The ‘Great Whore’ of Babylon (Rev 17) as a Non-Survivor of Sexual Abuse
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method and Perspective
3. The ‘Whore’s’ Origins: Texts of Terror and Personified Cities in the Hebrew Bible
4. Revelation 17
4.1. The Whore’s “Multi-Sourced Textual Body” (M. Fletcher)
4.2. The ‘Whore’s’ Body, Appearance, and Gender (Roles)
4.3. The Whore’s Punishment
- In addition to the very corporeal description of the ‘great whore’ already shown above, she is introduced to the pericope as a ‘whore’ (πόρνη pornē), and will be repeatedly called a whore (and ‘mother of whores’) after that (Rev 17:1.5.15. and 16). ‘Whore’ is not only grammatically female in Greek, but also a highly gender-specific term in biblical literature;
- Rev 17:3 presents the character in question for the first time in the pericope outside of the angel’s annunciating speech. What John sees (ὁράω horaō) in Rev 17:3 is a woman (γυνή gynē). The character is subsequently called ‘woman’ four more times before the narrative moves on to describing her destruction (Rev 17:4.6.7.9);
- It is uncontested that the text contains signals pointing to the hybrid character of the woman. Among them are intertextual allusions to OT scripture, the fact that the text calls the inscription on the woman’s forehead a mystery (μυστήριον mystērion), and the verses Rev 17:7–15, in which the angel interprets several elements of the beast’s earlier description to John. However, in contrast to the beast, Rev 17:7–15 does not offer any interpretation of the woman herself. Her name, attire, and cup are also not part of the interpretation offered in Rev 17:7–15 (Sals 2004, p. 69);
- The woman is identified as a city in Rev 17:18. However, from a narratological point of view, it is significant that this identification happens after the description of her punishment in v. 16 (Fletcher 2014, p. 152). She is hated, left alone, made naked, dismembered, eaten, and burned before Rev 17:18a tells the readers: “The woman you saw is the great city” (NRSV).2
5. Babylon as a Non-Survivor of Sexual Abuse, Or: Where Does the City End and the Woman Start?
5.1. Methodological and Hermeneutical Remarks
- Metaphors depend crucially on the figurative elements they use. To stay within Maier’s terminology: It is highly relevant which semantic field is used in interference with the other; meaning is transported through this choice. In the context of the female city of Babylon, it is quite important that Rev 17 brings the semantic fields of ‘woman’ and ‘whore’ into interference with that of the ‘city’, because this interference adds specific characteristics to the readers’ mental image of the city and highlights other characteristics of the city that might be there already (for more on the general process of meaning-making in the metaphorical female cities, see Maier 2008, p. 60). Which characteristics are added and highlighted depends on the readers’ cultural context, their prior knowledge of similar texts, their personal experiences, and many other factors. With regard to socio-cultural aspects connected to the metaphor of female cities in ancient readers’ perspectives, there are already many excellent discussions (e.g., Seifert 1997; Baumann 2006; Maier 2008; Maier 2019). For ancient and modern contexts alike, it is important that this highly complex process of transferring characteristics is inextricably connected with the specific semantic field(s) used, so that meaning cannot just be extracted by ‘translating’ figurative speech into non-figurative language. In the context of the synoptic gospels’ parables, this has been discussed extensively: it makes a huge difference to speak about the unstoppable growth of the kingdom of God while using the semantic field of a spreading virus, the force of a tsunami—or the life cycle of a plant which bears abundant fruit. Similarly, it is relevant, if a city is personified as a ‘woman’ and ‘whore’, to depict a morally reprehensible and potentially dangerous entity (as, i.e., in the case of Babylon) or if it is personified as ‘man’ and ‘tyrant’.
- Additionally important to note is the fact that metaphorical speech is not a one-way-street in which meaning is transferred from one semantic field to the other (Maier 2008, p. 61; Zimmermann 2004, p. 106). In our case, not only do the semantic fields of ‘woman’ and ‘whore’ influence the way readers think about the ‘city’; rather, the way the meaning of ‘city’ changes in this process also changes the readers’ subsequent images of ‘woman’ and ‘whore’.
