Verse 1
Revelation 18:1. And after these
things — After the
angel-interpreter had so far
explained the meaning of the
vision, and mystery of the
woman, and of the beast with
seven heads and ten horns which
carried her; I saw another angel
— Termed another, with respect
to him mentioned Revelation
10:1; come down from heaven — To
show the sure downfall of this
antichristian power, which is
here described in the same
sublime figurative style as that
in which Isaiah, Jeremiah, and
Ezekiel have foretold the fall
of ancient Babylon and Tyre, the
types and emblems of the
spiritual Babylon; and, together
with her punishment, the crimes
which deserved it, her idolatry
and wickedness; having great
power, and the earth was
lightened with his glory — In
this description of the angel
there seems to be an allusion to
the vision of Ezekiel, (Ezekiel
43:2,) when he beheld the glory
of the God of Israel, and the
earth, it is said, shined with
his glory. A bright and shining
light, it seems, usually
attended the appearance of
angels; and it is likely the
splendour of the appearance used
to be greater in proportion as
the angel appearing was more
honourable. The sending an angel
of superior rank alludes to the
custom of courts in employing
persons of dignity, according to
the weight and importance of the
commissions they were to
execute. We may observe here, if
such be the lustre of the
servant, in lightening the earth
with his glory, what images can
display the majesty of the Lord,
who has thousands of thousands
of those glorious attendants
ministering to him, and ten
thousand times ten thousand
standing before him!
Verse 2-3
Revelation 18:2-3. And he cried
mightily with a strong voice —
Proclaimed aloud with triumphant
joy, in the words of Isaiah
21:9, saying, Babylon the great
is fallen, is fallen — As if he
had said, What was prophesied
formerly concerning the
celebrated seat of the Chaldean
empire, shall presently be
verified in this mystical
Babylon. Her fall was announced
before, chap. Revelation 14:8,
but is now declared at large;
and is become a habitation of
devils, &c. — Here it is
foretold, that after her fall
she should be made a scene of
desolation, as the ancient
Babylon was, according to the
predictions of the prophet
respecting ancient Babylon,
Isaiah 13:19, Babylon, the glory
of kingdoms, 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 his tent there,
neither shall the shepherds make
their fold there; but wild
beasts of the desert shall lie
there, and their houses shall be
full of doleful creatures, and
owls shall dwell there, and
satyrs shall dance there; where
the word שׂעורים, which we
translate satyrs, the LXX.
render διαμονια, demons, or
devils, who were supposed
sometimes to take the shape of
goats, or satyrs: and to haunt
forlorn and desolate places; and
it is from the translation of
the LXX. that the apostle hath
borrowed his images and
expressions. According to this
prediction, how horrid were the
inhabitants of desolate Babylon
to be as long as the world shall
stand! Of invisible beings,
devils and unclean spirits; of
visible beings, every unclean
beast, every filthy and hateful
bird. Suppose then Babylon to
mean here heathen Rome, and the
fall predicted in this chapter
to have been effected by Totilas,
king of the Ostrogoths, as
Grotius would persuade us, or by
Alaric, king of the Visigoths,
as the bishop of Meaux contends,
how can Rome be said ever since
to have been the habitation of
devils, and the hold of every
foul spirit, and a cage of every
unclean and hateful bird, unless
they will allow the popes and
cardinals to merit these
appellations? For all nations
have drunk of the wine of her
fornication, &c. — She hath not
only been guilty of idolatry
herself, and with great wrath
persecuted the true Christian
faith, worship, and practice,
but hath also corrupted the
princes and nations of the
earth, as if she had given them
a cup of poisonous composition,
to disorder their reason and
inflame them into rage and fury,
having prevailed upon them to
commit the same sins of which
she was guilty, and to propagate
her corruptions by ambitious
views, incitements to luxury,
and prospects of gain. And the
merchants of the earth are waxed
rich through the abundance of
her delicacies — “The Romish
clergy,” says Daubuz, “by
trading in spiritual matters,
have gotten vast wealth; these
are the merchants of the earth,
who by their Popish tricks and
trinkets have gotten a good part
of the wealth of the world into
their hands. In short, Rome is a
great mart; the Romish clergy
are the merchants and factors;
the secular, inferior clergy,
the monks and friars, are the
pedlers and hawkers which retail
the merchandise. As for the
luxury of Rome, procured by this
trade, it needs no proof.
