The
Two Babylons
Conclusion
I have now finished the task I
proposed to myself. Even yet the evidence is not nearly exhausted; but,
upon the evidence which has been adduced, I appeal to the reader if I
have not proved every point which I engaged to demonstrate. Is there
one, who has candidly considered the proof that has been led, that now
doubts that Rome is the Apocalyptic Babylon? Is there one who will
venture to deny that, from the foundation to the topmost stone, it is
essentially a system of Paganism? What, then, is to be the practical
conclusion from all this?
1. Let every
Christian henceforth and for ever treat it as an outcast from the pale
of Christianity. Instead of speaking of it as a Christian Church, let
it be recognized and regarded as the Mystery of Iniquity, yea, as the
very Synagogue of Satan. With such overwhelming evidence of
its real character, it would be folly--it would be worse--it would be
treachery to the cause of Christ--to stand merely on the defensive, to
parley with its priests about the lawfulness of Protestant orders, the
validity of Protestant sacraments, or the possibility of salvation
apart from its communion. If Rome is now to be admitted to form a
portion of the Church of Christ, where is the system of Paganism that
has ever existed, or that now exists, that could not put in an equal
claim? On what grounds could the worshippers of the original Madonna
and child in the days of old be excluded "from the commonwealth of
Israel," or shown to be "strangers to the covenants of promise"? On
what grounds could the worshippers of Vishnu at this day be put beyond
the bounds of such wide catholicity? The ancient Babylonians held, the
modern Hindoos still hold, clear and distinct traditions of the
Trinity, the Incarnation, the Atonement. Yet, who will venture to say
that such nominal recognition of the cardinal articles of Divine
revelation could relieve the character of either the one system or the
other from the brand of the most deadly and God-dishonouring
heathenism? And so also in regard to Rome. True, it nominally admits
Christian terms and Christian names; but all that is apparently
Christian in its system is more than neutralised
by the malignant Paganism that it embodies. Grant that the bread the
Papacy presents to its votaries can be proved to have been originally
made of the finest of the wheat; but what then, if every particle of
that bread is combined with prussic acid or strychnine? Can the
excellence of the bread overcome the virus of the poison? Can there by
anything but death, spiritual and eternal death, to those who continue
to feed upon the poisoned food that it offers? Yes, here is the
question, and let it be fairly faced. Can there be salvation in a
communion in which it is declared to be a fundamental principle, that
the Madonna is "our greatest hope; yea, the SOLE GROUND OF OUR HOPE"? *
* The language of the late
Pope Gregory, substantially endorsed by the present Pontiff.
The time is come when charity
to the perishing souls of men, hoodwinked by a Pagan priesthood,
abusing the name of Christ, requires that the truth in this matter
should be clearly, loudly, unflinchingly proclaimed. The beast and the
image of the beast alike stand revealed in the face of all Christendom;
and now the tremendous threatening of the Divine Word in regard to
their worship fully applies (Rev 14:9,10): "And the third angel
followed them, saying, 'If any man worship the beast and his image, and
receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand, the same shall drink
of the wine of the wrath of God, poured without mixture into the cup of
His indignation; and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in
the presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb.'"
These words are words of awful import; and woe to the man who is found
finally under the guilt which they imply. These words, as has already
been admitted by Elliott, contain a "chronological prophecy," a
prophecy not referring to the Dark Ages, but to a period not far
distant from the consummation, when the Gospel should be widely
diffused, and when bright light should be cast on the character and
doom of the apostate Church of Rome (vv 6-8). They come, in the Divine
chronology of events, immediately after an angel has proclaimed,
"BABYLON IS FALLEN, IS FALLEN." We have, as it were, with our own ears
heard this predicted "Fall of Babylon" announced from the high places
of Rome itself, when the seven hills of the "Eternal City" reverberated
with the guns that proclaimed, not merely to the citizens of the Roman
republic, but to the wide world, that "PAPACY HAD FALLEN, de
facto and de jure, from the temporal
throne of the Roman State." *
* The Apocalypse announces
two falls of Babylon. The fall referred to above
is evidently only the first. The prophecy clearly
implies, that after the first fall it rises to a
greater height than before; and therefore the necessity of the warning.
