Add parallel Print Page Options

Chapter 18

The Fall of Babylon.[a] After this I saw another angel coming down from heaven, having great authority, and the earth became illumined by his splendor.(A) [b]He cried out in a mighty voice:

“Fallen, fallen is Babylon the great.(B)
    She has become a haunt for demons.
She is a cage for every unclean spirit,
    a cage for every unclean bird,
    [a cage for every unclean] and disgusting [beast].

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. 18:1–19:4 A stirring dirge over the fall of Babylon-Rome. The perspective is prophetic, as if the fall of Rome had already taken place. The imagery here, as elsewhere in this book, is not to be taken literally. The vindictiveness of some of the language, borrowed from the scathing Old Testament prophecies against Babylon, Tyre, and Nineveh (Is 23; 24; 27; Jer 50–51; Ez 26–27), is meant to portray symbolically the inexorable demands of God’s holiness and justice; cf. Introduction. The section concludes with a joyous canticle on the future glory of heaven.
  2. 18:2 Many Greek manuscripts and versions omit a cage for every unclean…beast.