Verses 4-6
Revelation 18:4-6. And I heard
another voice from heaven —
Probably the voice of Christ,
graciously warning his people of
their danger of being infected
by the prevailing corruptions of
the mystical Babylon, and, in
consequence thereof, of being
involved in her ruin; saying,
Come out of her, my people —
Immediately forsake the
communion of so corrupt a
church; that ye be not partakers
of her sins — Which you surely
will be if you do not separate
yourselves from her; and that ye
receive not of her plagues —
That ye share not in that guilt
which would render you liable to
all the plagues and judgments
with which she shall assuredly
be punished. But, as Bishop
Newton observes, “was there any
such necessity of forsaking the
Church of Rome in the days of
Alaric or Totilas, before she
had degenerated again into
idolatry? Or, what were then her
notorious crimes, deserving of
such exemplary punishment,
unless Rome Christian was to
suffer for the sins of Rome
pagan?” What a remarkable
providence it was that this book
of the Revelation was printed in
the midst of Spain, in the Great
Polyglot Bible, before the
Reformation! Else how much
easier had it been for the
Papists to reject the whole
book, than it is to evade these
striking parts of it! For her
sins have reached unto heaven —
When sins are ripe for judgment,
they are said to reach unto
heaven, or to come up before the
face of Jehovah. So the angels
speak who were sent to punish
the sins of Sodom, Genesis
19:13, We will destroy this
place, because the cry of them
is waxed great before the face
of the Lord. Thus God said to
Jonah, Cry against Nineveh, for
their wickedness is come up
before me: and St. James uses a
like expression concerning
oppressors, The cries of them
which have reaped have entered
into the ears of the Lord of
Sabaoth. It seems to be an
elegant allusion to the methods
of justice in human courts, when
criminals are actually
prosecuted, and their crimes are
brought to light before the
court of judgment. Reward her —
God speaks to the executioners
of his vengeance; even as she
hath rewarded — Others, in
particular the saints of God;
and double unto her double —
This, according to the Hebrew
idiom, implies only a full
retaliation; according to her
works — The injuries and evils
with which she has oppressed the
faithful servants of God. In the
cup which she hath filled, fill
to her double — Let her suffer
whatever the laws of justice
have made the punishment of such
great offences. By the laws of
the Jewish government some
offences were punished by
retaliation, or by inflicting on
the offender that evil which he
had injuriously done to his
neighbour. It was therefore
enacted by the Jewish law, that
life should be given for life,
eye for eye, tooth for tooth,
hand for hand, foot for foot,
Exodus 21:23, &c. In other cases
of damage it was enacted that
the offender should pay double
damages. Thus, in the case of
theft, the law required the
thief to restore double, (Exodus
22:4,) it being just that the
thief should suffer for his
offence, as well as make full
restitution for the damage he
had done. In allusion to these
laws of the Jewish government,
divine justice is represented as
punishing Rome for her idolatry
and persecution, by inflicting
upon her, as an offender, such
pains and penalties as the laws
of equity direct, where injuries
are so highly criminal.
