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- Adam Clarke Commentary -
Chapter 18
- A luminous angel proclaims the fall of Babylon, and the
cause of it, 1-3.
- The followers of God are
exhorted to come out of it, in order to escape her
approaching punishment, 4-8.
- The kings of the earth
lament her fate, 9,10.
- The merchants also bewail
her, 11.
- The articles in which she trafficked
enumerated, 12-16.
- She is bewailed also by shipmasters,
sailors, , 17-19.
- All heaven rejoices over her fall,
and her final desolation is foretold, 20-24.
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Verse 1. The earth was lightened
with his glory. This may refer to some
extraordinary messenger of the everlasting Gospel, who, by his
preaching and writings, should be the means of
diffusing the light of truth and true religion over the earth.
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Verse 2. Babylon the great is
fallen, is fallen This is a quotation from
Isaiah
21:9: And he said, Babylon is fallen, is fallen; and
all the graven images of her gods he hath broken unto
the ground. This is applied by some to Rome pagan;
by others to Rome papal; and by others to
Jerusalem.
Is become-the hold of every foul
spirit See the parallel passages in the
margin. The figures here point out the most complete
destruction. A city utterly sacked and ruined, never to be
rebuilt.
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Verse 3. The wine of the
wrath The punishment due to her
transgressions, because they have partaken with her in her
sins. See Clarke on Revelation
14:8.
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Verse 4. Come out of her, my
people These words appear to be taken from
Isaiah
48:20; ; Jeremiah
1:8;; 51:6,45.
The poet Mantuanus expresses this thought well:-
Vivere qui sancte cupitis, discelite; Romae Omnia
quum liceant, non licet esse bonum. "Ye who desire to live
a godly life, depart; for, although all things are lawful at
Rome, yet to be godly is unlawful.
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Verse 5. Her sins have reached unto
heaven They are become so great and
enormous that the long-suffering of God must give place to his
justice.
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Verse 6. Reward her even as she
rewarded you These words are a prophetic
declaration of what shall take place: God will deal with her
as she dealt with others.
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Verse 7. How much she hath glorified
herself By every act of transgression and
sinful pampering of the body she has been preparing for
herself a suitable and proportionate punishment.
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Verse 8. Therefore shall her plagues
come Death, by the sword of her
adversaries; mourning on account of the slaughter; and
famine, the fruits of the field being destroyed by the
hostile bands.
Utterly burned with
fire Of what city is this spoken?
Rome pagan has never been thus treated; Alaric and
Totilas burnt only some parts with fire. Rome papal has
not been thus treated; but this is true of Jerusalem, and yet
Jerusalem is not generally thought to be intended.
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Verse 9. The kings of the
earth Those who copied her superstitions
and adopted her idolatries.
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Verse 10. Standing afar
off Beholding her desolations with wonder
and astonishment, utterly unable to afford her any kind of
assistance.
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Verse 11. The merchants of the
earth These are represented as mourning
over her, because their traffic with her was at an end.
Bishop Bale, who applies all these things to the
Church of Rome, thus paraphrases the principal passages:-
"The mighty kinges and potentates of the
earth, not havinge afore their eyes the love and feare of
God, have committed with this whore moste vile filthynesse;
abusinge themselves by many straunge or uncommaunded
worshippings, and bynding themselves by othe to observe hyr
lawes and customs. At the examples, doctrines, counsels, and
perswasions of hyr holy whoremongers, have they broken the
covenaunts of peace; battailed, oppressed, spoyled, ravished,
tyrannously murthered innocents; yea, for vain foolish causes,
and more vaine titles, as though there were neither heaven nor
hel, God nor accounts to be made.
"And her mitred marchantes, hyr shorne souldiers,
hir massemongers, hyr soulesellers, and hir martbrokers, waxed
very riche, through the sale of hir oyles, creme, salt, water,
bread, orders, hallowings, houselinges, ashes, palme, waxe,
frankensence, beades, crosses, candlesticks, copes, belles,
organes, images, reliques, and other pedlary wares.
"They have gotten in unto them pallaces and princely
houses, fat pastors and parkes, meadowes and warrens, rivers
and pondes, villages and towns, cities and whole provinces,
with the divill and all els; besides other men's wives,
daughters, mayde servantes, and children, whom they have
abhominably corrupted. What profites they have drawen unto
them also by the sale of great bishopricks, prelacies,
promocions, benefices, tot quoties, pardons,
pilgrymages, confessions, and purgatory; besides the yearely
rents of cathedrall churches, abbayes, colleges, covents, for
sutes and suche other.-Specially shal they be sore
discontented with the matter, which have with hir committed
the whordom of the spyrite, by many externe worshipings of
drye waffer cakes, oyles, roods, relyques, ladyes, images,
sculles, bones, chippes, olde ragges, showes, (shoes,)
bootes, spurres, hattes, breches, whodes, night capes, and
such like.
