Call to Leave Worldly Babylon
## Overview
- Sermon on Revelation 18:4–5 about the fall of Babylon and the call: "Come out of her, my people."
- Main theme: God's grace is available now but will be shut off; believers must separate from worldly idols.
- Purpose: Urgent exhortation to repent, leave corrupt systems, and recommit to Christ.
## Key Points
- Context of Revelation
- Revelation reveals Jesus Christ and what is soon to take place.
- Revelation 18 describes Babylon (symbolic of a corrupt, idolatrous world system) and its final judgment.
- The command: "Come Out"
- God calls His people to leave Babylon to avoid sharing in its sins and plagues.
- This call is both urgent and voluntary — a moral choice for believers.
- Nature of Babylon
- Symbolizes rebellion against God: economic exploitation, idolatry, moral corruption, persecution of the saints.
- Its seduction uses luxury, pleasure, success, self-idolatry ("gods of more," "gods of me").
- Responsibility and Will
- Nations, kings, and merchants willingly drank Babylon's maddening wine; they are not merely victims.
- Believers must examine competing allegiances and idols in their lives.
## Biblical Examples Supporting The Warning
- Noah and the Flood
- God closed the ark door; grace was shut off for that generation; only Noah’s household was saved.
- Sodom and Gomorrah
- Cities destroyed by fire when no sufficient righteous were found; Lot’s wife looked back (she loved what she left).
- Israel’s Exile to Babylon
- Israel’s idolatry led to exile; many became comfortable in Babylon and did not return.
- Ezra and Nehemiah record return of a remnant; comfort led to assimilation and loss of identity.
- Jerusalem (Luke/Matthew)
- Jesus weeps over Jerusalem for not recognizing God's visitation; judgment followed (70 AD destruction).
## Theological Emphases
- God’s Character
- God is transcendent, imminent, immutable, holy, merciful, and righteous.
- God’s judgments are just and inevitable; heaven’s decrees will be fulfilled on earth.
- Grace and Judgment
- Salvation is by grace; Christians are saved by God’s mercy and Christ’s atoning work.
- However, there will come a time when God’s grace is sealed up and judgment begins.
- Identity and Allegiance
- Primary Christian identity: follower of the Lamb, not nationality, role, or achievements.
- True repentance requires removing competing gods and returning full allegiance to Christ.
## Practical Applications
- Self-Examination
- Identify and renounce modern “gods” (wealth, comfort, reputation, entertainment, self-reliance).
- Ask: Do I bow to Christ first when in crisis or turn to other solutions?
- Resist Assimilation
- Avoid losing distinctiveness as Christians by conforming to secular culture and idols.
- Preserve spiritual identity over social or national identity.
- Urgent Repentance and Commitment
- Respond now to God’s call to "come out" while grace is available.
- Recommitment includes public/private repentance and renewed dependence on Christ.