|
The
Scriptures
YHWH
True Calendar
The Sabbath
Christmas
Easter
Hebrew Alphabet
How Should We Then Live?
Thy Word is Light
First
Things First
Give Me Thy Heart
Enter into
Life
CREATION
Watch
Therefore
The Law & the Believer
Living the Abundant Life
Purpose
of the Law
Thoughts for Young Men
Marriage Harmony
The Temple
Hidden Prophecy
Character Qualities
Workers of Iniquity
The Nicolaitans
Be In Health
The Antichrist
Abomination of Desolation
The Power Of Prayer
Financial Freedom
Resources
e Books
Music
Israel
Home School
Links


site design / host:
ACCESS
NETWORK e SOLUTIONS
| |
The Two Babylons Chapter VII Section IV
The
Image of the Beast
Not merely does the beast from the
earth lead the world to worship the first beast, but (v 14) he prevails on them
that dwell on the earth to make "an IMAGE to the beast, which had the wound by a
sword, and did live." In meditating for many years on what might be implied in
"the image of the beast," I could never find the least satisfaction in all the
theories that had ever been propounded, till I fell in with an unpretending but
valuable work, which I have noticed already, entitled An Original
Interpretation of the Apocalypse. That work, evidently the production of a
penetrating mind deeply read in the history of the Papacy, furnished at once the
solution of the difficulty. There the image of the beast is pronounced to be the
Virgin Mother, or the Madonna. This at first sight may appear a very unlikely
solution; but when it is brought into comparison with the religious history of
Chaldea, the unlikelihood entirely disappears. In the old Babylonian Paganism,
there was an image of the Beast from the sea; and when it is known what
that image was, the question will, I think, be fairly decided. When Dagon was
first set up to be worshipped, while he was represented in many different ways,
and exhibited in many different characters, the favourite form in which he was
worshipped, as the reader well knows, was that of a child in his mother's arms.
In the natural course of events, the mother came to be worshipped along with the
child, yea, to be the favourite object of worship. To justify this worship, as
we have already seen, that mother, of course, must be raised to divinity, and
divine powers and prerogatives ascribed to her. Whatever dignity, therefore, the
son was believed to possess a like dignity was ascribed to her. Whatever name of
honour he bore, a similar name was bestowed upon her. He was called Belus, "the
Lord"; she, Beltis, "My Lady." He was called Dagon, "the Merman"; she, Derketo,
"the Mermaid." He, as the World-king, wore the bull's horns; she, as we have
already seen, on the authority of Sanchuniathon, put on her own head a bull's
head, as the ensign of royalty. *
* EUSEBIUS, Proeparatio Evangelii.
This statement is remarkable, as showing that the horns which the great
goddess wore were really intended to exhibit her as the express image of Ninus,
or "the Son." Had she worn merely the cow's horns, it might have been supposed
that these horns were intended only to identify her with the moon. But the
bull's horns show that the intention was to represent her as equal in her
sovereignty with Nimrod, or Kronos, the "Horned one."
He, as the Sun-god, was called
Beel-samen, "Lord of heaven"; she, as the Moon-goddess, Melkat-ashemin, "Queen
of heaven." He was worshipped in Egypt as the "Revealer of goodness and truth";
she, in Babylon, under the symbol of the Dove, as the goddess of gentleness and
mercy, the "Mother of gracious acceptance," "merciful and benignant to men." He,
under the name of Mithra, was worshipped as Mesites, or "the Mediator"; she, as
Aphrodite, or the "Wrath-subduer," was called Mylitta, "the Mediatrix." He was
represented as crushing the great serpent under his heel; she, as bruising the
serpent's head in her hand. He, under the name Janus, bore a key as the opener
and shutter of the gates of the invisible world. She, under the name of Cybele,
was invested with a like key, as an emblem of the same power. *
* TOOKE'S Pantheon. That the
key of Cybele, in the esoteric story, had a corresponding meaning to that of
Janus, will appear from the character above assigned to her as the Mediatrix.
He, as the cleanser from sin, was
called the "Unpolluted god"; she, too, had the power to wash away sin, and,
though the mother of the seed, was called the "Virgin, pure and undefiled." He
was represented as "Judge of the dead"; she was represented as standing by his
side, at the judgment-seat, in the unseen world. He, after being killed by the
sword, was fabled to have risen again, and ascended up to heaven. She, too,
though history makes her to have been killed with the sword by one of her own
sons, * was nevertheless in the myth, said to have been carried by her son
bodily to heaven, and to have been made Pambasileia, "Queen of the universe."
