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Babylon Fall In Bible And History Essay

, Research Paper


Comparing the fall of the Historical Babylon and the Babylon of Revelation To


understand the symbolism between the two Babylon’s of the bible, one must first


understand the fall of each and how the two compare. There is a lot to be said


about the events that took place during fall of the Historical Babylon how these


events are related to the fall of the Babylon of Revelation. To begin with I


will describe the fall of the Historical Babylon and then relate this to two


mainstreams of thought regarding the fall of the Babylon of Revelation. These


two ideas are the futuristic and the historical views of Babylon?s fall. The


reason for these two separate views is because there is certainly no book in the


Bible that has given more difficulty to interpreters than the book of


Revelation. Many things about it continue to puzzle the serious Bible student,


and many points remain obscure.(ref.# 4, p.220) Ancient Babylon Babylon was an


enormous city and thought by its inhabitants to be impregnable. Some estimates


put the area of the city at as much as 200 square miles, with many fields and


orchards within the city walls (ref.# 2, p320). The river Euphrates flowed


through the city, entering in under the city walls. The walls of Babylon are


believed to have been around 80 feet thick, with some area being over 120 feet


thick (ref.# 7, p.68). 100 gates of bronze gave entry to the city. In 604 B.C.


Nebuchadnezzar led an invasion of Jerusalem, taking many Jews captive and


beginning the captivity and seven times punishment that had previously been


prophesied. At this time Babylon was the greatest empire on earth, but a new


force was emerging. The Medes and Persians were becoming a mighty empire. In the


time of Belshazzar, grandson of Nebuchadnezzar, war was raging between the two


empires. The Babylonians, which were not caring about the enemy who were even


then at the gates of the city, engaged in a huge, drunken party. During this


feast the golden vessels, taken from the temple at Jerusalem and reserved for


pure service to God, were abused at the command of the king. The judgment of God


was revealed by the "writing on the wall". That night the city was


invaded, and the Medes and Persians under Darius and Cyrus were victorious


(ref.#1 p.431) During the night of the drunken feast, the river and its


tributaries that ran under the city walls were blocked and the water diverted


into canals and ponds dug by the Medes and Persians for that purpose. The result


was that the army of the Medes and Persians could literally walk in under the


wall. The army entered Babylon at one end and rapidly moved through the city,


meeting little resistance from the defenders, who were caught completely


off-guard. The city of Babylon was utterly destroyed (ref.#7). Babylon had a


warning of their judgment for over 100 years, a warning given by God Himself.


The warning was scorned and ignored by a Godless people. This foolish rejection


of the Word of God led to total destruction. The promise of the return of


Christ, signaling the end of the world, as we know it, has been scorned by


mankind, just as the prophecy of the fall of the Babylonian Empire. This is why


the book of Revelation relates the fall of Babylon with the modern day world.


Men and women today would rather indulge in a drunken party than seek the Lord.


The need to have a spirit-filled-soul, and to remain "in the Spirit" -


grows more urgent every day. Jesus said, "Watch, for you know not when your


Lord may come!" Babylon of Revelation This Babylon is of course a symbolic


figure representing the evil on earth that distracts God’s children from their


commitment to Him. Babylon is called the "great harlot" in Revelation.


This indicates a Babylon that allures, tempts, seduces, and draws people away


from God. The literal Babylon of Biblical times reminded one of the


pleasure-mad, arrogant, anti-God cultures that put pleasure ahead of all else.


Babylon of old was described as of the "lust of the flesh, the lust of the


eyes, and the pride of life," (1 John 2:16). In Revelation 18 John writes,


"And I heard another voice from heaven, saying, "Come out of her, my


people, that you may not participate in her sins and that you may not receive of


her plagues." Here John is talking about Babylon (see verse 2). Christians


are to live in the world, but they are not to be of the world. Paul writes in 2


Cor. 6:17, "Therefore, come out from their midst and be separate,"


says the Lord. "and do not touch what is unclean; And I will welcome


you." Babylon is the world, the seduction of the world, at any moment of


history, which would draw away a Christian from God. In John’s day Babylon would


have been represented by the Roman Empire. Today, it would be represented by all


cultures that seek to seduce the Christian away from God. The futuristic view of


the fall of Babylon It is the desire of the futuristic interpretation that in


context, the fall of Babylon is directly related to an eschatological setting.


