 My dear friends, my dear, dear friends, I feel the burden this evening of being the bearer of bad news. And it is really bad news. Really bad. Revelation 18 will begin by reading the first 19 verses. Revelation 18, verse 1. And after these things, I saw another angel come down from heaven, having great power, and the earth was lightened with his glory. And he cried mightily with a strong voice saying, Babylon, the great is fallen, is fallen, and has become the habitation of devils and the hold of every foul spirit and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird. And for all nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her fornication, and the kings of the earth have committed fornication with her, and the merchants of the earth are waxed rich through the abundance of her delicacies. And I heard another voice from heaven saying, Come out of her, my people, that she be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues. For her sins have reached unto heaven, and God hath remembered her iniquities. And reward her even as she rewarded you, and double unto her double according to her works, in the cup which she hath filled to her double. How much she hath glorified herself, and lived deliciously, so much torment and sorrow give her. For she saith in her heart, I sit a queen, and am no widow, and shall see no sorrow. Therefore shall her plagues come in one day, death and mourning and famine, and she shall be utterly burned with fire, for strong is the Lord God who judgeeth her. And the kings of the earth who have committed fornication and lived deliciously with her, shall bewail her and lament for her, when they shall see the smoke of her burning, standing afar off for the fear of her torment, saying, Alas, alas, that great city Babylon, that mighty city, for in one hour is thy judgment come. And the merchants of the earth shall weep and mourn over her, for no man buyeth her merchandise anymore. The merchandise of gold, and silver, and precious stones, and of pearls, and fine linen, and purple, and silk, and scarlet, and all thine wood, and all manner vessels of ivory, and all manner vessels of most precious wood, and of brass, and iron, and marble, and cinnamon, and odors, and ointments, and frankincense, and wine, and oil, and fine flour, and wheat, and beasts, and sheep, and horses, and chariots, and slaves, and souls of men. And the fruits that thy soul lesteth after are departed from thee, and all things which were dainty and goodly are departed from thee, and thou shalt find them no more at all. The merchants of these things which were made rich by her shall stand afar off for the fear of her torment, weeping and wailing, and saying, Alas, alas, that great city, that was clothed in fine linen, and purple, and scarlet, and decked with gold, and precious stones, and pearls, for in one hour so great riches is come to naught. And every shipmaster, and all the company, and ships, and sailors, and as many as trade by sea stood afar off, and cried when they saw the smoke of her burning, saying, What city is unto like this great city? And they cast dust on their heads, and cried, weeping and wailing, saying, Alas, alas, that great city wherein was made rich, all that had ships in the sea by reason of her costliness, for in one hour she is made desolate. It's a very sobering perspective to start a weekend of fellowship, isn't it? But it's a perspective I think we must be aware of, and see, with the eyes of faith. Not only do we see the rewards of the kingdom of heaven, but we see by faith what the truth says about the other end. And it is very sobering. But there's a verse in here that is a call to each and every one of us, and I heard another voice come from heaven saying, Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins. By God's grace and mercy, we live in an age where salvation is to be found through the blood of Jesus his Son. Are there Christians in Babylon? That's the title. Are there Christians in Babylon? Our evangelical friends like to compare the church's present state in society with Israel in captivity under Babylon. In Jeremiah 29, the prophet sends a letter from Jerusalem to the captives in Babylon. And in that letter, Jeremiah tells those captives, basically he says, Settle down, get married, plant fields, harvest them, let your children get married, and let them have children. Seek the good of the city that you're in, for in the welfare of that city, you will find your welfare. And our evangelical friends will say, Yeah, that's pretty much the state of the church in society and the church lives amidst a fallen society. She awaits her deliverance from heaven when the kingdom will finally come. And in the meantime, we kind of have to do the best that we can and will settle in, build houses, seek the welfare of our earthly city until Jesus comes back, even by serving in political offices like Daniel. So but I think there are problems with his view in first and foremost. The first problem is that Jeremiah is counteracting false