Verse 7-8
Revelation 18:7-8. How much she
hath glorified herself — By
pride, and pomp, and arrogant
boasting; and lived deliciously
— In all kinds of elegance,
luxury, and wantonness; so much
torment and sorrow give her —
Proportioning the punishment to
the sin; for, or because, she
saith in her heart — As did
ancient Babylon, Isaiah 47:8-9;
I sit — Her usual style. Hence
those expressions, the chair,
the see of Rome. She sat so many
years as a queen, over many
kings, “mistress of all
churches; the supreme, the
infallible, the only spouse of
Christ; a church out of which
there is no salvation:” and am
no widow — But the spouse of
Christ; and shall see no sorrow
— From the death of my children,
or any other calamity, for God
himself will defend “the
church.” Therefore — As both the
natural and judicial consequence
of this proud security; shall
her plagues come in one day —
All at once, in full extremity;
death — The death of her
children, with an incapacity of
bearing more; mourning — πενθος,
sorrow, or lamentation, instead
of carnal pleasure and delights;
and famine — In the room of
luxurious plenty; the very
things from which she imagined
herself to be most safe; and she
shall be utterly burned with
fire — Even ancient Rome, which
gloried in the name of the
eternal city; for strong is the
Lord God who judgeth her —
Expressions these which, as
Bishop Newton observes, “can
imply no less than a total
destruction by fire; but Rome
hath never yet been totally
destroyed by fire. The most that
Alaric and Totilas did was
burning some parts of the city:
but if only some parts of the
city were burned, it was not an
event important enough to be
ascribed to the Lord God
particularly, and to be
considered as a strong exertion
of his judgment.”
Verses 9-11
Revelation 18:9-11. And the
kings of the earth, &c. — Even
the chief rulers and great
powers of the world, who were
formerly in league with her, and
supported her in her
corruptions, practised her
idolatries, and lived
deliciously with her — Shared in
the pomp and luxury of her
prosperous state; shall bewail
her, &c. — Shall not be able to
afford her any support or
defence, or to do any more than
fruitlessly condole with her,
and lament her sad condition,
when they shall behold all these
calamities come suddenly upon
her. Saying, Alas, alas! — Only
expressing their astonishment at
so great and wonderful a
revolution, so little expected,
so little thought of; that great
city, that mighty city — Rome
was anciently termed by its
inhabitants, Valentia, that is,
strong; and the word Rome
itself, in Greek, signifies
strength. This name was given to
it by the Greek strangers. For
in one hour is thy judgment come
— How strange, how awful, that
so great and mighty a city
should be so suddenly, so
utterly destroyed! And the
merchants of the earth — Her men
of business, and those skilled
in the affairs of life, who
gained so much by her
preferments, and by employments
under her; the men of riches and
credit in the several nations
which she had corrupted, and who
were supported in their pride
and luxury by her means, shall
not be able to help in this hour
of her distress, any more than
the kings of the earth; they can
only weep and mourn for her
misery, and for their own loss
in her destruction. Now all
commerce with her shall be
utterly cut off; and no man by
her means shall obtain wealth,
credit, or power, any more.
Verses 12-14
Revelation 18:12-14. The
merchandise, &c. — There is an
end of all traffic or commerce
with her, whether spiritual or
temporal; of gold and silver,
&c. — Almost all the things here
named are still in use at Rome,
both in their idolatrous service
and in common life; fine linen —
The sort of which here
mentioned, βυσσος, is
exceedingly costly; thyine-wood
— A sweet- smelling wood, not
unlike citron, used in adorning
magnificent palaces. Vessels of
most precious wood — Ebony in
particular, which is often, as
here, mentioned with ivory, the
one excelling in whiteness, the
other in blackness, and both in
uncommon smoothness. And
cinnamon — Bengelius adds, και
αμωμον, and amomum, a shrub
whose wood is a fine perfume;
and ointments. — ΄υρον, liquid
and fragrant ointment; and
beasts — Cows and oxen; and
chariots — ρεδων, a word purely
Latin, but here inserted in the
Greek, doubtless, on purpose to
show more fully the luxury of
Rome; and slaves — σωματων,
bodies; a common term for
slaves; and souls of men — For
these also have been and are
continually bought and sold at
Rome. And this, of all others,
is the most gainful merchandise
to the Roman traffickers. And
the fruits that thy soul lusted
after — And for which alone thy
degenerate nature had any
remaining relish. From what was
imported, the narrative proceeds
to the domestic delicacies of
Rome; none of which is in
greater request there than the
particular sort of fruits here
mentioned. The word οπωρα
properly signifies such fruit as
pears, peaches, nectarines, and
all the apple and plum kinds;
and all things — λιπαρα και τα
λαμπρα dainty — Or delightful to
the taste; and splendid — To the
sight; as clothes, buildings,
furniture. “It is plain,” says
Lowman, “this is designed to be
a figurative, and not a literal
description; therefore readers
seem to be at liberty to apply
the figurative expressions to
such literal meanings as will
agree to the general and certain
intention of them. But whether
each of these wares is designed
to point out some particular
gainful corruption of Popery,
may very well be questioned. It
is sufficient, to answer the
general intention of the
prophecy, to observe, that Rome
shall be deprived of all her
wealth, which she procured by
her management and intrigues, in
the several places where her
agents resided, who continually
made her returns of great
riches, and plentifully supplied
her excessive pride and luxury.
