth, of the mind of God, including and going beyond both of them".
Let us now come more directly to our present theme.
The first time that Babylon is mentioned in the Apocalypse
is in 14:8: "And there followed another angel, saying, Babylon is fallen, is fallen,
that great city, because she made all nations drink of the wine of the wrath of her
fornication". Now what is there here to discountenance the natural conclusion that
"Babylon" means Babylon? Two or three generations ago, students of
prophecy received incalculable help from the simple discovery that when the Holy Spirit
spoke of Judea and Jerusalem in the Old Testament Scriptures He meant Judea and Jerusalem,
and not England and London; and that when He mentioned Zion He did not refer to the
Church. But strange to say, few, if any of these brethren, have applied the same rule to
the Apocalypse. Here they are guilty of doing the very thing for which they condemned
their forebears in connection with the Old Testament - they have
"spiritualised". They have concluded, or rather, they have accepted the
conclusions of the Reformers, that Babylon meant Papal Rome, ultimately being refined to
signify apostate Christendom. But what is there in Rev. 14:8 which gives any hint that
"Babylon" there refers to the Papal system? No; we believe that this scripture
means what it says, and that we need not the annals of secular history to help us to
understand it. What then? If to regard "Jerusalem" as meaning Jerusalem
be a test of intelligence in Old Testament prophecy, shall we be counted a heretic if we
understand "Babylon" to mean Babylon, and not Rome or apostate
Christendom?
The next reference to Babylon is in Rev. 16:18,19: "And
there were voices, and thunders, and lightenings; and there was a great earthquake, such
as was not since men were upon the earth, so mighty and earthquake, and so great. And the
great city was divided into three parts, and the cities of the nations fell: and great
Babylon came in remembrance before God, to give unto her the cup of the wine of the
fierceness of His wrath". The remarks just made above apply with equal force to this
passage too. Surely it is a literal city which is in view, and which is divided into three
parts by a literal earthquake. If it does not mean this then the simple reader might as
well turn from the Apocalypse in dismay. More than a hint of the literalness of this great
city Babylon is found in the context, were we read of the river Euphrates (v. 12). This is
sufficient for the writer: whether or not it is for the reader, we must leave with him.
We come now to Rev. 17, and as soon as we read its contents
we are at once struck with the noticeable difference there is between it and the other
passages which have just been before us. Here the language is no longer to be understood
literally, but symbolically; here the terms are not plain and simple, but occult and
mysterious. But God, in His grace, has provided help right to hand. He tells us that here
is "mystery" (v. 5). And what is more, He explains most (if not all) of the
symbols for us - see vv. 9,12,15,18. With these helps furnished it ought not to be
difficult to grasp the general outline.
The central figures in Rev. 17 are "the great
whore", the "scarlet-colored Beast", and the "ten horns". The
Beast is evidently the first Beast of Rev. 13. The "ten horns" are stated to be
"ten kings" (v. 12). Who, then, is figured by "the great Whore"? There
are a number of statements made concerning "the great Whore" - "the
woman" - "the mother of harlots" - which are of great help toward supplying
an answer to this question. First, it is said that she "sitteth upon many
waters" (v. 1), and in v. 15 these are said to signify "peoples, and multitudes,
and nations, and tongues". Second, it is said, "The kings of the earth have
committed fornication" with her (v. 2). Third, she is supported by "a
scarlet-colored Beast" (v. 3), and from what is said of this Beast in v. 8 it is
clear that he is the Antichrist, here viewed at the head of the last world-empire. Fourth,
the woman "was arrayed in purple and scarlet color and decked with gold and precious
stones" (v. 4). Fifth, "Upon her forehead was a name written - Mystery: Babylon
the great", etc. (v. 5). Sixth, the woman was "drunken with the blood of the
saints and with the blood of the martyrs" (v. 6). Seventh, in the last verse it is
said, "And the woman which thou sawest is that great city, which reigneth over the
kings of the earth". These seven points give an analysed summary of what is here told
us about this "woman".
Now the interpretation which has been most widely accepted
is, that the "Whore" of Rev. 17 pictures the Roman Catholic system. Appeal is
made to the fact that though she poses as a virgin, yet has she been guilty of the most
awful spiritual fornication. Unlike the blessed One who, in His condescension and
humiliation, had "not where to lay His head", Romanism has coveted silver and
gold, and has displayed herself in meretricious luxury. She has had illicit intercourse
with the blood of saints. Other parallelisms between the woman of Rev. 17 and the Roman
Catholic system may be pointed out. What, then, shall we say to these things?