Now, it is in the order of the
prophecy, after this fall of Babylon, that this
fearful threatening comes. Can there, then, be a doubt that this
threatening specially and peculiarly applies to this very time? Never
till now was the real nature of the Papacy fully revealed; never till
now was the Image of the beast set up. Till the Image of the beast was
erected, till the blasphemous decree of the Immaculate Conception was
promulged, no such apostacy had taken place, even in Rome, no such
guilt had been contracted, as now lies at the door of the great
Babylon. This, then, is a subject of infinite importance to every one
within the pale of the Church of Rome--to every one also who is
looking, as so many at present are doing, towards the City of the Seven
Hills. If any one can prove that the Pope does not assume all the
prerogatives and bear substantially all the blasphemous titles of that
Babylonian beast that "had the wound by a sword, and did live," and if
it can be shown that the Madonna, that has so recently with one consent
been set up, is not in every essential respect the same as the Chaldean
"Image" of the beast, they may indeed afford to despise the threatening
contained in these words. But if neither the one nor the other can be
proved (and I challenge the strictest scrutiny in regard to both), then
every one within the pale of the Papacy may well tremble at such a
threatening. Now, then, as never before, may the voice Divine, and that
a voice of the tenderest love, be heard sounding from the Eternal
throne to every adherent of the Mystic Babylon, "Come out of her, My
people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not
of her plagues."
2. But if the guilt and danger
of those who adhere to the Roman Church, believing it to be the only
Church where salvation can be found, be so great, what must be the
guilt of those who, with a Protestant profession, nevertheless uphold
the doomed Babylon? The constitution of this land requires our Queen to
swear, before the crown can be put upon her
head, before she can take her seat on the throne, that "she believes"
that the essential doctrines of Rome are "idolatrous."
All the Churches of Britain, endowed and unendowed, alike with one
voice declare the very same. They all proclaim that the system of Rome
is a system of blasphemous idolatry...And yet the members of these
Churches can endow and uphold, with Protestant money, the schools, the
colleges, the chaplains of that idolatrous system. If the guilt of
Romanists, then, be great, the guilt of Protestants who uphold such a
system must be tenfold greater. That guilt has been greatly
accumulating during the last three or four yeas. While the King of
Italy, in the very States of the church--what but lately were the
Pope's own dominions--has been suppressing the monasteries (and in the
space of two years no less than fifty-four were suppressed, and their
property confiscated), the British Government has been acting on a
policy the very reverse, has not only been conniving at the erection of
monasteries, which are prohibited by the law of the land, but has
actually been bestowing endowment on these illegal institutions under
the name of Reformatories. It was only a short while ago, that it was
stated, on authority of the Catholic Directory,
that in the space of three years, fifty-two new converts were added
to the monastic system of Great Britain, almost the very number that
the Italians had confiscated, yet Christian men and Christian Churches
look on with indifference. Now, if ever there was an excuse for
thinking lightly of the guilt contracted by our national support of
idolatry, that excuse will no longer avail. The God of Providence, in
India, has been demonstrating that He is the God of Revelation. He has
been proving, to an awe-struck world, by events that made every ear to
tingle, that every word of wrath, written three thousand years ago
against idolatry, is in as full force at this day as when He desolated
the covenanted people of Israel for their idols, and sold them into the
hands of their enemies. If men begin to see that it is a dangerous
thing for professing Christians to uphold the Pagan idolatry of India,
they must be blind indeed if they do not equally see that it must be as
dangerous to uphold the Pagan idolatry of Rome. Wherein does the
Paganism of Rome differ from that of Hindooism? Only in this, that the
Roman Paganism is the more complete, more finished, more dangerous,
more insidious Paganism of the two.
