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Come Out of Babylon
"A Biblical-Theological Study
of the Christian's Relationship to the World"
Isaiah 52:11
David Inks
Isaiah 40-66 is a book of comfort for an afflicted people, an
exiled people, a people under judgment, an oppressed people held
in captivity in Babylon. God's "comfort" is administered
in the proclamation of "Good News" (Is. 52:7)-that they
shall be free from the tyrant (49:25); that they shall depart
from Babylon as though raised from the dead (52:2); and that they
shall be brought back to restore the land. The call to "come
out" in 52:11 is God's call to his priestly people that they
"come out of Babylon."
They were in Babylon because of their sinful covenant-breaking.
Yahweh, having forewarned them, placed them under the covenant
sanctions of cursing. Within this section, rich in literary and
redemptive-historical themes, is placed probably the most famous
text of the Old Testament-Isaiah 52:13-53:12, the Suffering Servant
pericope. This text, pregnant with the future (the "new things"
the Lord is about to do), raises Isaiah 40-66 to a new prophetic
and eschatological highpoint. For the real Babylonian deliverance
is from the evil tyrant of this world, a redemption accomplished
through the Servant's sufferings. The real deliverance from the
curse of the broken law is a result of the propiatory sufferings
of the Lamb-like One who would render himself a guilt offering
for the sin of many (Is. 53:7,10,12). Due to his groaning labor,
the Father will "allot" and "divide" to him
the booty of redemption (53:12). Such Old Testament terminology
is consistently associated with the apportioning of the promised
land of the inheritance. But under the cover of the New Covenant
this terminology reveals to us the reality of the resurrection
of the Servant wherein he enters into and gains the inheritance
of the heavenly land, the final homeland of the people of God
(54:1-3). The jubilant "shout for joy" (54:1) is due
to the subsequent packing of the land with a seed set free from
cursed captivity and coming out of Babylon to resettle the empty
but growing land. But this land upon the prophetic horizon is
canopied by the holy tent of God's dwelling which can barely contain
its spreading numbers. Here, in Old Covenant language, is a prophecy
of New Covenant blessing. Holy cult and holy culture become undifferentiated
in the eschaton introduced by the Servant. People and priests,
land and temple, are one and the same.
The Old Covenant call to "come out of Babylon" is heard
again in the covenant proclamation of the "Good News"
that Isaiah's prophecy anticipated (2 Cor. 6:17; Rom. 10:15).
Thus, the Babylon of the Old Covenant was anticipatory of the
whole fallen order, the world under Satan, "this present
evil age" (Gal. 1:4). And like the Babylon of old, this world
too, having first surrendered the people of God, will come under
the devastating judgment of God (cf. Rev. 18). Again, at the end
of the world, that ancient call is heard for the last time: "Come
out of her my people" (Rev. 18:4).
Our Relationship to Babylon
In light of this overarching biblical-theological outlook, we
are faced with the well-worn question: what is the Christian's
relationship to the world?
One of the loudest voices today in directing Christians
minds to settling their relationship to the world comes from the
Reconstructionist school. This model anticipates not merely salvation
from the world but salvation for the world in the transforming
power of the Kingdom of God in culture and commerce. The Kingdom
is seen as exerting its rule over the powers of this world so
as to bring them into line with the law of God. This is called
"theonomy". These Kingdom labors are expected to produce
an eventual global victory, an expression of postmillennialism.
Thus Babylon is reclaimed for Christ.
Another voice, enduring but not loud, is heard from the Anabaptist
or Mennonite perspective. Here, when faced with the Babylonian
world, only one piece is claimed, separated out and then run on
the basis of Christian principles of discipleship. "Discipleship"
becomes mingled with a distinctive cultural baggage separate from
the rest of "worldly" .culture. In other words, one
creates a subculture.
Yet, biblically speaking, this world and this age is simply Babylonian,
and headed for damnation/destruction.
Babylon is part and parcel of this world It is part and parcel
of this age The whole thing is coming under destruction. At this
point one can begin to see that, though the Reconstructionist
and Mennonite perspectives seem light years apart, they are in
reality quite close. The Mennonite perspective draws from the
world at large a portion of disciples in order to create a separate
community with its own distinctives. In Reconstructionism there
is a central ideological hub from which the program spreads outward.
But in either case, Babylon is being Christianized, whether it
is a small chunk separated out or the whole conquered by spreading
out. In either case it is Babylon! That is why both perspectives
are mistaken. Both are seeking to Christianize Babylon, and both
consequently retain only a thin layer, if any, of common grace.
