By W. J. Erdman D.D.
VI. The Seven DoomsIntroduction BABYLON AND THE BEAST. Chapter. 17:1-18.
“Babylon” and “as fallen” was first mentioned and without explanation in an earlier vision. 14:1-20. In this present vision one of the Vial angels describes her character, deeds and career in connection with the world power. As introductory to the study of this great subject, attention is called to certain facts concerning the time of her existence. If the Beast which destroys her belongs to a future day, she does also. It is also revealed that she existed before his day and that of the “ten kings” allied with him. Turning to the interpretation of the “Mystery of the Woman” she is first shown in consummate form “sitting upon a scarlet coloured beast.” Then another “and I saw,” with significant brevity to indicate a dreadful charge of blood guiltiness that must be pondered by it self, leads to the explanation given by the angel: she is seen “drunken with the blood of the saints and with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus.” 17:6. This charge is again made in the conclusion of the ac count of her fall: “And in her was found the blood of prophets and' of saints and of all that have been slain upon the earth.” 18:24. In her is found the martyr blood of a historic past, pagan and papal, present and future. She fills up the cup of iniquity of all past years since Jerusalem’s day when the latter had attained the same unholy pre eminence. Matt. 23:34-36; Rev. 18:24. It is the picture of a corrupt religious system gradually filled with a spirit of luke-warmness and indifference and a false charity covering a multitude of errors, she has become apostate and anti-christian, her corporate testimony lost, and a demoniac hatred of the truth urging her on to a persecution of the saints and faithful of God. For all this and her love of the world, using its power arrayed in its glory, she is delivered to the Beast and his Kings for utter destruction. A distinction must be made between “Babylon” as a system and as a city of the world. It is only to a system the words can apply, “Come out of her, my people,” when the “Beast” and his ten Kings are about to destroy her. This destruction takes place before the literal city is destroyed by the wrath of God at the last Vial, after the close of the Week. This must be so, even though system and city in the prophetic vision are seen so intimately conjoined and their characters interchanged. As the people and institutions of any city are called by the same name as its buildings, streets and parks, so “Babylon the great” is the name of both the city and the apostate system. And surely when the literal city falls under the final wrath, the Seventh Vial, there will be no people of God in her to come forth, nor merchants and mariners to bewail their loss, for then the end of Gentile civilization will have come. In the explanation of the “Mystery” there is a retrospect over the entire past times of the great Empires of Gentile history which had to do with Israel, and later, with the Church. The Woman is seen seated upon the Beast in its sum total of the imperial and kingly powers. Seven are world empires; but between the sixth and the seventh come ten kingdoms, so forming, in all, eight world powers. Out of the “ten horns” arises an eleventh, who subduing three, secures the allegiance of all, and becomes the head of a final or seventh world empire; he is of the seven world emperors, but the eighth world power. Dan. 7:8, 20. The explanation of the angel ends with “a definite statement” which apparently identifies the “Woman” with Rome: “And the woman which thou sawest is that great city which holdeth sovereignty over the kings of the earth. 5 17:18. But in the light of the history of Christendom and the perspective of prophecy, it is Rome neither pagan nor papal, but Babylonian. Pagan Rome was never a false woman towards God or Christ, papal Rome has been so in her partial sovereignty over the European world powers, but “Babylon” includes more in her power and extent; she is the “Mother of the harlots” of all Christendom; and true to the historic instinct, she may seek to be rooted in the marvelous past of a great imperial city and thus secure the prestige of its history. But she is Babylonian; the Rome of the Caesars be comes the locale and heir of the idolatry and worldliness and persecuting spirit of the Babylon on the Euphrates. She would fain reproduce, as a religious system, ancient Babylonian rite and ceremony and doctrine, and thus become a Jerusalem also to the religious world, merging a Rome and a Babylon and a Jerusalem into one. The Beast, on the other hand, though at first supporting the Woman in her city, would strike the roots of his power and authority into a religious past more potent and universal than that of Rome and would make the Jerusalem of the Holy Land the place of worship, the joy of the whole earth, the religious metropolis of the world. There in its temple he seats himself as God, and there in the Holy Land he comes to his end as the greatest enemy of God the centuries have produced. Whatever other world-city or seat of secular imperial authority he may make his own, the religious capital will he the preeminent one. Progression THE DOOM OP BABYLON. Chapter. 18:1-24.