The points of correspondence between Rev. 17 and the history
of Romanism are too many and too marked to be set down as mere co-incidences. Undoubtedly
the Papacy has supplied a fulfillment of the symbolic prophecy found in Rev. 17. And
therein has lain its practical value for God's people all through the dark ages. It
presented to them a warning too plain to be disregarded. It was the means of keeping the
garments of the Waldenses (and many others) unspotted by her filth. It confirmed the faith
of Luther and his contemporaries, that they were acting according to the revealed will of
God, when they separated themselves from that which was so manifestly opposed to His
truth. But, nevertheless, there are other features in this prophecy which do not apply to
Romanism, and which compel us to look elsewhere for the complete and final fulfillment. We
single out but two of these.
In Rev. 17:5 Babylon is termed "the Mother of
harlots and abominations of the earth". Is this an accurate description of Romanism?
Were there no "harlot" systems before her? Is the Papacy the mother of
the "abominations of the earth"? Let scripture be allowed to interpret
scripture. In 1 Kings 11:50-7 we read of "Ashtoreth the goddess of the Zidonians, and
after Milcom the abomination of the Ammonites...then did Solomon build an high place for
Chemosh, the abomination of Moab, in the hill that was before Jerusalem, and for Molech,
the abomination of the children of Ammon"! The Papacy had not come into existence
when John wrote the Revelation, so that she cannot be held responsible for all the
"abominations" which preceded her. Again; in Rev. 17:2 we read of "the
great Whore" that "the kings of the earth have committed fornication" with
her. Is that applicable in its fulness to Rome? Have the kings of Asia and the kings of
Africa committed fornication with the Papacy? It is true that the Italian pontiffs have
ruled over a wide territory, yet it is also true that there are many lands which have
remained untouched by their religious influence.
It is evident from these two points alone that we have to go
back to something which long antedates the rise of the Papacy, and to something which has
exerted a far wider influence than has any of the popes. What, then, is this something?
and where shall we look for it? The answer is not hard to find: the word
"Babylon" supplies us with the needed key. Babylon takes us back not merely to
the days of Nebuchadnezzar, but to the time of Nimrod. It was in the days of the son of
Cush that "Babylon" began. And from the Plain of Shinar has flown that dark
stream whose tributaries have reached to every part of the earth. It was then, and there,
that idolatry began. In his work on "The Two Babylons"[8]
Dr. Hislop has proven conclusively that all the idolatrous systems of the nations had
their origin in what was founded by that mighty Rebel, the beginning of whose kingdom was
Babel (Gen. 10:10). But into this we cannot now enter at length. We refer the reader back
to our comments on Nimrod in chapter 13. Babylon was founded in rebellion against God. The
very name Nimrod gave to his city, proves him to have been an idolator - the first
mentioned in Scripture - for Bab-El signified "the gate of God"; thus he, like
his anti-type, determined to exalt himself above all that is called God (2 Thess. 2:4).
This, then, was the source and origin of all idolatry. Pagan Rome, afterwards Papal Rome,
was only one of the polluted streams from this corrupt source - one of the filthy
"daughters" of this unclean Mother of Harlots. But to return to Rev. 17.
In v. 5 we read, "And upon her forehead was a name
written - mystery: Babylon the great, the Mother of harlots and abominations of the
earth". We believe that the English translators have misled many by printing (on
their own authority) the word "mystery" in large capital letters, thus making it
appear that this was a part of "the woman's name. This we are assured is a mistake.
That the "mystery" is connected with the "Woman" herself and not with
her "name" is clear from v. 7, where the angel says unto John, "I will tell
thee the mystery of the Woman, and of the Beast which carrieth her".
The word "mystery" is used in the New Testament in
two ways. First, as a secret, unfathomable by man but explained by God: see Matt. 13:11;
Rom. 16:25, 26; Eph. 3:3,6 etc. Second, the word "mystery" signifies a sign or
symbol. Such is its meaning in Eph. 5:32, where we are told that a man who is joined to
his wife so that the two become "one flesh" is a "great mystery, (that is,
a great sign or symbol) of Christ and the Church". So, again, in Rev. 1:20 we read of
"the mystery (sign or symbol) of the seven stars", etc.
