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THE FALL OF BABYLON.
Re 18 BABYLON has fallen. We have now the Divine proclamation of her fate,
and. the lamentation of the world over the doom to which she has
been
consigned. {Re 18:1-3} At Re 17:1 we read of one of the
angels that had the seven Bowls. The angel now introduced is
"another," or a second. We shall find as we proceed that we have
entered upon a new series of seven parts, similar to that in chap.
14., where six angels and their actions, three on either side, are
grouped around One higher than angels, and forming the central
figure
of the movement. The series is a long one, extending from Re
17:1 to Re 22:5, the central figure meeting us at Re
19:11; and again, as before, the fact ought to be carefully
noticed, for it has a bearing on the interpretation of some of the
most difficult sections of this book. Meanwhile we have to do with
the second angel, whose action extends to ver. 20 of the present
chapter. The description given of this angel is proportioned to the
importance
of his message. He has "great authority"; the earth is "lightened
with his glory"; the voice with which he cries is "mighty." It
could hardly be otherwise than that, with such joyful tidings as he
bears to men, the "glory of the Lord should shine round about him,
and a light from heaven above the brightness of the sun.". {Lu
2:9 Ac 26:13} The tidings themselves follow, taken from. the Old
Testament accounts, of the desolation that was to come upon Babylon:
"And Babylon, the glory of kingdoms, the beauty of the Chaldeans’
pride, shall be as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah. It shall
never be inhabited, neither shall it be dwelt in from generation to
generation: neither shall the Arabian pitch tent there; neither
shall
shepherds make their flocks to lie down there. But wild beasts of
the
desert shall lie there; and their houses shall be full of doleful
creatures; and ostriches shall dwell, there, and satyrs shall dance
there. And wolves shall cry in their castles, and jackals in the
pleasant palaces." {Isa 13:19-22} In words such as these,
though combined throughout both the present and following
descriptions with expressions taken from the ruin of other famous
and
guilty cities of the Old Testament, we have the source whence the
powerful and pathetic words of this chapter are drawn. The most
terrible disasters of bygone times are but types of that wreck of
all
the grandeur of earth which we are now invited to behold, while
Babylon’s sinfulness is referred to that her fate may appear to be
no
more than her appropriate punishment. At this point we are met by one of those sudden transitions, common
in the Apocalypse, which so completely negative the idea of
chronological arrangement. A cry is heard which seems to imply that
Babylon has not yet fallen. {Re 18:4-8} The first words of this voice from heaven deserve peculiar
attention:
"Come forth, My people, out of her"; that is, out of Babylon, the
degenerate Church. We are at once reminded of the striking teaching
of our Lord in chap. 10. of the fourth Gospel, where He compares
Himself to the "door" of the fold, not the door by which the sheep
enter into, but by which they come out of, the fold. {Joh 10:7}
We are also reminded of the blind man of chap. 9. of the same
Gospel,
whom our Lord "found" only after he had been "cast out" of the
synagogue. {Joh 9:35} In the midst of the blinded theocracy of
Israel in the days of Jesus there was a faithful, though small,
remnant. It had been betrayed by the religious guides of the people,
who had become "thieves and robbers," whom the true sheep did not
know, and to whom they ought not to listen. Jesus came to call it
out
of the theocracy to Himself. Such was the spectacle which St. John
had witnessed when his Master was in the world, and that experience
is now repeated. The Church as a whole degenerates. Called to
prepare
men for the Second Coming of the Lord, and to teach them to live,
not
for the present, but the future, she becomes herself the victim of
the present. She forgets that, in the absence of the Bridegroom, her
days are days of fasting. She fails to realise the fact that until
her Lord comes again her state is one of widowhood. And, instead of
mourning, she sits as a queen, at ease and satisfied, proud of her
pomp and jewellery. What is all this but a recurrence of the old
events of history? The Apostle sees the future mirrored in the past;
and he can only follow in his Master’s footsteps, and call His
Christian remnant out of Babylon. The words are in the highest degree important for the interpretation
and understanding of the Apocalypse. We have already found in more
than one passage distinct traces of this double Church, of the true
Church within the false, of the few living ones within the Body
which
had a name to live, but was dead. Here the distinction meets us in
all its sharpness, and fresh light is cast upon passages that may
have formerly seemed dark. "Many are called," "many" constituting
the outward Church; but "few are chosen," "few" constituting the
real Church, the Church which consists of the poor, and meek, and
lowly. The two parts may keep together for a time, but the union
cannot last; and the day comes when, as Christ called His sheep out
of the Jewish, so He will again call His sheep out of the Christian
"fold," that they may hear His voice, and follow Him. Having summoned the true disciples of Jesus out of Babylon, the
voice
from heaven again proclaims in a double form, as "sins" and as
"iniquities," the guilt of the doomed city, and invites the
ministers of judgment, according to the lex talionis, to "render
unto her double." The command may also be founded upon the law of
the theocracy by which thieves and violent aggressors of the poor
were required to make a double repayment to those whom they had
injured, or it may rest upon the remembrance of such threatenings as
those by the prophet Jeremiah, "I will recompense their iniquity and
their sin double." Judgment is next supposed to have been executed upon Babylon; and
the
Seer proceeds to describe in language of unexampled eloquence the
lamentation of the world over the city’s fall. {Re 18:9-20} Three classes of persons are introduced to us: Kings, Merchants, and
Sailors. All are "of the earth; "and each class, in its own strain,
swells the voice of lamentation. The words are largely taken from
the
Old Testament, and more particularly from the description of the
overthrow of Tyre in Ezekiel (chaps. 26., 27.). There is even a
peculiar propriety in this latter reference, for Tyre was known by.