I am afraid, that after all
that has been said, not a few will revolt from the above comparative
estimate of Popery and undisguised Paganism. Let me, therefore, fortify
my opinion by the testimonies of two distinguished writers, well
qualified to pronounce on this subject. They will, at least, show that
I am not singular in the estimate which I have formed. The writers to
whom I refer, are Sir George Sinclair of Ulbster, and Dr. Bonar of
Kelso. Few men have studied the system of Rome more thoroughly than Sir
George, and in his Letters to the Protestants of Scotland
he has brought all the fertility of his genius, the curiosa
felicitas of his style, and the stores of his highly
cultivated mind, to bear upon the elucidation of his theme. Now, the
testimony of Sir George is this: "Romanism is a refined system of
Christianised heathenism, and chiefly differs from its prototype in
being more treacherous, more
cruel, more dangerous, more
intolerant." The mature opinion of Dr. Bonar is the very same, and
that, too, expressed with the Cawnpore massacre particularly in view:
"We are doing for Popery at home," says he, "what we have done for
idolaters abroad, and in the end the results will be the same; nay,
worse; for Popish cruelty, and thirst for the blood of the
innocent, have been the most savage and merciless that the earth has
seen. Cawnpore, Delhi, and Bareilly, are but dust in comparison with
the demoniacal brutalities perpetrated by the
Inquisition, and by the armies of Popish fanaticism." These are the
words of truth and soberness, that no man acquainted with the history
of modern Europe can dispute. There is great danger of their being
overlooked at this moment. It will be a fatal error if they be. Let not
the pregnant fact be overlooked, that, while the Apocalyptic history
runs down to the consummation of all things, in that Divine
foreshadowing all the other Paganisms of the world are in a manner cast
into the shade by the Paganism of Papal Rome. It is against Babylon
that sits on the seven hills that the saints are forewarned; it is for
worshipping the beast and his image pre-eminently, that "the vials of
the wrath of God, that liveth and abideth for ever," are destined to be
outpoured upon the nations. Now, if the voice of God has been heard in
the late Indian calamities, the Protestantism of Britain will rouse
itself to sweep away at once and for ever all national support, alike
from the idolatry of Hindoostan and the still more malignant idolatry
of Rome. Then, indeed, there would be a lengthening of our tranquility,
then there would be hope that Britain would be exalted, and that its
power would rest on a firm and stable foundation. But if we will not
"hear the voice, if we receive not correction, if we refuse to return,"
if we persist in maintaining, at the national charge, "that image of
jealousy provoking to jealousy," then, after the repeated and ever
INCREASING strokes that the justice of God has laid on us, we have
every reason to fear that the calamities that have fallen so heavily
upon our countrymen in India, may fall still more heavily upon
ourselves, within our own borders at home; for it was when "the image
of jealousy" was set up in Jerusalem by the elders of Judah, that the
Lord said, "Therefore will I also deal in fury; mine eye shall not
spare, neither will I have pity; and though they cry in mine ears with
a loud voice, yet will I not hear them." He who let loose the Sepoys,
to whose idolatrous feelings and antisocial propensities we have
pandered so much, to punish us for the guilty homage we had paid to
their idolatry, can just as easily let loose the Papal Powers of
Europe, to take vengeance upon us for our criminal fawning upon the
Papacy.
3. But, further, if the views
established in this work be correct, it is time that the Church of God
were aroused. Are the witnesses still to be slain, and has the Image of
the Beast only within the last year or two been set up, at whose
instigation the bloody work is to be done? Is this, then, the time for
indifference, for sloth, for lukewarmness in religion? Yet, alas! how
few are they who are lifting up their voice like a trumpet, who are
sounding the alarm in God's holy mountain--who are bestirring
themselves according to the greatness of the emergency--to gather the
embattled hosts of the Lord to the coming conflict? The emissaries of
Rome for years have been labouring unceasingly night and day, in season
and out of season, in every conceivable way, to advance their Master's
cause, and largely have they succeeded. But "the children of light"
have allowed themselves to be lulled into a fatal security; they have
folded their hands; they have got to sleep as soundly as if Rome had
actually disappeared from the face of the earth--as if Satan himself
had been bound and cast into the bottomless pit, and the pit had shut
its mouth upon him, to keep him fast for a thousand years. How long
shall this state of things continue? Oh, Church of God, awake, awake!
Open your eyes, and see if there be not dark and lowering clouds on the
horizon that indicate an approaching tempest. Search the Scriptures for
yourselves; compare them with the facts of history, and say, if there
be not reason after all to suspect that there are sterner prospects
before the saints than most seem to wot of. If it may turn out that the
views opened up in these pages are Scriptural and well-founded, they
are at least worthy of being made the subjects of earnest and prayerful
inquiry. It never can tend to good to indulge an uninquiring and
delusive feeling of safety, when, if they be true,
the only safety is to be found in a timely knowledge of the danger and
due preparation, by all activity, all zeal, all spirituality of mind,
to meet it. On the supposition that peculiar dangers are at hand, and
that God in His prophetic Word has revealed them, His goodness is
manifest. He has made known the danger, that, being forewarned, we may
be forearmed; that, knowing our own weakness, we may cast ourselves on
His Almighty grace; that we may feel the necessity of a fresh baptism
of the Holy Ghost; that the joy of the Lord being our strength, we may
be thorough and decided for the Lord, and for the Lord alone, that we
may work, every one in his own sphere, with increased energy and
diligence, in the Lord's vineyard, and save all the souls we can, while
yet opportunity lasts, and the dark predicted night has not come,
wherein no man can work. Though there be dark prospects before us,
there is no room for despondency; no ground for any one to say that,
with such prospects, effort is vain. The Lord can bless and prosper to
His own glory, the efforts of those who truly gird themselves to fight
His battles in the most hopeless circumstances; and, at the very time
when the enemy cometh in like a flood, He can, by His Spirit, lift up a
standard against him. Nay, not only is this a possible thing, there is
reason, from the prophetic word, to believe that so it shall actually
be; that the last triumph of the Man of Sin shall not be achieved
without a glorious struggle first, on the part of those who are
leal-hearted to Zion's King. But if we would really wish to do anything
effectual in this warfare, it is indispensable that we know, and
continually keep before our eyes, the stupendous character of that
Mystery of Iniquity embodied in the Papacy that we have to grapple
with. Popery boasts of being the "old religion"; and truly, from what
we have seen, it appears that it is ancient indeed. It can trace its
lineage far beyond the era of Christianity, back over 4000 years, to
near the period of the Flood and the building of the Tower of Babel.
