The Two Babylons Chapter VII Section III
The
Beast from the Earth
This beast is presented to our notice
(Rev 13:11): "And I beheld another beast coming up out of the earth; and he had
two horns like a lamb, and he spake as a serpent." Though this beast is
mentioned after the beast from the sea, it does not follow that he came into
existence after the sea-beast. The work he did seems to show the very
contrary; for it is by his instrumentality that mankind are led (v 12) "to
worship the first beast" after that beast had received the deadly wound, which
shows that he must have been in existence before. The reason that he is
mentioned second, is just because, as he exercises all the powers of the first
beast, and leads all men to worship him, so he could not properly be described
till that beast had first appeared on the stage. Now, in ancient Chaldea there
was the type, also, of this. That god was called in Babylon Nebo, in Egypt Nub
or Num, * and among the Romans Numa, for Numa Pompilius, the great priest-king
of the Romans, occupied precisely the position of the Babylonian Nebo.
* In Egypt, especially among the
Greek-speaking population, the Egyptian b frequently passed into an
m.
Among the Etrurians, from whom the
Romans derived the most of their rites, he was called Tages, and of this Tages
it is particularly recorded, that just as John saw the beast under consideration
"come up out of the earth," so Tages was a child suddenly and miraculously born
out of a furrow or hole in the ground. In Egypt, this God was represented with
the head and horns of a ram (Fig.
55). In Etruria he seems to have been represented in a somewhat
similar way; for there we find a Divine and miraculous child exhibited wearing
the ram's horns (Fig. 56).
The name Nebo, the grand distinctive name of this god, signifies "The Prophet,"
and as such, he gave oracles, practised augury, pretended to miraculous powers,
and was an adept in magic. He was the great wonder-worker, and answered exactly
to the terms of the prophecy, when it is said (v 13), "he doeth great wonders,
and causeth fire to come down from heaven in the sight of men." It was in this
very character that the Etrurian Tages was known; for it was he who was said to
have taught the Romans augury, and all the superstition and wonder-working
jugglery connected therewith. As in recent times, we hear of weeping images and
winking Madonnas, and innumerable prodigies besides, continually occurring in
the Romish Church, in proof of this papal dogma or that, so was it also in the
system of Babylon. There is hardly a form of "pious fraud" or saintly imposture
practised at this day on the banks of the Tiber, that cannot be proved to have
had its counterpart on the banks of the Euphrates, or in the systems that came
from it. Has the image of the Virgin been seen to shed tears? Many a tear was
shed by the Pagan images. To these tender-hearted idols Lucan alludes, when,
speaking of the prodigies that occurred during the civil wars, he says:--
"Tears shed by gods, our
country's patrons,
And sweat from Lares, told the city's woes."
Virgil also refers to the same, when he
says:--
"The weeping statues did
the wars foretell,
And holy sweat from brazen idols fell."
When in the consulship of Appius
Claudius, and Marcus Perpenna, Publius Crassus was slain in a battle with
Aristonicus, Apollo's statue at Cumae shed tears for four days without
intermission. The gods had also their merry moods, as well as their weeping
fits. If Rome counts it a divine accomplishment for the sacred image of her
Madonna to "wink," it was surely not less becoming in the sacred images of
Paganism to relax their features into an occasional grin. That they did so, we
have abundant testimony. Psellus tells us that, when the priests put forth their
magic powers, "then statues laughed, and lamps were spontaneously
enkindled." When the images made merry, however, they seemed to have inspired
other feelings than those of merriment into the breasts of those who beheld
them. "The Theurgists," says Salverte, "caused the appearance of the gods in the
air, in the midst of gaseous vapour, disengaged from fire. The Theurgis Maximus
undoubtedly made use of a secret analogous to this, when, in the fumes of the
incense which he burned before the statue of Hecate, the image was seen to laugh
so naturally as to fill the spectators with terror." There were times,
however, when different feelings were inspired. Has the image of the Madonna
been made to look benignantly upon a favoured worshipper, and send him home
assured that his prayer was heard? So did the statues of the Egyptian Isis. They
were so framed, that the goddess could shake the silver serpent on her forehead,
and nod assent to those who had preferred their petitions in such a way as
pleased her. We read of Romish saints that showed their miraculous powers by
crossing rivers or the sea in most unlikely conveyances. Thus, of St. Raymond it
is written that he was transported over the sea on his cloak. Paganism is not a
whit behind in this matter; for it is recorded of a Buddhist saint, Sura Acharya,
that, when "he used to visit his flocks west of the Indus, he floated himself
across the stream upon his mantle." Nay, the gods and high priests of Paganism
showed far more buoyancy than even this. There is a holy man, at this day, in
the Church of Rome, somewhere on the Continent, who rejoices in the name of St.