As we have seen, the term "mystery" has two
significations in its New Testament usage, and we believe it has a double meaning in Rev.
17:5, where it is connected with the "Woman". It signifies both a symbol and a
secret, that is, something not previously revealed. It should also be noted that, in
keeping with this, the name given to the Woman is a dual one - "Babylon the
great", and "the Mother of harlots and abominations of the earth". Who,
then, is symbolized by the Woman with this dual name? V. 18 tells us, "And the Woman
which thou sawest is that great city, which reigneth over the kings of the earth".
Now to get the force of this it is essential that we should bear in mind that, in the
Apocalypse, the words "is" and "are" almost always (in the symbolical
sections) signify "represent". Thus, in 1:20 "the seven stars are the seven
churches" means "the seven stars represent the seven churches"; and
"the seven candlesticks are the seven churches", signifies, "the seven
candlesticks represent the seven churches". So in 17:9 "the seven heads are
(represent) seven mountains"; 17:12 "the ten horns are (represent) ten
kings"; 17:15 "the waters...are (represent) peoples", etc. So in 17:18
"the woman which thou sawest is that great city" must mean, "the woman
represents that great city". What, then, is signified by the "great city"?
In keeping with what we have just said above, namely, that
the term "mystery" in Rev. 17:5 has a two-fold significance, and that the woman
has a dual name, so we believe "that Great City" has a double force and
application. First, it signifies a literal city, which shall yet be built in the
Land of Shinar, on the banks of the Euphrates. Proof of this was furnished in our last
chapter so that we need not pause here to submit the evidence. Six times (significant
number!) is "Babylon" referred to in the Apocalypse, and nowhere is there a hint
that the name is not to be understood literally. In the second place, the "great
city" (unnamed) signifies an idolatrous system - "mother of harlots"
a system of idolatry which originated in the Babylon of Nimrod's day, and a system which
is to culminate and terminate in another Babylon in a day soon to come. This we think is
clear and on the surface. What, then, is the secret here disclosed, which had hitherto
been so closely guarded?
In seeking the answer to our last question it is important
to note that there is another "Woman" in the Revelation, between whom and this
one in chapter 17 there are some striking comparisons and some vivid contrasts. Let us
note a few of them. First, in Rev. 12:1 we read of "a Woman clothed with the sun, and
the moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars", which
symbolically signifies that she occupies a position of authority and rule (cf Gen. 37:9);
so also the Woman of chapter 17 is pictured as "ruling over the kings of the
earth" (v. 18). Second, this Woman of Rev. 12 is a mother, for she gives birth to the
Man-child who shall rule all nations (v. 5); so the Woman of chapter 17 is "the
Mother of harlots". Third, in 12:3 we read of a great red Dragon "having seven
heads and ten horns", and he persecutes the Woman (v. 14); but in striking contrast,
the Woman of chapter 17 is seen supported by a scarlet-colored Beast "having seven
heads and ten horns" (v. 3). Fourth, in Rev. 19:7 the Woman of chapter 12 is termed
the Lamb's Wife (v. 7); whereas the Woman of chapter 17 is the Devil's Whore. Fifth, the
Wife of Rev. 19 is "arrayed in fine linen, clean and white" (v. 8); but the
Whore of chapter 19 is arrayed in purple and scarlet, and has in her hand a golden cup
"full of abominations and filthiness of her fornication" (v. 4). Sixth, the
Lamb's Wife is also inseparably connected with a great city, even the holy Jerusalem
(21:10); so the Whore of Rev. 17 is connected with a great city, even Babylon. Seventh,
the chaste Woman shall dwell with the Lamb forever; the Whore shall suffer endless torment
in the Lake of Fire.