prophets when he sends that letter. They're saying, for example, Hannah and I have the previous chapter. He's saying, Look, Israel is going to go back to Jerusalem in two years. But in reality, God had said 70 years. And so Jeremiah sends this letter to the exiles and he says to them, Look, this is what God said, it's going to be 70 years. So you might as well settle in, build houses, plant vineyards, get married, because at the end of 70 years, you're going to go back, but not before then. Secondly, in this writing, later on in his prophecies in Jeremiah 51 and 52, Jeremiah himself calls his people to flee from Babylon. Not to settle in Babylon, but to flee from Babylon. Two entire chapters, very much like Revelation 18, which we just read much of are found there. And in those chapters, Jeremiah is laying out the future judgment of Babylon. He's looking beyond the 70 years captivity now to the time when God will judge Babylon. He has used Babylon to judge the nations of the world. Now it's Babylon's turn. And he says in those chapters to the captives in Babylon who are left, who may still be left there, flee out of the midst of Babylon. He says in Jeremiah 51 and 6, very similar to Revelation 18 and 4. He says deliver every man his soul, be not cut off in her iniquity, for this is the time of the Lord's vengeance. So he's saying flee Babylon. It's time to get out. The judgment of God is about to fall on Babylon. And if you are to save yourselves, it's time to get out. The third reason we kind of resist this idea of settling down in Babylon is that we do not believe, brothers and sisters, that the church is in some kind of Babylonian captivity. No, no, the true church has been liberated, delivered from the power of darkness into the kingdom of his dear son. We're no longer exiled, praise the Lord, the 70 years captivity are over. And as with chapter one, King Cyrus issued what might be called the first Balfour declaration when he released the Jewish people to go back to their homeland to rebuild their temple. And in Luke chapter four, I think we have the New Testament counterpart to Cyrus's declaration in Ezra chapter one. We have our King Cyrus gets up in the synagogue there at Nazareth, his hometown. And he declares to the people reading from Isaiah chapter 61. And he declares to them, the spirit of the Lord is upon me, and he has sent me to deliver the captives. This is the day of the Lord, the year of Jubilee. And he said, this day the scripture is fulfilled in your ears. And in that declaration, our King Cyrus, he set free the captives and he allowed the true children of Israel to return to their home city Zion, the New Jerusalem, where Messiah sits on David's throne. So I suggest that we could suggest to our evangelical friends that it might be better to compare the present status of the true believer to the liberated returnees in the book of Ezra, the former captives been set free by King Cyrus. They've left Babylon behind. They're traveling along a fertile crescent in search of their homeland and their home city Jerusalem. They don't belong in the fertile crescent. They don't belong there. They're not going to settle down. They don't have time to build houses and plant farms and build businesses. They're just passing through pilgrims and strangers. They're living in tents as Abraham and Isaac and Jacob did generations before in their journey to the same land. They're not interested in settling down. You know why? They're not interested in settling down on their way from Babylon because they're going home. They've seen the lights of home. They're going home to their Fatherland. Jerusalem is on their minds. This is what has caused them to leave Babylon. It's true, judgment's coming, but they've got Jerusalem in front of them. They're headed there. Nothing's going to stop them. They've got God's protection over them. No earthly army needed for protection. They had Jerusalem. Thank you, brother. Jerusalem was on their minds. And my question for all of us this evening is Jerusalem on our minds. But we have come unto Mount Zion and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and church of the firstborn, which are written in heaven, and to God the judge of all, and so on and so forth goes our memory passage. Hallelujah, hallelujah for liberation from Babylon. But here's the contradiction, a sort of contradiction. We've been liberated by God's grace and mercy, all those who've been set free from their former lives. In a sense, well, not in a sense, in reality, we've been liberated. However, if we look around us, it seems as though we, God's people, are living smack dab in the middle of the good OUSB. The United States of Babylon seems we're living right there, doesn't it? So what do we do? The truth about modern civilization is even though they say there's been a lot of progress made in education and economic systems in the scientific realm, all of this, a lot of progress, so to speak. But in reality, we don't have to look far. We see this world is under