Certain passages relate the fall of Babylon to the Day of the Lord. Babylon’s


fall and the Day of the Lord. The futuristic interpreters insist that Isaiah


13:6, 9, 13 definitely establishes the setting for the fall of Babylon as the


Day of the Lord. To these interpreters the Day of the Lord is always an


eschatological event. Since in Isaiah 13:2-16 the terminology "Day of the


Lord" appears these verses must have a future fulfillment. But if these


verses have a future fulfillment then it would seem to be impossible to


interpret verses 17 through 20, which describe the overthrow of Babylon as


having been fulfilled in the past. The conclusion is therefore offered that


since the fall of Babylon as prophesied in Scripture is to take place in the


setting of the Day of the Lord; and since the Day of the Lord is yet future,


then it follows that the destruction of Babylon yet awaits fulfillment. The


futuristic interpreters point out that the prophecy of Babylon’s fall not only


relates to the Day of the Lord but also to the events that mark the beginning of


the Millennium. The passage which most clearly supports this contention is


Isaiah 14:1-7. This idea points out that there are at least three things in


these verses concerning Israel’s history, which have not come to pass: (1) God


has not yet set them in their own land (14:1); (2) Israel does not yet possess


the peoples of the earth for servants and handmaids (14:2); (3) Israel has not


yet taken them captive whose captives they were, nor ruled over their oppressors


(14:2). Thus Scripture makes Babylon’s fall contemporaneous with two concurrent


events-the forgiveness of Israel and the coming Day of the Lord. Even if it


could be shown that the desolation of Babylon and its land has reached a point


that adequately answers to predictions of Scripture respecting it, a revival of


Babylon would still be necessary in order for Scripture to be accomplished. The


Historical View of Babylon?s Fall The Babylon role is played several times in


the Scriptures. In Revelation the three angels would begin to fly one after the


other. The first angel announced the beginning of the judgment period which


precedes the coming of Christ. God called many around the world to begin to


study the 2300-day prophecy. The most prominent of these was a Baptist farmer,


William Miller. In 1818 he came to the conclusion that the judgment would begin


around 1843 and that Jesus would then return in glory to cleanse the earth by


fire. (Of course he was wrong about the return of Je

sus.) His public ministry


began in 1831. Before the time of disappointment in 1844, had been joined by


around 300 other ministers. 135,000 people are estimated to have expressed their


commitment to the movement. This was a significant part of the population of the


United States (ref.#8). Thus 1831 would mark the beginning of the call of the


first angel (Rev. 14:6, 7). As the movement was coming to its climax, the


Protestant churches began to denounce the new ideas, placing themselves in the


position of corrupted Babylon. The second angel’s message, therefore, began


shortly before the time of disappointment in the fall of 1844. The third angel


predicts God’s final wrath for those who accepted the beast’s mark. It began


when the significance of his message was discovered from the Scriptures by those


who earnestly studied and prayed after the disappointment. "And there


followed another angel, saying, Babylon is fallen, is fallen, that great city,


because she made all nations drink of the wine of the wrath of her


fornication." (Rev. 14:8) The Historical interpiters believe that Babylon


was the Roman church which developed new doctrines adulterated by combining


Biblical truth with pagan beliefs. The effects of the Counter Reformation and


the refusal of the Protestant churches to continue searching the Scriptures for


new truth, was bringing them into the camp of spiritual Babylon. The verse just


quoted, the angel simply says "Babylon is fallen." Can be contrasted


to the message of the powerful angel of Revelation 18 who cries out mightily in


a loud voice with the same message. The angels continue to fly and the messages


continue to be increasingly urgent until the climax in chapter 18. There the


final call is given to come out and the punishment of plagues predicted by the


third angel is given to Babylon who is pictured as the woman on the beast. It is


in this sense that Protestantism may be said to have fallen. Reminder of what


happened in 1844 The advent preachers were wrong about Jesus coming in 1844, and


the churches of the time justly pointed out their error. The churches failed,


however, to recognize the leading of God and refused to see that the temple to


be cleansed was in heaven (Heb. 8). In other words, these Protestant churches


rejected the idea that something important had happened. At the same time the


vast majority of the people who had been moved by the Holy Spirit to repent and


prepare for the judgment quickly returned to their old ways without further


study to understand what had happened to the calculations and events predicted.


