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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER
18
@Re
18:1-24. BABYLON'S
FALL: GOD'S
PEOPLE CALLED
OUT OF HER:
THE KINGS
AND MERCHANTS
OF THE EARTH
MOURN, WHILE
THE SAINTS
REJOICE AT HER
FALL.
1. And--so Vulgate
and ANDREAS.
But A, B, Syriac, and Coptic omit "And."
power--Greek, "authority."
lightened--"illumined."
with--Greek, "owing to."
2. mightily . . . strong--not
supported by manuscripts. But A, B, Vulgate, Syriac,
and Coptic read, "with (literally, 'in') a mighty
voice."
is fallen, is fallen--so A, Vulgate,
Syriac, and ANDREAS.
But B and Coptic omit the second "is fallen" (@Isa
21:9 Jer 51:8). This phrase is here prophetical of her
fall, still future, as @Re
18:4 proves.
devils--Greek, "demons."
the hold--a keep or prison.
3. drunk--@Re
14:8, from which perhaps "the wine" may have been
interpolated. They have drunk of her fornication,
the consequence of which will be wrath to
themselves. But A, B, and C read, "(owing to the wrath of
her fornication all nations) have fallen."
Vulgate and most versions read as English Version,
which may be the right reading though not supported by the
oldest manuscripts. Babylon, the whore, is destroyed
before the beast slays the two witnesses (@Re
11:7), and then the beast himself is destroyed.
the wine--so B, Syriac, and Coptic.
But A, C, and Vulgate omit.
abundance--literally, "power."
delicacies--Greek, "luxury." See on
1Ti 5:11, where the Greek verb "wax wanton" is akin
to the noun here. Translate, "wanton luxury." The
reference is not to earthly merchandise, but to spiritual
wares, indulgences, idolatries, superstitions, worldly
compromises, wherewith the harlot, that is, the apostate
Church, has made merchandise of men. This applies
especially to Rome; but the Greek, and even in a
less degree Protestant churches, are not guiltless.
However, the principle of evangelical Protestantism
is pure, but the principle of Rome and the Greek
church is not so.
4. Come out of her, my people--quoted
from @Jer
50:8 51:6,45. Even in the Romish Church God has a
people: but they are in great danger; their only safety is
in coming out of her at once. So also in every apostate or
world-conforming church there are some of God's invisible
and true Church, who, if they would be safe, must come
out. Especially at the eve of God's judgment on apostate
Christendom: as Lot was warned to come out of Sodom just
before its destruction, and Israel to come from about the
tents of Dathan and Abiram. So the first Christians came
out of Jerusalem when the apostate Jewish Church was
judged. "State and Church are precious gifts of God. But
the State being desecrated to a different end from what
God designed it, namely. to govern for, and as under, God,
becomes beast-like; the Church apostatizing becomes the
harlot. The true woman is the kernel: beast and harlot are
the shell: whenever the kernel is mature, the shell is
thrown away" [AUBERLEN].
"The harlot is not Rome alone (though she is pre-eminently
so), but every Church that has not Christ's mind and
spirit. False Christendom, divided into very many sects,
is truly Babylon, that is, confusion. However, in all
Christendom the true Jesus-congregation, the woman clothed
with the sun, lives and is hidden. Corrupt, lifeless
Christendom is the harlot, whose great aim is the pleasure
of the flesh, and which is governed by the spirit of
nature and the world" [HAHN
in AUBERLEN].
The first justification of the woman is in her being
called out of Babylon the harlot, as the culminating stage
of the latter's sin, when judgment is about to fall: for
apostate Christendom, Babylon, is not to be converted, but
to be destroyed. Secondly, she has to pass through an
ordeal of persecution from the beast, which purifies and
prepares her for the transfiguration glory at Christ's
coming (@Re
20:4 Lu 21:28).
be not partakers--Greek, "have no
fellowship with her sins."
that ye receive not of her plagues--as Lot's
wife, by lingering too near the polluted and doomed city.
5. her sins--as a great
heap.
reached--Greek, "reached so far as to
come into close contact with, and to cleave unto."
6. Addressed to the
executioners of God's wrath.