In this Vision of Babylon’s fall a mighty angel announces and a voice from heaven summons the people of God to come out of her lest they receive of hip plagues. Her judgment is then described and the great lamentation over her of kings and merchants and all traffickers by land and sea. To this wail of worldings on earth is heard the response of a great multitude in heaven in Hallelujahs over her judgment. 18:1-19:3. She was a persecuting power before the Beast became one. The martyrs who suffer under him are those of the great Tribulation; her martyrs are those of the Fifth Seal and who are told to wait for their complement of that Tribulation. It is a popular belief and too sadly justified by her past history that to the Roman Catholic Church should be given the name “Babylon,” but the description of the false “Woman” of the Revelation demands a larger fulfilment than “Rome” has furnished. “Babylon” unites all religious systems which are seen as false to God near the close of this “present evil age.” The commercialism of “Babylon” does not indicate her city to be a mart of exchange of all manner of goods, but rather an emporium of supply receiving the products of all peoples and lands to meet the demand of her wanton luxuriousness. On her destruction as a system, there is need of a reconstruction, both of the political and commercial relations of the kingdoms. The kings and merchants deplore her fall, even though they suffered through her arrogance and imperiousness. The wars (14:8) she instigated and finally her own destruction led to a disorder and anarchy which the strong hand of the Beast alone could suppress. The nations “were made to drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication.” But all the Beast does is to 'aggrandise himself as the sole political, commercial and religious head of the race. Not only “Babylon” the “Woman” does lie destroy, but later when baffled in Jerusalem, he endeavours to destroy all that still represents the divine and supernatural on the earth, both Judaism and Christianity, all that once expressed the religious spirit of man in forms of the revealed will of God. This is the great word concerning him, “There was given to him authority over every tribe and people and tongue and nation. And all that dwelt on the earth shall worship him; every one whose name has not been writ ten in the book of life of the Lamb that hath been slain from the foundation of the world.” And also, it is writ ten, “that no man should be able to buy or to sell save he that hath the mark, even the name of the beast or the number of his name.” 13:14. In brief, the name “Babylon the Great” is to be interpreted in the light of the religious and imperial history of a far off past. There are two and separable elements in the idea “Babylon”; first, a religious system or cult, and second, a culmination and embodiment at last of the religious spirit in a visible Head and his worship. So in its historic manifestation there have been two stages: the first from the primal Babylon of the one race, language and speech, and its tower and city, to the Babylon of Nebuchadnezzar, ruler over “all the peoples, nations and languages” of the earth, and his city; and ’ the other from Nebuchadnezzar and his city to the close of “the times of the Gentiles” and their city. Gen. 11:1-9; Dan. 4:28-33. At first appeared Babylon as a system, its organizing principle the unification of the race, its central idea the glory of humanity instead of the glory of God, and its rallying cry, “Let us build”; and then at last appears the self-deified man, the professed embodiment of the idea of humanity in its supreme greatness and glory; his representative city the symbol of the man-centered religious system whose head and god he has become; and like the first great imperial head of the “times of the Gentiles,” so he the last boasts “Is not this great Babylon that / have built?” “Babylon” as a system corresponds to the first stage of the development of the Babel idea; to the second stage the Beast; the system gives way to an autocratic head. With his destruction, the times of Gentile sovereignty close and the new age of the Kingdom of the Messiah begins. Episode THE FOUR HALLELS. Ch. 19:1-10.
