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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER
17
@Re
17:1-18. THE
HARLOT BABYLON'S
GAUD: THE
BEAST ON WHICH
SHE RIDES,
HAVING SEVEN
HEADS AND TEN
HORNS, SHALL
BE THE INSTRUMENT
OF JUDGMENT
ON HER.
As @Re
16:12 stated generally the vial judgment about to be
poured on the harlot, Babylon's power, as the
seventeenth and eighteen chapters give the same in detail,
so the nineteenth chapter gives in detail the judgment on
the beast and the false prophet, summarily
alluded to in @Re
16:13-15, in connection with the Lord's
coming.
1. unto me--A, B,
Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic omit.
many--So A. But B, "the many waters"
(@Jer
51:13); @Re
17:15, below, explains the sense. The whore is the
apostate Church, just as "the woman" (@Re
12:1-6) is the Church while faithful. Satan
having failed by violence, tries too successfully to
seduce her by the allurements of the world; unlike her
Lord, she was overcome by this temptation; hence she is
seen sitting on the scarlet-colored beast, no
longer the wife, but the harlot; no longer Jerusalem, but
spiritually Sodom (@Re
11:8).
2. drunk with--Greek,
"owing to." It cannot be pagan Rome, but papal Rome, if a
particular seat of error be meant, but I incline to think
that the judgment (@Re
18:2) and the spiritual fornication (@Re
18:3), though finding their culmination in Rome, are
not restricted to it, but comprise the whole apostate
Church, Roman, Greek, and even Protestant, so far as it
has been seduced from its "first love" (@Re
2:4) to Christ, the heavenly Bridegroom, and given its
affections to worldly pomps and idols. The woman (@Re
12:1) is the congregation of God in its purity under
the Old and New Testament, and appears again as the Bride
of the Lamb, the transfigured Church prepared for the
marriage feast. The woman, the invisible Church, is latent
in the apostate Church, and is the Church militant; the
Bride is the Church triumphant.
3. the wilderness--Contrast
her in @Re
12:6,14, having a place in the wilderness-world,
but not a home; a sojourner here, looking for the city to
come. Now, on the contrary, she is contented to have her
portion in this moral wilderness.
upon a scarlet . . . beast--The same as in @Re
13:1, who there is described as here, "having seven
heads and ten horns (therein betraying that he is
representative of the dragon, @Re
12:3), and upon his heads names (so the oldest
manuscripts read) of blasphemy"; compare also @Re
17:12-14, below, with @Re
19:19,20, and @Re
17:13,14,16. Rome, resting on the world power and
ruling it by the claim of supremacy, is the chief, though
not the exclusive, representative of this symbol. As the
dragon is fiery-red, so the beast is blood-red in
color; implying its blood-guiltiness, and also
deep-dyed sin. The scarlet is also the symbol of
kingly authority.
full--all over; not merely "on his heads," as
in @Re
13:1, for its opposition to God is now about to
develop itself in all its intensity. Under the harlot's
superintendence, the world power puts forth blasphemous
pretensions worse than in pagan days. So the Pope is
placed by the cardinals in God's temple on the altar to
sit there, and the cardinals kiss the feet of
the Pope. This ceremony is called in Romish writers "the
adoration." [Historie de Clerge, Amsterd., 1716;
and LETTENBURGH'S
Notitia Curiĉ Romanĉ, 1683, p. 125; HEIDEGGER,
Myst. Bab., 1, 511, 514, 537]; a papal coin [Numismata
Pontificum, Paris, 1679, p. 5] has the blasphemous
legend, "Quem creant, adorant." Kneeling and
kissing are the worship meant by John's word nine
times used in respect to the rival of God (Greek, "proskunein").
Abomination, too, is the scriptural term for an
idol, or any creature worshipped with the homage due to
the Creator. Still, there is some check on the God-opposed
world power while ridden by the harlot; the consummated
Antichrist will be when, having destroyed her, the beast
shall be revealed as the concentration and incarnation of
all the self-deifying God-opposed principles which have
appeared in various forms and degrees heretofore. "The
Church has gained outward recognition by leaning on the
world power which in its turn uses the Church for its own
objects; such is the picture here of Christendom ripe for
judgment" [AUBERLEN].
