Religious Babylon: A System Built On Greed

Religious Babylon: A System Built On GreedπŸ’°

INTRO
Her towers pierce the clouds πŸ™οΈ, shining with stolen gold πŸ†.
Her streets sparkle under the sun β˜€οΈ, but every stone is cemented with the sweat and blood 🩸 of the poor.
Music 🎢 fills her markets, drowning the groans of the oppressed.
Perfume πŸ’ rises in her halls, masking the stench of injustice. Religious Babylon

She holds a golden cup 🍷 β€” rich, dazzling, irresistible β€” yet inside is the venom 🐍 of greed and the wine of covetousness.
Kings πŸ‘‘ bow to her, merchants πŸ’° serve her, nations 🌍 drink from her hand until their hearts forget the Lord.

But Heaven’s voice thunders like a shofar πŸ“― across the nations: Religious Babylon

β€œCome out of her, My people, lest you share in her sins, and lest you receive of her plagues!”

This is not a suggestion β€” it is a rescue order 🚨.
For Babylon’s fall is not far off, and when she burns πŸ”₯, only those standing in Zion πŸ•ŠοΈπŸŒΏ will remain unshaken. Religious Babylon

Chapter 1 β€” The Golden Cup in the Hand of the Harlot πŸ·πŸ‘‘


She sits robed in scarlet ❀️, a queen in the eyes of the world but a harlot before Heaven.
Her garments shimmer with gold thread πŸ†, every jewel πŸ’Ž upon her stolen from the backs of the poor.
She laughs in luxury, draped in treasures that do not belong to her,
and with a painted hand she lifts a golden cup β€” not to serve, but to seduce.

Inside the cup swirls a wine as rich as the sunset 🍷,
but it is laced with the blood 🩸 of prophets, saints, and the innocent of the earth.
One sip clouds the mind 😡, dulls the heart πŸ’”, and blinds the eyes πŸ‘οΈβ€πŸ—¨οΈ.
Kings πŸ‘‘ stagger under its spell,
nations 🌍 sway in drunken worship at her table πŸ‡. Religious Babylon

She offers this drink to the whole world β€”
a covenant of corruption in a vessel of beauty. Religious Babylon
The more they drink, the more they forget the Lord… until their tongues cannot speak His name. Read our New Book Here

Chapter 2 β€” Merchants of the Earth βš“πŸ’°


When Babylon falls, the earth shakes 🌍,
and the markets crash πŸ“‰ like a crystal vessel shattering on stone.
The merchants lift their voices β€” not in repentance πŸ™…β€β™‚οΈ, but in grief for their lost profits πŸ’”πŸ’°. Religious Babylon

Silks πŸͺ‘ lie moth-eaten, spices 🌿 rot in warehouses,
pearls βšͺ lose their shine,
and ships 🚒 of fine wood sit anchored in dead harbors. Religious Babylon

The heartbeat of Babylon has never been mercy 🀍, truth πŸ“œ, or justice βš–οΈ.
It is the thud of coins πŸͺ™ on a counting table.
Her priests wear the robes of commerce,
her altars are trading floors,
and her prayers are invoices.

In the day of her ruin, the merchants will stand far off,
watching the smoke of her burning πŸ”₯,
weeping not for her sins,
but because the gold has stopped flowing,
and their ships have nowhere to sail.

Chapter 3 β€” Greed as Religion πŸ›οΈπŸ’€


In Babylon, greed is not just a vice β€” it is a god 🐍.
She dresses it in priestly robes πŸ‘˜,
crowns it with gold πŸ†,
and sets it on the altar ⛩️ for the nations to worship.

Her gospel is simple: Gain is godliness πŸ’°βœ¨.
Her scripture: β€œBlessed are the rich, for they shall rule.” Religious Babylon
Her offering plate is never full β€”
because the god she serves is never satisfied.