In both cases the pure, spiritual mission of the church in proclaiming
the gospel gets mingled with a fleshly struggle with the world.
Quite simply God does not call us to Christianize either part
or the whole of Babylon. Rather, he calls us to "come out
of Babylon." But how do we "come out of Babylon"
and at the same time live in this world?
Life in Babylon
Let's look at Jeremiah 29:4-14 for some insight on how to live
in this world. The historical situation is that Israel has been
ousted from the promised land to live in Babylon, away from their
homeland as exiles. What are they to do while they are there?
Build houses, make gardens, continue to marry and multiply and
be a blessing to the city. They should pray for the welfare of
the city and be there for its blessing. So, they are to live in
and participate in Babylon.
Now, generally speaking, two things should characterize life
in Babylon: allegiance to Yahweh and hope. First of all, participation
in Babylon would be free of idolatry. At any point where living
life in Babylon presents a compromise with allegiance to Yahweh
the brakes must be applied. The book of Daniel is illustrative
of this principle. Daniel was in Babylon. He rose high in the
political process in a terribly demonized society. Daniel was
culturally separated but culturally involved. When Daniel was
required to stop praying what did he do? He prayed. He did not
seek to implement the demands of the Mosaic law within that society.
He engaged in no campaign to knock down idols. When given an opportunity
to seek the execution of the magicians he spared their lives and
never actively pursued their elimination. But were he back in
the promised land he should have done all of it. Yet when his
life and allegiance to God were put on the line, he stood firm,
unwilling to give one inch, trusting the consequences to God.
Shadrach, Meschach and Abednego are also examples of stout adherence
to this principle of allegiance to Yahweh while in exile. Contrary
to these principles, the Anabaptist-Mennonite outlook would say
Daniel was dead wrong, for he was participating in the world.
And Reconstructionism would question Daniel's failure to implement
theocratic law.
The second thing which should characterize or shape one's life
in Babylon is the location of one's hope Israel's great hope was
that someday they could return to the freedom, the belongingness,
and the holiness of their homeland. Their hope was grounded in
the land of the theocratic kingdom. But what is a theocratic kingdom?
A theocratic kingdom is basically a religiously confessing, geopolitical
institution. Old Testament Israel was constituted a theocratic
kingdom. As a nation they were covenantally bound to Yahweh. Religious
freedom was not the order of the day in the promised land. The
death penalty was the proper way to deal with idolatry and lawlessness.
Israel was a religiously confessing kingdom. It was also a geopolitical
institution. The land with its perimeters constituted a specific
geography. And over that land was a God-appointed political
institution organized with a king and subjects, a court, taxes
and levies.
That is what a theocratic kingdom is, namely, a religiously confessing,
geopolitical institution.
Israel and the Church
Are Christians part of a theocratic kingdom? Yes. Obviously,
in the Old Testament, Israel was part of the theocratic kingdom.
But when they were in Babylon, they were not in the theocratic
kingdom for they were not within its geographical boundaries.
At that time, though they were the people of the kingdom, they
were not in the kingdom. While away, their hearts yearned to return
to the land, free from captivity where Yahweh's rule could be
exercised and his worship instituted with all the blessings flowing
from it. The New Covenant Church is in an analogous situation.
We are citizens of the theocratic kingdom living in Babylon as
exiles, sojourners in a strange land. The same basic instructions
in Jeremiah 29 on how to act while in Babylon are applicable to
us in the church. Daniel becomes a model for the church's relationship
to the world. The apostle Peter tells us that we are aliens and
strangers in this world (1 Pet. 2:11). So was Israel when they
were in Babylon.
There is a critically subtle point to be clarified in this comparison
between Israel and the church. The Israel in Babylon was the people
of God of the typological theocratic kingdom. They were alienated
from the typological kingdom when in Babylon. We are the people
of the antitypological and final theocratic kingdom. We are alienated
from our homeland. We are in Babylon now, in the flesh. There
is a good deal of discussion today about whether the kingdom is
now or in the future. It is both! It is now and it is future.
"Now" the kingdom has arrived in the power of the Holy
Spirit. But where are our feet? On the earth. Our feet are in
Babylon. So in the realm of the Spirit, we are in Christ, and
thus in the kingdom of heaven, delivered from Babylon. What does
it mean to be "in Christ"? It means to be in the heavenlies,
up there. Colossians 3 says: "your life is hidden with Christ
in God. Seek those things above where Christ is seated."
Where is he seated? At the right hand of God. He is seated on
the throne. He is seated in the kingdom. And that is where our
life is found.