- This also shows that metaphoric speech actively involves its readers and/or listeners. While it is true for all forms of texts that readers have an essential role in meaning-making (Nicklas 2021, p. 116), in the case of metaphorical speech, the readers’ involvement is even more prominent than in most other forms of written communication. Readers are required to actively bridge the difference between the different semantic fields that are brought into contact with each other in the text and to construct meaning from the newly formed connection (Zimmermann 2004, p. 135; Rivera 2015, p. 63). In the case of Revelation, the readers are also sometimes tasked with entangling the not always linear but quite complex relationships between the different semantic fields. While this process of reader involvement, typical to metaphorical speech, is fascinating from a literary and narratological perspective, in the case of violent texts, it can also become problematic, as we will see in Section 6.1, below.
5.2. Babylon as Non-Survivor of Sexual Abuse
5.3. Sexual Abuse and Sexual Violence: Power and Punishment
6. Possible Consequences for Reading Rev 17 as a Roman Catholic Scholar
6.1. Readers and Their Bodies, Genders, and Traumas
6.2. Re-Thinking Interpretive Imperatives: Taking a Positional Stance
- To engage in discussion about a responsible way of reading ‘texts of sexual terror’ with survivors. Biblical interpretation must not be harmful (Alkier et al. 2021); as much is certainly true and must be recorded. More concrete steps towards what this means are necessary, and should be developed in dialogue with those of us most acutely in danger of being hurt. The many qualitative studies published in the last years should also be utilized;
- No interpretive track must claim exclusivity. As was emphasized above, this is not only important considering the Bible’s fundamental character as text, but an exclusive claim to interpretative authority can also be part of abusive strategies in cases of spiritual and sexual abuse;
- Efforts should be made so as to not set different interpretative possibilities against each other, as has been the case in the past, e.g., with feminist and post-colonial biblical exegesis. Instead, the radical contextuality of interpreting biblical texts should be acknowledged. Talking about sexual abuse and sexual violence as a white person from a warm and comfortable desk in Germany is, of course, just one perspective. Many voices need to be heard.
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Instead of contrasting the ‘great whore’ with other female characters in Revelation, as, e.g., Beale (1999) and others do, Moloney (2020) outlines a complete storyline with the development of one ‘woman’-character that extends through the second half of the narrative from the woman clothed with the sun giving birth to a son in Rev 12, through the punishment and destruction of the woman in Rev 16 and 17, and to her restitution and eventual marriage to the lamb in Rev 19 and 21. The woman in question is identified as Jerusalem and explicitly connected to the OT tradition of the female cities whose turning away from God and worshipping of different gods is described as adultery (Moloney 2020, p. 259; see also Lupieri 2015, p. 315 n. 53, who links the ‘great whore’ at least with the woman of Rev 12). While Moloney makes an interesting proposition that certainly deserves careful attention and a more extensive discussion than can be given here, one could also voice doubt in several regards, of which only one shall be listed here: the destruction of the ‘great whore’ in Rev 17:16 does resemble the violent and sexually charged punishment of Jerusalem in texts such as Ezek 16:39–41. Moreover, in Ezek 16:40, the dismemberment of Jerusalem with swords does not prevent JHWH from restituting her in the end (Ezek 16:55) (and to renew the covenant with