the prophets as another Babylon. In describing the "Burden of
Tyre," Isaiah uses in one part of his description the words, "The
city of confusion" (the meaning of the word Babylon) "is broken
down.". {Isa 24:10} It is unnecessary to enter into any examination clause by clause of
the passage before us. We shall better catch its spirit and be made
sensible of its effect by attending to a few general observations
upon the description as a whole. 1. Not without interest may we mark that the classes selected
to mourn over the burning of the city are three in number. We have
thus another illustration of the manner in which that number
penetrates the structure of all the writings of St. John. 1. Emphasis is laid upon the fact that the city is
"burned." Her destruction by fire has indeed been more than once
alluded to. Of the beast and the ten horns it had been said that
"they shall burn her utterly with fire"; 2 Re 17:16 and, again, it had been proclaimed by the
voice from heaven that "she shall be utterly burned with
fire." {Re 17:8} We shall not venture to say with any measure
of positiveness that the type of this "burning" is taken from the
burning of Jerusalem by the Romans: It may have been taken from the
burning of other cities by victorious enemies. But this much at
least
is obvious: that, in conjunction with the fact that Babylon is a
harlot, destruction by fire leads us directly to the thought of the
spiritual, and not simply the civil, or political, or commercial,
character of the city. According to the law of Moses, burning
appears
to have been the punishment of fornication only in the case of a
priest’s daughter: "And the daughter of any priest, if she profane
herself by playing the harlot, she shall be burnt with
fire.". {Le 21:9} 3. Whether there is any other allusion to spiritual traffic
in the lamentations before us it is not easy to say. Of one at least
which may be quoted in this connection the interpretation is
uncertain. When the merchants of the earth weep and mourn over the
loss of that merchandise which they now miss, they extend it, not
only to articles of commerce bought and sold in an ordinary market,
but to "souls of men." It may be that, as often suggested, slavery
alone is thought of. Yet it is highly improbable that such is the
case. Rather may it be supposed to refer to that Spiritual life
which
is destroyed by too much occupation with, and too engrossing
interest
in, the world. "The characteristic of this fornication is the
selling themselves for gold, as the Greek word signifies. Therefore
with such wonderful force and emphasis of accumulation is every
species of this merchandise mentioned, running up all into one head:
the souls of men. Like that in the prophet: ‘Their land is full of
silver and gold, neither is there any end of their treasures; their
land also is full of horses, neither is there any end of their
chariots; their land also is full of idols.’ And it must be observed
that all these things which are so minutely particularised as
expressive of the meshes of that net by which men’s souls are taken
have also their place in the new Jerusalem, where every jewel is
specified by name, and the gold of its streets, and the fine linen,
and the incense, and the wine, and the oil, its white horses also.
In
both alike must they stand for spiritual merchandise of good and
evil, the false riches and the true." The conclusion to be drawn is that Babylon is a spiritual city.
That,
as such, she is Jerusalem is further confirmed by the fact that, at
the close of the chapter, it is said, "And in her was found the
blood of prophets, and of saints, and of all that have been slain
upon the earth." Similar words met us Re 17:6; and here, as
there, they unmistakably remind us of
the words already quoted in which our Lord describes the great city
of the Mt 23:35. 4. From all that has been said, it must be obvious that nothing
is here spoken of Babylon inapplicable to Jerusalem when we think of
this latter city in the light in which the Seer specially regards
it.