It is a pretty observation of
Daubuz, “Rome receives all the
luxurious wares mentioned, but
she has so infatuated the world
that she pays nothing for them
but trumpery; her money is her
enchantments and sorceries. Her
merchants, her superior clergy,
engross the real wealth of the
world to bring it to her; and
her returns and exportations are
paper and bills drawn upon
heaven and hell, never to be
accepted; however, they pass
among the common people for
payment, as if they were of real
value. The merchant who finds
means to get shut of them takes
no care about their intrinsic
value, finding gulls who take
them off his hands for real
wealth.” Whether these wares
were designed to signify
pardons, indulgences,
dispensations, and the like
trifles, with which Rome
purchases gold, silver, and
whatever ministers to pride and
luxury, this is a plain and
manifest meaning, that she shall
be deprived of all her wealth
and luxury at once, and of all
the means by which she used to
procure them.
Verses 15-21
Revelation 18:15-21. The
merchants, ship-masters, and
sailors, and as many as trade by
sea, weep and wail — For they
can no longer import or export
commodities for her, or convey
strangers to and fro, for there
is an end of all her gains,
wealth, and glory. These
lamentations are copied from the
like lamentations over Tyre,
(Ezekiel 26. and 27.,) and are
equal to the most mournful
strains of the Greek tragedians
over Thebes or Troy. In all,
they stand afar off — In a
mixture of terror and grief, but
absolutely incapable of giving
her any relief, Revelation
18:10; Revelation 18:15;
Revelation 18:17. In all, they
cry, Alas! alas! — ουαι, ουαι,
wo, wo, (Revelation 18:10;
Revelation 18:16; Revelation
18:19,) for this is the third wo
before mentioned, Revelation
8:13; Revelation 11:14. For, as
the fall of the Othman empire is
the end of the second wo, so the
fall of Rome is the completion
of the third wo. In all they
lament the suddenness of her
fall; for in one hour is her
judgment come. At the same time,
her destruction is matter of joy
and triumph to the saints,
apostles, and prophets; for it
is added, Revelation 18:20,
Rejoice over her, thou heaven —
That is, all the inhabitants of
heaven; και οι αγιοι, and ye
saints; and among the saints,
still more eminently, the
apostles and prophets, for God
hath avenged you on her — For it
is to avenge the cause of his
church and faithful servants,
that God so severely punishes
this persecuting city. And a
mighty angel, &c. — And further,
to confirm the irrecoverable
ruin of this persecuting place,
another mighty angel appeared in
my vision, and took up a stone,
like a great mill-stone, and
cast it into the sea — Using the
same emblem by which Jeremiah
foreshowed the fall of the
Chaldean Babylon; saying, Thus
with violence shall that great
city, this mystical Babylon, be
thrown down — Shall sink never
to rise again. Her utter
desolation is further described
in the two next verses, in
phrases and expressions borrowed
from the ancient prophets.