The true word of the Lord says, β€œGive, and it shall be given unto you” πŸ™Œ.
Babylon twists it into, β€œTake all you can before someone else does.” βš”οΈ

Her incense 🌫️ is ambition,
her hymns are advertisements πŸ“Ί,
her sacrifices are the souls of the laborers πŸ˜” β€”
spent, used, and discarded once the profit is made. Religious Babylon

She bows not to Heaven,
but to the balance sheet πŸ“Š.
In her temple, the only miracle is multiplication β€” of money, not mercy.

Chapter 4 β€” The Trap of Debt and Desire β›“οΈπŸ’³


Babylon’s streets are paved with promises 🌟 β€”
but her gates πŸšͺ are locked with chains of debt ⛓️.
She smiles πŸ₯€ and whispers β€œfreedom” πŸ•ŠοΈ
while slipping a noose of interest πŸ’° around the necks of the poor.

Her merchants fill the skies 🌬️ with glittering images πŸ–ΌοΈ β€”
bright, glossy lies designed to stir covetousness 😈.
She teaches men to crave what they do not need, Religious Babylon
and to buy what they cannot afford.

Desire becomes debt πŸ’³.
Debt becomes slavery 🀐.
And slavery becomes normal πŸ’€ β€”
a lifestyle passed from father to son,
mother to daughter,
until chains feel like bracelets.

She sells the illusion of abundance 🍾,
while quietly transferring the wealth of nations 🌍 into the hands of the few.
Her victims smile as they sign the contract ✍️,
never knowing it is a covenant with captivity.

Chapter 5 β€” Come Out of Her, My People πŸ“―πŸƒβ€β™‚οΈ


The cry is not gentle β€” it is a trumpet blast πŸ“― from the courts of Heaven.
It thunders across nations 🌍, shaking palaces and marketplaces alike:

β€œFlee! Do not linger! Do not look back!” πŸš«πŸ‘€

This is not a polite invitation β€” it is a rescue order 🚨.
For the fires πŸ”₯ are already kindled,
and Babylon’s judgment is not far off.

To come out of her is more than leaving her streets πŸ™οΈ β€”
it is tearing her values πŸ’” out of your heart ❀️‍πŸ”₯.
It is breaking covenant βœ‚οΈ with greed,
cutting ties with exploitation 🐍,
and renouncing the false god of more πŸ’°. Religious Babylon

The Lord calls His people into a different economy πŸ‘‘ β€”
one where righteousness rules βš–οΈ,
and justice flows like a mighty river 🌊.
Those who hear His voice and obey will stand in Zion πŸ•ŠοΈπŸŒΏ,
while the smoke of Babylon’s ruin rises behind them.

Chapter 6 β€” Zion’s Economy πŸ•ŠοΈπŸŒΏπŸ‘‘


Zion has no stock market πŸ“ˆ β€”
her currency is covenant 🀝,
her wealth is measured in mercy 🀍,
and her profit is counted in souls redeemed πŸ•ŠοΈ.

Here, gold πŸ† is not hoarded in vaults β€” it is placed in open hands πŸ™Œ.
Bread 🍞 is not sold at a markup β€” it is broken and shared at the table of the Lord πŸ‡.
The gates πŸšͺ never close,
and the storehouses overflow 🌱 β€” not because of exploitation, but because of generosity.

In Zion, stewardship replaces greed.
Wealth is a tool πŸ› οΈ to build cities of righteousness πŸ™οΈ,
to lift the poor 🀲 from the dust,
and to set captives πŸ”“ free from the chains of lack.

The King πŸ‘‘ Himself walks her streets,
and His throne is the center of all trade βš–οΈ.
Every transaction is holy,
every exchange an act of love ❀️.

While Babylon’s riches rot πŸͺ¦ in the ruins of her pride,
Zion’s treasures shine brighter with every generation ✨.
For her economy is eternal β€”
built not on gold and silver,
but on the unshakable justice of God 🌟.

Religious Babylon

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