a spell. Good news, Bible says, that the whole world lies, verse John 519, under the spell of the evil one. Second Corinthians 4-4, the God of this world has blinded the eyes of those that believe not. It is such a sad thing. May God give us a burden for our neighbors and our friends who are still in Babylon and have not heard the call of judgment and the call of our King. Eberhard Arnold said this. He said, the early Christians were convinced that there's a God in the world who is not the God of Jesus Christ. There's a God of Godless, worldly religion, antagonistic to the life of Jesus, a God of the present era, hostile to God's future and his eternity. This God has blinded the minds of those who cannot believe in our perishing. It has corrupted their vision so they're no longer able to see what really matters or to grasp the message of the future, the message of liberation. How sad. How so very sad to know that people are in this world blinded to the reality of the coming judgment of Babylon, blinded to the reality of liberation from Babylon and the journey home to Zion. This is the reality in which we live and we're in the middle of it. If you go back to Revelation chapter 18, 2 and 3, you see that the essence of Babylon, the spirit of Babylon is demonic, verse 2, it's immoral, verse 3, and it's luxurious, verse 3. Basically you have those three themes all throughout the chapter 18 of Revelation and pretty much describes the iniquity of Babylon in that chapter. Now here's what Elon Musk said of Tesla, that great forward-thinking scientist who's inventing all these things. He said this about artificial intelligence. He said, sometime in a lecture a few years back, he said with artificial intelligence, we're summoning the demon. Now a man by the name of Peter Moman Momsen writes an editorial and it was in the Plough issue, a winter issue of 2018. It's a very good issue on technology by the way. Plough being published by the Bruderhoffs. And so the editor quotes Elon Musk's and he says, whatever Musk meant by these words, they fit with strange precision. Remember Elon Musk said with artificial intelligence, we have summoned the demon. He says, they fit with strange precision into the New Testament view of reality. As the biblical writer saw it, the major social systems that shape human communities are not merely impersonal. Rather such systems which include the state, religious institutions, and we could add so many more institutions, those systems and structures of society. Religious, the government, state government, the educational systems, the media and technology and the entertainment and the sports and the philosophies of sexuality and morality. The practices of marriage and all these things. All these systems, structures, philosophies that shape human society. I think we can safely say they are under the domination of the spirit of the age. And we as believers have to think very, very carefully as these philosophies flood into our thinking through various media means. Because these influences are of Babylon. Now if we are with Christ, we've been liberated. This is not to say we have to fear demons behind every bush. We only have to be wise, discerning and prudent and willing to cut off the right hand and pluck out the right eye if necessary in order to continue our journey to Zion, the city of the living God. So he goes on to say that these technological structures that govern modern life operate under the influence of distinct spiritual forces is how he says it. The New Testament he says uses a range of names for the spiritual powers among them demons. Recognizing that uncanny forces lurk within technological structures, he says doesn't require us to flee the information age. But he says it does mean Christians must stop pretending that technological products are just neutral tools. Now that's very thoughtful, I think. So escaping Babylon's spell. We're not here this evening to lift up Babylon. We're here to call God's people with the prophet John out of Babylon. So how do we escape this pervasive spell of Babylon? How do we come out of Babylon while seeming to live right in the middle of the United States of Babylon? I want to talk about one thing tonight, folks, pretty much. Just one thing. I cannot think of anything more important to escaping the spell of Babylon. It's a very simple thing. We've heard about it all our lives. I want to talk about it some more this evening because, oh my heart, I feel as what God wants me to say or talk about it at least. We see it all through the Bible in the lives of men and women who followed God in its faith. Faith, my brothers and sisters. Faith. We did not leave Babylon just to escape judgment, although that would be a good reason in itself. We leave Babylon because we see Jerusalem out ahead. Jerusalem is on our minds. While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen, for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal. And Peter says there in 1 Peter 1 verse 8, speaking of Jesus, his Savior, whom