Once we learn who is symbolized by the chaste Woman, we are
in the position to identify the corrupt Woman, who is compared and contrasted with her. As
to whom is signified by the former, there is surely little room for doubt - it is the
faithful portion of Israel. She is the one who gave birth to the Man-child - i.e. Judah,
in contrast from the unfaithful ten tribes, who because of idolatry were, at the time of
the Incarnation, is captivity. So in Rev. 19 and 21 there are a number of things which
show clearly (to any unprejudiced mind) that the Bride, the Lamb's Wife, is redeemed
Israel, and not the Church. For example, in Rev. 19:6,7, when praise bursts forth because
the marriage of the Lamb is come, a great multitude cry, "Alleluia: for the Lord God
omnipotent reigneth. Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to Him for the marriage of
the Lamb is come". "Alleluia (which occurs nowhere in the New Testament but in
this chapter) is a peculiarly Hebrew expression, meaning "Praise the Lord". In
the second place, the word for "marriage" (gamos) or "wedding-feast"
is the same as is used in Matt. 22:2,3,8,11,12, where, surely, it is Israel that is in
view. In the third place, note that we are told "His wife hath made herself
ready" (v. 7). Contrast this with Eph. 5:26, where we learn that Christ will make the
Church ready - see Matt. 23:39 for Israel making herself ready. In the fourth place, in
19:8 we read, "And to her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen, clean
and white, for the fine linen is the righteousness of saints". The Church will have
been arrayed years before the time contemplated here. In the fifth place, note it is said
that "the marriage of the Lamb is come" (v. 7), just as He is on the point of
leaving heaven for earth (v. 11; but the Church will have been with Him in the Father's
house for at least seven years (probably forty years, or more) when that hour strikes. In
the sixth place, in Rev. 21;9,10 the Lamb's Wife is inseparably connected with that great
city, the holy Jerusalem, and in the description which follows we are told that on the
twelve gates of the city were written "the names of the twelve tribes of the children
of Israel" (v. 12)! Surely that is conclusive evidence that it is not the Church
which is in view. In the seventh place, in Rev. 21:14 we are told that in the twelve
foundations of the City's wall were "the names of the twelve apostles of the
Lamb" (cf Matt. 19:28!). Is it thinkable that the name of the apostle Paul would have
been omitted if the Church were there symbolically portrayed?[9]
If, then, the Chaste Woman of Rev. 12,19,21, symbolizes
faithful Israel, must not the Corrupt Woman (who is compared and contrasted with the
former) represent faithless Israel? But if so, why connect her so intimately with Babylon,
the great city? It will help us here to remember that the Chaste Woman of the Apocalypse
is also indissolubly united to a city. In Rev. 21;9 we read that one of the seven angels
said to John, "Come hither, I will show thee the bride, the Lamb's Wife". And
immediately following we read, "And he carried me away in the spirit to a great and
high mountain, and showed me that great city, the holy Jerusalem, descending out of heaven
from God". Thus, though separate, the two are intimately connected. The Bride will
dwell in the holy Jerusalem. So here in Rev. 17, though distinct, the Whore is intimately
related to the City, Babylon. One of the many proofs related to the Harlot of Rev. 17 is
apostate Israel is found in Isa. 1, where we read, "How is the faithful city become
an harlot"! (v. 21). In the verses which follow it will be seen that the Lord of
hosts is addressing Israel, and describing conditions which will prevail in the End-time.
After indicting Israel for her sins, the Lord declares, "I will ease Me of Mine
adversaries, and avenge Me of Mine enemies". Clearly, this has reference to the
Tribulation period. Then the Lord continues, "And I will turn, Mine hand upon thee,
and purely purge away thy dross", etc., and then He adds, "Afterwards thou shalt
be called, The city of righteousness, the faithful city". How clear it is then that
God calls Israel "an harlot" for her unfaithfulness. For further proofs see Jer.
2:20; 3:6,8; Ezek. 16:15; 20:30; 43:8, 9; Hosea 2:5, etc.
We would next call attention to some of the scriptures which
prove that there will be Israelites dwelling in Babylon and the land of Assyria at the
End-time. In Jer. 50:4-7 we read, "In those days, and in that time, saith the Lord,
the children of Israel shall come, they and the children of Judah together, going and
weeping: they shall go, and seek the Lord their God. They shall ask the way to Zion with
their faces thitherward, saying, Come, and let us join ourselves to the Lord in a
perpetual covenant that shall not be forgotten", etc. Clearly these verses treat of
the closing days of the time of "Jacob's trouble". Immediately following we
read, "Remove out of the midst of Babylon, and go forth out of the land of the
Chaldeans" (v. 8). Then, in the next verse, a reason is given, showing the urgency of
this call for the faithful Jews in Babylon to come out: "For lo, I will raise and
cause to come up against Babylon an assembly of great nations from the north country: and
they shall set themselves in array against her; from thence she shall be taken" (v.