When the children of Israel were in Babylon, where was their
life? It was called the land of life, the land of the living.
In the Old Testament, to possess God's blessing was to have "long
life in the land." Now, to have God's blessing is to have
eternal life "in the land." In other words, the Old
Testament blessing of "prolonged days in the land" (Dt.
5:33; Ps. 91:16; Is. 53:10) anticipated eternal life in the New
Covenant kingdom. Christ is now in the kingdom, in the land. In
the Old Testament, the word "inheritance" primarily
applies to "the land." "The land" is the geographical
inheritance of the Old Testament Kingdom of God. They inherited
"the land." The book of Joshua records how they moved
into their inheritance-"the land." The New Testament
speaks of our inheritance too. It too is "the land,"
but it is the heavenly one, the earthly real estate anticipated.
1 Peter 1:3 states, "Blessed be the God and Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ, who according to his great mercy has caused
us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection
of Jesus Christ from the dead." I am born again through the
resurrection of Christ. When I find myself in Christ, what has
happened to me? I have been born again, that is, new life emerges.
I am raised up. I am joined to Christ in the newness of resurrection
life and I experience the exodus. His resurrection life becomes
my life within my soul. I have new life. I have eternal life.
I am born again.
Now, that resurrection life has removed me from Babylon and placed
me with Christ in the promised land. Where does that life lead?
It leads to "an inheritance" (1 Pet. 1:4). This inheritance
is "imperishable, undefiled ... does not fade away."
But where is it? It is reserved in heaven. By virtue of Christ's
resurrection he entered into the inheritance. He entered heaven
and exited out of this world, this Babylon. By his resurrection
he came into life eternal. He came into the land eternal, the
kingdom of God. His resurrection led him up to David's throne
(Acts 2:27-34). He is raised up to the inheritance. So now, when
we are brought to faith in Christ, we have that resurrection life
within us. Our inheritance is where? It is in heaven where Christ
is. Do we share in it now? Yes, in the Spirit. But, on the other
hand, we are still waiting for it. We are still waiting in Babylon
for that inheritance. We are still waiting for our homeland to
appear, while the Holy Spirit is a down payment of the inheritance
of life in the land (Eph. 1:13-14).
So, the kingdom of God has come in the power of the Spirit. I
have been raised up spiritually in Christ to inhabit the heavenly
places. I have come out of Babylon and I have come into the Kingdom
of God in that sense. But in terms of my present earthly existence
in the flesh, the inheritance is on reserve; it hasn't appeared
yet. So, the land, the physical land where my feet will one day
be settled, will not come until Jesus returns. And that is the
future aspect of the kingdom of God. So because of the "now/already"
character of the kingdom, we share in the power of the Spirit
as a down payment of our inheritance to come; and at the second
coming that inheritance which is reserved in heaven for us appears
as our eternal homeland in the new creation "not yet. Consequently,
the kingdom of God is here "already" and it is "not
yet" here. It is here in the Spirit. It is not here in its
manifest glory of the consummation. So, my relationship to this
earth/world is one of a stranger and an alien while my true "politic"
(the New Testament word "commonwealth"), my true "citizenship"
is in heaven (Phil. 3:20).
Now, what is Israel's politic?
Where is Israel's commonwealth?
This is a hot topic today. Ephesians 2 tells me where Israel's
politic is. Paul declares: "Now therefore remember that formerly
you, the Gentiles in the flesh who are called uncircumcised by
the so-called circumcision which is performed in the flesh by
human hands, remember that you were at that time (i.e., prior
to the advent of Christ) separated from Christ, and excluded from
the commonwealth of Israel (that is, the political citizenry),
and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and
without God in the world. But now (you were then strangers to
Israel's commonwealth), in Christ you who were far off have been
bought near" (Eph. 2:11-13). Verse 19 continues this train
of thought: "So then, you are no longer strangers and aliens,
but you are fellow-citizens with the saints and of God's household."
What is the point? The point is simply this: Israel's Old Testament
typological commonwealth has come into actual existence in the
heavenlies in Christ. Christ has entered into it as the resurrected
Davidic King. The kingdom of God has come. We should never, never
think that Israel's commonwealth, Israel's citizenry, Israel's
theocratic kingdom is something that is to be presently reproduced
or is going to occur in a future millennium in some linear manner
on earth as it occurred in the Old Testament. That notion denies
the reality of fulfillment in Christ. That notion denies the type-antitype
dynamic. That notion denies the simple principle that the New
Covenant fulfills, and in fulfilling transcends, the Old Covenant.