"And they that have lived wantonly with hir, 18:9,)
in following hir idle observacions, in mattenses, houres, and
masses; in sensinges, halowings, and font halowing; in going
processions with canapye, crosse, and pyx; with banneres,
stremers, and torche light; with such other gaudes to folish
for children.
"Alas, alas, that great cyty 18:10)
that beautiful Babilon, that blessed holy mother the
Church, which somtime had so many popes pardons, so many
bishoppes blessinges, so many holye stations, so many cleane
remissions a pena et culpa, so many good ghostly
fathers, so many religious orders, so much holy water for
spirites, and Saint John's gospel, with the five woundes and
the length of our Lord for drowning, is nowe decayed for ever!
'Alas, alas, who shall pray for us now? Who shall singe
dirges and trentoles? Who shal spoile us of our sinnes? Who
shal give us ashes and palmes? Who shal blesse us with a
spade, and singe us out of purgatory when we are deade? If we
lacke these things we are like to want heaven. These are the
desperate complaints of the wicked."
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Verse 12.
The merchandise of gold, and silver,
Author, Bishop
Bale, who was once a priest of the Romish Church, goes on
to apply all these things to that Church; and whether the text
have this meaning or not, they will show us something of the
religious usages of his time, and the real mockery of
this intolerant and superstitious Church. Speaking in
reference to the Reformation, and the general light
that had been diffused abroad by the word of God, which was
then translated into the vulgar tongue, and put into the hands
of the people at large, he says:-
"They will pay no more money for the housell
sippings, bottom blessings; nor for 'seest me and seest me
not,' above the head and under of their chalices, which in
many places be of fine gold. Neyther regarde they to
kneele anye more downe, and to kisse their pontificall rings
which are of the same metal. They will be no more at coste to
have the ayre beaten, and the idols perfumed with their
sensers at pryncipall feastes; to have their crucifixes layde
upon horses, or to have them solemply borne aloft in their
gaddings abroade; with the religious occupyings of their
paxes, cruettes, and other jewels which be of silver.
"Neyther passe they greatly to beholde precyous stones any
more in their two-horned miters, whan they hollow their
churches, give theyr whorishe orders, and tryumphantly muster
in processions. Nor in costuous pearles in theyr copes
perrours, and chysibilles, whan they be in their prelately
pompous sacrifices. Men, knowing the worde of God, supposeth
that their ornaments of silk, wherewith they garnishe
their temples and adorne their idolles, is very blasphemous
and divillish. They thinke also, that their fayre white
rockets of raynes, or fine linnen cloath; their costly gray
amices, of calaber and cattes tayles; theyr fresh purple
gownes, whan they walke for their pleasures; and their read
scarlet frockes, whan they preach lyes in the pulpit, are very
superfluous and vayne.
"In their thynen wood (whom some men call algume
trees, some basill, some corall) may be
understande all theyr curious buildings of temples, abbeys,
chappels, and chambers; all shrines, images, church stooles,
and pews that are well payed for; all banner staves,
paternoster scores, and peeces of the holy crosse.
"The vessels of ivory comprehendeth all their
maundye dyshes, their offring platters, their relique chestes,
their god boxes, their drinking horns, their sipping cuppes
for the hiccough, their tables whereupon are charmed their
chalises and vestiments; their standiches, their combes, their
muske balles, their pomaunder pottes, and their dust boxes,
with other toyes.
"The vessels of precious stone; which after some
interpretours, are of precious stone, or after some are of
most precious wood; betokeneth their costuous cuppes, or
cruses of jasper, jacinct, amel, and fine beral; and their
alabaster boxes, wherwith they annointe kinges, confirme
children, and minister their holy whorish orders. Their pardon
masers, or drinking dishes, as St. Benit's bole, St. Edmond's
bole, St. Giles's bole, St. Blythe's bole, and Westminster
bole, with such other holy re-liques.
"Of brasse, which containeth latten, copper,
alcumine, and other harde metals, are made all their great
candlesticks, holy water kettles, lampes, desks, pyllers,
butterasses, bosses, bels, and many other thinges more.