Cubertin, who so overflows with spirituality, that when he engages in his
devotions there is no keeping his body down to the ground, but, spite of all the
laws of gravity, it rises several feet into the air. So was it also with the
renowned St. Francis of Assisi, Petrus a Martina, and Francis of Macerata, some
centuries ago. But both St. Cubertin and St. Francis and his fellows are far
from being original in this superhuman devotion. The priests and magicians in
the Chaldean Mysteries anticipated them not merely by centuries, but by
thousands of years. Coelius Rhodiginus says, "that, according to the Chaldeans,
luminous rays, emanating from the soul, do sometimes divinely penetrate the
body, which is then of itself raised above the earth, and that this was the case
with Zoroaster." The disciples of Jamblichus asserted that they had often
witnessed the same miracle in the case of their master, who, when he prayed was
raised to the height of ten cubits from the earth. The greatest miracle which
Rome pretends to work, is when, by the repetition of five magic words, she
professes to bring down the body, blood, soul, and divinity of our Lord Jesus
Christ from heaven, to make Him really and corporeally present in the sacrament
of the altar. The Chaldean priests pretended, by their magic spells, in like
manner, to bring down their divinities into their statues, so that their "real
presence" should be visibly manifested in them. This they called "the making of
gods"; and from this no doubt comes the blasphemous saying of the Popish
priests, that they have power "to create their Creator." There is no evidence,
so far as I have been able to find, that, in the Babylonian system, the thin
round cake of wafer, the "unbloody sacrifice of the mass," was ever regarded in
any other light than as a symbol, that ever it was held to be changed
into the god whom it represented. But yet the doctrine of transubstantiation
is clearly of the very essence of Magic, which pretended, on the pronunciation
of a few potent words, to change one substance into another, or by a dexterous
juggle, wholly to remove one substance, and to substitute another in its place.
Further, the Pope, in the plenitude of his power, assumes the right of wielding
the lightnings of Jehovah, and of blasting by his "fulminations" whoever offends
him. Kings, and whole nations, believing in this power, have trembled and bowed
before him, through fear of being scathed by his spiritual thunders. The priests
of Paganism assumed the very same power; and, to enforce the belief of their
spiritual power, they even attempted to bring down the literal lightnings from
heaven; yea, there seems some reason to believe that they actually succeeded,
and anticipated the splendid discovery of Dr. Franklin. Numa Pompilius is said
to have done so with complete success. Tullus Hostilius, his successor,
imitating his example, perished in the attempt, himself and his whole family
being struck, like Professor Reichman in recent times, with the lightning he was
endeavouring to draw down. * Such were the wonder-working powers attributed in
the Divine Word to the beast that was to come up from the earth; and by the old
Babylonian type these very powers were all pretended to be exercised.
* The means appointed for drawing
down the lightning were described in the books of the Etrurian Tages. Numa had
copied from these books, and had left commentaries behind him on the subject,
which Tallus had misunderstood, and hence the catastrophe.
Now, in remembrance of the birth of the
god out of a "hole in the earth," the Mysteries were frequently celebrated in
caves under ground. This was the case in Persia, where, just as Tages was said
to be born out of the ground, Mithra was in like manner fabled to have been
produced from a cave in the earth. *
* JUSTIN MARTYR. It is remarkable
that, as Mithra was born out of a cave, so the idolatrous
nominal Christians of the East represent our Saviour as having in like manner
been born in a a cave. (See KITTO's Cyclopaedia, "Bethlehem") There is
not the least hint of such a thing in the Scripture.
Numa of Rome himself pretended to get
all his revelations from the Nymph Egeria, in a cave. In these caves men were
first initiated in the secret Mysteries, and by the signs and lying wonders
there presented to them, they were led back, after the death of Nimrod, to the
worship of that god in its new form. This Apocalyptic beast, then, that "comes
up out of the earth," agrees in all respects with that ancient god born from a
"hole in the ground"; for no words could more exactly describe his doing than
the words of the prediction (v 13): "He doeth great wonders, and causeth fire to
come down from heaven in the sight of men,...and he causeth the earth and them
that dwell therein to worship the first beast, whose deadly wound was healed."