The seven heads in the view of many are the seven
successive forms of government of Rome: kings, consuls,
dictators, decemvirs, military tribunes, emperors, the
German emperors [WORDSWORTH],
of whom Napoleon is the successor (@Re
17:11). But see the view given, see on Re 17:9,10,
which I prefer. The crowns formerly on the ten horns (@Re
13:1) have now disappeared, perhaps an indication that
the ten kingdoms into which the Germanic-Slavonic world [the
old Roman empire, including the East as well as the
West, the two legs of the image with five toes on each,
that is, ten in all] is to be divided, will lose their
monarchical form in the end [AUBERLEN];
but see @Re
17:12, which seems to imply crowned
kings.
4. The color scarlet, it is
remarkable, is that reserved for popes and cardinals. Paul
II made it penal for anyone but cardinals to wear hats of
scarlet; compare Roman Ceremonial [3.5.5]. This
book was compiled several centuries ago by MARCELLUS,
a Romish archbishop, and dedicated to Leo X. In it are
enumerated five different articles of dress of scarlet
color. A vest is mentioned studded with pearls. The
Pope's miter is of gold and precious stones.
These are the very characteristics outwardly which
Revelation thrice assigns to the harlot or Babylon. So
Joachim an abbot from Calabria, about
A.D. 1200, when
asked by Richard of England, who had summoned him to
Palestine, concerning Antichrist, replied that "he was
born long ago at Rome, and is now exalting himself above
all that is called God." ROGER
HOVEDEN [Annals,
1.2], and elsewhere, wrote, "The harlot arrayed in gold is
the Church of Rome." Whenever and wherever (not in Rome
alone) the Church, instead of being "clothed (as at first,
@Re
12:1) with the sun" of heaven, is arrayed in earthly
meretricious gauds, compromising the truth of God through
fear, or flattery, of the world's power, science, or
wealth, she becomes the harlot seated on the beast, and
doomed in righteous retribution to be judged by the beast
(@Re
17:16). Soon, like Rome, and like the Jews of Christ's
and the apostles' time leagued with the heathen Rome, she
will then become the persecutor of the saints (@Re
17:6). Instead of drinking her Lord's "cup" of
suffering, she has "a cup full of abominations and
filthinesses." Rome, in her medals, represents herself
holding a cup with the self-condemning inscription, "Sedet
super universum." Meanwhile the world power gives up
its hostility and accepts Christianity externally; the
beast gives up its God-opposed character, the woman gives
up her divine one. They meet halfway by mutual
concessions; Christianity becomes worldly, the world
becomes Christianized. The gainer is the world; the loser
is the Church. The beast for a time receives a deadly
wound (@Re
13:3), but is not really transfigured; he will return
worse than ever (@Re
17:11-14). The Lord alone by His coming can make the
kingdoms of this world become the kingdoms of our Lord and
His Christ. The "purple" is the badge of empire; even as
in mockery it was put on our Lord.
decked--literally, "gilded."
stones--Greek, "stone."
filthiness--A, B, and ANDREAS
read, "the filthy (impure) things."
5. upon . . . forehead . . .
name--as harlots usually had. What a contrast to "HOLINESS
TO THE LORD,"
inscribed on the miter on the high priest's
forehead!
mystery--implying a spiritual fact heretofore
hidden, and incapable of discovery by mere reason, but now
revealed. As the union of Christ and the Church is a
"great mystery" (a spiritual truth of momentous interest,
once hidden, now revealed, @Eph
5:31,32), so the Church conforming to the world and
thereby becoming a harlot is a counter "mystery" (or
spiritual truth, symbolically now revealed). As iniquity
in the harlot is a leaven working in "mystery," and
therefore called "the mystery of iniquity," so when
she is destroyed, the iniquity heretofore working
(comparatively) latently in her, shall be revealed
in the man of iniquity, the open embodiment of all
previous evil. Contrast the "mystery of God" and
"godliness," @Re
10:7 1Ti 3:16. It was Rome that crucified Christ; that
destroyed Jerusalem and scattered the Jews; that
persecuted the early Christians in pagan times, and
Protestant Christians in papal times; and probably shall
be again restored to its pristine grandeur, such as it had
under the Cĉsars, just before the burning of the harlot
and of itself with her. So HIPPOLYTUS
[On Antichrist] (who lived in the second century),
thought. Popery cannot be at one and the same time the "mystery
of iniquity," and the manifested or revealed
Antichrist. Probably it will compromise for political
power (@Re
17:3) the portion of Christianity still in its creed,
and thus shall prepare the way for Antichrist's
manifestation. The name Babylon, which in the image, @Da
2:32,38, is given to the head, is here given to
the harlot, which marks her as being connected with the
fourth kingdom, Rome, the last part of the image. Benedict
XIII, in his indiction for a jubilee,
A.D. 1725, called
Rome "the mother of all believers, and the mistress
of all churches" (harlots like herself). The
correspondence of syllables and accents in Greek is
striking; "He porne kai to therion; He numphe kai to
arnion." "The whore and the beast; the Bride and the
Lamb."