Jerusalem was indeed neither a commercial nor a maritime city, but
Rome also was no city on the sea. A large part, therefore, of the
details of St. John’s description is not less destitute of force
when
applied, if applied literally, to the latter than to the former. On
the other hand, these details are more applicable to Jerusalem. than
to Rome, if we remember that Jerusalem supplies, in a way impossible
to Rome, the groundwork for a delineation of those religious forces
which are far more wide-spreading in their reach, and far more
crushing in their power, than the legions of the imperial
metropolis. Babylon then is fallen, and that with a sudden and swift
destruction,
a destruction indeed so sudden and so swift that each of the three
companies that lament takes particular notice of the fact that "in
one hour" did her judgment come. Vers 10, 17, 19. More, however, so important is the subject, has to be said; and we
are introduced to the action of the third angel of the first
group. {Re 18:21-24} Yet once again, it would seem, must we think of Babylon as to be
destroyed rather than as destroyed already. So great is her
guiltiness that the Seer again and again approaches it, and dwells,
though from different points of view, upon the thought of her
disastrous fate. In the present case it is less the method than the
effect of her destruction that is before his eye, and nothing can be
more touching than the light in which he presents it. At one moment
we behold the city in her brightness, her gaiety, her rich and
varied
life. We hear the voice of her harpers, and minstrels, and
flute-players, and trumpeters, all that can delight the ear
accompanying all that can please the eye. Her craftsmen of every
craft are busy at their work; and each shop in the great city
resounds with the noise of the hammer, or the shuttle, or the other
instruments of prosperous industry. The cheering sound of the
millstone tells that there is food in her humbler dwellings. Her
merchants, too, are the princes of the earth; innumerable lamps
glitter in their halls and gardens; and the voice of the bridegroom
and the bride is the pledge of her well-being and joy. The next
moment the proud city is cast like a millstone into the sea; and all
is silence, desolation, and ruin. The resources of language appear
as
if they had been exhausted to supply the description of so great a
fall. We have now reached the close of the longest and most important
section of the Apocalypse, beginning, as has been already pointed
out, with chap. 6. It is the fourth in that series of seven of which
the book
is composed; and the main purpose of St. John in writing finds
expression in it. As the writer of the fourth Gospel describes in
the
fourth section of that book, extending from chap. 5. to chap. 12.,
the conflict between the Son of God and "the Jews," so he describes
in the corresponding section of the Apocalypse the conflict between
the glorified Son of man as He lives and reigns in His Church and
the
evil of the world. Throughout the conflict we are not once permitted
to forget that, although Christ and the true members of His Body may
be the objects of attack, and may even have to retire for security
from the field, God is on their side, and will never suffer His
faithfulness to fail or forget His promises. In a threefold series
of
judgments the guilty world and the guilty Church are visited with
the
terrors of His wrath. These three series of judgments, too, go on in
an ascending line. The climactic character of their contents has
already been pointed out, and nothing more need be said of it. But
it
may be worth while to notice that the element of climax appears not
less in the nature of the instruments employed. Comparing the
Trumpets with the Seals, the simple fact that they are Trumpets
indicates a higher, more exciting, more terrible unfolding of wrath.
The Trumpet is peculiarly the war like instrument, summoning the
hosts to battle: "Thou hast heard, O my soul, the sound of the
trumpet, the alarm of war; That day is a day of wrath, a day
of trouble and distress, a day of wasteness and desolation, a day of
darkness and gloominess, a day of clouds and thick darkness, a day
of
the trumpet an alarm against the fenced cities." {Jer 4:19 Zep
1:15,16} That the Bowls, again, are still more potent than the
Trumpets, appears from the language in which they are described,
from. their mode of introduction, and from the vessels made use of
for the plagues. They are "the last" plagues; in them is
"finished" the wrath of God; they are called for by a "great voice
out of the sanctuary"; and they proceed, not from a secular
instrument, however warlike, but from a sacred vessel, not from one
which must be sounded for a length of time before it.produces its
effect, but from one which, inverted in a moment, pours out with a
sudden gush its terrors upon men. Similar though they thus are, the
three series of judgments lose what might otherwise be their
sameness; and the mind is invited to rest upon that most instructive
lesson of the providence of God, that in proportion to privilege
misused is the severity with which sin is punished. Throughout all
these judgments the righteous are kept safe. It will thus be observed that there is no strict chronological
succession in the visions of this book. There is succession of a
certain kind, succession in intensity of punishment. But we cannot
assign one series of judgments to one period in the history of the
Church or limit another to another. All the three series may
continually fulfil themselves wherever persons are found of the
character and disposition to which they severally apply. But while these three series constitute the chief substance of the
fourth, or leading, section of the seven into which the Apocalypse
is
divided, they do not exhaust the subject. The last series, in
particular—that of the Bowls—has proceeded upon a supposition the
most startling and pathetic bywhich the history of the Church is
marked, -that "they are not all Israel which are of Israel," that
tares have mingled with the wheat, and that the spirit of Babylon
has
found its way into the heart of the city of God. A phenomenon so
unexpected and so melancholy stands in need of particular
examination, and that examination is given in the description of the
character and fate of Babylon. The remarks already made upon this
point need not be repeated. It may be enough to remind the reader
that in no part of his whole book is the Seer more deeply moved, and
that in none does he rise to strains of more powerful and touching
eloquence. Yet what is chiefly required of us is to open our minds
to
the full impression of the fact that Babylon does fall, deep in ruin
as in guilt, and that with her fall the conflict ends. |