M
Mintaka
Guest
Well, there always has been a minority view that “Babylon” is Jerusalem, because people of all languages and nations were supposed to gather there (a la Isaiah), and because Jews and “Godfearers” of all nations and languages did gather there at Passover and other big festivals (as we see in Acts).
However, in antiquity (and despite other cities being built on similar numbers of hills), any mention of seven hills did mean the city of Rome, and hence the Roman Empire. The seven hills within Rome’s pagan sacred boundary (the pomerium) were: the Aventine, Caelian, Esquiline, Quirinal, Viminal, Capitoline, and Palatine Hills.
“Foreign gods” were forbidden to be worshipped within the pomerium, so pretty much all Jews and Christians lived in the neighborhoods of Trastevere (“across the Tiber” from Rome proper), Subura (“under the city”, ie further downslope from the city proper), and other nearby neighborhoods they could creep into, eventually including Vatican Hill (also across the Tiber from the city proper, which was why Nero chose it for his gardens, circus, and garden villa).
In the Bible, since Israel and the Church are both depicted as God’s Bride, “the bride of His youth,” idolatrous practices are often poetically described as sleeping around, adultery, or harlotry - especially since Mideastern paganism often included “sacred prostitution” and other sexual acts. But “harlotry” images often also include Israel dabbling in alliances with foreign powers, like the Assyrians or Egyptians, instead of trusting the Lord. (And since this often meant Israel’s kings marrying foreign women who brought along pagan practices – foreign women like Jezabel, for instance – this also circles around.)
Early Christian interpretations of Revelation are dangerously clear that the Beast is the Roman Empire, and that the Whore was Christians or Jews who cooperated with the pagan, worldly state and their pagan neighbors in ways contrary to God’s law. (Augustine spends a lot of time trying to talk about this in a way that won’t get everybody arrested for treason against the Emperor.) There’s a lot of connection to the four Beasts in the Book of Daniel, of which the last Beast is usually considered to be the Roman Empire.
Revelation is deeply concerned with matters like eating food sacrificed to idols, and pagan “sacred” sexual practices. Here’s what Jesus says to the folks at Pergamum, and their “angel,” which is to say, their bishop (Rev. 2:14-15):
Here’s what Jesus said to the folks at Thyatira and their bishop (Rev. 2:20-23):
This post is getting long, so I’ll make another post.
However, in antiquity (and despite other cities being built on similar numbers of hills), any mention of seven hills did mean the city of Rome, and hence the Roman Empire. The seven hills within Rome’s pagan sacred boundary (the pomerium) were: the Aventine, Caelian, Esquiline, Quirinal, Viminal, Capitoline, and Palatine Hills.
“Foreign gods” were forbidden to be worshipped within the pomerium, so pretty much all Jews and Christians lived in the neighborhoods of Trastevere (“across the Tiber” from Rome proper), Subura (“under the city”, ie further downslope from the city proper), and other nearby neighborhoods they could creep into, eventually including Vatican Hill (also across the Tiber from the city proper, which was why Nero chose it for his gardens, circus, and garden villa).
In the Bible, since Israel and the Church are both depicted as God’s Bride, “the bride of His youth,” idolatrous practices are often poetically described as sleeping around, adultery, or harlotry - especially since Mideastern paganism often included “sacred prostitution” and other sexual acts. But “harlotry” images often also include Israel dabbling in alliances with foreign powers, like the Assyrians or Egyptians, instead of trusting the Lord. (And since this often meant Israel’s kings marrying foreign women who brought along pagan practices – foreign women like Jezabel, for instance – this also circles around.)
Early Christian interpretations of Revelation are dangerously clear that the Beast is the Roman Empire, and that the Whore was Christians or Jews who cooperated with the pagan, worldly state and their pagan neighbors in ways contrary to God’s law. (Augustine spends a lot of time trying to talk about this in a way that won’t get everybody arrested for treason against the Emperor.) There’s a lot of connection to the four Beasts in the Book of Daniel, of which the last Beast is usually considered to be the Roman Empire.
Revelation is deeply concerned with matters like eating food sacrificed to idols, and pagan “sacred” sexual practices. Here’s what Jesus says to the folks at Pergamum, and their “angel,” which is to say, their bishop (Rev. 2:14-15):
If you read the story of Balaam and Balak at Beth-Peor, you’ll know that they did exactly hold a pagan sexual festival that included the eating of meat sacrificed to Baal. The Nicolaites were a heretical early Christian group that believed in sleeping around with each others’ wives and husbands, along with other immoral things.“But I have a few things against you. Because you have there those who hold the doctrine of Balaam, who taught Balak to cast a stumblingblock before the children of Israel: to eat, and to commit fornication. So do you also have those who hold the doctrine of the Nicolaites.”
Here’s what Jesus said to the folks at Thyatira and their bishop (Rev. 2:20-23):
"But I have a few things against you, because you suffer the woman Jezabel, who calls herself a prophetess, to teach and to seduce my servants to commit fornication, and to eat of things sacrificed to idols.
This “Jezabel,” whether that was her name or an insult, is generally seen as being an actual human woman who was doing bad things, and who was used as a sort of model for the symbolic figure of the Whore of Babylon. So most people look to her as an lens for what the Whore of Babylon was doing later on.And I gave her a time that she might do penance, and she will not repent of her fornication. Behold, I will cast her into a bed: and they that commit adultery with her shall be in very great tribulation, except they do penance from their deeds."
This post is getting long, so I’ll make another post.