of harlots--Greek, "of the
harlots and of the abominations." Not merely Rome,
but Christendom as a whole, even as formerly Israel as a
whole, has become a harlot. The invisible Church of true
believers is hidden and dispersed in the visible Church.
The boundary lines which separate harlot and woman are not
denominational nor drawn externally, but can only be
spiritually discerned. If Rome were the only seat
of Babylon, much of the spiritual profit of Revelation
would be lost to us; but the harlot "sitteth upon many
waters" (@Re
17:1), and "ALL
nations have drunk of the wine of her fornication" (@Re
17:2 Re 18:3; "the earth," @Re
19:2). External extensiveness over the whole world and
internal conformity to the world--worldliness in extent
and contents--is symbolized by the name of the world city,
"Babylon." As the sun shines on all the earth, thus the
woman clothed with the sun is to let her light penetrate
to the uttermost parts of the earth. But she, in
externally Christianizing the world, permits herself to be
seduced by the world; thus her universality or catholicity
is not that of the Jerusalem which we look for
("the MOTHER
of us all," @Re
21:2 Isa 2:2-4 Ga 4:26), but that of Babylon,
the world-wide but harlot city! (As Babylon was destroyed,
and the Jews restored to Jerusalem by Cyrus, so our
Cyrus--a Persian name meaning the sun--the Sun of
righteousness, shall bring Israel, literal and spiritual,
to the holy Jerusalem at His coming. Babylon and Jerusalem
are the two opposite poles of the spiritual world). Still,
the Romish Church is not only accidentally and as a matter
of fact, but in virtue of its very PRINCIPLE, a harlot,
the metropolis of whoredom, "the mother of harlots";
whereas the evangelical Protestant Church is, according to
her principle and fundamental creed, a chaste woman; the
Reformation was a protest of the woman against the harlot.
The spirit of the heathen world kingdom Rome had, before
the Reformation, changed the Church in the West into a
Church-State, Rome; and in the East, into a
State-Church, fettered by the world power, having its
center in Byzantium; the Roman and Greek churches have
thus fallen from the invisible spiritual essence of the
Gospel into the elements of the world [AUBERLEN].
Compare with the "woman" called "Babylon" here, the woman
named "wickedness," or "lawlessness," "iniquity" (@Zec
5:7,8,11), carried to Babylon: compare "the
mystery of iniquity" and "the man of sin," "that wicked
one," literally, "the lawless one" (@2Th
2:7,8; also @Mt
24:12).
6. martyrs--witnesses.
I wondered with great admiration--As the
Greek is the same in the verb and the noun, translate
the latter "wonder." John certainly did not admire
her in the modern English sense. Elsewhere (@Re
17:8 13:3), all the earthly-minded ("they that dwell
on the earth") wonder in admiration of the beast.
Here only is John's wonder called forth; not the
beast, but the woman sunken into the harlot, the
Church become a world-loving apostate, moves his sorrowful
astonishment at so awful a change. That the world should
be beastly is natural, but that the faithful bride should
become the whore is monstrous, and excites the same
amazement in him as the same awful change in Israel
excited in Isaiah and Jeremiah. "Horrible thing" in them
answers to "abominations" here. "Corruptio optimi
pessima"; when the Church falls, she sinks lower than
the godless world, in proportion as her right place is
higher than the world. It is striking that in @Re
17:3, "woman" has not the article, "the woman,"
as if she had been before mentioned: for though identical
in one sense with the woman, @Re
12:1-6, in another sense she is not. The elect are
never perverted into apostates, and still remain as the
true woman invisibly contained in the harlot;
yet Christendom regarded as the woman has
apostatized from its first faith.