9). Again, in Jer. 51:44, the Lord says, "And I will punish Bel in Babylon, and I
will bring forth out of his mouth that which he hath swallowed up: and the nations shall
not flow together any more unto him: yea, the wall of Babylon shall fall". And then
follows the Call for the faithful Jews to separate themselves from the mass of their
apostate brethren in Babylon - "My people, go ye out of the midst of her, and deliver
ye every man his soul from the fierce anger of the Lord". Isa. 11:11; 27:13; Micah
4:10, all show that Israel will be intimately connected with Babylon in the End-time.
It was of incalculable help to students of the past when
they discovered that Israel is the key which unlocks prophecy, and that the Nations are
referred to only as they affect the fortunes of Jacob's descendants. There were other
mighty peoples of old besides the Egyptians and the Chaldeans, but the holy Spirit has
passed them by, because their history had no bearing on that of the chosen Nation. The
same reason explains why the empires of Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome, do occupy
such a prominent notice in the book of Daniel - they were the enemies into whose hands God
delivered His wayward people. These principles have received wide recognition by prophetic
students, and therefore it is the more strange that so few have applied them in their
study of the final prophetic book. Israel is the key to the Revelation, and the Nations
are only mentioned therein as they immediately affect Israel's fortunes. The ultimate
design of the Apocalypse is not to take notice of such men as Nero and Charlemagne and
Napoleon, nor such systems as Mohammedanism and the Papacy. Nor would so much be said
about Babylon unless this "great city" was yet to be the home of apostate
Israel. After these preliminary considerations, which though length were necessary, we are
now prepared to examine a few of the details supplied by Rev. 17 and 18. Nor can we now do
more than offer a bare outline, and even that will require a further chapter on Rev. 18.
"And there came one of the seven angels which had the
seven vials, and talked with me, saying unto me, Come hither; I will show thee the
judgment of the great whore that sitteth upon many waters: with whom the kings of the
earth have committed fornication, and the inhabitants of the earth have been made drunk
with the wine of her fornication" (Rev. 17:1,2). The "great whore", in the
final accomplishment of this prophecy, describes apostate Israel in the End-time - i.e.
Daniel's seventieth week. The figure of an unfaithful woman to represent apostate Israel
is a common one in the Scriptures: see Jer. 2:20; 3:6; Ezek. 16:15; 20:30; 43:8,9; Hosea
2:5, etc. She is here termed "the great whore" for two reasons: first, because
(as we shall show later) she will, at the end, worship Mammon as she never has in the
past; second, because of her idolatrous alliance with the Beast. The apostle is here shown
her "judgment". This is in contrast from what we have in Rev. 12, where we learn
that the chaste "Woman" will be preserved. That apostate Israel will yet sit
"upon many waters" ("peoples", etc., v. 15), and that the kings of the
earth will commit fornication with her, we reserve for consideration in the next chapter.
"So he carried me away in the spirit into the
wilderness: and I saw a woman sit upon a scarlet colored Beast, full of names of
blasphemy, having seven heads and ten horns. And the woman was arrayed in purple and
scarlet color, and decked with gold and precious stones, and pearls, having a golden cup
in her hand full of abominations and filthiness of her fornication" (vv. 3 and 4 ).
The Woman seated on the Beast does not signify that she will rule over him, but intimates
that he will support her. The ultimate reference here is to the Devil's imitation of the
Millennium, when the Jews (even now rapidly coming into prominence) shall no longer be the
tail of the Nations, but the head. How the Devil will bring this about will appear when we
examine Rev. 18. As the result of the Beast's support (v. 3), apostate Israel will be
lifted to heights of worldly power and glory (v. 4).
"And upon her forehead was a name written, mystery:
BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH" (v. 5). In a
re-built Babylon will culminate the various systems of idolatry which had their source in
the first Babylon of Nimrod's day. It is in this city that the most influential Jews will
congregate at the Time of the End. From there, Jewish financiers will control the
governments of earth. That apostate Israel, in Babylon, should be clothed in "purple
and scarlet" (emblems of royalty and earthly glory) before the Kingdom of Messiah is
set up, was indeed a "mystery" (secret) disclosed by none of the Prophets, but
now made known in the Revelation.
