Click here for Revelation 18 audio:
Read it. Pray it. Share it. Live it.
Today’s post includes a brief overview of the chapter and a focused look at what it reveals about Jesus (Rev. 1:1) — so our eyes stay fixed on Him.
Chapter Overview:
Revelation 18 announces and describes the complete fall of Babylon, the corrupt system that seduced the nations through wealth, power, and immorality (vv. 1–3). God calls His people to separate from her so they do not share in her sins or judgment (vv. 4–5). Her destruction comes swiftly and decisively, repaying her for her arrogance and evil (vv. 6–8). The kings, merchants, and sailors who profited from her mourn her sudden collapse, grieving the loss of their wealth and influence (vv. 9–19). In contrast, heaven rejoices because God has judged her and vindicated His people (v. 20). The chapter ends with a powerful image of Babylon’s final and irreversible destruction – never to rise again (vv. 21–24).
Seeing Jesus in This Chapter:
Revelation 18 reveals Jesus as the righteous Judge who brings down every system built on sin and self-glory. Babylon appeared strong, wealthy, and untouchable, but her fall comes suddenly because God’s justice cannot be delayed forever (vv. 8, 10). Jesus sees the pride, greed, and injustice that the world often celebrates, and He will bring it all to account (vv. 5–7). His judgment is not unjust – it is a fitting response to the harm done to His people and the rebellion against His rule (vv. 6, 24). At the same time, He calls His people to come out and live differently, refusing to be shaped by the values of a fallen world (v. 4). Jesus is both the One who judges and the One who rescues, calling His people to faithfulness now and promising that all evil will one day be brought to an end.
🌀 Reflection:
The world’s systems can look powerful and appealing, but they will not last. Are you living shaped more by the values of this world or by the kingdom of Christ?
💬 Mission Challenge:
Identify one area where the world’s values are influencing you and choose today to live differently in obedience to Jesus.

Continue reading in our NT260 plan in the rest of Phase 4 — That You May Believe.
1 Comment