During all that period its essential elements have been nearly the
same, and these elements have a peculiar adaptation to the corruption
of human nature. Most seem to think that Popery is a system merely to
be scouted and laughed at; but the Spirit of God everywhere
characterises it in quite a different way. Every statement in the
Scripture shows that it was truly described when it was characterised
as "Satan's Masterpiece"--the perfection of his policy for deluding and
ensnaring the world. It is not the state-craft of politicians, the
wisdom of philosophers, or the resources of human science, that can
cope with the wiles and subtleties of the Papacy. Satan, who inspires
it, has triumphed over all these again and again. Why, the very nations
where the worship of the Queen of Heaven, with all its attendant
abominations, has flourished most in all ages, have been precisely the
most civilised, the most polished, the most distinguished for arts and
sciences. Babylon, where it took its rise, was the cradle of astronomy.
Egypt, that nursed it in its bosom, was the mother of all the arts; the
Greek cities of Asia Minor, where it found a refuge when expelled from
Chaldea, were famed for their poets and philosophers, among the former
Homer himself being numbered; and the nations of the European
Continent, where literature has long been cultivated, are now prostrate
before it. Physical force, no doubt, is at present employed in its
behalf; but the question arises, How comes it that this system, of all
others, can so prevail as to get that physical force to obey its
behests? No answer can be given but this, that Satan, the god of this
world, exerts his highest power in its behalf. Physical force has not
always been on the side of the Chaldean worship of the Queen of Heaven.
Again and again has power been arrayed against it; but hitherto every
obstacle it has surmounted, every difficulty it has overcome. Cyrus,
Xerxes, and many of the Medo-Persian kings, banished its priests from
Babylon, and laboured to root it out of their empire; but then it found
a secure retreat in Pergamos, and "Satan's seat" was erected there. The
glory of Pergamos and the cities of Asia Minor departed; but the
worship of the Queen of Heaven did not wane. It took a higher flight,
and seated itself on the throne of Imperial Rome. That throne was
subverted. The Arian Goths came burning with fury against the
worshippers of the Virgin Queen; but still that worship rose buoyant
above all attempts to put it down, and the Arian Goths themselves were
soon prostrate at the feet of the Babylonian goddess, seated in glory
on the seven hills of Rome. In more modern times, the temporal powers
of all the kingdoms of Europe have expelled the Jesuits, the chief
promoters of this idolatrous worship, from their dominions. France,
Spain, Portugal, Naples, Rome itself have all adopted the same
measures, and yet what do we see at this hour? The same Jesuitism and
the worship of the Virgin exalted above almost every throne on the
Continent. When we look over the history of the last 4000 yeas, what a
meaning in the words of inspiration, that "the coming of the Man of
Sin" is with the energy, "the mighty power of Satan." Now, is this the
system that, year by year, has been rising into power in our own
empire? And is it for a moment to be imagined that lukewarm,
temporising, half-hearted Protestants can make any head against such a
system? No; the time is come when Gideon's proclamation must be made
throughout the camp of the Lord: "Whosoever is fearful and afraid, let
him return and depart early from Mount Gilead." Of the old martyrs it
is said, "They overcame by the blood of the Lamb and the word of their
testimony, and they loved not their lives unto the death." The same
self-denying, the same determined spirit, is needed now as much as ever
it was. Are there none who are prepared to stand up, and in that very
spirit to gird themselves for the great conflict that must
come, before Satan shall be bound and cast into his prison-house? Can
any one believe that such an event can take place without a tremendous
struggle--that "the god of this world" shall quietly consent to resign
the power that for thousands of years he has wielded, without stirring
up all his wrath, and putting forth all his energy and skill to prevent
such a catastrophe. Who, then, is on the Lord's side? If there be those
who, within the last few years, have been revived and
quickened--stirred up, not by mere human excitement, but by the
Almighty grace of God's Spirit, what is the gracious design of this? Is
it merely that they themselves may be delivered from the wrath to come?