he saw not so many years ago, he says of him, whom having not seen, we love. And he says it twice in the verse, whom having not seen, we love. Although now you do not see him yet believing, you rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory. That's who we see. His city is who we're seeing. His capital city, we're headed there by His grace and mercy. We need a living faith that compels and propels us toward the eternal realities that only faith can reveal, and away from those eternal realities that too only faith can reveal. Hebrews is all full of this, but without faith it is impossible to please Him, for He that cometh to God must believe that He is and that He is a rewarder of those that diligently seek Him. In the summer of 1987, a friend and I got on our bikes at Rockfish Gap, Virginia, at the beginning of the Blue Ridge Parkway. We weren't all that well-prepared. We were going to ride the whole parkway from beginning to end. We had 10-speed bikes, and they were loaded down with saddlebags, front and back, heavy load. Our first day, we had planned to ride 85 miles to the peaks of Otter, up and down those mountains. Even though we weren't really prepared, we didn't have proper equipment. We started off in high spirits, strong wind, and we rode our bikes. And we rode and rode and struggled up and down those hills. Finally, in probably mid-late afternoon, we were down at the James River, about 60-some miles on. James River's lowest point on the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia, around 600 feet above sea level. And by that time, our spirits and our energy levels had sunk correspondingly. We had come those 60-some miles, but ahead of us was Apple Orchard Mountain. And we looked at the maps, especially the maps of the profile of the road as it went up and down, and those cruel engineers of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Why did they take the Blue Ridge Parkway from the lowest point in Virginia, straight to the highest point in Virginia, at the top of Apple Orchard Mountain, 4,000 feet up there, nothing but uphill for 13 miles? How are we going to get up there? I didn't tell you at the beginning, but I'm pretty sure at the very beginning of this, we had already decided at the beginning of this day, one thing we're going to do when we get to peaks of Otter, we know about this restaurant up there, peaks of Otter restaurant. And we're going to sit down there, and we're going to enjoy a hot meal when we get there. And you know, down there at the James River, we were thinking about this too. We got this 13 miles ahead of us, but we got this hot meal ahead of us, chicken, mashed potatoes, we can do it. So you know what? We started going, and we pedaled. And our bikes weren't geared low enough, and it was excruciating. Partway up my buddy pretty much gave up. I would have too probably, except I kept thinking about this meal up there at peaks of Otter restaurant. And we finally crested Apple Orchard Mountain, probably about twilight near sunset. We had a few more miles to go, and we came down off the crest of Apple Orchard Mountain, went downhill, and then to our utter shock, we had to climb again for maybe a mile or two. But we were utterly exhausted, but at that point we were so close, and you know what kept us going. And we got, when we, right about dark, we got to the most welcome sight in the world, the sign, peaks of Otter, and we pulled into the parking lot after 14 hours of biking, and we staggered into the peaks of Otter restaurant at nine o'clock in the evening, just as they shut down for the night. You know, we drug ourselves over to our campsite, fixed some ramen noodle soup or something, and what a let down. But the kingdom won't let us down. You know, about 30, 31 years later, just a few months ago, my wife and I finally got to that restaurant, and I had my fried chicken meal, my chicken meal, friends of the Lord. But I have a simple point to make with this story, and you know what it is, Truman Miller and I would have never made it to peaks of Otter that day, except we had in front of us this vision of something very wonderful, and it kept us going. And if that vision hadn't been there, I'm sure we'd have stopped probably somewhere down near the bottom of Appalachian mountain and camp for the night. How is this any less true in a spiritual sense? My dear, dear people, my dear people, this demonic, immoral, luxurious spirit of Babylon seeks to draw our hearts away, and how well we know it, and how much we need fellowship and meetings like this one. In fact, we need to get together every Lord's day and celebrate Jesus' resurrection from the dead and encourage our spirits to gather and have a wonderful time in fellowship around him so that our faith does not grow weak. It's a very real and present danger for our hearts to be drawn, I have to tell you this. It's a very real and present danger for our hearts to be drawn away by the spirit of Babylon. The word says, seek those things which are above, where