Reward--Greek, "repay."
she rewarded--English Version reading
adds "you" with none of the oldest manuscripts. But A, B,
C, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic omit it. She
had not rewarded or repaid the world power
for some injury which the world power had inflicted on
her; but she had given the world power that which
was its due, namely, spiritual delusions, because
it did not like to retain God in its knowledge; the
unfaithful Church's principle was, "Populus vult decipi,
et decipiatur." "The people like to be deceived, and
let them be deceived."
double--of sorrow. Contrast with this the
double of joy which Jerusalem shall receive for her
past suffering (@Isa
61:7 Zec 9:12); even as she has received double
punishment for her sins (@Isa
40:2).
unto her--So Syriac, Coptic, and ANDREAS.
A, B, and C omit it.
in the cup--(@Re
18:3 Re 14:8 17:4).
filled--literally "mixed."
fill to her double--of the Lord's cup of
wrath.
7. How much--that is in
proportion as.
lived deliciously--luxuriously: see on Re
18:3, where the Greek is akin.
sorrow--Greek, "mourning," as for a
dead husband.
I sit--so Vulgate. But A, B, and C
prefix "that."
I . . . am no widow--for the world power is
my husband and my supporter.
shall see no sorrow--Greek,
"mourning." "I am seated (this long time) . . . I
am no widow . . . I shall see no sorrow,"
marks her complete unconcerned security as to the past,
present, and future [BENGEL].
I shall never have to mourn as one bereft of her husband.
As Babylon was queen of the East, so Rome has been queen
of the West, and is called on Imperial coins "the
eternal city." So Papal Rome is called by AMMIAN
MARCELLIN
[15.7]. "Babylon is a former Rome, and Rome a latter
Babylon. Rome is a daughter of Babylon, and by her, as by
her mother, God has been pleased to subdue the world under
one sway" [AUGUSTINE].
As the Jew's restoration did not take place till Babylon's
fall, so R. KIMCHI
on Obadiah, writes, "When Rome (Edom) shall be devastated,
there shall be redemption to Israel." Romish idolatries
have been the great stumbling-blocks to the Jews'
acceptance of Christianity.
8. death--on herself,
though she thought herself secure even from the death of
her husband.
mourning--instead of her feasting.
famine--instead of her luxurious
delicacies (@Re
18:3,7).
fire--(See on Re 17:16). Literal fire may
burn the literal city of Rome, which is situated in the
midst of volcanic agencies. As the ground was cursed for
Adam's sin, and the earth under Noah was sunk beneath the
flood, and Sodom was burnt with fire, so may Rome be. But
as the harlot is mystical (the whole faithless Church),
the burning may be mainly mystical, symbolizing
utter destruction and removal. BENGEL
is probably right in thinking Rome will once more rise to
power. The carnal, faithless, and worldly elements in all
churches, Roman, Greek, and Protestant, tend towards one
common center, and prepare the way for the last form of
the beast, namely, Antichrist. The Pharisees were in the
main sound in creed, yet judgment fell on them as on the
unsound Sadducees and half-heathenish Samaritans. So
faithless and adulterous, carnal, worldly Protestant
churches, will not escape for their soundness of creed.
the Lord--so B, C, Syriac, and ANDREAS.
But A and Vulgate omit. "Strong" is the meaning of
God's Hebrew name, "EL."
judgeth--But A, B, and C read the past
tense (Greek, "krinas"), "who hath judged
her": the prophetical past for the future: the charge in @Re
18:4 to God's people to come out of her implies
that the judgment was not yet actually executed.
9. lived deliciously--Greek,
"luxuriated." The faithless Church, instead of reproving,
connived at the self-indulgent luxury of the great men of
this world, and sanctioned it by her own practice.
Contrast the world's rejoicing over the dead bodies
of the two witnesses (@Re
11:10) who had tormented it by their faithfulness,
with its lamentations over the harlot who had made
the way to heaven smooth, and had been found a useful tool
in keeping subjects in abject tyranny. Men's carnal mind
relishes a religion like that of the apostate Church,
which gives an opiate to conscience, while leaving the
sinner license to indulge his lusts.
bewail her--A, B, C, Syriac, Coptic,
and CYPRIAN
omit "her."
10. God's judgments inspire
fear even in the worldly, but it is of short duration, for
the kings and great men soon attach themselves to the
beast in its last and worst shape, as open Antichrist,
claiming all that the harlot had claimed in blasphemous
pretensions and more, and so making up to them for the
loss of the harlot.
mighty--Rome in Greek means
strength; though that derivation is doubtful.
