Babylon Rides the Beast
End-Time “Babylon” sits on the same beastly entity that John saw “ascending from the Sea” in Chapter 13, but it combines the four “Beasts” of Daniel into one final malignant creature bent on destroying the saints. In Chapter 17, its “lineage” and inevitable destruction are described with language from Daniel’s vision of the “Little Horn” and the “Fourth Beast.”
The final incarnation of the “Beast” evolved
over a long history of imperial regimes. It is an entity that transcends
human history, beginning with the Tower of Babel incident “in the land of
Shinar” - (Genesis 11:1-9, Daniel 7:1-8, 15-26, Revelation 13:1-3).
[Photo by Corbin Mathias on Unsplash] |
- (Revelation 17:7-8) – “And the angel said to me: Why were you astonished? I will tell you the mystery of the woman, and of the beast that carries her, which has seven heads and ten horns. The beast which you saw was and is not, and is going to ascend from the abyss, and into destruction, it goes. And the inhabitants of the earth, whose name is not written upon the book of life from the foundation of the world, will be astonished when they see the beast because it was and is not, and will be present.”
The English term “astonished” translates the Greek verb
thaumazō, meaning “wonder, marvel; to
be astonished.” It echoes Daniel’s reaction to his visions of the “fourth
beast” and the “king of fierce countenance” - (Daniel
7:28, 8:27 – “As for me, Daniel, my thoughts much ASTONISHED me, and my
countenance was changed in me.”
This understanding is confirmed by the angel’s reaction to John’s astonishment:
“I will tell you the mystery of the woman and of the Beast that carries her.”
So, also, Daniel was troubled by his visions, not simply by their content, but
because he did not understand their significance.
The “mystery”
of “Babylon the Great” is the mystery of the
Harlot AND the “Beast on which she sits.” Their activities and fates
are inextricably linked. The Beast has “Seven Heads and Ten Horns.” It is
the same creature seen in Chapter 13, only now it is described as one that “was
and is not and is going to ascend from the Abyss.”
The description of its ascent from the “Abyss” verbally links it to
the “Two Witnesses” who were killed by the “Beast from the Abyss.”
That same reality is in view in Chapter 17. When the final incarnation of the “Beast”
appears, it will wage war on the witnesses of the “Lamb.”
The description recalls the “head” of the “Beast” that
received the death blow but was “healed.” Just as the “Inhabitants of the Earth wondered after
the Beast” when its wound was healed, they will wonder “because it was and is not and will be present.”
The Beast is “not” but
then “present,” alluding to Daniel’s vision of the “fourth beast”
and its predicted fate. Despite their demise, the “four beasts” of Daniel
continued to exist in some fashion for a designated “season”:
- (Daniel 7:11-12) – “I beheld even till the beast was slain, and its body destroyed, and it was given to be burned with fire. And as for the rest of the beasts, their dominion was taken away: yet their lives were prolonged for a season and a time.”
This is the beastly parody of the
declaration that God is the one “who is and who was and is coming.” The “Beast”
claims divine prerogatives, but unlike the “coming” of God, its “arrival”
will mean its destruction - (Revelation 1:4, 11:15-19).
Moreover, the term translated
as “present” is pareimi. It is related to the noun ‘Parousia’
applied by the New Testament to the “arrival” of Jesus. The “arrival”
of the “Beast” is compared to that of Jesus. One ends in glory, but the
other, in destruction - (2 Thessalonians 2:8-9).
- (Revelation 17:9-13) – “Here is the mind that has wisdom. The seven heads are seven mountains, upon which the woman sits; and they are seven kings: the five have fallen, the one is, the other has not yet come; and, whenever he comes, a little while must he remain, and the beast that was and is not, and he is an eighth and is of the seven, and into destruction, it goes. And the ten horns which you saw are ten kings, who, indeed, have not received sovereignty as of yet but will receive authority as kings for one hour with the beast. These have one mind, and their power and authority they give to the beast.”
SEVEN MOUNTAINS
“The mind that has wisdom” is a clause paralleling
the earlier call to understand the “Number of the Beast.” It also recalls
the prediction given to Daniel at the end of his final vision - (Revelation
13:18, Daniel 12:10- “None of the wicked will understand, but the wise will
understand”).
Next, the angel provided John with the interpretation of the vision. The “Seven Heads” of the Beast represented “mountains,” which, in turn, represented “kings” or kingdoms. From John’s perspective, five had “fallen” already, one existed at his time, and the seventh was yet to come.
The regime that existed
for John could only be the Roman Empire. Again, the “Beast” is a transhistorical
reality, just as the single “Beast from the Sea,” and the last “kingdom” was in John’s
future. When it does arrive, it will remain for “a little while.” This
translates the Greek term oligos,
the same one used when the Devil was expelled to Earth for a “short while” - (Revelation 13:1).
Likewise,
at the end of the “Thousand Years,” the Devil was released from the “Abyss” for “a little while.” The same “short”
period is in view in all three passages. The arrival of the final incarnation of
the “Beast,” singular, will coincide with Satan’s release from the “Abyss”
- (Revelation 12:12, 20:3).
[Photo by Stefan Cosma on Unsplash] |
This final kingdom “was and is not.” This describes the same reality as the Beast’s “head” that received the “death stroke that was healed.” It will be one of the “seven,” but it will also be an “eighth.” The final “Beast” will be of the same lineage as its predecessors, but it will also be something beyond them - (Revelation 16:16).
The
“Ten Horns are ten kings” who did not receive their sovereignty until the
“Hour
of Trial” of the “whole habitable Earth.” These kings gave
their allegiance to the “Beast from the Sea.” The group is identical to
the “kings of the Earth” allied with the “Beast,” and they subjugate
themselves to “Babylon.”
The
number “ten” symbolizes an entire series in Revelation. All the “Kings
of the Earth” along with the nations from the “four corners of the Earth”
will join the “Beast” from the Sea/Abyss in its final assault against
the “Lamb” and his “saints” on behalf of the “Dragon.”
RELATED POSTS:
- Babel Lives! - (In the Bible, Babylon becomes a symbol of the recurring rise of empires and self-appointed world leaders)
- Empires Rise and Fall - (Imperial hubris is the legacy of the Tower of Babel, humanity’s first but certainly not attempt to establish the World Empire)
- God Grants Sovereignty - (God gave the kingdom of Judah into the hands of Nebuchadnezzar, but He also equipped Daniel and his companions for service in the court of Babylon)
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