"And I saw the woman drunken with the blood of the
saints, and with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus: and when I saw her, I wondered with a
great wonder" (v. 6, R.V.) The final reference is, again, to apostate Israel in the
End-time. The most relentless enemies of the godly Jews will be their own apostate
brethren - cf our notes on Luke 18 in chapter 9. The second half of v. 6, correctly
rendered in the R.V., "And when I saw her I wondered with a great wonder", ought
to show us that it is not Romanism which is here in view. Why should John, who was himself
then suffering from the hatred of Rom (Pagan) wonder at Rome (Papal) being clothed with
governmental power and glory, and drunken with the blood of saints? But that the kings of
the earth (her worst enemies for three thousand years) should commit fornication with
Israel, and that the apostate portion of the Nation should be drunken with the blood of
their own brethren according to the flesh, was well calculated to fill him with amazement.
"And the angel said unto me, Wherefore didst thou
marvel? I will tell thee the mystery of the woman, and of the Beast that carrieth her,
which hath the seven heads and ten horns" (v. 7). It should be noted that in the
interpretation which follows, far more is said about "the Beast" than about
"the Woman". We believe the chief reason for this is because the 18th verse
tells us the Woman represents "that great city, which reigneth over the kings of the
earth", and the City receives fuller notice in the chapter that follows - Rev. 18.
"And here is the mind which hath wisdom. The seven
heads are seven mountains, on which the woman sitteth. And there are seven kings: five are
fallen, and one is, and the other is not yet come; and when he cometh, he must continue a
short space. And the Beast that was, and is not, even he is the eighth, and is of the
seven, and goeth into perdition" (vv. 9-11). Here is the mind which hath wisdom (v.
9): "This repetition of 13:18 identifies and connects these two chapters. The word
rendered "mind" in 17:9 and `understanding' in 13:18 is the same. This `wisdom'
is, to understand that, though a "Beast" is seen in the vision, it is not a wild
beast that is meant, but one great final super-human personality; namely, a man energized
by satanic power" (Dr. E.W. Bullinger).
The 9th verse should end with the word "wisdom":
what follows belongs to v. 10. The R.V., which in this verse follows a number of reliable
translations, renders thus: "The seven heads are seven mountains, on which the woman
sitteth, and they are seven kings". This at once disposes of the popular
interpretation which regards these seven mountains s referring to the seven hills on which
the city of Rome was built. The Holy Spirit expressly tells us that the seven mountains
are (represent) seven kings. Of these seven kings it is said, "five are fallen, and
one is (i.e. the sixth existed when John wrote the Apocalypse), and the other (the
seventh) is yet to come: he must continue a short space". And then in v. 11 we read,
"And the Beast that was, and is not, is himself also an eighth, and is of the seven,
and he goeth into perdition". Upon those verses we cannot do better than give
extracts from Mr. Newton's "Thoughts on the Apocalypse".
"This passage is evidently intended to direct our
thoughts to the various forms of executive government or kingship which have existed, or
shall exist in the prophetic earth, until the hour when the sovereignty of the world shall
become the sovereignty of the Lord and of His Christ. We might expect to find such a
reference in a chapter which professedly treats of him who is to close the history of
human government by the introduction of a new and marvellous form of power - a form new as
to its mode of administration and development, yet not unconnected with the past, for it
will be constructed upon principles drawn from the experience of preceding ages, and will
have the foundations of its greatness laid by the primeval efforts of mankind. He will be
the eighth; but he is of (ek) the seven.
"The native energy and intrepidity of him who is said
to have been a mighty hunter before the Lord - an energy essential to men who were setting
in a forlorn and unsubdued earth, surrounded by beasts of the forest and countless other
difficulties and dangers, very naturally gave the first form to kingship, and hence its
parentage may be said to spring. "The beginning of his kingdom was Babel". The
supremacy of Nimrod was not derived from any previously existing system. He neither
inherited his power from others, nor did he, like Nebuchadnezzar afterwards, receive it as
a gift from God. He earned it for himself, by the force of his own individual character -
but it was without God. Great progress was made in the kingdom which he founded in the
land of Shinar, in civilization and refinement; for we early read of the godly Babylonish
garment, and of the s kill and learning of the Chaldees; but their domination was
repressed and kept, as it were, in abeyance by the hand of God, until the trial of Israel,
His people, had been fully made, that it might be seen whether they would prove themselves
worthy of supremacy in the earth.