8. beast . . . was, and is not--(Compare
@Re
17:11). The time when the beast "is not" is the time
during which it has "the deadly wound"; the time of the
seventh head becoming Christian externally, when its
beast-like character was put into suspension temporarily.
The healing of its wound answers to its
ascending out of the bottomless pit. The beast, or
Antichristian world power, returns worse than ever, with
satanic powers from hell (@Re
11:7), not merely from the sea of convulsed
nations (@Re
13:1). Christian civilization gives the beast only a
temporary wound, whence the deadly wound is always
mentioned in connection with its being healed up
the non-existence of the beast in connection with its
reappearance; and Daniel does not even notice any change
in the world power effected by Christianity. We are
endangered on one side by the spurious Christianity of the
harlot, on the other by the open Antichristianity of the
beast; the third class is Christ's little flock."
go--So B, Vulgate, and ANDREAS
read the future tense. But A and IRENĈUS,
"goeth."
into perdition--The continuance of this
revived seventh (that is, the eighth) head is short: it is
therefore called "the son of perdition," who is
essentially doomed to it almost immediately after his
appearance.
names were--so Vulgate and ANDREAS.
But A, B, Syriac, and Coptic read the
singular, "name is."
written in--Greek, "upon."
which--rather, "when they behold the beast
that it was," &c. So Vulgate.
was, and is not, and yet is--A, B, and ANDREAS
read, "and shall come" (literally, "be present," namely,
again: Greek, "kai parestai"). The
Hebrew, "tetragrammaton," or sacred four
letters in Jehovah, "who is, who was, and who is to
come," the believer's object of worship, has its
contrasted counterpart in the beast "who was, and is not,
and shall be present," the object of the earth's worship [BENGEL].
They exult with wonder in seeing that the beast
which had seemed to have received its death blow from
Christianity, is on the eve of reviving with
greater power than ever on the ruins of that religion
which tormented them (@Re
11:10).
9. Compare @Re
13:18 Da 12:10, where similarly spiritual discernment
is put forward as needed in order to understand the
symbolical prophecy.
seven heads and seven mountains--The
connection between mountains and kings must be
deeper than the mere outward fact to which incidental
allusion is made, that Rome (the then world city) is on
seven hills (whence heathen Rome had a national festival
called Septimontium, the feast of the seven-hilled
city [PLUTARCH];
and on the imperial coins, just as here, she is
represented as a woman seated on seven hills. Coin
of Vespasian, described by CAPTAIN
SMYTH [Roman
Coins, p. 310; ACKERMAN,
1, p. 87]). The seven heads can hardly be at once seven
kings or kingdoms (@Re
17:10), and seven geographical mountains. The
true connection is, as the head is the prominent
part of the body, so the mountain is prominent in
the land. Like "sea" and "earth"and "waters . . . peoples"
(@Re
17:15), so "mountains" have a symbolical meaning,
namely, prominent seats of power. Especially such as are
prominent hindrances to the cause of God (@Ps
68:16,17 Isa 40:4 41:15 49:11 Eze 35:2); especially
Babylon (which geographically was in a plain, but
spiritually is called a destroying mountain, @Jer
51:25), in majestic contrast to which stands Mount
Zion, "the mountain of the Lord's house" (@Isa
2:2), and the heavenly mount; @Re
21:10, "a great and high mountain . . . and that great
city, the holy Jerusalem." So in @Da
2:35, the stone becomes a mountain--Messiah's
universal kingdom supplanting the previous world kingdoms.