his wife who is not only brought back under the control of JHWH but also permanently made mute with shame (Ezek 16:62–63)). In Revelation, however, there does not seem to be such an event of reassembly of the female city. Moreover, her final destruction is confirmed by an angel just a few verses before the narrative turns to the jubilation about the lamb’s wedding in Rev 19:7 (Sals 2004, p. 73). The angel throws a big millstone into the sea and emphasizes: “With such violence Babylon the great city will be thrown down, and will be found no more” (Rev 18:21b NRSV). How the narrative moves from such total annihilation to marriage would at least have to be argued more extensively. |
2 | To my knowledge, none of the above-mentioned textual details are contested with regard to textcritical considerations, with the possible exception of a variant reading of ἡ μήτηρ τῶν πορνῶν (hē mētēr tōn pornōn) in Rev 17:5. Neither the critical apparatus of Novum Testamentum Graece (28th edition) and Greek New Testament (5th edition) nor Metzger (1994) show variants relevant to the argument. For the debate concerning whether the ‘whores’ in Rev 17:5 should be considered female or male, see Bachmann (2012). |
3 | The exceptions to this rule include Job 26:6 LXX, with a reference to Sheol, yet another (personified?) space, being ‘naked’ before God, two references to nakedness in 1 Cor 15:37 and 2 Cor 5:3, where bodily resurrection is discussed, and Heb 4:13, where nakedness is used as a metaphor for the absence of deception and deceit. |
4 | Possibly, there is a second example of such a connection in Revelation. In Rev 2:20, Jezebel is introduced into the narrative, another woman (γυνή gynē) accused of ‘whoring’/’fornicating’ (πορνεύω porneuō). After mentioning ‘whoring’ twice (πορνεία porneia and πορνεύω porneuō) in Rev 2:20–21, Rev 2:22 describes the first part of the punishment that the ‘One like a Son of Man’—a Christ-like character—has devised for Jezebel: “Beware, I am throwing her on a bed […]” (NRSV). In the commentary literature, it is suggested again and again that the bed (κλίνη klinē) can and/or should be read as a ‘sickbed’, even though the context of the verse does not offer any indication to sickness whatsoever. Conspicuously absent from the most-read commentaries is the suggestion that Rev 2:22 might allude to Jezebel being raped, a reading plausible not only in light of the sexualized language of Rev 2:20–22 and the OT background of the character (Streete 1997, p. 154), but also the connection between the bed (κλίνη klinē) and sexuality made, e.g., in Ezek 23:14, Tob 8:4, Song 1:16, or Sir 23:18, as well as in the scene interpreted as an attempt to rape Ester, in which a bed (κλίνη klinē) prominently figures, too (Est 7:8). |
References
- Adler, Helen (pseudonym). 2020. Dafür sind wir nicht zuständig‘. In Erzählen als Widerstand. Berichte über Spirituellen und Sexuellen Missbrauch an Erwachsenen Frauen in der Katholischen Kirche. Edited by Barbary Haslbeck, Regina Heyder, Ute Leimgruber and Dorothee Sandherr-Klemp. Münster: Aschendorff, pp. 29–33. [Google Scholar]
- Alkier, Stefan. 2020. Das Markusevangelium als Tragikomödie lesen. In Modern and Ancient Literary Criticism of the Gospels. Edited by Robert Calhoun, David Moessner and Tobias Nicklas. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, pp. 219–42. [Google Scholar]
- Alkier, Stefan, Christos Karakolis, and Tobias Nicklas. 2021. 10 Leitthesen. In Sola Scriptura Ökumenisch. Edited by Stefan Alkier, Christos Karakolis and Tobias Nicklas. Paderborn: Schöningh, pp. 3–5. [Google Scholar]
- Bachmann, Michael. 2012. Wo bleibt das Positive? Zu Offb 6,1 f. und 17,5 in Rezeptionsgeschichte und Exegese. In Die Johannesoffenbarung. Ihr Text und Ihre Auslegung. Edited by Michael Labahn and Martin Karrer. Leipzig: Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, pp. 197–221. [Google Scholar]