"Of strong yron are the braunches made that holde up
the lightes before their false gods; the tacks that sustayne
them for fallinge; the lockes that save them from the robberye
of thieves; their fyre pans, bars, and poolyes, with many
other straunge ginnes besides.
"With marble most commonlye pave they their temples, and
build strong pillers and arches in their great cathedrale
churches and monastries; they make thereof also their
superalities, their tumbs, and their solemne grave-stones;
besides their other buildinges, with free-stone, flint, ragge,
and brick, comprehended in the same.
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Verse 13. And
cinnamon "By the sinamon is ment all maner
of costly spyces, wherewith they bury their byshops and
founders, lest they shoulde stinke when they translate them
agayne to make them saintes for advauntage.
"By the smellynge odours, the swete herbes that they
strewe abrode at theyr dedications and burials; besydes the
damaske waters, bawmes, muskes, pomaunder, civet, and other
curious confections they yet bestow upon theyr owne precious
bodyes.
"The oyntments are such oyles as they mingle with
rose water, aloes, and spike, with other mery conceits,
wherwith they anoynt their holy savours and roods, to make
them to sweat, and to smell sweete when they are borne abrod
in procession upon their high feastfull dayes.
"Frankinsence occupye they ofte as a necessarie
thinge in the sensyng of their idols, hallowinge of their
paschal, conjuringe of their ploughes; besydes the blessing of
their palmes, candles, ashes, and their dead men's graves,
with requiescant in pace.
"With wine synge they theyr masses for money, they
housell the people at Easter, they wash their aultar stones
upon Maundy Thursday; they fast the holy imber dayes, besydes
other banketinges all the whole years, to kepe theyr flesh
chaste.
"With oyle smere they yonge infantes at baptisme and
bishopping; they grease their massmongers, and gere them the
mark of madian; they anele their cattell that starveth; and do
many other feates els.
"Fyne floure is suche a merchandyse of theirs as far
excedeth all other, and was first geven them by Pope Alexander
the first, thinkinge Christes institution not sufficient, nor
comly in using the common breade in that ministerie. For that
ware hath brought them in their plentifull possessions, their
lordshippes, fatte benifices, and prebendaries, with
innumerable plesures els.
"Wheat have thei of their farms, whereof they make
pardon bread and cakes, to draw people to devocion towardes
them.
"Cattell receive they, offered unto their idols by
the idiots of the countries, for recover of sondrye diseases;
besides that they have of their tithes.
"Shepe have they, sometime of their owne pastures,
sometime of begginge, sometime of bequestes for the dead, to
cry them out of their feareful purgatorye, when they be
asleepe at midnight.
"Great horses have they, for mortuaries, for
offices, for favers, giftes, and rewardes, to be good lords
unto them, that they may holde still their farmes, and to have
saunder waspe their sonne and their heire a priest; or to
admitte him unto a manerly benefice, that he may be called
'maister person,' and suche lyke.
"Charets have they also, or horse litters, of
al manner of sorts, specially at Rome, with foote men runninge
on both sides of them, to make roome for the holy fathers. Of
whom some carye their owne precious bodyes, some theyr
treasure, some the blessed sacramente, some holy reliques and
ornamentes, some their whores, and some their bastardes. The
bodyes of men must needes be judged to be at their
pleasure, so long as Christen provinces be tributaries unto
them, princes obediente, people subject, and their lawes at
their commaundement to slea and to kyll. And to make this
good, who hath not in England payd his Peter peny, sometime to
acknowledge hymselfe a bondman of theirs, at the receit
of his yerely howsell? Furthermore yet, besides their market
muster of monkes, fryars, and priestes, they have certayne
bondmen, of whom some they sell to the
Venicians, some to the Genues, some to the
Portingales, and some to the Turks, to row in
their galleis. And laste of all, to make up their market,
least any thing should escape theyr hands, these unmercifull
bribers maketh marchaundise of the soules of men, to
deprive Christe of his whole right, sending many unto hell,
but not one unto heaven, (unlesse they maliciously murther
them for the truths sake,) and all for mony. After many other
sortes els, abuse they these good creatures of God, whom the
Holy Ghost heere nameth. Much were it to shew here by the
cronicles severally of what Pope they have received
authorytie, power, and charge, to utter these wares to
advauntage, and how they came firste by the old idolatrous."