As nature shadows forth the great realities of the
spiritual world, so seven-hilled Rome is a representative
of the seven-headed world power of which the dragon has
been, and is the prince. The "seven kings" are hereby
distinguished from the "ten kings" (@Re
17:12):the former are what the latter are not,
"mountains," great seats of the world power. The seven
universal God-opposed monarchies are Egypt (the first
world power which came into collision with God's people,)
Assyria, Babylon, Greece, Medo-Persia, Rome, the
Germanic-Slavonic empire (the clay of the fourth
kingdom mixed with its iron in Nebuchadnezzar's image, a
fifth material, @Da
2:33,34,42,43, symbolizing this last head). These
seven might seem not to accord with the seven heads in @Da
7:4-7, one head on the first beast (Babylon),
one on the second (Medo-Persia), four on the
third (Greece; namely, Egypt, Syria, Thrace with Bithynia,
and Greece with Macedon): but Egypt and Greece are in both
lists. Syria answers to Assyria (from which the name Syria
is abbreviated), and Thrace with Bithynia answers to the
Gothic-Germanic-Slavonic hordes which, pouring down on
Rome from the North, founded the Germanic-Slavonic empire.
The woman sitting on the seven hills implies the
Old and New Testament Church conforming to, and resting
on, the world power, that is, on all the seven world
kingdoms. Abraham and Isaac dissembling as to their wives
through fear of the kings of Egypt foreshadowed this.
Compare @Eze
16:1-63 23:1-49, on Israel's whoredoms with Egypt,
Assyria, Babylon; and @Mt
7:24 24:10-12,23-26, on the characteristics of the New
Testament Church's harlotry, namely, distrust, suspicion,
hatred, treachery, divisions into parties, false doctrine.
10. there are--Translate,
"they (the seven heads) are seven kings."
five . . . one--Greek, "the five . . .
the one"; the first five of the seven are fallen (a
word applicable not to forms of government passing
away, but to the fall of once powerful empires:
Egypt, @Eze
29:1-30:26; Assyria and Nineveh, @Na
3:1-19; Babylon, @Re
18:2 Jer 50:1-51:64; Medo-Persia, @Da
8:3-7,20-22 10:13 11:2; Greece, @Da
11:4). Rome was "the one" existing in John's
days. "Kings" is the Scripture phrase for kingdoms,
because these kingdoms are generally represented in
character by some one prominent head, as Babylon by
Nebuchadnezzar, Medo-Persia by Cyrus, Greece by Alexander,
&c.
the other is not yet come--not as ALFORD,
inaccurately representing AUBERLEN,
the Christian empire beginning with Constantine;
but, the Germanic-Slavonic empire beginning
and continuing in its beast-like, that is,
HEATHEN
Antichristian character for only "a short space." The time
when it is said of it, "it is not" (@Re
17:11), is the time during which it is "wounded
to death," and has the "deadly wound" (@Re
13:3). The external Christianization of the migrating
hordes from the North which descended on Rome, is the
wound to the beast answering to the earth
swallowing up the flood (heathen tribes) sent by the
dragon, Satan, to drown the woman, the Church. The
emphasis palpably is on "a short space," which
therefore comes first in the Greek, not on "he must
continue," as if his continuance for some
[considerable] time were implied, as ALFORD
wrongly thinks. The time of external Christianization
(while the beast's wound continues) has lasted for
centuries, ever since Constantine. Rome and the Greek
Church have partially healed the wound by image worship.
11. beast that . . . is not--his
beastly character being kept down by outward
Christianization of the state until he starts up to life
again as "the eighth" king, his "wound being healed" (@Re
13:3), Antichrist manifested in fullest and most
intense opposition to God. The "he" is emphatic in the
Greek. He, peculiarly and pre-eminently: answering to
"the little horn" with eyes like the eyes of a man, and a
mouth speaking great things, before whom three of the
ten horns were plucked up by the roots, and to whom
the whole ten "give their power and strength" (@Re
17:12,13,17). That a personal Antichrist will
stand at the head of the Antichristian kingdom, is likely
from the analogy of Antiochus Epiphanes, the Old Testament
Antichrist, "the little horn" in @Da
8:9-12; also, "the man of sin, son of perdition" (@2Th
2:3-8), answers here to "goeth into perdition," and is
applied to an individual, namely, Judas, in the only other
passage where the phrase occurs (@Joh
17:12). He is essentially a child of destruction, and
hence he has but a little time ascended out of the
bottomless pit, when he "goes into perdition" (@Re
17:8,11). "While the Church passes through death of
the flesh to glory of the Spirit, the beast passes through
the glory of the flesh to death" [AUBERLEN].