Finally, to clench the whole, the name by which she was now known was Semele,
which, in the Babylonian language, signifies "THE IMAGE." ** Thus, in every
respect, to the very least jot and tittle, she became the express image of the
Babylonian "beast that had the wound by a sword, and did live."
* In like manner, Horus, in Egypt, is
said to have cut off his mother's head, as Bel in Babylon also cut asunder the
great primeval goddess of the Babylonians. (BUNSEN)
** Apollodorus states that Bacchus,
on carrying his mother to heaven, called her Thuone, which was just the
feminine of his own name, Thuoenus--in Latin Thyoneus. (OVID, Metam.)
Thuoneus is evidently from the passive participle of Thn, "to lament,"
a synonym for "Bacchus," "The lamented god." Thuone, in like manner, is
"The lamented goddess." The Roman Juno was evidently known in this very
character of the "Image"; for there was a temple erected to her in Rome, on
the Capitoline hill, under the name of "Juno Moneta." Moneta is the emphatic
form of one of the Chaldee words for an "image"; and that this was the real
meaning of the name, will appear from the fact that the Mint was contained in
the precincts of that temple. (See SMITH'S "Juno") What is the use of a mint
but just to stamp "images"? Hence the connection between Juno and the
Mint.
After what the reader has already seen
in a previous part of this work, it is hardly necessary to say that it is this
very goddess that is now worshipped in the Church of Rome under the name of
Mary. Though that goddess is called by the name of the mother of our Lord, all
the attributes given to her are derived simply from the Babylonian Madonna, and
not from the Virgin Mother of Christ. *
* The very way in which the Popish
Madonna is represented is plainly copied from the idolatrous representations
of the Pagan goddess. The great god used to be represented as sitting or
standing in the cup of a Lotus-flower. In India, the very same mode of
representation is common; Brahma being often seen seated on a Lotus-flower,
said to have sprung from the navel of Vishnu. The great goddess, in like
manner, must have a similar couch; and, therefore, in India, we find Lakshmi,
the "Mother of the Universe," sitting on a Lotus, borne by a tortoise (see
Fig. 57).
Now, in this very thing, also Popery has copied from its Pagan model; for, in
the Pancarpium Marianum the Virgin and child are represented sitting in
the cup of a tulip (see
Fig. 58).
There is not one line or one letter in
all the Bible to countenance the idea that Mary should be worshipped, that she
is the "refuge of sinners," that she was "immaculate," that she made atonement
for sin when standing by the cross, and when, according to Simeon, "a sword
pierced through her own soul also"; or that, after her death, she was raised
from the dead and carried in glory to heaven. But in the Babylonian system all
this was found; and all this is now incorporated in the system of Rome. The
"sacred heart of Mary" is exhibited as pierced through with a sword, in token,
as the apostate Church teaches, that her anguish at the crucifixion was as true
an atonement as the death of Christ;--for we read in the Devotional office or
Service-book, adopted by the "Sodality of the sacred heart," such blasphemous
words as these, "Go, then, devout client! go to the heart of Jesus, but let your
way be through the heart of Mary; the sword of grief which pierced her soul
opens you a passage; enter by the wound which love has made"; *--again we
hear one expounder of the new faith, like M. Genoude in France, say that "Mary
was the repairer of the guilt of Eve, as our Lord was the repairer of the guilt
of Adam"; and another--Professor Oswald of Paderbon--affirm that Mary was not a
human creature like us, that she is "the Woman, as Christ is the Man," that
"Mary is co-present in the Eucharist, and that it is indisputable that,
according to the Eucharistic doctrine of the Church, this presence of Mary in
the Eucharist is true and real, not merely ideal or figurative"; and,
further, we read in the Pope's decree of the Immaculate Conception, that that
same Madonna, for this purpose "wounded with the sword," rose from the dead, and
being assumed up on high, became Queen of Heaven. If all this be so, who can
fail to see that in that apostate community is to be found what precisely
answers to the making and setting up in the heart of Christendom, of an "Image
to the beast that had the wound by a sword and did live"?
* Memoir of Rev. Godfrey Massy.