- Bail, Ulrike. 1998. Gegen das Schweigen Klagen. Eine Intertextuelle Studie zu den Klagepsalmen Ps 6 und Ps 55 und der Erzählung von der Vergewaltigung Tamars. Gütersloh: Kaiser. [Google Scholar]
- Baumann, Gerlinde. 2006. Gottesbilder der Gewalt im Alten Testament Verstehen. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. [Google Scholar]
- Beale, G. K. 1999. The Book of Revelation. A Commentary on the Greek Text. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. [Google Scholar]
- Ben-Chorin, Schalom. 1986. Was ist der Mensch. Anthropologie des Judentums. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr. [Google Scholar]
- Berger, Klaus. 2017. Die Apokalypse des Johannes. Kommentar. Teilband 2. Freiburg, Basel and Wien: Herder. [Google Scholar]
- Bosenius, Bärbel. 2014. Der Literarische Raum des Markusevangeliums. Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener. [Google Scholar]
- Breytenbach, Cilliers. 2020. Exegese des Neuen Testaments. Auslegung sprachlich strukturierter Texte. In Von Texten zu Geschichten. Aufsätze zur Konzeption und Geschichte der Wissenschaft vom Neuen Testament. Edited by Cilliers Breytenbach. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, pp. 3–17. First published 2000. [Google Scholar]
- Exum, J. Cheryl. 1996. Plotted, Shot and Painted. Cultural Representations of Biblical Women. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press. [Google Scholar]
- Fischer, Irmtraud. 2021. Liebe, Laster, Lust und Leiden. Sexualität im Alten Testament. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer. [Google Scholar]
- Fletcher, Michelle. 2014. Flesh for Franken-Whore. Reading Babylon’s Body in Revelation 17. In The Body in Biblical, Christian and Jewish Texts. Edited by Joan Taylor. London and New York: Bloomsbury, pp. 144–64. [Google Scholar]
- Giesen, Heinz. 1997. Die Offenbarung des Johannes. Regensburg: Pustet. [Google Scholar]
- Greenough, Chris. 2020. The Bible and Sexual Violence Against Men. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Grütter, Nesina. 2019. Die Blöße der Stadt-Frauen. Überlegungen zur Verwendung der Substantive αἰσχύνη und ἀσχημοσύνη in der Septuaginta. In The Vocabulary of the Septuagint and Its Hellenistic Background. Edited by Eberhard Bons, Patrick Pouchelle and Daniela Scialabba. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, pp. 14–29. [Google Scholar]
- Haslbeck, Barbara. 2007. Sexueller Missbrauch und Religiosität. Wenn Frauen das Schweigen brechen: Eine Empirische Studie. Berlin: LIT. [Google Scholar]
- Haslbeck, Barbara, Regina Heyder, Ute Leimgruber, and Dorothee Sandherr-Klemp, eds. 2020. Erzählen als Widerstand. Berichte über Spirituellen und Sexuellen Missbrauch an Erwachsenen Frauen in der Katholischen Kirche. Münster: Aschendorff. [Google Scholar]
- Heussler, Milena. 2021. War deine Hurerei noch zu wenig?‘ Zur Metapher der Stadtfrau Jerusalem. Zürich: TVZ. [Google Scholar]
- Hieke, Thomas. 2015. Die literarische und theologische Funktion des Alten Testaments in der Johannesoffenbarung. In Poetik und Intertextualität der Johannesapokalypse. Edited by Stefan Alkier, Thomas Hieke and Tobias Nicklas. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, pp. 271–90. [Google Scholar]
- Hoff, Katharina (pseudonym). 2020. Das alles im Namen Gottes. In Erzählen als Widerstand. Berichte über Spirituellen und Sexuellen Missbrauch an Erwachsenen Frauen in der Katholischen Kirche. Edited by Barbara Haslbeck, Regina Heyder, Ute Leimgruber and Dorothee Sandherr-Klemp. Münster: Aschendorff, pp. 103–15. [Google Scholar]
- Kerstner, Erika, Barbara Haslbeck, and Annette Buschmann. 2016. Damit der Boden Wieder Trägt. Seelsorge Nach Sexuellem Missbrauch. Ostfildern: Schwabenverlag. [Google Scholar]
- Klein, Thorsten. 2017. Fleisch (NT). www.wibilex.de. Available online: https://www.bibelwissenschaft.de/stichwort/48865/ (accessed on 18 February 2022).