is of the seven--rather "springs out of
the seven." The eighth is not merely one of the seven
restored, but a new power or person proceeding out of
the seven, and at the same time embodying all the
God-opposed features of the previous seven concentrated
and consummated; for which reason there are said to be not
eight, but only seven heads, for the eighth
is the embodiment of all the seven. In the birth-pangs
which prepare the "regeneration" there are wars,
earthquakes, and disturbances [AUBERLEN],
wherein Antichrist takes his rise ("sea," @Re
13:1 Mr 13:8 Lu 21:9-11). He does not fall like
the other seven (@Re
17:10), but is destroyed, going to his own
perdition, by the Lord in person.
12. ten kings . . . received no
kingdom as yet; but receive power as kings . . . with the
beast--Hence and from @Re
17:14,16, it seems that these ten kings or kingdoms,
are to be contemporaries with the beast in its last or
eighth form, namely, Antichrist. Compare @Da
2:34,44, "the stone smote the image upon his feet,"
that is, upon the ten toes, which are, in @Da
2:41-44, interpreted to be "kings." The ten
kingdoms are not, therefore, ten which arose in the
overthrow of Rome (heathen), but are to rise out of the
last state of the fourth kingdom under the eighth head. I
agree with ALFORD
that the phrase "as kings," implies that they
reserve their kingly rights in their alliance with the
beast, wherein "they give their power and strength unto"
him (@Re
17:13). They have the name of kings, but not
with undivided kingly power [WORDSWORTH].
See AUBERLEN'S
not so probable view, see on Re 17:3.
one hour--a definite time of short
duration, during which "the devil is come down to the
inhabitant of the earth and of the sea, having great
wrath, because he knoweth that he hath but a short
time." Probably the three and a half years (@Re
11:2,3 13:5). Antichrist is in existence long before
the fall of Babylon; but it is only at its fail he obtains
the vassalage of the ten kings. He in the first instance
imposes on the Jews as the Messiah, coming in his own
name; then persecutes those of them who refuse his
blasphemous pretensions. Not until the sixth vial, in the
latter part of his reign, does he associate the ten kings
with him in war with the Lamb, having gained them over by
the aid of the spirits of devils working miracles. His
connection with Israel appears from his sitting "in the
temple of God" (@2Th
2:4), and as the antitypical "abomination of
desolation standing in the Holy place" (@Da
9:27 12:11 Mt 24:15), and "in the city where our Lord
was crucified" (@Re
11:8). It is remarkable that IRENĈUS
[Against Heresies, 5:25] and CYRIL
OF JERUSALEM
[RUFINUS,
Historia Monachorum, 10.37] prophesied that Antichrist
would have his seat at Jerusalem and would restore the
kingdom of the Jews. JULIAN
the apostate, long after, took part with the Jews, and
aided in building their temple, herein being Antichrist's
forerunner.
13. one mind--one
sentiment.
shall give--So Coptic. But A, B, and
Syriac, "give."
strength--Greek, "authority." They
become his dependent allies (@Re
17:14). Thus Antichrist sets up to be King of
kings, but scarcely has he put forth his claim when
the true KING OF KINGS
appears and dashes him down in a moment to destruction.
14. These shall . . . war with
the Lamb--in league with the beast. This is a summary
anticipation of @Re
19:19. This shall not be till after they have
first executed judgment on the harlot (@Re
17:15,16).
Lord of lords, &c.--anticipating @Re
19:16.
are--not in the Greek.
Therefore translate, "And they that are with Him, called
chosen, and faithful (shall overcome them, namely, the
beast and his allied kings)." These have been with Christ
in heaven unseen, but now appear with Him.
15. (@Re
17:1 Isa 8:7.) An impious parody of Jehovah who "sitteth
upon the flood" [ALFORD].