As in the case of the other Episodes, this interlude is both retrospective and prospective. Two Halleluiahs look back over the judgment of the great Harlot? X other two point forward to the Throne and the Marriage Supper of the Lamb at the inauguration of the Kingdom. This worship of the great multitude and of the Elders and Living Beings is a scene of preparation for the great events to follow. The sovereignty of the Lord God Almighty is fore announced; the Wife and Marriage of the Lamb are foreviewed as ready; once again, and for the last time m these Visions, the Kingdom is anticipated as twice before when the Seventh Trumpet sounded and when the Dragon was cast out. It should be noted that the “wife of the Lamb” can be no other than “the Church,” though some would understand by the phrase, the new Israel of the Messianic age; but Israel from both a national and dispensational viewpoint, and by positive statements in the words of the prophets, is a wife set aside for a time, separated from Jehovah on account of her transgressions, and not a bride. The Church is a bride, who is to become a wife who is to make herself ready and for the marriage sup per, and who is collectively the saints arrayed in the fine linen of a spotless righteousness. Hosea 1-3- Is 54- 1-8 Rev. 19:7-9, 21:9. Consummation THE SIX FINAL DOOMS. Chapters. 19:11-20:15.
The picture of the fall of Babylon (Ch. 18 ) is followed by the description of the dooms of the Beast, the false prophet, the Kings, the Dragon, Gog and the Dead. The Vision is full of contrasts between the great Warrior and Judge who is seen coming out of the opened heaven and the unrighteous judges and kings of the earth who are embattled against him. He is the Faithful and True One, the Word of God, the Maker of Peace, to whom belong all the diadems of earth, the King of kings and Lord of lords. The psalmist foresaw him as the Smiter of Nations, the coming Melchizedek priest-king of the Most High God, possessor of heaven and earth; and the prophet foretold him as the Mighty One who “glorious in his apparel, marching in the greatness of his strength” would come and tread the peoples in the winepress of wrath in behalf of Israel and Jerusalem. The day of vengeance foretold from age to age has come, the year of recompense for the cause of Zion; the Glory of Jehovah has appeared and all nations learn that he alone is God. Ps. 2:1-12, 110; Is. 63:1-6, 34-35; 66:15-24. The whole world, as implied in the standing of the angel in the sun, shall know of this conflict, all nations shall enter the peace to be made by this Prince of Peace, between nation and nation, between Israel and the nations, between heaven and earth, between God and man. And when at last the gathering of the armies of heaven and earth is seen, the impotence of the warfare of kings and beasts against the Almighty who was and is and now has come, is intimated in the sublime, simple brevity of speech concerning the defeat and doom of the Beast and the false Prophet. 20:19-21. After the Vision of the Investiture there were others anticipating the Coming of the King' in wrath to destroy the great usurper of his throne of the world; but now in a last Vision there is seen coming through the opened heaven the King of kings and Lord of lords on his way to tread the winepress of wrath on the armies of the nations. At the blowing of the Seventh Trumpet the resurrection and reward of the saints, the wrath on enemies and the establishment of the Kingdom are all proleptically ascribed with that coming; in the Vision of the Harvest he is seen on a white cloud directing the angel reapers; in the Vision of the overcomers standing triumphant by the glory-reddened, glassy sea, it is shown how they have been removed from earth before the judgments come and the vials of wrath are poured out upon the beast, and armies and cities of the world; but now in this latest Vision not only is the One faithful and true, the Word of God, the King of kings and Lord of lords seen coming out of heaven, but also the armies which were in heaven clothed in fine linen, white and pure are seen on white horses following him. It is a symbolic picture of the event prophesied by Paul, “When Christ who is our life shall appear then shall ye also appear with him in glory”; “he shall come to be glorified in his saints... in that day.” It is also written of them, “And they that are with him are called and chosen and faithful.” This is said of the saints in a previous Vision just before the Lamb makes war with the Beast and the kings of the earth, and overcomes them. Rev. 17:12-14. In another Vision it is said, “The marriage of the Lamb is come and his wife hath made herself ready. And to her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen bright and pure, for the fine linen is the righteous acts of the saints.” 