- König, Hildegard. 2020. Wenn Gottes Wort entweiht wird und sich zuletzt doch als heilsam erweist. Die Rolle der Heiligen Schrift in Missbrauchskontexten. In Erzählen als Widerstand. Berichte über Spirituellen und Sexuellen Missbrauch an Erwachsenen Frauen in der Katholischen Kirche. Edited by Barbara Haslbeck, Regina Heyder, Ute Leimgruber and Dorothee Sandherr-Klemp. Münster: Aschendorff, pp. 241–46. [Google Scholar]
- Lupieri, Edmondo. 1999. A Commentary on the Apocalypse of John. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. [Google Scholar]
- Lupieri, Edmondo. 2015. From Sodom and Balaam to the Revelation of John. Transtextual Adventures of Biblical Sins. In Poetik und Intertextualität der Johannesapokalypse. Edited by Stefan Alkier, Thomas Hieke and Tobias Nicklas. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, pp. 301–18. [Google Scholar]
- Magdalene, Rachel. 1995. Ancient Near Eastern Treaty Curses and the Ultimate Texts of Terror. A Study of the Language of Divine Sexual Abuse in the Prophetic Corpus. In A Feminist Companion to the Latter Prophets. Edited by Athalya Brenner. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, pp. 326–52. [Google Scholar]
- Maier, Christl. 2008. Daughter Zion, Mother Zion. Gender, Space and the Sacred in Ancient Israel. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. [Google Scholar]
- Maier, Christl. 2019. Tochter Zion und Hure Babylon. Zur weiblichen Personifikation von Städten und Ländern in der Prophetie. In Prophetie. Edited by Irmtraud Fischer and Juliana Claassens. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, pp. 109–225. [Google Scholar]
- Metzger, Bruce. 1994. A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament. Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft. [Google Scholar]
- Meyer, Marion. 1996. ‘Neue’ Bilder. Zur Verwendung und zum Verständnis von bildlichen Darstellungen in der Levante. In Hellenismus. Beiträge zur Erforschung von Akkulturation und Politischer Ordnung in den Staaten des Hellenistischen Zeitalters. Edited by Bernd Funck. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr, pp. 243–54. [Google Scholar]
- Moloney, Francis. 2020. The Apocalypse of John. A Commentary. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic. [Google Scholar]
- Müllner, Ilse, and Yvonne Sophie Thöne. 2012. Von Mutterhäusern, Landestöchtern und Stadtfrauen. Raum und Geschlecht im Alten Testament. Lectio Difficilior 1: 1–32. [Google Scholar]
- Nicklas, Tobias. 2021. Die Botschaft vom Reich Gottes. Erziehung und Bildungsangebot im Markusevangelium. Jahrbuch für Biblische Theologie 35: 115–34. [Google Scholar]
- Pippin, Tina. 2010. Of Metaphors and Monsters. The Body of the Whore of Babylon in the Apocalypse of John. The Classical Bulletin 86: 156–72. [Google Scholar]
- Poser, Ruth. 2019. Verkörperte Erinnerung. Trauma und ‘Geschlecht’ in prophetischen Texten. In Prophetie. Edited by Irmtraud Fischer and Juliana Claassens. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, pp. 273–92. [Google Scholar]
- Reaves, Jayme, and David Tombs. 2021. Introduction. Acknowledging Jesus as a Victim of Sexual Abuse. In When Did We See You Naked? Jesus as a Victim of Sexual Abuse. Edited by Jayme Reaves, David Tombs and Rocío Figueroa. London: SCM, pp. 1–11. [Google Scholar]
- Reaves, Jayme, David Tombs, and Rocío Figueroa. 2021. When Did We See You Naked? Jesus as a Victim of Sexual Abuse. London: SCM. [Google Scholar]
- Reisinger, Doris, and Ute Leimgruber. 2021. Sexueller Missbrauch oder sexualisierte Gewalt? feinschwarz.net. Available online: https://www.feinschwarz.net/sexueller-missbrauch-oder-sexualisierte-gewalt-ein-einspruch/ (accessed on 18 February 2022).
- Riede, Peter. 2012. Wüste (Theologische Bedeutung). www.wibilex.de. Available online: https://www.bibelwissenschaft.de/stichwort/35046/ (accessed on 18 February 2022).
