Part 19 (1/2)

It has been as though there were an unseen spirit power tirelessly at work _behind_ all the varied manifestations of evil. The dominant characteristic always has been blasphemy of G.o.d. It has controlled thrones and royal power, and has had unlimited gold at its command. And it has always been an enemy, subtle or open, cunning or violent, of G.o.d and His people.

That system or genius of evil is represented in the Old Testament as finding expression in one great political power after another, but chiefly in the power of Babylon. Babylon stands typically in these older pages, not merely for the great empire of the Euphrates, but for the unseen spirit of evil lying behind that power, and making use of it to carry through its own foul purposes.

But that unseen evil spirit power has found more than one agency to dominate and use. Babylon long since pa.s.sed off the stage as a political factor. But the power of evil has not ceased. It is distressing to note another great organization behind and through which the power of evil has worked. What is the system that has, for the past sixteen centuries, been supported by the various great civil governments?

There is only one answer. It is the organization known as ”the Christian Church.” And the term Church must be taken here in its fullest, broadest meaning. Its great main stem historically is the Roman Catholic Church.

The first great split-off was the Greek Orthodox Church. The Church of England was a later break-off. These, with the various government-ally supported Churches, and those free of such support, and various ancient primitive bodies,--these all together make up the organization known as ”the Church.”

The two symbolical characteristics of this woman and the two dominant characteristics of this historical Church are the same. The Church has been and is supported almost wholly by the civil governments, and used by them in furthering their policies. And it has been active in persecuting to death the people of G.o.d who would not yield to its domination. It has been marked by intolerance of all not yielding to its wishes, and especially of the Jew. That intolerance has been carried not only to the extreme of blood, but a riot of bloodshed. This is utterly heart-breaking to realize and to repeat.

The woman is said to be ”drunken (1) with the blood of the saints, and (2) with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus.” The twofold statement is seen to cover the two great periods, before Christ and since. And it covers also the two great powers through which the spirit of evil has chiefly worked in those two periods. But the name given first in the plains of s.h.i.+nar, and used characteristically of the G.o.d-defying power of evil, is given here, Babylon. It will be Babylon again at the very end after the Church system is overthrown.

It is plainly said that the beast represents the great civil or governmental power in its final stage, the shape it will be in at the end when these events occur.[161] The chief dominating political power of the world will have pa.s.sed through a succession of changes, seven kingdoms successively following each other. At the end there will be a combination of some sort, with ten great subdivisions, and one great head over all.

But at the last, the civil power will discard the Church, and persecute it. The spirit of evil thus gets embodiment typically in the great Babylon power, then in the Church, and at the very last, in a coalition of civil powers heading up in a new Babylon.

Then follows announcement of the fall of Babylon. The city is regarded here as the earthly capital of the organized system of unseen evil spirit power at work in the world. The city and the system are inseparably allied. The name Babylon is used in the Bible for both system and city.

If the question be asked what city is meant here, there can be but one answer. From the twelfth of Genesis on the Bible never touches history, except as history touches Israel as a nation. A thoughtful review of the book makes this clear. And this book of Revelation is a gathering-up of Bible threads, and only these. There is only one city in the Bible record that answers to the description here, ”the great city which reigneth over the kings of the earth.” ”Babylon _the_ great.”

But the old Babylon lies in ruins. And its ruined condition has been quoted as the fulfilment of the famous pa.s.sage in Isaiah xiii. 19-22. It should be carefully noted that the present conditions at the site of old Babylon do not seem to satisfy fully the language of that pa.s.sage. It would seem to be another ill.u.s.tration of the rare use of language in the Bible, which adapts a pa.s.sage accurately to one event, and then to a second event, a long time afterward.

This would, of course, involve the rebuilding of the old capital of the Euphrates. The reverent student quietly notes the movements taking place in that part of the world, but restrains mere curious speculation, as he continues fervently to pray, ”Thy kingdom come.”

This eighteenth chapter of Revelation seems like an echo of that intense twenty-first of Isaiah, and indeed of a strain sounding all through the prophetic books. One familiar with the old writings is not surprised to find this echo; he expects it. No echo of G.o.d's voice or purpose is ever lost. G.o.d never loses any of the threads out of His hand.

Hallelujah! He Comes.

_The seventh view_ presents the climax. It includes from chapter nineteen to chapter twenty-two, verse five. It presents in full the great scene that closes this tribulation period; touches the kingdom in a bare word so as to fit it into its place in the scheme of events being outlined; and then gives the final wind-up after the Kingdom time is over. We want to look now at the portion connected immediately with what has just gone before, the description of the wondrous close of the tribulation, in chapters nineteen, verse one, to twenty, verse three.

John hears a great outburst of wors.h.i.+p and praise in heaven. It resembles the outburst back in chapter five, when the Lamb took the book. But it is seen to be yet greater than that. Its joy and delight seem wholly unbounded. Again the living creatures and the four and twenty elders lead the song that bursts out.

John tries to tell how great was the volume of adoring song that fills all heaven. It is like the voice of a great mult.i.tude, like the waters that he had heard many a time breaking in deafening roar on the rocky coast of Patmos, like the mighty thunders which he had heard so much in these visions.

And the song they sang explains the exuberance of their singing, ”Hallelujah: for the Lord our G.o.d, the Almighty _reigneth_.” At last He _reigneth_. In the earlier parts of the book G.o.d is spoken of as ”He who is and who was, and _who cometh_.”[162] As later events are described that last part ”who cometh” is significantly dropped.[163]

Clearly at these points being described He has come. Now the great realization bursts out from countless voices, the Lord, our G.o.d, the Almighty _reigneth_!

And John is bidden to write the words whose refrain has filled such a place in hymns and devout speech, ”Blessed are they that are bidden to the marriage supper of the Lamb.” And the one who seems to be serving as John's guide puts peculiar emphasis on all that is being revealed by saying, ”these are true words of G.o.d.”

John is so overwhelmed that he falls down to wors.h.i.+p this one. And then he finds that this is one of his own redeemed brothers of the earth. And as He quietly bids John give his wors.h.i.+p to One only, He adds very significant words: ”the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.”

The whole genius and soul of all this wealth of prophecy is to point men to our Lord Jesus Christ, G.o.d to us.

And now comes the event toward which the ages have looked. _The heavens open._ And _our Lord Jesus appears_ coming in glory to earth. At last He comes. There's a wonderful description. He comes as a conqueror, riding forth to judge the earth righteously, and to make war on evil. His eyes are as a flame of fire, and upon His head many diadems. He has a name indicating that He is all alone in the experiences He has been through, and in His character. He comes as King of kings and Lord of lords, to rule all the earth with a new absolutism, to right all wrongs, and visit the indignant wrath of G.o.d upon all sin.

As He appears an angel gives warning of what is coming. In words that are an echo of Ezekiel's, long centuries before, he calls to all the scavenger birds of the earth that haunt battlefields to come to a great feasting time.[164] And John sees the vast armies of the nations of the earth all gathered together for a last mighty battle, under the leaders.h.i.+p of the great leader of lawlessness and his lieutenant.

And the utter impotence of their struggle against G.o.d is revealed in the quietness and brevity with which their defeat and capture are told.

Satan's great earth leader and his chief who deceived the people with his miraculous power, both are taken and forever put away. And then Satan himself is chained and fastened securely in the abyss. Such is the tremendous consummation quietly told in a few lines. And then follows the setting up of the glorious kingdom on earth.

Whatever the immediate circ.u.mstances under which the Second Psalm was penned, it will be readily seen how it fits into this situation at the end.