19:7, 8. This is said just before the great Hallelujah is heard concerning the Kingdom of the Lord God Almighty, which follows the war with the Beasts and the kings. The context of these two passages is thus the same. 19:5-6. “And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses, clothed' in fine linen bright and pure.”' 19:11-14. These “armies” are not only angels but also the “saints” which, in the first quotation, are said to be “with him” and “are called and chosen and faithful.” And both the “wife” and the “armies” are “clothed in fine linen bright and pure.” Also, in each instance, those “with him,” and the “wife” and the “armies” are brought to view just before the war begins with the "Beast” and his allied kings. The inference is that the three are one and the same and accompany him that is called " The Lamb” in the first two passages and " The Word of God” in the third, and in the first and third, "King of kings and Lord of lords.” And that all three viewed as one are actual 1 participants in the war, is further shown by a more faithful rendering of the first text: "His Lamb shall overcome them for he is Lord of lords and King of kings, and they also shall overcome that are with him, called and chosen and faithful.” As to the passage in relation to the Thousand Years, "The Millennium” (Ch. 20:1-15), it may be noted, first of all, that the Beast and his false Prophet are cast alive into the " lake of fire”; that is, they enter at once into the final abode of the lost, into " the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels,” but into which Satan is not cast until the Thousand Years are finished. Meanwhile, he is bound and cast into a temporary compartment of the Abyss, the latter being another name for Hades. At last, these temporary abodes, Death and Hades, are themselves cast into the " lake of fire.” Matt. I 25:41; Lk. 8:31; 16:23; 23:43; Rom. 10:7; Rev. 20:1-14. Secondly, the fulfilment of the Vision of the thrones and the judgment given comes before Harmagedon; the saints are raised before the Wrath Falls. This is evident from the time assigned to the same judgment in the Vision of Daniel, and from the words heard in heaven at the sounding of the Seventh Trumpet. The first resurrection has taken place, but not martyrs only are on the thrones of judgment; those also who worshipped not the Beast are there, who alive with the risen dead together at the same time were translated into the presence of the Lord. Rev. 11:13-18. The final deception of Satan, and revolt of the nations in the four comers of the earth, attest at least the in curable depravity of man as soon as divine influences are withdrawn and Satan is permitted again to deceive men. Rev. 20:7-10. Thirdly, in a preceding passage it was said, “the rest of the dead lived not until the thousand years should be finished.” It is then the dead, the great and the small, who are seen standing before the great white Throne to be judged according to their works. It appears that the “first resurrection” has taken place a thousand years before, and consequently, also, the judgment of the saints, risen, living, rewarded, glorified, reigning.
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[Note by Editor: It is evident that the author regarded the return of Christ as Premillennial. Yet it might be more accurate to say that he regarded it as preceding the Kingdom in which the Millennium was to issue. In his view the goal of all prophecy was not the Millennium, but the ultimate establishment upon earth of the perfected Kingdom of God. As to the Millennium, the “Notes” are seen to be very brief. His views differed from certain forms of popular premillennialism in that he did not see grounds for believing in an “any moment,” “secret rapture of the Church.” Rather, he saw this rapture to take place in a time of Tribulation but preceding the final judgments of God upon the “Beast,” the Man of Sin. Nor did he agree with the view that this rapture is to be placed immediately after chapter three, and that from Chapter four to nineteen the visions relate only to the Jewish people. There were many references which he interpreted as belonging specifically to Israel, and to a body of converted Jews at the time of the Great Tribulation (a “remnant according to the election of grace”), but he held that John had in view also throughout the whole course of the Apocalypse the experiences of the Christian Church. It is also true that he identified the events predicted by Daniel and by John, and that the “last half” of Daniel's “prophetic week” of years, was the period of time described in the Revelation as “a time times and half a time,” or as “forty and two months,” or “twelve hundred and sixty days.” However, those who see no identity or analogy in the events predicted by Daniel and by John, will find in this Outline an analysis of the literary material and an indication of the dramatic movement which will be of service to the reader, no matter what particular theory of interpretation may be accepted. As the author himself stated, his analysis was “an at tempt to group the contents of the Book according to what seem to be the lines of its structure.”]
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