Christ sets on the right hand of God, sets your affection on things above, not on things on the earth. That's what the word says. But the world says, seek those things here below, where you can enjoy yourself with all sorts of pleasure and creature comforts, set your desires on money, food, sports, business, central pleasure. This is the, make no mistake, this is the demonic, immoral, luxurious spirit of the United States of Babylon. Maybe the most important question we can ask ourselves this weekend is, what am I seeking? What am I seeking? What am I seeking? The things of heaven or the things of earth. Show me what a person is seeking today and I will show you where he will be tomorrow. Here's a quote from Martyr's Mirror. Hope you don't, no, I'm not gonna make any apologies. Martyr's Mirror is a wonderful book, Brothers and Sisters, by God's grace, I read through that thing three times in less than a year in the place I was where I had more time than I do now. But I treasure this wonderful book of stories and doctrine and here is a definition of faith that I've not found anything better in any of the stuff I've read. It says, saving faith is a sure knowledge of the heart, a sure confidence which we receive from God, not through our own power, but through hearing the word of God, which by the illumination of the Holy Spirit is written in the heart and works so effectively in us. Listen to this, it works so effectively in us that we are drawn away by it, the faith from all visible and perishable things to the invisible and living God, thereby acquiring thereby a new spiritual taste for that which is heavenly and not for that which is earthly. For saving faith accompanied with hope and love is of such a nature that it conforms to things not seen. You see what I'm saying tonight? I think faith is the most important thing building up of our faith to allow us to escape the allure of the spirit of Babylon and make it to Zion, our heavenly city. Let me remind each of us that faith is not just a warm feeling of the heart that we experience together in meetings like this. This weekend is a time of action, brothers and sisters. True faith leads to self-examination. It leads to decision, it leads to action, it leads to dying of self, it leads to seeing Christ crucified and calling us also to take up our cross and count the cost. It calls us to obedience to the Son of God. This is true living faith and oh brothers and sisters let us prepare our hearts for decision, for obedience and for action and I am not proud of this but I will tell it anyway. This afternoon, I wasn't feeling so great. I went across this bridge over here to the island in the river and I was there struggling with something and I knew it was like God's spirit was putting his finger on my heart and I was struggling with a sense of coldness and hardness toward a certain person. And I thought to myself, wow, if that's there, then I must also be hard toward God too in some way because you can't be feeling hard toward your brother without in some way feeling hard toward God, being hard toward God. And upon to what I should do and prayed and I picked up the phone and I called this person and I had sort of been fighting with this person a little bit. You know how we subtly fight sometimes with people, we try to get our own way and we prove that we're right. And I just had to say, look, I was wrong here. You know, I shouldn't have done this and I gave up the fight and the peace came. I'm embarrassed by how many times that needs to happen in my life, those sorts of things. But we just have to be sensitive to the spirit of God. There'll be much reading of the word, this much memorization of the word and recitation. There'll be much preaching, prayer, solitude and fellowship in the next 43 hours. God will be speaking, it's very likely that if you open your heart and you look to God by faith, it's not only very likely, it will be inevitable that God is gonna speak to you in some way because we all have places we need to grow. And so God's gonna put his finger in your life and it will be your decision or not whether you will move, whether you will act upon that and obey. And we're not interested in just having a wonderful time of warm fellowship and feeling the comforting presence of God's spirit in this place. We're here to give ourselves to him and to serve him and to obey him. You know, and so we have to ask ourselves these kind of questions, is Jerusalem on our minds or is it Babylon? Psalm 78's a very sad chapter describes the unfaithfulness of Israel. Twice in that chapter, Psalm 78, God says of Israel, that Israel has turned back. He's turned back. Is there someone here who's turned back to Babylon? Is Babylon still in your heart in some way? Is there a divided heart? You like your secret sin over here but you still got one foot in God's kingdom over here. You know, God hates divided hearts. He won't have that. He will spew us out of his mouth, he says. This is the day to seek Zion. This is the day to set your