In the Paradisus sponsi et sponsoe, by the author of Pancarpium
Marianum, the following words, addressed to the Virgin, occur in
illustration of a plate representing the crucifixion, and Mary, at the foot of
the Cross, with the sword in her breast, "Thy beloved son did sacrifice
his flesh; thou thy soul--yea, both body and soul." This does much more than
put the sacrifice of the Virgin on a level with that of the Lord Jesus, it
makes it greater far. This, in 1617, was the creed only of Jesuitism; now
there is reason to believe it to be the general creed of the Papacy.
If the inspired terms be consulted, it
will be seen that this was to be done by some public general act of apostate
Christendom; (v 14), "Saying to them that dwell on the earth, that they should
make an image to the beast"; and they made it. Now, here is the important fact
to be observed, that this never was done, and this never could have been
done, till eight years ago; for this plain reason, that till then the Madonna of
Rome was never recognised as combining all the characters that belonged to the
Babylonian "IMAGE of the beast." Till then it was not admitted even in Rome,
though this evil leaven had been long working, and that strongly, that Mary was
truly immaculate, and consequently she could not be the perfect counterpart of
the Babylonian Image. What, however, had never been done before, was done in
December, 1854. Then bishops from all parts of Christendom, and representatives
from the ends of the earth, met in Rome; and with only four dissentient voices,
it was decreed that Mary, the mother of God, who died, rose from the dead, and
ascended into heaven, should henceforth be worshipped as the Immaculate Virgin,
"conceived and born without sin." This was the formal setting up of the Image of
the beast, and that by the general consent of "the men that dwell upon the
earth." Now, this beast being set up, it is said, that the beast from the earth
gives life and speech to the Image, implying, first, that it has neither
life nor voice in itself; but that, nevertheless, through means of the beast
from the earth, it is to have both life and voice, and to be an effective agent
of the Papal clergy, who will make it speak exactly as they please. Since the
Image has been set up, its voice has been everywhere heard throughout the
Papacy. Formerly decrees ran less or more in the name of Christ. Now all things
are pre-eminently done in the name of the Immaculate Virgin. Her voice is
everywhere heard--her voice is supreme. But, be it observed, when that voice is
heard, it is not the voice of mercy and love, it is the voice of cruelty and
terror. The decrees that come forth under the name of the Image, are to this
effect (v 17), that "no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the
name of the beast, or the number of his name." No sooner is the image set up
than we see this very thing begun to be carried out. What was the Concordat in
Austria, that so speedily followed, but this very thing? That concordat, through
the force of unexpected events that have arisen, has not yet been carried into
effect; but if it were, the results would just be what is predicted--that no man
in the Austrian dominions should "buy or sell" without the mark in some shape or
other. And the very fact of such an intolerant concordat coming so speedily on
the back of the Decree of the Immaculate Conception, shows what is the natural
fruit of that decree. The events that soon thereafter took place in Spain showed
the powerful working of the same persecuting spirit there also. During the last
few years, the tide of spiritual despotism might have seemed to be effectually
arrested; and many, no doubt, have indulged the persuasion that, crippled as the
temporal sovereignty of the Papacy is, and tottering as it seems to be, that
power, or its subordinates, could never persecute more. But there is an amazing
vitality in the Mystery of Iniquity; and no one can ever tell beforehand what
apparent impossibilities it may accomplish in the way of arresting the progress
of truth and liberty, however promising the aspect of things may be. Whatever
may become of the temporal sovereignty of the Roman states, it is by no means so
evident this day, as to many it seemed only a short while ago, that the
overthrow of the spiritual power of the Papacy is imminent, and that its power
to persecute is finally gone. I doubt not but that many, constrained by the love
and mercy of God, will yet obey the heavenly voice, and flee out of the doomed
communion, before the vials of Divine wrath descend upon it. But if I have been
right in the interpretation of this passage, then it follows that it must yet
become more persecuting than ever it has been, and that that intolerance, which,
immediately after the setting up of the Image, began to display itself in
Austria and Spain, shall yet spread over all Europe; for it is not said that the
Image of the beast should merely decree, but should "cause that as
many as would not worship the Image of the beast should be killed" (v 15). When
this takes place, that evidently is the time when the language of verse 8 is
fulfilled, "And all that dwell on the earth shall worship the beast, whose names
are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the
world." It is impossible to get quit of this by saying, "This refers to the Dark
Ages; this was fulfilled before Luther." I ask, had the men who dwelt on the
earth set up the Image of the beast before Luther's days? Plainly not. The
decree of the Immaculate Conception was the deed of yesterday. The prophecy,
then, refers to our own times--to the period on which the Church is now
entering. In other words, the slaying of the witnesses, the grand trial of the
saints, IS STILL TO COME. (see note below)
____________________
The Slaying of the
Witnesses
Is it past, or is it still to come?