In contrast to the futuristic view of Babylon’s fall the historical interperters


holds the view that the Old Testament prophecies relating to the fall of Babylon


have already been fulfilled. They contend that the prophecies regarding


Babylon’s fall do not relate to one specific historical situation but to an


ideal fall of the city. The definite historical beginning of the ideal fall of


Babylon is indicated in the prophecies of the coming of the Medes (Isaiah 13:17;


21:2, 3; Jeremiah 51:11, 28). Cyrus is named as the leader in the expedition


against Babylon (Isaiah 44:28; 45:1). Because of these definite historical


allusions the historical school of interpreters cannot see how the fall of


Babylon could be an eschatological event. While the futuristic interpreters


distinguish between the Babylon of Revelation 17 and that of chapter 18 the


historical interpreters, as a rule, do not. Whatever interpretation is given to


the harlot of Revelation 17 is also given to the metropolis of chapter 18. Among


the interpreters who reject any reference to literal Babylon in Revelation,


three views prevail. Some hold that Apocalyptic Babylon is the figurative


application of that name to a totally different city, Rome. Others hold that


Apocalyptic Babylon is the apostate church. A third group holds that the term


Babylon in Revelation applies to a system or civilization rather than to any


specific geographical center. However diverse their explanations of the


Apocalyptic Babylon may be, these interpreters are convinced that no reference


to literal Babylon is intended. They feel that the notion that literal Babylon


is to be rebuilt is in conflict with the Old Testament prophecies, which


indicate Babylon is to be destroyed and never again inhabited. Conclusion


Revelation has been very difficult for many to understand for many biblical


scholars, however in researching the two mainstreams of thought regarding the


fall of Babylon of Revelation I have come to my own understanding that the fall


of Babylon has yet to come. And I am reassured of this because Revelation gives


details related to the collateral damage caused by the fall of Babylon. Which


seems that these are warnings and descriptions of things to come. Also I believe


that Christ warns of the fall of Babylon in the Parable of the Ten Virgins.


Predicted by a story Jesus told This pattern of events traced in Jesus’ story of


the ten virgins. All carried oil in their lamps, but five foolish ones didn’t


carry extra oil with them. The foolish virgins ran out of oil and were not


admitted to the wedding. All are claiming a place in the wedding but some won’t


be as ready as they had imagined. The wedding represents the time when the


members of the kingdom of God are identified in judgment and become the bride of


Christ. In Luke 12:32 we see Jesus coming out from the wedding and into the


wedding feast. Thus the wedding begins before Christ returns in glory. It ends


at that time when we go to celebrate the marriage supper of the Lamb (Rev.


19:9). Many of the references seem to indicate that fall of Babylon will


strongly affect the social and economic structure of the world. They imply that


the creativity, skill and naturally industrious nature of man will suddenly come


up missing. And darkness will descend on mankind as the light of the world; the


"candles" shine no more "at all in thee"(Rev.18:23). Jesus


related the light of a candle to the inner spirit of man, comparing it to either


evil (darkness), or goodness (light) (Luke 11:33-36). Revelation states that


when Babylon falls, she is to be "utterly burned with fire (Rev.18:


8:9)." At Pentecost, tongues of fire sat over the heads of the apostles,


but they were not harmed. Instead they received the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:1-4).


The firebrand that destroys Babylon will not be made of the natural material we


humans might first consider. The fire that destroys Babylon is the fire of the


Holy Spirit. And as its power floods the earth, whether directly or through man,


it will finalize the removal of man’s bondage to the physical world and set him


eternally free. What a wonderful day this will be, when we will be set free!


1. Jones, Alonzo Trevier. The Great Empires of Prophecy. Chicago: Review and


Herald Publishing Company, 1898. 2. Goodspeed, George Stephen. A History of the


Babylonians and Assyrains. New York: Charles Scribner?s Sons, 1917. 3. King,


Leonard W. A History of Babylon. London: Chatto and Windus, 1919. 4. Hislop,


Rev. Alexander. The Two Babylons or The Papal Worship. New York: Loizeaux


Brothers, Bible Truth Depot, 1944. 5. Winckler, Hugo. The History of Babylonia


and Assyria. New York: Charles Scribner?s Sons, 1907. 6. Parrot, Andre.


Babylon and the Old Testament. New York: Philosophical Library, 1958. 7. Saggs,


H.W.F. The Greatness that was Babylon. New York: Hawthorn Books Inc. Publishers,


1962. 8. Maxwell, C. Mervyn. God Cares Vol. 2. Boise, Idaho; Oshawa, Ontario,


Canada: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1985.

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