11. shall--So. B. But A and
C read the present, "weep and mourn."
merchandise--Greek, "cargo": wares
carried in ships: ship-lading (compare @Re
18:17). Rome was not a commercial city, and is not
likely from her position to be so. The merchandise
must therefore be spiritual, even as the harlot is not
literal, but spiritual. She did not witness against carnal
luxury and pleasure-seeking, the source of the
merchants' gains, but conformed to them (@Re
18:7). She cared not for the sheep, but for the wool.
Professing Christian merchants in her lived as if this
world not heaven, were the reality, and were unscrupulous
as to the means of getting gain. Compare Notes, see
on Zec 5:4-11, on the same subject, the judgment on
mystical Babylon's merchants for unjust gain. All
the merchandise here mentioned occurs repeatedly in the
Roman Ceremonial.
12. (See on Re 17:4).
stones . . . pearls--Greek, "stone
. . . pearl."
fine linen--A, B, and C read Greek, "bussinou"
for "bussou," that is, "fine linen manufacture" [ALFORD].
The manufacture for which Egypt (the type of the
apostate Church, @Re
11:8) was famed. Contrast "the fine linen" (@Eze
16:10) put on Israel, and on the New Testament Church
(@Re
19:8), the Bride, by God (@Ps
132:9).
thyine wood--the citrus of the Romans:
probably the cypressus thyoyides, or the thuia
articulata. "Citron wood" [ALFORD].
A sweet-smelling tree of Cyrene in Lybia, used for
incense.
all manner vessels--Greek, "every
vessel," or "furniture."
13. cinnamon--designed by
God for better purposes: being an ingredient in the holy
anointing oil, and a plant in the garden of the Beloved (@So
4:14); but desecrated to vile uses by the adulteress
(@Pr
7:17).
odours--of incense. A, C, Vulgate, and
Syriac prefix "and amomium" (a precious hair
ointment made from an Asiatic shrub). English Version
reading is supported by Coptic and ANDREAS,
but not oldest manuscripts.
ointments--Greek, "ointment."
frankincense--Contrast the true "incense"
which God loves (@Ps
141:2 Mal 1:11).
fine flour--the similago of the Latins
[ALFORD].
beasts--of burden: cattle.
slaves--Greek, "bodies."
souls of men--(@Eze
27:13). Said of slaves. Appropriate to the
spiritual harlot, apostate Christendom, especially Rome,
which has so often enslaved both bodies and
souls of men. Though the New Testament does not
directly forbid slavery, which would, in the then state of
the world, have incited a slave revolt, it virtually
condemns it, as here. Popery has derived its greatest
gains from the sale of masses for the souls of men
after death, and of indulgences purchased from the Papal
chancery by rich merchants in various countries, to be
retailed at a profit [MOSHEIM,
III, 95, 96].
14. Direct address to
Babylon.
the fruits that thy soul lusted after--Greek,
"thy autumn-ripe fruits of the lust (eager desire) of the
soul."
dainty--Greek, "fat": "sumptuous" in
food.
goodly--"splendid," "bright," in dress and
equipage.
departed--supported by none of our
manuscripts. But A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, and
Coptic read, "perished."
thou shalt--A, C, Vulgate, and
Syriac read, "They (men) shall no more
find them at all."
15. of these things--of the
things mentioned, @Re
18:12,13.
which--"who."
made rich by--Greek, "derived riches
from her."
stand afar off for the fear--(Compare @Re
18:10).
wailing--Greek, "mourning."
16. And--so Vulgate
and ANDREAS.
But A, B, and C omit.
decked--literally, "glided."
stones . . . pearls--Greek, "stone
. . . pearl." B and ANDREAS
read "pearls." But A and C, "pearl."
17. is come to naught--Greek,
"is desolated."
shipmaster--Greek, "steersman," or
"pilot."
all the company in ships--A, C, Vulgate,
and Syriac read, "Every one who saileth to a place"
(B has ". . . to the place"), every voyager.
Vessels were freighted with pilgrims to various
shrines, so that in one month (A.D.
1300) two hundred thousand pilgrims were counted in Rome [D'AUBIGNE,
Histoire de la Reformation]: a source of gain, not
only to the Papal see, but to shipmasters, merchants,
pilots, &c. These latter, however, are not restricted
to those literally "shipmasters," &c., but mainly refer,
in the mystical sense, to all who share in the spiritual
traffic of apostate Christendom.
18. when they saw--Greek,
"horontes." But A, B, C, and ANDREAS
read, Greek, "blepontes," "looking at."