No; it is that, zealous for the glory of their Lord, they may act the
parts of true witnesses, contend earnestly for the faith once delivered
to the saints, and maintain the honour of Christ in opposition to him
who blasphemously usurps his prerogatives. If the servants of
Antichrist are faithful to their master, and unwearied in promoting his
cause, shall it be said that the servants of Christ are less faithful
to theirs? If none else will bestir themselves, surely to the generous
hearts of the young and rising ministry of Christ, in the kindness of
their youth, and the love of their espousals, the appeal shall not be
made in vain, when the appeal is made in the name of Him whom their
souls love, that in this grand crisis of the Church and of the world,
they should "come to the help of the Lord--the help of the Lord against
the mighty," that they should do what in them lies to strengthen the
hands and encourage the hearts of those who are seeking to stem the
tide of apostacy, and to resist the efforts of the men who are
labouring with such zeal, and with so much of infatuated patronage on
the part of "the powers that be," to bring this land back again under
the power of the Man of Sin. To take such a part, and steadily and
perseveringly to pursue it, amid so much growing lukewarmness, it is
indispensable that the servants of Christ set their faces as a flint.
But if they have grace so to do, they shall not do so without a rich
reward at last; and in time they have the firm and faithful promise
that "as their day is, so shall their strength be." For all who wish
truly to perform their part as good soldiers of Jesus Christ, there is
the strongest and richest encouragement. With the blood of Christ on
the conscience, with the Spirit of Christ warm and working in the
heart, with our Father's name on our forehead, and our life, as well as
our lips, consistently bearing "testimony" for God, we shall be
prepared for every event. But it is not common grace that will do for
uncommon times. If there be indeed such prospects before us, as I have
endeavoured to prove there are, then we must live, and feel, and act as
if we heard every day resounding in our ears the words of the great
Captain of our Salvation, "To him that overcometh will I grant to sit
with Me on My throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with My
Father on His throne. Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee
a crown of life."
Lastly, I appeal to every
reader of this work, if it does not contain an argument for the
divinity of the Scriptures, as well as an exposure of the impostures of
Rome. Surely, if one thing more than another be proved in the previous
pages, it is this, that the Bible is no cunningly devised fable, but
that holy men of God of old spake and wrote as they were moved by the
Holy Ghost. What can account for the marvellous unity in all the
idolatrous systems of the world, but that the facts recorded in the
early chapters of Genesis were real transactions, in which, as all
mankind were involved, so all mankind have preserved in their various
systems, distinct and undeniable memorials of them, though those who
have preserved them have long lost the true key to their meaning? What,
too, but Omniscience could have foreseen that a system, such as that of
the Papacy, could ever effect an entrance into the Christian Church,
and practise and prosper as it has done? How could it ever have entered
into the heart of John, the solitary exile of Patmos, to imagine, that
any of the professed disciples of that Saviour whom he loved, and who
said, "My kingdom is not of this world," should gather up and
systematise all the idolatry and superstition and immorality of the
Babylon of Belshazzar, introduce it into the bosom of the Church, and,
by help of it, seat themselves on the throne of the Caesars, and there,
as the high-priests of the queen of Heaven, and gods upon earth, for
1200 years, rule the nations with a rod of iron? Human foresight could
never have done this; but all this the exile of Patmos has done. His
pen, then, must have been guided by Him who sees the end from the
beginning, and who calleth the things that be not as though they were.
And if the wisdom of God now shines forth so brightly from the Divine
expression "Babylon the Great," into which such an immensity of meaning
has been condensed, ought not that to lead us the more to reverence and
adore the same wisdom that is in reality stamped on every page of the
inspired Word? Ought it not to lead us to say with the Psalmist,
"Therefore, I esteem all Thy commandments
concerning all things to be right"? The commandments of God, to our
corrupt and perverse minds, may sometimes seem to be hard. They may
require us to do what is painful, they may require us to forego what is
pleasing to flesh and blood. But, whether we know the reason of these
commandments or no, if we only know that they come from "the only wise
God, our Saviour," we may be sure that in the keeping of them there is
great reward; we may go blindfold wherever the Word of God may lead us,
and rest in the firm conviction that, in so doing, we are pursuing the
very path of safety and peace. Human wisdom at the best is but a blind
guide; human policy is a meter that dazzles and leads astray; and they
who follow it walk in darkness, and know not whither they are going;
but he "that walketh uprightly," that walks by the rule of God's
infallible Word, will ever find that "he walketh surely," and that
whatever duty he has to perform, whatever danger he has to face, "great
peace have all they that love God's law, and nothing shall offend
them."
The Two Babylons: Contents
|