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The Two Babylons
Alexander Hislop
Introduction
"And upon her forehead
was a name written, MYSTERY, BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND
ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH."--Revelation 17:5
There is this great difference
between the works of men and the works of God, that the same minute and
searching investigation, which displays the defects and imperfections of the
one, brings out also the beauties of the other. If the most finely polished
needle on which the art of man has been expended be subjected to a microscope,
many inequalities, much roughness and clumsiness, will be seen. But if the
microscope be brought to bear on the flowers of the field, no such result
appears. Instead of their beauty diminishing, new beauties and still more
delicate, that have escaped the naked eye, are forthwith discovered; beauties
that make us appreciate, in a way which otherwise we could have had little
conception of, the full force of the Lord's saying, "Consider the lilies of
the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin: and yet I say
unto you, That even Solomon, in all his glory, was not arrayed like one of
these." The same law appears also in comparing the Word of God and
the most finished productions of men. There are spots and blemishes in the most
admired productions of human genius. But the more the Scriptures are searched,
the more minutely they are studied, the more their perfection appears; new
beauties are brought into light every day; and the discoveries of science, the
researches of the learned, and the labours of infidels, all alike conspire to
illustrate the wonderful harmony of all the parts, and the Divine beauty that
clothes the whole.
If this be the case with
Scripture in general, it is especially the case with prophetic Scripture. As
every spoke in the wheel of Providence revolves, the prophetic symbols start
into still more bold and beautiful relief. This is very strikingly the case
with the prophetic language that forms the groundwork and corner-stone of the
present work. There never has been any difficulty in the mind of any
enlightened Protestant in identifying the woman "sitting on seven
mountains," and having on her forehead the name written, "Mystery,
Babylon the Great," with the Roman apostacy. "No other city in the world
has ever been celebrated, as the city of Rome has, for its situation on seven
hills. Pagan poets and orators, who had not thought of elucidating prophecy,
have alike characterised it as 'the seven hilled city.'" Thus Virgil refers to
it: "Rome has both become the most beautiful (city) in the world, and alone has
surrounded for herself seven heights with a wall." Propertius, in the same
strain, speaks of it (only adding another trait, which completes the
Apocalyptic picture) as "The lofty city on seven hills, which governs the whole
world." Its "governing the whole world" is just the counterpart of the Divine
statement--"which reigneth over the kings of the earth" (Rev 17:18). To
call Rome the city "of the seven hills" was by its citizens held to be as
descriptive as to call it by its own proper name. Hence Horace speaks of it by
reference to its seven hills alone, when he addresses, "The gods who have set
their affections on the seven hills." Martial, in like manner, speaks of "The
seven dominating mountains."
In times long subsequent, the
same kind of language was in current use; for when Symmachus, the prefect of
the city, and the last acting Pagan Pontifex Maximus, as the Imperial
substitute, introduces by letter one friend of his to another, he calls him "De
septem montibus virum"--"a man from the seven mountains," meaning thereby, as
the commentators interpret it, "Civem Romanum, "A Roman Citizen." Now, while
this characteristic of Rome has ever been well marked and defined, it has
always been easy to show, that the Church which has its seat and headquarters
on the seven hills of Rome might most appropriately be called "Babylon,"
inasmuch as it is the chief seat of idolatry under the New Testament, as the
ancient Babylon was the chief seat of idolatry under the Old. But recent
discoveries in Assyria, taken in connection with the previously well-known but
ill-understood history and mythology of the ancient world, demonstrate that
there is a vast deal more significance in the name Babylon the Great than this.
It has been known all along that Popery was baptised Paganism; but God is now
making it manifest, that the Paganism which Rome has baptised is, in all its
essential elements, the very Paganism which prevailed in the ancient
literal Babylon, when Jehovah opened before Cyrus the two-leaved gates of
brass, and cut in sunder the bars of iron.
That new and unexpected light,
in some way or other, should be cast, about this very period, on the Church of
the grand Apostacy, the very language and symbols of the Apocalypse might have
prepared us to anticipate. In the Apocalyptic visions, it is just before the
judgment upon her that, for the first time, John sees the Apostate Church
with the name Babylon the Great "written upon her forehead" (Rev 17:5).
What means the writing of that name "on the forehead"? Does it not
naturally indicate that, just before judgment overtakes her, her real character
was to be so thoroughly developed, that everyone who has eyes to see, who has
the least spiritual discernment, would be compelled, as it were, on ocular
demonstration, to recognise the wonderful fitness of the title which the Spirit
of God had affixed to her. Her judgment is now evidently hastening on; and just
as it approaches, the Providence of God, conspiring with the Word of God, by
light pouring in from all quarters, makes it more and more evident that Rome is
in very deed the Babylon of the Apocalypse; that the essential character of her
system, the grand objects of her worship, her festivals, her doctrine and
discipline, her rites and ceremonies, her priesthood and their orders, have all
been derived from ancient Babylon; and, finally, that the Pope himself is truly
and properly the lineal representative of Belshazzar.
In the warfare that has been
waged against the domineering pretensions of Rome, it has too often been
counted enough merely to meet and set aside her presumptuous boast, that she is
the mother and mistress of all churches--the one Catholic Church, out of whose
pale there is no salvation. If ever there was excuse for such a mode of dealing
with her, that excuse will hold no longer. If the position I have laid down can
be maintained, she must be stripped of the name of a Christian Church
altogether; for if it was a Church of Christ that was convened on
that night, when the pontiff-king of Babylon, in the midst of his thousand
lords, "praised the gods of gold, and of silver, and of wood, and of
stone" (Dan 5:4), then the Church of Rome is entitled to the name of a
Christian Church; but not otherwise. This to some, no doubt, will appear a very
startling position; but it is one which it is the object of this work to
establish; and let the reader judge for himself, whether I do not bring ample
evidence to substantiate my position.
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