The way that Israel's commonwealth and citizenry is fulfilled
is in Christ. And as such it has been transformed into its full
intention in the already/not yet Kingdom. The Old Covenant inheritance
of the land in the New Covenant that Christ brings is that land
where Christ is in the heavenlies-that land which will one day
dawn in the emergence of the new heavens and new earth at his
return.
So, are we part of Israel? Yes and no. No, we are not part of
the Old Covenant typological situation. We are part of the New
Covenant situation that the Old anticipated typologically. And
yes, therein we are part of Israel. Because it is Israel's promises
that "in Christ" have been fulfilled and realized. In
them, along with the Jewish remnant, we share. As Ephesians 2:19
says: "We (Gentiles) are fellow citizens with the saints"
(Israel's remnant).
Christ the True Israel
Christ is the fulfillment of the whole thing; this is the basic
presupposition; in him the theocratic kingdom that Israel anticipated
has come, and it has been transformed. The Old Covenant caterpillar
has become the New Covenant butterfly. All that the Old Testament
anticipated regarding Israel's theocratic kingdom finds its fulfillment
in the already/not yet dynamic of the kingdom heralded by Christ.
The "not yet" sphere will be realized in the second
advent of Christ in the consummation at the appearance of the
new heavens and new earth, the new Jerusalem, the temple and the
resurrected people of God with
Christ dwelling in their midst. But now, "already,"
these very realities exist in the heavenlies, communicated by
the Spirit to earth.
So where is the temple now? Hebrews tells us. It is where the
land of the Kingdom is-in heaven! Christ entered the Holy Place
in heaven, the real, eternal, of which the Old Covenant was merely
a symbol. Believers now enter the Holy Place by faith. When the
church assembles on earth for worship, by faith, they sit around
Christ in the true sanctuary. There we enjoy, by the Spirit, our
true homeland in heaven. With physical eyes we are seen as any
other Babylonian assembly, where people gather to sit, speak and
listen. The physical, earthly dimensions are the same. But to
interpret this assembly biblically, we are in the Holy Place,
the true sanctuary where Christ our Priest/King resides, perceived
only by the eye of faith as informed by the Word and Spirit. Here
we are in the midst of the cherubim and the angelic host. We are
in the heavenlies with Christ. We are seated around him in worship,
in the land, in Jerusalem, in the temple of the Lord. And we too
"in the Spirit" have become the temple of the Lord with
him dwelling in the midst. We have been united to Christ in his
death and have been resurrected and removed from Babylon to join
our King in the homeland of his theocratic kingdom. In union with
Christ's death and resurrection we have "come out of Babylon."
You can't see it. It is all hidden. Our life is "hidden with
Christ in God." But it is going to be revealed when he returns
in manifest glory (Col. 3:1-4). So, all that Ezekiel's temple
anticipated (40-48) has begun now in the power of the Spirit.
Yet, it will be revealed in the consummation when Christ returns
to destroy Babylon forever in the final exodus of the people of
God.
Consequently, Isaiah tells us, "Come out (of Babylon), you
who bear the vessels of the Lord" (i.e., "you priests,"
52:11). As the real, New Covenant priests of the Lord we are to
come out of Babylon. Why? Because our cultic identity and our
cultural identity are merged in the kingdom of God. The kingdom
of God is separated from the religious as well as the political
rudimentary principles of the world. Christian utopianism in either
a conservative or liberal postmillennialism is plainly unbiblical.
Thus, drawing swords "in the name of Christ" for dominion
over this earth is contrary to the origin of our true
"commonwealth" where we have become fellow citizens
with the people of God (Eph. 2:12,19). "Our citizenship is
in heaven, from which we eagerly wait for our Savior" (Phil.
3:20).
Our Present Citizenship
Then what, as Christians, are we to be doing on earth? We are
"ambassadors" (2 Cor. 5:20). As such, our homeland is
elsewhere, in heaven with Christ. Yet we are now, in the flesh,
in Babylon. On earth we are strangers because we are not home.
We are ambassadors, away from our homeland, commissioned by the
King of our commonwealth with a message to Babylon. What is that
mission? Is it the theocratic reconstruction of the whole of Babylon?
