The Revelation of St. John the Divine
⭑ Catholic Public Domain :: World English Bible Catholic ⭑
- Chapter 17 -
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The Mystery Explained
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The Victory of the Lamb
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Footnotes
(a)17:5
A mystery: That is, a secret; because what follows of the name and title of the great harlot is to be taken in a mystical sense.(Challoner)
(b)17:5
Babylon: Either the city of the devil in general; or, if this place be to be understood of any particular city, pagan Rome, which then and for three hundred years persecuted the church; and was the principal seat both of empire and idolatry.(Challoner)
(c)17:7 This woman is the same as the false prophetess, hence the use of the feminine in the earlier verses.(Conte)
(d)17:8
The beast that you saw: This beast which supports Babylon, may signify the power of the devil: which was and is not, being much limited by the coming of Christ, but shall again exert itself under Antichrist. The seven heads of this beast are seven mountains or empires, instruments of his tyranny; of which five were then fallen. (See chap. 13.1, and below, ver. 10.) The beast itself is said to be the eighth, and is of the seven; because they all act under the devil, and by his instigation, so that his power is in them all, yet so as to make up, as it were, an eighth empire, distinct from them all.(Challoner)
(e)17:12
Ten kings: Ten lesser kingdoms, enemies also of the church of Christ: which, nevertheless, shall be made instruments of the justice of God for the punishment of Babylon. Some understand this of the Goths, Vandals, Huns, and other barbarous nations, that destroyed the empire of Rome.(Challoner)
(f)17:16 They hate her (the false prophetess) at this point in time, after she has lost her power, because she lost her power and the kingdom of the Antichrist lost its power. The ten horns are ten kings, who each take control of one kingdom of the ten kings, after the Antichrist loses power. They attack the false church of the false prophetess and her seat of pretended religious authority, the city of the seven hills (Rome). Then they try to attack Christ and his saints (Jerusalem).(Conte)
(g)17:17 The word ‘illi’ is dative singular, referring to the harlot; what they do is not pleasing to God; rather, they do ‘illi’ (to her) whatever they please.(Conte)
1
2
3
4
5
The Mystery Explained
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
The Victory of the Lamb
14
15
16
17
18
Footnotes
(a)17:8 TR reads “yet is” instead of “shall be present”