This wonder-working beast, called Nebo, or "The Prophet," as the prophet of
idolatry, was, of course, the "false prophet." By comparing the passage
before us with Revelation 19:20, it will be manifest that this beast that "came
up out of the earth" is expressly called by that very name: "And the beast was
taken, and with him the false prophet that wrought miracles before him,
with which he deceived them that received the mark of the beast, and them that
worshipped his image." As it was the "beast from the earth" that "wrought
miracles" before the first beast, this shows that "the beast from the earth" is
the "false prophet"; in other words, is "Nebo."
If we examine the history of the Roman
empire, we shall find that here also there is a precise accordance between type
and antitype. When the deadly wound of Paganism was healed, and the old Pagan
title of Pontiff was restored, it was, through means of the corrupt clergy,
symbolised, as is generally believed, and justly under the image of a beast with
horns, like a lamb; according to the saying of our Lord, "Beware of false
prophets, that shall come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are
ravening wolves." The clergy, as a corporate body, consisted of two grand
divisions--the regular and secular clergy answering to the two horns or powers
of the beast, and combining also, at a very early period, both temporal and
spiritual powers. The bishops, as heads of these clergy, had large temporal
powers, long before the Pope gained his temporal crown. We have the distinct
evidence of both Guizot and Gibbon to this effect. After showing that before the
fifth century, the clergy had not only become distinct from, but independent of
the people, Guizot adds: "The Christian clergy had moreover another and very
different source of influence. The bishops and priests became the principal
municipal magistrates...If you open the code, either of Theodosius or
Justinian, you will find numerous regulations which remit municipal affairs to
the clergy and the bishops." Guizot makes several quotations. The following
extract from the Justinian code is sufficient to show how ample was the civil
power bestowed upon the bishops: "With respect to the yearly affairs of cities,
whether they concern the ordinary revenues of the city, either from funds
arising from the property of the city, or from private gifts or legacies, or
from any other source; whether public works, or depots of provisions or
aqueducts, or the maintenance of baths or ports, or the construction of walls or
towers, or the repairing of bridges or roads, or trials, in which the city may
be engaged in reference to public or private interests, we ordain as
follows:--The very pious bishop, and three notables, chosen from among the first
men of the city, shall meet together; they shall each year examine the works
done; they shall take care that those who conduct them, or who have conducted
them, shall regulate them with precision, render their accounts, and show that
they have duly performed their engagements in the administration, whether of the
public monuments, or of the sums appointed for provisions or baths, or of
expenses in the maintenance of roads, aqueducts, or any other work." Here is a
large list of functions laid on the spiritual shoulders of "the very pious
bishop," not one of which is even hinted at in the Divine enumeration of the
duties of a bishop, as contained in the Word of God. (See 1 Timothy 3:1-7; and
Titus 1:5-9.) How did the bishops, who were originally appointed for purely
spiritual objects, contrive to grasp at such a large amount of temporal
authority? From Gibbon we get light as to the real origin of what Guizot calls
this "prodigious power." The author of the Decline and Fall shows, that
soon after Constantine's time, "the Church" [and consequently the bishops,
especially when they assumed to be a separate order from the other clergy]
gained great temporal power through the right of asylum, which had belonged to
the Pagan temples, being transferred by the Emperors to the Christian churches.
His words are: "The fugitive, and even the guilty, were permitted to implore
either the justice or mercy of the Deity and His ministers." Thus was the
foundation laid of the invasion of the rights of the civil magistrate by
ecclesiastics, and thus were they encouraged to grasp at all the powers of the
State. Thus, also, as is justly observed by the authoress of Rome in the 19th
Century, speaking of the right of asylum, were "the altars perverted into
protection towards the very crimes they were raised to banish from the world."