This is a vital question. The favourite doctrine at this moment is, that it is
past centuries ago, and that no such dark night of suffering to the saints of
God can ever come again, as happened just before the era of the Reformation.
This is the cardinal principle of a work that has just appeared, under the title
of The Great Exodus, which implies, that however much the truth may be
assailed, however much the saints of God may be threatened, however their fears
may be aroused, they have no real reason to fear, for that the Red Sea will
divide, the tribes of the Lord will pass through dry shod, and all their
enemies, like Pharaoh and his host, shall sink in overwhelming ruin. If the
doctrine maintained by many of the soberest interpreters of Scripture for a
century past, including such names as Brown of Haddington, Thomas Scott, and
others, be well founded-viz., that the putting down of the testimony of the
witnesses is till to come, this theory must not only be a delusion, but a
delusion of most fatal tendency--a delusion that by throwing professors off
their guard, and giving them an excuse for taking their ease, rather than
standing in the high places of the field, and bearing bold and unflinching
testimony for Christ, directly paves the way for that very extinction of the
testimony which is predicted. I enter not into any historical disquisition as to
the question, whether, as a matter of fact, it was true that the witnesses were
slain before Luther appeared. Those who wish to see an historical argument on
the subject may see it in the Red Republic, which I venture to think has
not yet been answered. Neither do I think it worth while particularly to examine
the assumption of Dr. Wylie, and I hold it to be a pure and gratuitous
assumption, that the 1260 days during which the saints of God in Gospel times
were to suffer for righteousness' sake, has any relation whatever, as a half
period, to a whole, symbolised by the "Seven times" that passed over
Nebuchadnezzar when he was suffering and chastened for his pride and blasphemy,
as the representative of the "world power." *
* The author does not himself make
the humiliation of the Babylonian king a type of the humiliation of the
Church. How then can he establish any typical relation between the "seven
times" in the one case, and the "seven times" in the other? He seems to think
it quite enough to establish that relation, if he can find one point of
resemblance between Nebuchadnezzar, the humbled despot, and the "world-power"
that oppresses the Church during the two periods of "seven times"
respectively. That one point is the "madness" of the one and the other. It
might be asked, Was, then, the "world-power" in its right mind before
"the seven times" began? But waiving that, here is the vital objection to this
view: The madness in the case of Nebuchadnezzar was simply an affliction;
in the other it was sin. The madness of Nebuchadnezzar did not, so far
as we know, lead him to oppress a single individual; the madness of the
"world-power," according to the theory, is essentially characterised by the
oppression of the saints. Where, then, can there be the least analogy between
the two cases? The "seven times" of the Babylonian king were seven times of
humiliation, and humiliation alone. The suffering monarch cannot be
a type of the suffering Church; and still less can his "seven times" of
deepest humiliation, when all power and glory was taken from him, be a type of
the "seven times" of the "world-power," when that "world-power" was to
concentrate in itself all the glory and grandeur of the earth. This is one
fatal objection to this theory. Then let the reader only look at the following
sentence from the work under consideration, and compare it with historical
fact, and he will see still more how unfounded the theory is: "It follows
undeniably," says the author, "that as the Church is to be tyrannised over by
the idolatrous power throughout the whole of the seven times, she will be
oppressed during the first half of the 'seven times,' by idolatry in the form
of Paganism, and during the last half by idolatry in the form of Popery." Now,
the first half, or 1260 years, during which the Church was to be oppressed by
Pagan idolatry, ran out exactly, it is said, in AD 530 or 532; when
suddenly Justinian changed the scene, and brought the new oppressor on the
stage. But I ask where was the "world-power" to be found up to 530,
maintaining "idolatry in the form of Paganism"? From the time of
Gratian at least, who, about 376, formally abolished the worship of the gods,
and confiscated their revenues, where was there any such Pagan power to
persecute? There is certainly a very considerable interval between 376 and
532. The necessities of the theory require that Paganism, and that avowed
Paganism, be it observed, shall be persecuting the Church straight away till
532; but for 156 years there was no such thing as a Pagan "world-power" in