"The form of government in Israel was a theocracy; as
was seen in the reigns of David and Solomon, who were types (imperfect types indeed) of
Him that is to come. The monarch was independent of and uncontrolled by those whom he
governed, but he was dependent upon God, who dwelt in the temple, ever near to be
consulted, and whose law was given as the final standard of appeal. He stood between God
and the people, not to be their functionary and slave - not to be the expression of their
judgments, and the reflection of their will; but as set over them by principles which he
himself had received from above. But the possession of power like this, held in
companionship with God, required a holiness that was not found in man in the flesh, and
therefore it was soon forfeited. Divine sanction, however, has many times since been
coveted, and the name of `the Lord's anointed' assumed. The last great king of the
Gentiles, indeed, will do more than this, for he will take the place of Divinity itself,
and sit upon the mount of the congregation on the sides of the north, saying he is like
the Most High. But all this is unauthorized assumption.
"The third form is developed when the Gentile dynasty
was formally constituted by God in the person of Nebuchadnezzar. He, like the monarchs of
Israel, had absolute sovereignty granted to him - but God was not with him in it. He and
his successors received it as delegated power to be exercised according to their own
pleasure, though in final responsibility to God. It is not necessary here to pursue the
painful history of the Gentiles. It is sufficient to say, as regards the history of power,
that the Gentile monarchs from the beginning, not knowing God so as to lean upon Him, and
too weak to stand alone; exposed to the jealousy and hatred of those whom they governed -
a jealousy not unfrequently earned by their own evil, found it necessary to lean upon
something inferior to themselves: and thus the character of power has been deteriorated
from age to age, until at last the monarchy of these latter days has consented not only to
own the people as the basis and source of its power, but has also submitted to be directed
in the exercise of that power by given rules prescribed by its subjects.
"The native monarchy of Nimrod, the theocracy of
Israel, the despotic authority of Nebuchadnezzar, the aristocratic monarchy of Persia, and
the military monarchy of Alexander and his successors, had all passed away when John
beheld this vision. All these methods had been tried - none had been found to answer even
the purposes of man; and now another had arisen, the half military, half popular monarchy
of the Caesars, - the iron empire of Rome. `Five have fallen, and one is, and the other is
not yet come; and when he cometh he must continue a little space".
"That other (though it cannot yet be said to have come
so as to fulfill this verse)[10] (we are rather inclined to
believe that the "seventh" is commercialism, that is, the moneyed-interests in
control - A.W.P.) and, with one brief exception, the last form that is to be exhibited
before the end shall come, and it is under this form that the system of Babylon is
matured. It is obvious that a monarchy, guided not by the people numerically, but by
certain classes of the people, and those classes determined by the possession of property,
must be the form adapted for the accumulation of wealth, and the growth of commercial
power; for it gives (which pure democracy has ever failed to do), the best security fro
property without unduly fettering the liberty of individual enterprise".
For lack of space we are obliged to pass over the
intervening verses now, and in closing this chapter we offer a brief word on v. 18.
"And the woman which thou sawest is that great city, which reigneth over the kings of
the earth". This verse tells us that the Whore represents a City. This city is named
in 14:8; 16:19; 17:5; 18:2; 10, 21; and it is surely significant that it is thus named in
the Apocalypse six times - the number of man; whereas the new Jerusalem is referred to
three times (3:12; 21:2; 10) the Divine number. Babylon, must therefore be understood
literally, otherwise we should have the anomaly of a figure representing a figure. But
from the very fact that we are here told the Woman represents the City, we learn that she
is not literal, but figurative. In the next chapter we shall further review Rev. 17 and
offer some comments on Rev. 18.
[8] A book of intense interest for the antiquarian, but
dull and wearisome for the average reader.
[9] He that hath the Bride (John 3:29), spoken by John
the Baptist - the "friend of the Bridegroom" - demonstrates that "the
Bride" was in view during our Lord's ministry unto the lost sheep of the house of
Israel. The believing Remnant who "received" Him, form the nucleus and were
representative of redeemed Israel, millennial Israel, the Bride of the Lamb.
[10] It will not have come in the sense of this verse,
until it pervades the Roman world. When all the ten kingdoms have been constitutionalized,
it may be said to have come.

[ The Antichrist - Contents Page ] [ The Antichrist - Forward ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 1 ] [ The Antichrist Chapter 2 ] [ The Anticrist - Chapter 3 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 4 ] [ The Anticrist - Chapter 5 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 6 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 7 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 8 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 9 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 10 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 11 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 12 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 13 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 14 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 15 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 16 ] [ The Antichrist - Chapter 17 ] [ The Antichrist ]