sights on this heavenly city. This is the day to call upon our heavenly merciful Father for the kind of faith that conforms to things not seen. This is what we need, brothers and sisters, in these days as we grapple with the practical issues. A living faith that sees beyond the influences of Babylon and sees the glories that await God's people. I want to close with a story that's near to me because I knew this woman whom this story relates to. In fact, by God's grace, mercy, I was privileged to bring the sermon at her funeral. Actually, some of her descendants are here tonight. I think this dear woman was one of the sweetest women, older women you ever met. I was a woman I'd like to be like her when I'm her age. She was such a sweet spirit, loved Jesus, and it was written all over her face. She's left testimony of the presence of God and you could feel her presence of God when you were near her. The sweet person, made sweet by Christ. You know, and I found this story in preparation for preaching the sermon at her funeral. And it was in the summer of 1889. This woman, her mother, I'll give the name, I trust it'll be okay. Mary Swarie, she's going now with the Lord. This dear woman's father, who was five years old, was on the train coming through central Pennsylvania, somewhere north of here, it was the summer of 1889 and it had rained a lot that summer. A lot of rain had fallen the night before and in the afternoon of May 31, 1889, that train approached that big stone bridge that crossed the Panama River in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. At that time, that bridge I think was just a year or two old and I believe it might still be standing there today in Johnstown. The train would normally have stopped to pick up mail or maybe water at the one end of the bridge or pick up passengers. But as that train came to that spot on that bridge, on that day, the flagman, the signalman was standing out by the track and he was frantically waving the train to go on and he shouted, the dam has broke, the dam has broke, the dam has broke. And the engineer opened up the steam and that train got out of there, thundered out of the valley just ahead of that wall of water that came down from 14 miles away in the mountains and 2,000 people died in that flood. Some of them died at the bridge, 80-some people died at that bridge as the debris came down and caught fire. Very likely if that train hadn't come out of there in the nick of time, it would have gotten swamped and never gotten away and very likely Mary Swary's descendants wouldn't be sitting here tonight. Faith shows us how to live relative to the future, according to the Word of God. Let us seek that faith at all costs. We see a glorious future for those who are one with Christ in his kingdom, but if we are reading the Word, we also see a very terrifying and beyond description future for those without saving faith and Noah saw something of that and he built an ark. And yes, we believe in an everlasting hell with real fire and a real Satan. And brothers and sisters, the judgment against Babylon is rising up like a water behind a dam that is about to break. And one day that judgment will break out. We do well to live with that reality in front of us. We're motivated by that. Yes, we are. It would be right to be motivated to leave that bridge as that wall of water is coming down. It's right to be motivated to save our lives. But you know, the motivation doesn't, doesn't maybe, it may not begin there and it certainly doesn't end there. Motivation that propels us on is a vision of this heavenly city, the new Jerusalem. And might I say that Kingdom Fellowship 2018 is like that signal man by the side of our lives. And he's waving. This weekend is waving us away from condemned Babylon toward a glorious Zion. Let us put our hand to the throttle and take the needed action this weekend. Brothers and sisters, let's stand for prayer. Our heavenly Father, thank you for your son, Jesus, who came into this world and he healed people, raised the dead, cast out demons. And he lived the most, he lived a perfectly righteous life and he showed us by all that what your Kingdom is and that it will not be shaken. The forces of hell were arrayed against him. They couldn't shake him. He went through the cross, rose triumphant, conquered death, Satan sinned at the grave, came out of the grave, ascended into your right hand where now you're preparing a place for us heavenly Father through Jesus and we look forward to that Kingdom that is to come. In the meantime, we have a foretaste of it here. If we yield ourselves to you and open our hearts to your presence and to the reality of your spirit, help us to do that, help us not to hold anything back, forgive us heavenly Father for it being so earthbound. I confess I often like that way too much, heavenly Father. Have mercy on us, lift our eyes, let us see the things that are not seen, give us a faith that conforms to the unseen. Let it begin this weekend in my own life, in Jesus' name, amen.