This is a very striking thing, as showing how the temporal power of the Papacy,
in its very first beginnings, was founded on "lawlessness," and is an additional
proof to the many that might be alleged, that the Head of the Roman system, to
whom all bishops are subject is indeed "The Lawless One" (2 Thess 2:8),
predicted in Scripture as the recognised Head of the "Mystery of Iniquity." All
this temporal power came into the hands of men, who, while professing to be
ministers of Christ, and followers of the Lamb, were seeking simply their own
aggrandisement, and, to secure that aggrandisement, did not hesitate to betray
the cause which they professed to serve. The spiritual power which they wielded
over the souls of men, and the secular power which they gained in the affairs of
the world, were both alike used in opposition to the cause of pure religion and
undefiled. At first these false prophets, in leading men astray, and seeking to
unite Paganism and Christianity, wrought under-ground, mining like the
mole in the dark, and secretly perverting the simple, according to the saying of
Paul, "The Mystery of Iniquity doth already work." But by-and-by, towards
the end of the fourth century, when the minds of men had been pretty well
prepared, and the aspects of things seemed to be favourable for it, the wolves
in sheep's clothing appeared above ground, brought their secret doctrines and
practices, by little and little, into the light of day, and century after
century, as their power increased, by means of all "deceivableness of
unrighteousness," and "signs and lying wonders," deluded the minds of the
worldly Christians, made them believe that their anathema was equivalent to the
curse of God; in other words, that they could "bring down fire from heaven," and
thus "caused the earth, and them that dwelt therein, to worship the beast whose
deadly wound was healed." *
* Though the Pope be the great
Jupiter Tonans of the Papacy, and "fulminates" from the Vatican, as his
predecessor was formerly believed to do from the Capitol, yet it is not he
in reality that brings down the fire from heaven, but his clergy. But for the
influence of the clergy in everywhere blinding the minds of the people, the
Papal thunders would be but "bruta fulmina" after all. The symbol, therefore,
is most exact, when it attributes the "bringing down of the fire from heaven,"
to the beast from the earth, rather than to the beast from the sea.
When "the deadly wound" of the Pagan
beast was healed, and the beast from the sea appeared, it is said that this
beast from the earth became the recognised, accredited executor of the will of
the great sea beast (v 12), "And he exerciseth all the power of the first beast
before him," literally "in his presence"--under his inspection. Considering who
the first beast is, there is great force in this expression "in his presence."
The beast that comes up from the sea, is "the little horn," that "has eyes like
the eyes of man" (Dan 7:8); it is Janus Tuens, "All-seeing Janus," in other
words, the Universal Bishop or "Universal Overseer," who, from his throne on the
seven hills, by means of the organised system of the confessional, sees
and knows all that is done, to be the utmost bounds of his wide dominion.
Now, it was just exactly about the time that the Pope became universal bishop,
that the custom began of systematically investing the chief bishops of the
Western empire with the Papal livery, the pallium, "for the purpose," says
Gieseler, "of symbolising and strengthening their connection with the Church of
Rome." *
* GIESELER. From Gieseler we learn
that so early as 501, the Bishop of Rome had laid the foundation of the
corporation of bishops by the bestowal of the pallium; but, at the same
time, he expressly states that it was only about 602, at the `63 ascent of
Phocas to the imperial throne--that Phocas that made the Pope Universal
Bishop--that the Popes began to bestow the pallium, that is, of course,
systematically, and on a large scale.
That pallium, worn on the shoulders of
the bishops, while on the one hand it was the livery of the Pope, and bound
those who received it to act as the functionaries of Rome, deriving all their
authority from him, and exercising it under his superintendence, as the "Bishop
of bishops," on the other hand, was in reality the visible investiture of these
wolves with the sheep's clothing. For what was the pallium of the Papal bishop?
It was a dress made of wool, blessed by the Pope, taken from the holy lambs kept
by the nuns of St. Agnes, and woven by their sacred hands, that it might be
bestowed on those whom the Popes delighted to honour, for the purpose, as one of
themselves expressed it, of "joining them to our society in the one pastoral
sheepfold." *
* GIESELER, "Papacy"). The reader who
peruses the early letters of the Popes in bestowing the pallium, will not fail
to observe the wide difference of meaning between "the one pastoral sheepfold"
above referred to, and "the one sheepfold" of our Lord. The former really
means a sheepfold consisting of pastors or shepherds. The papal letters
unequivocally imply the organisation of the bishops, as a distinct
corporation, altogether independent of the Church, and dependent only on the
Papacy, which seems remarkably to agree with the terms of the prediction in
regard to the beast from the earth.
Thus commissioned, thus ordained by the
universal Bishop, they did their work effectually, and brought the earth and
them that dwelt in it, "to worship the beast that received the wound by a sword
and did live." This was a part of this beast's predicted work. But there
was another, and not less important, which remains for consideration.