And the ten horns which thou sawest upon the beast, these shall hate the whore, and shall make her desolate and naked, and shall eat her flesh, and burn her with fire.
Those ten horns you saw on the beast? They're going to turn on the corrupt woman with pure hatred. They'll strip her of everything, leave her with nothing, completely destroy her, and burn what's left to ashes.
Even evil turns on itself in the end, corruption always destroys corruption.
📚 Historical Context
In the Book of Revelation, written during the Roman Empire's persecution of early Christians, the beast symbolizes oppressive worldly powers like Rome, while the "whore" represents Babylon, a biblical image for corrupt and idolatrous systems that seduce people away from God. The ten horns likely refer to allied kings or forces that initially support the beast but will turn against the whore, illustrating God's sovereign judgment on evil alliances as part of the end-times narrative. This apocalyptic vision draws from Old Testament prophecies to encourage faithfulness amid suffering.
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