Greek, "blepo," is to use the eyes, to
look: the act of seeing without thought of the
object seen. Greek, "horao," refers to the
thing seen or presented to the eyes [TITTMANN].
smoke--so B, C. But A reads "place."
What city is like--Compare the similar beast
as to the beast, @Re
13:4: so closely do the harlot and beast approximate
one another. Contrast the attribution of this praise to
God, to whom alone it is due, by His servants (@Ex
15:11). MARTIAL
says of Rome, "Nothing is equal to her;" and ATHENĈUS,
"She is the epitome of the world."
19. wailing--"mourning."
that had ships--A, B, and C read, "that had
their ships": literally, "the ships."
costliness--her costly treasures: abstract
for concrete.
20. holy apostles--So C
reads. But A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and ANDREAS
read, "Ye saints and ye apostles."
avenged you on her--Greek, "judged
your judgment on (literally, exacting it from)
her." "There is more joy in heaven at the harlot's
downfall than at that of the two beasts. For the most
heinous of all sin is the sin of those who know God's word
of grace, and keep it not. The worldliness of the Church
is the most worldly of all worldliness. Hence, Babylon, in
Revelation, has not only Israel's sins, but also the sins
of the heathen; and John dwells longer on the abominations
and judgments of the harlot than on those of the beast.
The term 'harlot' describes the false Church's essential
character. She retains her human shape as the woman,
does not become a beast: she has the form of
godliness, but denies its power. Her rightful lord and
husband, Jehovah-Christ, and the joys and goods of His
house, are no longer her all in all, but she runs after
the visible and vain things of the world, in its manifold
forms. The fullest form of her whoredom is, where the
Church wishes to be itself a worldly power, uses politics
and diplomacy, makes flesh her arm, uses unholy means for
holy ends, spreads her dominion by sword or money,
fascinates men by sensual ritualism, becomes 'mistress of
ceremonies' to the dignitaries of the world, flatters
prince or people, and like Israel, seeks the help of one
world power against the danger threatening from another" [AUBERLEN].
Judgment, therefore, begins with the harlot,
as in privileges the house of
God.
21. a--Greek, "one."
millstone--Compare the judgment on the
Egyptian hosts at the Red Sea, @Ex
15:5,10 Ne 9:11, and the foretold doom of Babylon, the
world power, @Jer
51:63,64.
with violence--Greek, "with impetus."
This verse shows that this prophecy is regarded as still
to be fulfilled.
22. pipers--flute players.
"Musicians," painters and sculptors, have desecrated their
art to lend fascination to the sensuous worship of corrupt
Christendom.
craftsman--artisan.
23. What a blessed contrast
is @Re
22:5, respecting the city of God: "They need no
candle (just as Babylon shall no more have
the light of a candle, but for a widely different
reason), for the Lord God giveth them light."
candle--Translate as Greek, "lamp."
bridegroom . . . bride . . . no more . . . in
thee--Contrast the heavenly city, with its
Bridegroom, Bride, and blessed marriage supper
(@Re
19:7,9 21:2,9 Isa 62:4,5).
thy merchants were--So most of the best
authorities read. But A omits the Greek article
before "merchants," and then translates, "The great men of
. . . were thy merchants."
sorceries--Greek, "sorcery."
24. Applied by Christ (@Mt
23:35) to apostate Jerusalem, which proves that not
merely the literal city Rome, and the Church of Rome
(though the chief representative of the apostasy),
but the WHOLE
of the faithless Church of both the Old and New Testament
is meant by Babylon the harlot; just as the whole Church
(Old and New Testament) is meant by "the woman" (@Re
12:1). As to literal city, ARINGHUS
in BENGEL
says, Pagan Rome was the "general shambles" for slaying
the sheep of Jesus. FRED.
SEYLER in BENGEL
calculates that papal Rome, between
A.D. 1540 and 1580,
slew more than nine hundred thousand Protestants. Three
reasons for the harlot's downfall are given: (1) The
worldly greatness of her merchants, which was
due to unholy traffic in spiritual things. (2) Her
sorceries, or juggling tricks, in which the false
prophet that ministers to the beast in its last form shall
exceed her; compare "sorcerers" (@Re
21:8 22:15), specially mentioned among those doomed to
the lake of fire. (3) Her persecution of (Old Testament)
"prophets" and (New Testament) "saints."
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