Also, contrast the "many waters" @Re
19:6, "Alleluia."
peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and tongues--The
"peoples," &c. here mark the universality of the spiritual
fornication of the Church. The "tongues" remind us of the
original Babel, the confusion of tongues, the
beginning of Babylon, and the first commencement of
idolatrous apostasy after the flood, as the tower was
doubtless dedicated to the deified heavens. Thus, Babylon
is the appropriate name of the harlot. The Pope, as the
chief representative of the harlot, claims a double
supremacy over all peoples, typified by the "two
swords" according to the interpretation of Boniface VIII
in the Bull, "Unam Sanctam," and represented by the
two keys: spiritual as the universal bishop, whence he is
crowned with the miter; and temporal, whence he is also
crowned with the tiara in token of his imperial supremacy.
Contrast with the Pope's diadems the "many diadems"
of Him who alone has claim to, and shall exercise when He
shall come, the twofold dominion (@Re
19:12).
16. upon the beast--But A,
B, Vulgate, and Syriac read, "and the
beast."
shall make her desolate--having first
dismounted her from her seat on the beast (@Re
17:3).
naked--stripped of all her gaud (@Re
17:4). As Jerusalem used the world power to crucify
her Saviour, and then was destroyed by that very power,
Rome; so the Church, having apostatized to the world,
shall have judgment executed on her first by the world
power, the beast and his allies; and these afterwards
shall have judgment executed on them by Christ Himself in
person. So Israel leaning on Egypt, a broken reed, is
pierced by it; and then Egypt itself is punished. So
Israel's whoredom with Assyria and Babylon was punished by
the Assyrian and Babylonian captivities. So the Church
when it goes a-whoring after the word as if it were
the reality, instead of witnessing against its apostasy
from God, is false to its profession. Being no longer a
reality itself, but a sham, the Church is rightly judged
by that world which for a time had used the Church to
further its own ends, while all the while "hating"
Christ's unworldly religion, but which now no longer wants
the Church's aid.
eat her flesh--Greek plural, "masses
of flesh," that is, "carnal possessions"; implying the
fulness of carnality into which the Church is sunk. The
judgment on the harlot is again and again described (@Re
18:1 19:5); first by an "angel having great power" (@Re
18:1), then by "another voice from heaven" (@Re
18:4-20), then by "a mighty angel" (@Re
18:21-24). Compare @Eze
16:37-44, originally said of Israel, but further
applicable to the New Testament Church when fallen into
spiritual fornication. On the phrase, "eat . . . flesh"
for prey upon one's property, and injure the character and
person, compare @Ps
14:4 27:2 Jer 10:25 Mic 3:3. The First Napoleon's
Edict published at Rome in 1809, confiscating the papal
dominions and joining them to France, and later the
severance of large portions of the Pope's territory from
his sway and the union of them to the dominions of the
king of Italy, virtually through Louis Napoleon, are a
first instalment of the full realization of this prophecy
of the whore's destruction. "Her flesh" seems to point to
her temporal dignities and resources, as distinguished
from "herself" (Greek). How striking a retribution,
that having obtained her first temporal dominions, the
exarchate of Ravenna, the kingdom of the LOMBARDs,
and the state of Rome, by recognizing the usurper
Pepin as lawful king of France, she should be stripped of
her dominions by another usurper of France, the Napoleonic
dynasty!
burn . . . with fire--the legal punishment of
an abominable fornication.
17. hath put--the
prophetical past tense for the future.
fulfil--Greek, "do," or "accomplish."
The Greek, "poiesai," is distinct from that
which is translated, "fulfilled," Greek, "telesthesontai,"
below.
his will--Greek, "his mind," or
purpose; while they think only of doing their own
purpose.
to agree--literally, "to do" (or
accomplish) one mind" or "purpose." A and Vulgate
omit this clause, but B supports it.
the words of God--foretelling the rise and
downfall of the beast; Greek, "hoi logoi,"
in A, B, and ANDREAS.
English Version reading is Greek, "ta
rhemata," which is not well supported. No mere
articulate utterances, but the efficient words of
Him who is the Word: Greek, "logos."
fulfilled--(@Re
10:7).
18. reigneth--literally, "hath
kingship over the kings." The harlot cannot be a mere
city literally, but is called so in a spiritual
sense (@Re
11:8). Also the beast cannot represent a spiritual
power, but a world power. In this verse the harlot is
presented before us ripe for judgment. The eighteenth
chapter details that judgment.
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