The phrase “Babylon the Great” appears prominently in the
book of Revelation, chapters 17–18. It is one of the most vivid and sobering
symbols in biblical prophecy. While interpreters have differed on precise
identification, Scripture itself provides clear theological contours that
define what Babylon the Great represents and why its judgment is certain.
In Revelation, Babylon the Great is not merely an ancient
city revived, but a symbolic system—a comprehensive representation of human
civilisation organised in rebellion against God. It encompasses religious
corruption, political power, economic exploitation, and moral decadence, all
unified in opposition to the sovereignty of Christ.
Revelation 17:5 states, “And on her forehead a name was
written, a mystery, ‘BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND OF THE
ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH.’”
The use of the word mystery indicates that Babylon
is more than a literal location. It signifies a trans-historical reality: the
world system that exalts itself, persecutes God’s people, and seduces nations
away from truth.
How Does God View Babylon the Great?
God’s assessment of Babylon the Great is unequivocally
negative. She is portrayed as morally corrupt, spiritually adulterous, and
violently opposed to the people of God.
A System of Spiritual Adultery
Revelation 17:2 declares, “With whom the kings of the
earth committed acts of immorality, and those who dwell on the earth were made
drunk with the wine of her immorality.”
In biblical language, immorality here refers
primarily to spiritual unfaithfulness, the replacement of devotion to God with
allegiance to power, wealth, and false worship. Babylon intoxicates the
nations, normalising sin and dulling spiritual discernment.
Guilty of Persecuting the Saints
God also indicts Babylon for violence against His people.
Revelation 17:6 says, “And I saw the woman drunk with the blood of the saints,
and with the blood of the witnesses of Jesus.”
This imagery shows Babylon as a persecuting power,
responsible for the suffering and death of those faithful to Christ. From God’s
perspective, Babylon is not merely corrupt; she is culpable.
Marked for Judgment
Babylon’s sins are described as having reached heaven
itself. Revelation 18:5 states, “For her sins have piled up as high as heaven,
and God has remembered her iniquities.”
God’s “remembering” is not forgetfulness corrected, but
covenantal justice about to be executed. Babylon stands fully exposed before
the holy Judge.
What Will Happen to Babylon the Great?
The fate of Babylon the Great is sudden, total, and
irreversible destruction. Her downfall demonstrates the certainty of divine
judgment upon all systems that exalt themselves against God.
Sudden and Complete Collapse
Revelation 18:8 proclaims, “For this reason in one day
her plagues will come, pestilence and mourning and famine, and she will be
burned up with fire; for the Lord God who judges her is strong.”
What appears invincible to the world collapses in a
moment under God’s sovereign power. Babylon’s strength is illusory; her end is
decisive.
Lament from the World
The kings and merchants of the earth mourn Babylon’s fall
not out of repentance, but because they profited from her. Revelation 18:11
notes, “And the merchants of the earth weep and mourn over her, because no one
buys their cargoes anymore.”
This grief reveals Babylon’s economic dominance and the
deep entanglement of global commerce with moral corruption. Her destruction
exposes the emptiness of wealth gained apart from God.
A Call for God’s People to Separate
Before judgment falls, God issues a clear command to His
people. Revelation 18:4 states, “Come out of her, my people, so that you will
not participate in her sins and receive of her plagues.”
This is both a warning and a pastoral appeal. Believers
are called to spiritual separation to refuse Babylon’s values, practices, and
loyalties even while living within the world.
Heaven Rejoices
In stark contrast to earth’s mourning, heaven rejoices.
Revelation 19:1–2 declares, “Hallelujah! Salvation and glory and power belong
to our God; because His judgments are true and righteous; for He has judged the
great harlot who was corrupting the earth with her immorality.”
Babylon’s fall vindicates God’s justice and faithfulness.
Evil is neither ignored nor eternal.
Final Remarks
Babylon the Great represents the totality of human
culture and power structures organised in defiance of God, religious,
political, economic, and moral. God views her as corrupt, violent, and
irredeemable, and her destruction is certain.
For believers, Babylon the Great serves as both a warning
and an exhortation: a warning against compromise with the world’s values, and
an exhortation to remain faithful to Christ, whose kingdom alone will endure.
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