Or are we to create a culture within a culture? No, neither of
these. Our mission is to proclaim that the judgment of God which
is upon Babylon and about to destroy it has been exhausted in
Christ. Thus the urgent cry is "come out of her my people"
(Rev. 18:4; Is. 52:11; Jer. 51:6,45). This call of the gospel
is a call for resurrection life in the city of sin and death made
effectual by the Spirit of the resurrected Christ. In order to
"come out of Babylon," the curse abiding on the elect
dwelling in Babylon must be removed through the Suffering Servant's
death on their behalf. To "come out of Babylon" is to
be joined to Christ in his resurrection and be seated with him
in the land of life in the kingdom of God. That resurrection shout
at the second advent to "come out of her my people"
(Rev. 18:4) is echoed backward into the present preaching of the
gospel. In this way, some will be raised from their Babylon tombs,
while others will be left to ripen for the judgment to come. Reconciliation
is nothing less than the removal of hostility and the joining
of alien parties. Biblically, the removal of that wrath is accomplished
by Christ (2 Cor. 5:21), the Suffering Servant of Isaiah 53. Hostility,
wrath, judgment, and the just execution of the curse are about
to fall. So we cry out, "Come out of Babylon."
Our Present Mission
What therefore is our mission while we are in Babylon? Well,
we do indeed participate in the daily culture and commerce of
the world. This "participation" perspective as opposed
to a militant dominionism or cultural isolationism is the only
perspective consistent with the theological idea of common grace.
But though participating in the world we do not "make full
use of the world" (1 Cor. 7:31). Why? Because this world
is not the homeland of the people of God. It is not our reason
for living and can provide no ultimate or lasting purpose. Thus,
in "seeking first the kingdom of God" we are living
for another world, the world to come. And in the meantime, we
have a message of reconciliation-that though wrath is going to
come upon this world, the enmity has been removed in the cross
of Jesus Christ. The holy war that is coming upon this world from
the other country has already been finished and exhausted in Jesus
Christ. Paul says in effect, God reconciled the world to himself
and he is on his way to destroy the unrepentant; in the meantime,
we beg you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God (cf. 2 Cor.
5:19,20). Our mission, as we are strangers, away from our homeland,
to the Babylonians of this world is to call them to be reconciled
to God because judgment is coming. Babylon will be destroyed!
And that is why the call of the gospel is to "come out of
Babylon." Yet, how do we "come out of the world?"
How do we "come out " of Babylon? We come out of the
world/Babylon when we are joined with Christ in his death, burial,
resurrection and ascension in the heavenlies. As people seated
in the heavenlies, we have tasted of the world to come, ahead
of time, so that now we live differently in Babylon. That difference
of life is reflected fundamentally in three ways.
First, when we come out of the world, God becomes our God and
our idolatry is forsaken. 1 Thessalonians 1:9 tells us what conversion
is. Paul says, "You turned from idols to serve the living
God."
Second, we come out of the world when our hope in life is no
longer set upon either large or small earthly circumstances. In
other words, when neither the productivity of one's personal career
nor the eventual political justice and peace on earth is the quest
of our existence, but rather the return of Jesus from heaven (1
Thess. 1:10). Where my hope is constitutes the location of my
heart's treasure. My hope is my reason for living. As a believer
I hope for the new world at Christ's return. I live for another
world. My hope is set in another place. No matter what happens
in this world, I have hope. I may be terminally ill, but I have
hope. If you have hope in the returning kingdom of God to replace
Babylon, the worst thing imaginable cannot swallow you in despair.
As painful as life may be, the Christian has the hidden joy and
strength within-he has hope. Paul's summation of conversion in
1 Thess. 1:9-10 consists in the same two Old Covenant distinctives
for living life in Babylon: allegiance to the living God and hope
in arriving in another land, the land of the theocratic kingdom
of God.
The third way the Christian's life is distinctive in Babylon
is that his mission is unique. The position of the church is not
one of competing for world dominion with other Babylonian powers.
Such a view is totally mistaken. Certainly believers will participate
in the world commercially, politically and culturally. Sometimes
we will do significant things. But this is not our mission. Our
mission is based on the principle that the land of the kingdom
of God is not this earth. We are not to labor to "kingdomize
the world." We are not called to plant the kingdom here.
God is going to remove this world. As Revelation 18:2 announces
(quoting from Isaiah 13:12): "fallen, fallen is Babylon the
great!" But the land of the kingdom of heaven where Christ
is, will remain. It is this which gives the church an urgent message.
Each Christian has a message and mission, not of Babylonian reconstruction,
but of reconciliation through repentance toward God and faith
in Jesus Christ. The world, Babylon, is under the wrath/curse
of God. Yet the Christian's message is not a gloomy or self-righteous
dirge of "you are doomed-period." But rather "Gospel",
"Good News", "Exodus", "Release to the
captives", "Come out of Babylon", "Your God
reigns" - for "How beautiful are the feet of him who
brings Good News!"
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