Verses 22-24
Revelation 18:22-24. The voice
of harpers — Players on stringed
instruments; and musicians —
Skilful singers in particular;
and pipers — Who played on
flutes, chiefly on mournful,
whereas trumpeters played on
joyful occasions; shall be heard
no more at all in thee; and no
craftsman — Greek, τεχνιτης
ωασης τεχνης, no artificer, of
whatever art. Arts of every
kind, particularly music,
sculpture, painting, and
statuary, were there carried to
their greatest height. No, nor
even the sound of a mill-stone
shall be heard any more in thee
— Not only the arts that adorn
life, but even those employments
without which it cannot subsist,
will cease from thee for ever:
all which expressions denote
absolute and eternal desolation.
There shall be no more musicians
for the entertainment of the
rich and great; no more
tradesmen or artificers to
employ those of the middle
ranks, and to furnish the
conveniences of life; no more
servants or slaves to grind at
the mill, prepare bread, and
supply the necessaries of life.
Nay, there shall be no more
lights, no more bridal songs:
that is, no more marriages, in
which lamps and songs were known
ceremonies; and therefore the
city shall never be peopled
again, but shall remain
depopulated and desolate for
ever. The desolation of Rome is
therefore described in such a
manner as to show that neither
rich nor poor, neither persons
of middle rank nor those of the
lowest condition, should be able
to live there any more. For thy
merchants were the great men of
the earth — A circumstance which
was in itself indifferent, and
yet led them into pride, luxury
and numberless other sins. For
by thy sorceries were all
nations deceived — That is,
poisoned by thy pernicious
practices. So that the reasons
assigned for her utter
desolation are her pride and
luxury, her superstition and
idolatry, with various other
vices; and especially her cruel
persecutions of God’s saints and
servants: for it is added, In
her was found the blood of
prophets, &c. — These seem to be
the words of St. John: and of
all that were slain upon the
earth — As if he had said, Her
punishment shall be as severe
and exemplary as if she had been
guilty of all the persecutions
that ever were upon account of
religion; for by her conduct she
hath approved, and imitated, and
surpassed them all. Certainly
there is no city under the sun
which has so clear a title to
general blood-guiltiness as
Rome. The guilt of the blood
shed under the heathen emperors
was not removed under the popes,
but hugely multiplied. Nor is
Rome accountable only for what
hath been shed in the city, but
for that shed in all the earth.
For at Rome, under the popes, as
well as under the heathen
emperors, were the bloody orders
and edicts given: and wherever
the blood of holy men was shed,
there were the grand rejoicings
for it. And what immense
quantities of blood have been
shed by her agents! Charles IX.
of France, in his letter to
Gregory XIII., boasts that in,
and not long after, the massacre
of Paris, he had destroyed
seventy thousand Huguenots. Some
have computed that, from the
year 1518 to 1548, fifteen
millions of Protestants perished
by war and the inquisition. This
may be overcharged; but
certainly the number of them in
those thirty years, as well as
since, is almost incredible. To
these we may add innumerable
martyrs in ancient, middle, and
late ages, — in Bohemia,
Germany, Holland, France,
England, Ireland, and many other
parts of Europe, Africa, and
Asia.
Now this tyrannical cruelty
exercised against God’s saints,
apostles, and prophets being
considered, we cannot wonder
that the sentence of so terrible
a desolation and destruction
should be passed on this
persecuting city. But the reader
must observe, Rome hath never
yet been depopulated and
desolated in this manner. She
hath been taken indeed and
plundered by Alaric, king of the
Visigoths, in the year 410; by
Genseric, king of the Vandals,
in the year 455; by Totilas,
king of the Ostrogoths, in the
year 546; and by others since
that time: but yet she is still
standing and flourishing, and is
honoured by many nations as the
metropolis of the Christian
world; she still resounds with
singers and musicians; she still
excels in arts, which serve to
pomp and luxury; she still
abounds with candles, and lamps,
and torches, burning even by day
as well as by night: and
consequently this prophecy hath
not yet been, but remaineth
still to be, fulfilled. |