Military strikes light up the headlines. Economic summits promise stability in a house built on sand. The pageantry of politics, the ceremonies of wealth, the distractions of our digital playground—all of it feels like a grand illusion. And this morning, I was pulled back—almost hurled back—into the deep, haunting poetry of Revelation 18 and 19.
There are parts of the Bible that read like clear instruction. Others like comforting narrative. But then there’s Revelation 18—a chapter that sings and weeps and burns. It feels like a song and a funeral and a thunderstorm all at once. I can’t help but be mesmerized every time I read it. It’s apocalyptic, yes—but also strangely lyrical. Like an epic poem written in fire. It's so good as a lyrical poem and so haunting at the same time.
And I can’t shake this truth:
I live in Babylon.
Not ancient Babylon, of course—but the system she represents. The luxurious, idolatrous, blood-soaked city that Revelation uses as a symbol of worldly power and godless prosperity. I live in comfort. I am enmeshed in technology and commerce. I benefit from the very structures that, in Revelation 18, are judged with absolute finality.
“Come out of her, my people,
lest you take part in her sins,
lest you share in her plagues...” (Rev. 18:4)
That verse stirs me every time. And convicts me. Because the call is clear, but the line is hard to trace.
Where does harmless enjoyment end and compromise begin?
Where does convenience morph into captivity?
Where does appreciation of beauty become worship of the beast?
What struck me again today is how modern this chapter feels. Read the list of goods the merchants mourn over (Rev. 18:11–13): fine linens, perfumes, gold, silver, vehicles (well, chariots), even “human souls.” It sounds like a luxury market, an international shipping manifest, and a human trafficking report—all at once. The things Babylon sells are not evil in themselves—but they’ve become stained by the system that profits from injustice, exploitation, and spiritual adultery.
“And the merchants of the earth weep and mourn for her,
since no one buys their cargo anymore...” (Rev. 18:11)
This is what breaks me.
No one mourns her sin.
They mourn her usefulness.
Her profit margins. Her capacity to provide pleasure and distraction.
And all the while, the blood of prophets and saints soaks the foundation of the city.
There’s a part of me that wants to stop reading right there.
But then comes Chapter 19—and the cheering in Heaven.
If you don't understand the Gospel and God's nature, the pain of sin... this verse will make NO SENSE.
“Hallelujah!
The smoke from her goes up forever and ever.” (Rev. 19:3)
It always feels strange at first—this eruption of praise over the fall of Babylon. Heaven rejoicing while earth laments. But then I realize: what we lament and what we applaud reveal the allegiance of our hearts. If I’m mourning the collapse of the things that seduced me, that’s a warning. If I’m celebrating that God is finally setting things right, even at great cost, then that’s a sign of reoriented hope.
Still—it’s not easy. I love some of the things Babylon offers. The music (Rev. 18:22). The craftsmanship and technology. The beautiful weddings. The clever architecture. These aren’t evil. But they can become a veneer that hides the rot beneath. They can draw my affections away from the God who made beauty for His glory, not mine.
That’s why Revelation doesn’t just challenge the wicked. It challenges the comfortable. It speaks to people like me—people who need grace not because we’re out killing saints, but because we’re far too comfortable in the shadow of the system that does.
And here’s the tension I carry:
I don’t know how to live outside of Babylon.
But I don’t want to belong to her.
I want to live as a citizen of the New Jerusalem while I dwell in the streets of this world.
That’s why I desperately need God’s mercy and grace. Not just to forgive me, but to loosen Babylon’s grip on my heart.
So I pray:
Lord, help me not to love the things You are going to burn.
Help me to use them wisely, hold them loosely, and never trade them for You.
Because Babylon’s fire is coming.
But so is the wedding of the Lamb.
And the more I set my eyes on that feast, the less I’ll mourn the fall of what was never meant to last.
Now I know why I felt this way— The City smiled but could not stay. The green light fades, the music’s gone— And dawn reveals what we stood on. I held the night but lost the day— And now the truth won’t turn away.