Several of the most reputable MSS. versions, and some of
the fathers, after cinnamon, add καιαμωμον,
and amomum. What this shrub was is not easy to say,
though mentioned and partially described by Pliny and
Dioscorides. Some think it was a species of
geranium; others, the rose of Jericho. It was an
odoriferous plant supposed to be a native of Assyria; and is
thus mentioned by Virgil, Eclog. iv., ver. 25:-
_________Assyrium vulgo nascetur amomum. "The
Assyrian amomum shall grow in every soil."
This is translated by some spikenard; by others
lady's rose.
Thyine wood The
Thyne or Thyin is said to be a tree whose
boughs, leaves, stalks, and fruit, resemble the cypress. It is
mentioned by Homer, Odyss, lib. v., ver. 60; by
Theophrastes, Hist. Plant, v. 5; and by Pliny,
Hist. Nat. lib. xiii. c. 16. How much the different articles
mentioned in the 12th and 13th verses were in request among
the ancients, and how highly valued, every scholar knows.
Slaves σωματων
The bodies of men; probably distinguished here from
ψυχας, souls of men, to express bondmen and
freemen.
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Verse 14. And the fruits that thy
soul lusted after. καιη
Î¿Ï€Ï‰Ï Î±Ï„Î·Ï‚ÎµÏ€Î¹Î¸Ï…Î¼Î¹Î±Ï‚Ï„Î·Ï‚ÏˆÏ…Ï‡Î·Ï‚ÏƒÎ¿Ï…. As Î¿Ï€Ï‰Ï Î± signifies
autumn, any and all kinds of autumnal fruits may
be signified by the word in the above clause.
Dainty and goodly
Ï„Î±Î»Î¹Ï€Î±Ï Î± Delicacies for the table.
Ï„Î±Î»Î±Î¼Ï€Ï Î±,, what is splendid and costly in
apparel.
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Verse 15. Stand afar
off See Revelation
18:10.
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Verse 16.
Clothed in fine linen, and purple, Ï€ÎµÏ Î¹Î²Î±Î»Î»ÎµÏƒÎ¸Î±Î¹, which
we here translate clothed, signifies often to
abound, be enriched, laden with, and is so used by the
best Greek writers; see many examples in Kypke. These
articles are not to be considered here as personal
ornaments, but as articles of trade or merchandise, in
which this city trafficked.
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Verse 17. Every
shipmaster Captains of vessels; some think
pilots are meant, and this is most likely to be the
meaning of the original word ÎºÏ…Î²ÎµÏ Î½Î·Ï„Î·Ï‚. This description
appears to be at least partly taken from Ezekiel
27:26-28.
And all the company in
ships καιπαςεπιτωνπλοιωνοομιλος The
crowd or passengers aboard. But the best MSS, and versions
have καιπαςοεπιτοπονπλεων, those who sail from place to
place, or such as stop at particular places on
the coast, without performing the whole voyage. This
sufficiently marks the traffic on the coast of the
Mediterranean Sea. Some might debark (in sailing from Rome) at
the island of Sicily, others at different ports in
Greece; some at Corinth, others at Crete,
or the various islands of the AEgean Sea; some at
Rhodes, Pamphylia, as in those times in which the
compass was unknown, every voyage was performed
coastwise, always keeping, if possible, within sight of
the land.
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Verse 18. What city is like
unto this great city! Viz. in magnitude,
power, and luxury.
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Verse 19. They cast dust on their
heads They showed every sign of the
sincerest grief. The lamentation over this great ruined city,
Revelation
18:9-19, is exceedingly strong and well drawn. Here is no
dissembled sorrow; all is real to the mourners, and affecting
to the spectators.
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Verse 20. Rejoice over her, thou
heaven This is grand and sublime; the
fall of this bad city was cause of grief to bad men. But as
this city was a persecutor of the godly, and an
enemy to the works of God, angels, apostles, and
prophets are called to rejoice over her fall.
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Verse 21. Thus with violence shall
that great city Babylon be thrown down
This action is finely and forcibly expressed by the
original words: Î¿Ï…Ï„Ï‰Ï‚Î¿Ï Î¼Î·Î¼Î±Ï„Î¹Î²Î»Î·Î¸Î·ÏƒÎµÏ„Î±Î¹Î²Î±Î²Ï…Î»Ï‰Î½Î·Î¼ÎµÎ³Î±Î»Î·Ï€Î¿Î»Î¹Ï‚.
The millstone will in falling have not only an accelerated
force from the law of gravitation, but that force will be
greatly increased by the projectile force impressed upon it by
the power of the destroying angel.
