Complete dictionary reading
Context, form, interpretation, and limits
Principal source or earliest context
Revelation 17–18 names Babylon as a symbolic city, depicts a golden cup, rulers and merchants, and narrates collapse and lament. The USCCB note identifies Rome as the principal historical referent.
Historical interpretations
Babylon already carried exile and imperial memory from the Hebrew scriptures. Christian reception later used the name for Rome, rival churches, cities, empires, markets, and corrupt social orders.
Visual anatomy
Stacked open arcs feed a central hollow cup. The visual beauty is interrupted by a hidden extraction line beneath the vessel.
Antichrist.net visual convention: Open arcs feeding a hollow cup with a concealed extraction line.
Antichrist.net reading
Antichrist.net uses Babylon for comfort that conceals dependency, commerce that becomes worship, and luxury that makes extraction feel inevitable.
Misuse warning
Never use Babylon as a slur for women, cities, ethnic groups, nations, religions, or ordinary commerce.
What this symbol does not prove
It does not prove that a modern metropolis, denomination, financial center, or culture is metaphysically condemned.
Disputed readings and unresolved questions
Debates concern the balance between Rome-specific reference, transhistorical imperial critique, ecclesial polemic, and future expectation.
Suggested comparison or manuscript example
Add MS 19896, folios 18v–19v, documents Babylon’s cup, beast, merchants, fall, and reception.
Source discipline
Source notes
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Revelation 17 USCCB Bible
Babylon, golden cup, seven heads, ten horns, kingship, and Rome reception.
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Revelation 18 USCCB Bible
Merchants, luxury, extraction, lament, and Babylon’s collapse.
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Add MS 19896: Apocalypse Picture Book British Library
Fifteenth-century illustrated cycle documenting dragon, beasts, mark, Babylon, witnesses, Lamb, books, and New Jerusalem.