existence to persecute the Church. "The legs of the lame," says Solomon, "are
not equal"; and if the 1260 years of Pagan persecution lack no less that 156
years of the predicted period, surely it must be manifest that the theory
halts very much on one side at least. But I ask, do the facts agree with the
theory, even in regard to the running out of the second 1260 years in 1792, at
the period of the French Revolution? If the 1260 years of Papal oppression
terminated then, and if then the Ancient of days came to begin the
final judgment on the beast, He came also to do something else. This will
appear from the language of Daniel 7:21, 22: "I beheld, and the same horn made
war with the saints, and prevailed against them; until the Ancient of days
came, and judgment was given to the saints of the Most High; and the time
came that the saints possessed the kingdom." This language implies that
the judgment on the little horn, and the putting of the saints in possession
"of the kingdom" are contemporaneous events. Long has the rule of the kingdoms
of this world been in the hands of worldly men, that knew not God nor obeyed
Him; but now, when He to whom the kingdom belongs comes to inflict judgment on
His enemies, He comes also to transfer the rule of the kingdoms of this world
from the hands of those who have abused it, into the hand of those that fear
God and govern their public conduct by His revealed will. This is evidently
the meaning of the Divine statement. Now, on the supposition that 1792 was the
predicted period of the coming of the Ancient of days, it follows that, ever
since, the principles of God's Word must have been leavening the governments
of Europe more and more, and good and holy men, of the spirit of Daniel and
Nehemiah, must have been advanced to the high places of power. But has it been
so in point of fact? Is there one nation in all Europe that acts on Scriptural
principles at this day? Does Britain itself do so? Why, it is notorious that
it was just three years after the reign of righteousness, according to this
theory, must have commenced that that unprincipled policy began that has left
hardly a shred of appearance of respect for the honour of the "Prince of the
Kings of the earth" in the public rule of this nation. It was in 1795 that
Pitt, and the British Parliament, passed the Act for the erecting of the Roman
Catholic College of Maynooth, which formed the beginning of a course that,
year by year, has lifted the Man of Sin into a position of power in this land,
that threatens, if Divine mercy do not miraculously interfere, to bring us
speedily back again under complete thraldom to Antichrist. Yet, according to
the theory of The Great Exodus, the very opposite of this ought to have
been the case.
But to this only I call the reader's
attention, that even on the theory of Dr. Wylie himself, the witnesses of Christ
could not possibly have finished their testimony before the Decree of the
Immaculate Conception came forth. The theory of Dr. Wylie, and those who take
the same general view as he, is, that the "finishing of the testimony," means
"completing the elements" of the testimony, bearing a full and complete
testimony against the errors of Rome. Dr. Wylie himself admits that "the dogma
of the 'Immaculate Conception' [which was given forth only during the last few
years] declares Mary truly 'divine,' and places her upon the altars of Rome as
practically the sole and supreme object of worship" (The Great Exodus).
This was NEVER done before, and therefore the errors and blasphemies of Rome
were not complete until that decree had gone forth, if even then. Now, if the
corruption and blasphemy of Rome were "incomplete" up to our own day, and if
they have risen to a height which was never witnessed before, as all men
instinctively felt and declared, when that decree was issued, how could the
testimony of the witnesses be "complete" before Luther's day! It is
nothing to say that the principle and the germ of this decree were in operation
long before. The same thing may be said of all the leading errors of Rome long
before Luther's day. They were all in essence and substance very broadly
developed, from near the time when Gregory the Great commanded the image of the
Virgin to be carried forth in the processions that supplicated the Most High to
remove the pestilence from Rome, when it was committing such havoc among its
citizens. But that does in no wise prove that they were "complete," or that the
witnesses of Christ could then "finish their testimony" by bearing a full and
"complete testimony" against the errors and corruptions of the Papacy. I submit
this view of the matter to every intelligent reader for his prayerful
consideration. If we have not "understanding of the times," it is vain to expect
that we "shall know what Israel ought to do." If we are saying "Peace and
safety," when trouble is at hand, or underrating the nature of that trouble, we
cannot be prepared for the grand struggle when that struggle shall come.
|