- Rivera, Mayra. 2015. Poetics of the Flesh. Durham and London: Duke University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Rosenberg, Eliza. 2017. ‘As She Herself has Rendered’. Resituating Gender Perspectives on Revelation’s ‘Babylon’. In New Perspectives on the Book of Revelation. Edited by Adela Yarbro Collins. Leuven, Paris and Bristol: Peeters, pp. 545–60. [Google Scholar]
- Rossing, Barbara. 1999. The Choice Between Two Cities. Whore, Bride and Empire in the Apocalypse. Harrisburg: Trinity Press. [Google Scholar]
- Sals, Ulrike. 2004. Die Biographie der‚ Hure Babylon’. Studien zur Intertextualität der Babylon-Texte in der Bibel. Mohr Siebeck: Tübingen. [Google Scholar]
- Seifert, Elke. 1997. Tochter und Vater im Alten Testament. Eine ideologiekritische Untersuchung zur Verfügungsgewalt von Vätern über ihre Töchter. Neukirchener: Neukirchen-Vluyn. [Google Scholar]
- Setel, T. Drorah. 1985. Prophets and Pornography. Female Sexual Imagery in Hosea. In Feminist Interpretation of the Bible. Edited by Letty Russell. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, pp. 86–95. [Google Scholar]
- Stahl, Andreas. 2019. Traumasensible Seelsorge. Grundlinien für die Arbeit mit Gewaltbetroffenen. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer. [Google Scholar]
- Staubli, Thomas, and Silvia Schroer. 2014. Menschenbilder der Bibel. Ostfildern: Patmos. [Google Scholar]
- Streete, Gail. 1997. The Strange Woman. Power and Sex in the Bible. Louisville: Westminster John Knox. [Google Scholar]
- Trainor, Michael. 2014. The Body of Jesus and Sexual Abuse. How the Gospel Passion Narrative Informs a Pastoral Approach. Eugene: Wipf and Stock. [Google Scholar]
- Trible, Phyllis. 1984. Texts of Terror. Literary Feminist Readings of Biblical Narratives. Philadelphia: Fortress Press. [Google Scholar]
- Vander Stichele, Caroline. 2009. Re-Membering the Whore. The Fate of Babylon According to Revelation 17.16. In A Feminist Companion to the Apocalypse of John. Edited by Amy-Jill Levine. London: T&T Clark, pp. 106–20. [Google Scholar]
- Yarbro Collins, Adela. 2009. Feminine Symbolism in the Book of Revelation. In A Feminist Companion to the Apocalypse of John. Edited by Amy-Jill Levine. London: T&T Clark, pp. 121–30. [Google Scholar]
- Yarbro Collins, Adela. 2015. Rewritten Prophets. The Use of Older Scripture in Revelation. In Poetik und Intertextualität der Johannesapokalypse. Edited by Stefan Alkier, Thomas Hieke and Tobias Nicklas. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, pp. 291–300. [Google Scholar]
- Yee, Gale. 2001. ‘She is not my Wife and I am not her Husband’. A Materialist Analysis of Hosea 1–2. Biblical Interpretation 9: 345–83. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Yee, Gale. 2003. Poor Banished Children of Eve. Woman as Evil in the Hebrew Bible. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. [Google Scholar]
- Zimmermann, Ruben. 2004. Christologie der Bilder im Johannesevangelium. Die Christopoetik des Vierten Evangeliums unter Besonderer Berücksichtigung von Joh 10. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. [Google Scholar]
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2022 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
König, J. The ‘Great Whore’ of Babylon (Rev 17) as a Non-Survivor of Sexual Abuse. Religions 2022, 13, 267. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030267
König J. The ‘Great Whore’ of Babylon (Rev 17) as a Non-Survivor of Sexual Abuse. Religions. 2022; 13(3):267. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030267
Chicago/Turabian StyleKönig, Judith. 2022. "The ‘Great Whore’ of Babylon (Rev 17) as a Non-Survivor of Sexual Abuse" Religions 13, no. 3: 267. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030267
APA StyleKönig, J. (2022). The ‘Great Whore’ of Babylon (Rev 17) as a Non-Survivor of Sexual Abuse. Religions, 13(3), 267. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030267