Shall be found no more at
all. In her government, consequence, or
influence. This is true of ancient Babylon; we are not
certain even of the place where it stood. It is also
true of Jerusalem; her government, consequence, and
influence are gone. It is not true of Rome pagan; nor,
as yet, of Rome papal: the latter still exists, and the
former is most intimately blended with it; for in her
religions service Rome papal has retained her language, and
many of her heathen temples has she dedicated to saints
real or reputed, and incorporated many of her superstitions
and absurdities in a professedly Christian service. It
is true also that many idols are now restored under the names
of Christian saints!
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Verse 22.
The voice of harpers, only a total destruction of
influence, being. It seems as if this city was to be
swallowed up by an earthquake, or burnt up by fire
from heaven.
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Verse 23. By thy
sorceries Political arts, state tricks,
counterfeit miracles, and deceptive manoeuvres of every kind.
This may be spoken of many great cities of the world, which
still continue to flourish!
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Verse 24.
In her was found the blood of prophets, the persecutor
and murderer of prophets and of righteous men.
And of all that were slain upon
the earth. This refers to her
counsels and influence, exciting other nations
and people to persecute and destroy the real followers of God.
There is no city to which all these things are yet
applicable, therefore we may presume that the prophecy remains
yet to be fulfilled.
Bishop Bale, who applies this, as before, to the
Romish Church, has, on Revelation
18:22, given some information to the curious
antiquary.
"But be certaine," says he, "and sure, thou myserable
Church, that thou shalt no longer enjoy the commodious
pleasures of a free cittye.-The merry noyes of them that play
upon harpes, lutes, and fidels; the sweet voice
of musicians that sing with virginals, vials,
and chimes; the armony of them that pipe in
recorders, flutes, and drums; and the
shirle showt of trumpets, waits, and shawmes,
shall no more be heard in thee to the delight of men. Neyther
shall the sweet organs containing the melodious noyse
of all maner of instruments and byrdes be plaied
upon, nor the great belles be rong after that, nor yet
the fresh discant, prick-song, counter-point,
and faburden be called for in thee, which art the very
sinagog of Sathan. Thy lascivious armonye, and delectable
musique, much provoking the weake hartes of men to meddle in
thy abhominable whordom, by the wantonnes of idolatry in that
kinde, shall perish with thee for ever. No cunning
artificer, carver, paynter, nor gilder,
embroderer, goldsmith, nor silk-worker; with such
other like of what occupacion soever they be, or have bene to
thy commodity, shall never more be found so agayne.
"Copes, cruettes, candelstickes, miters, crosses, sensers,
crismatoris, corporasses, and chalices, which for thy whorishe
holines might not somtime be touched, will than for thy sake
be abhorred of all men. Never more shall be builded for
marchants of thi livery and mark, palaces, temples, abbeys,
collages, covents, chauntries, fair houses, and horcherds of
plesure. The clapping noise of neyther wyndmil, horsemil, nor
watermil, shal any more be heard to the gluttenous feeding of
thy puffed up porklings, for the maintenaunce of thine idle
observacions and ceremonies. For thy mitred marchaunts were
sumtimes princes of the earth, whan they reigned in their
roialty. Thy shorn shavelinges were lordes over the multitude
whan they held their priestly authority over the soules and
bodies of men. Yea, and with thy privy legerdemain, with thy
juggling castes, with thy craftes and inchauntmentes of thy
subtile charmes, were all nacions of the world deceyved."
This is very plain language, and thus on all hands a
monstrous system of superstition and idolatry was attacked by
our Reformers; and with these unfurbished weapons, directed by
the Spirit of the living God, popery was driven from the
throne, from the bench, from the
universities, and from the churches of this
favoured kingdom. And by a proper application of Scripture,
and by the universal diffusion of the word of God, it may be
soon driven from the face of the universe. And when the
inventions of men are separated from that Church, and it
becomes truly regenerated, (and of this it is highly capable,
as, among its monstrous errors and absurdities, it contains
all the essential truths of God,) it will become a praise and
a glory in the earth. Protestants wish not its
destruction, but its reformation.
Some there may be, who, in their zeal for truth, would pull
the whole edifice to pieces; but this is not God's method: he
destroys what is evil, and saves what is good. It is
reformation, not annihilation, that this Church
needs.
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- Revelation 18:1.
Copyright Statement The Adam Clarke Commentary is a derivative
of an electronic edition prepared by GodRules.net.
Bibliography
Information Clarke, Adam.
"Commentary on Revelation 18". "The Adam Clarke
Commentary".
<http://www.studylight.org/com/acc/view.cgi?book=re&chapter=018>.
1832.
|