Babylon the Great: Call to Repentance
## Overview
- Sermon on Revelation 17–18:1–5 focusing on Babylon the Great and the church’s complacency.
- Main thesis: Babylon represents a corrupt, intoxicating power leading the world and church away from God; the church must repent, pray, and wake from spiritual intoxication.
## Passage Summary
- Revelation 17:1–6: Vision of a woman (Babylon) on a scarlet beast with seven heads and ten horns.
- Woman: dressed in purple and scarlet, adorned with gold, precious stones, pearls.
- Holds a golden cup filled with abominations and filth of adulteries.
- Named “Babylon the Great, mother of prostitutes and abominations.”
- Drunk with the blood of the saints and persecutors of Jesus’ witnesses.
- Revelation 17:7–18: Angel explains imagery.
- Seven heads: seven hills and seven kings (five fallen, one present, one future).
- Eighth king: a beast, belongs to the seven, destined for destruction.
- Ten horns: ten future kings who give authority to the beast for a short time.
- Waters: peoples, multitudes, nations, languages (the inhabited world).
- Beast and kings will turn on the prostitute, judge and destroy her.
- Revelation 18:1–5: Announcement of Babylon’s fall and call to God’s people to come out to avoid sharing in her sins and plagues.
## Key Concepts and Interpretations
- Babylon the Great
- Symbol of a global, idolatrous system opposed to God.
- Combines political power (beast) and corrupt religion (prostitute).
- Historically linked to ancient Babylon, often associated with Rome or a future revived city/power.
- Scarlet Beast (World Empire)
- Represents Satanic, worldly political authority allied with false religion.
- One-world religion and one-world political power will enforce theology by government.
- Intoxication by Babylon
- Metaphor: people and nations “drunk” on her adulteries — seduced by luxuries, sorcery, and immorality.
- Intoxication is gradual: one sip at a time; lowers inhibitions and judgment.
- The prostitute’s luxury imagery (purple, scarlet, jewels) is a counterfeit of true priestly garments.
- Persecution and Blood of the Saints
- Babylon is “drunk” on killing faithful witnesses to Jesus.
- If seduction fails, persecution and killing follow.
## The Church’s Condition (Main Practical Application)
- Complacency and Intoxication
- Many churches have become comfortable, lukewarm, or “intoxicated” with worldly luxuries and conveniences.
- Laodicea (Revelation 3) parallels: wealthy, self-sufficient, blind, and outside Christ’s fellowship.
- Symptoms: focus on entertainment, consumer-driven worship, emphasis on comfort over mission.
- Consequences
- Decline in gospel influence and decline in church affiliation (example statistics cited).
- Loss of urgency for evangelism and discipleship.
- Spiritual ineffectiveness: body (church) not responding to the head (Christ).
- Biblical reminder of God’s heart for lost people
- 2 Peter 3:9 — God is patient, wants all to come to repentance.
- John 3:16–17 — Christ came to save, not condemn.
- Romans 1:16 — Gospel is the power of God for salvation.
- Romans 10:17 — Faith comes from hearing the message of Christ.
## Call To Action (Practical Steps Given)
- Repentance
- Individual and corporate repentance for complacency, prayerlessness, and misplaced priorities.
- Prayer and Intercession
- Make lists of six unbelieving family, friends, coworkers; pray daily for them.
- Church goal: 52 souls (one per week) in the coming year; mobilize prayer meetings.
- Prioritize scheduled, uninterrupted prayer time (e.g., early morning).
- Evangelism and Discipleship
- Return to Matthew 28: Go, make disciples, baptize, teach obedience to Christ’s commands.
- Pray first, then actively share the gospel; expect God to work.
- Corporate Revival Effort
- Humble the church, rely on the Spirit rather than man-made machinery.
- Re-orient church life from consumer convenience to sacrificial mission.