

âȘ Lesson 13: IMAGES OF THE END
đ 13.4 The Drying of the Euphrates
âš When the River Runs Dry â The Fall of Babylon Is Near
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đŠ Introduction
The story of ancient Babylon is more than just a chapter in ancient world historyâit is a prophetic mirror for our time. What happened in 539 B.C. with the fall of Babylon finds a striking parallel in the final phase of earthâs history as described in the book of Revelation. The Euphratesâthe “supply system” of Babylonâdried up, and the city fell. In Revelation 16, this is repeated symbolically, this time in the context of spiritual Babylon.
These prophetic images are not cryptic riddles but warnings filled with grace, calling us to repentance and watchfulness. This Bible study leads us deep into God’s Wordâand concludes with a story that shows how these truths could become real in the 21st century.
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đ Bible Study â Daniel 5:18â31 & Revelation 16:12â19
đ Daniel 5: Judgment on Babylon
Belshazzar, Babylon’s final king, threw a party in the midst of crisis. While enemies outside were diverting the Euphrates, he mocked the God of Israel, drinking wine from the sacred vessels of the temple. That night, mysterious handwriting appeared on the wall:
âMene, mene, tekel, u-parsin.â
God had weighed the kingdom and found it wanting. That very night, Babylon fellâunprepared, overconfident, godless.
đ Revelation 16: The Plagues Before the End
Revelation 16:12 says:
âThe sixth angel poured out his bowl on the great river Euphrates, and its water was dried up to prepare the way for the kings from the east.â
This is symbolic, but its meaning is profound: the “water supply” of spiritual Babylonâits sources of power, control, and supportâis dried up, and the way is cleared for Godâs intervention. This marks the final phase before Christâs return.
The following verses (16:13â16) describe the gathering for the battle of Armageddonâa spiritual conflict where the powers of the world rise up against God. Just like ancient Babylon, people remain oblivious to whatâs really happeningâthey party, dance, ignore. And then itâs too late.
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đ Answers to the Questions
đ What parallels do you see between Revelation 16 and Daniel 5?
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In both stories, people live in a dangerous illusion of safety.
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In both, judgment is declaredâwritten in Daniel, symbolic in Revelation.
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The drying up of the Euphrates marks the turning pointâin Babylon literally, in Revelation spiritually.
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A clear warning is given, but ignored.
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Both events end suddenlyâin one night, without a chance to reverse the outcome.
đ What good news is found in Revelation 16:15? What does it mean not to be ânakedâ?
Revelation 16:15:
âLook, I come like a thief! Blessed is the one who stays awake and remains clothed, so as not to go naked and be shamefully exposed.â
The good news? Jesus is coming.
The call to us? Stay awake.
âClothingâ here symbolizes righteousness, spiritual preparedness, and purity (see Revelation 3:18).
To be ânakedâ means to face judgment without forgiveness, without a relationship with Christ, without spiritual covering.
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âš Spiritual Principles
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Watchfulness guards against surprise.
Spiritual drowsiness is more dangerous than outside pressure. -
Godâs judgment is justâbut never without warning.
Like with Belshazzar, God announces His actionsâthrough signs, His Word, His Spirit. -
The worldâs systems are not eternal.
The “water” of spiritual Babylon can vanish suddenlyâwhat appears stable may be deceptive. -
Grace is for todayânot someday.
Jesusâ callââBlessed is the one who watchesââis not a threat, but a promise to those who trust Him.
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đ§© Application for Daily Life
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Do you live as if Jesus could return todayâor as if thereâs still “plenty of time”?
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Do you intentionally make space to hear Godâs voiceâthrough Scripture, prayer, and silence?
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Are there âEuphratesâ sources in your lifeâthings you rely on instead of God?
đ Set aside one Sabbath evening per week to spiritually examine your heart.
đ Reflect: What gives me securityâand what gives me salvation?
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â Conclusion
The story of Babylon is not just history. It is prophecy in motion.
Like Belshazzar, we too can be blinded by the illusion of controlâwhile the âEuphratesâ of our age is already drying up. Revelation doesnât call us to fearâbut to decision. Watchfulness isnât an accidentâitâs a spiritual discipline.
Godâs grace calls out to us today. His coming is certain.
The question is: Will you be readyâor caught by surprise?
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đ Thought of the Day
âGod doesnât only write on palace wallsâHe speaks to the heart.â
Whoever listens today will not be shaken tomorrow.
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âïž Illustration â When the River Runs Dry: The Last Night in Babylon
The city was a marvel of the modern ageââBabylon Central,â the shining heart of a global digital order that believed itself invincible. Glass towers scraped the clouds while ad drones projected glowing messages into the dusk: âProgress is Freedom,â âTrust the System,â âYou are your own god.â An artificial riverâEuphrateXâran beneath the city, powering the entire system: energy, information, water, light. Modeled after an ancient river, it was the city’s lifebloodâpulsing, unbeatable.
Elina, a quiet woman in her 30s, worked as an archivist in the lowest sector of the Global Cultural Authority. Her task: sort data, âfilterâ cultural traces. Anything that didnât match the values of the age was removedâarchived deep or deleted. Elina had learned not to question the system. It worked. Always.
But one rainy Tuesday evening, she found something unusual: a thin, yellowed box labeled âUndigitized â Religious.â Curiosity made her open it. Inside was a leather-bound bookâthe Bible. She skimmed through it, until one handwritten-marked verse stopped her:
âYou will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.â â Jeremiah 29:13
The words struck her like a spark in darkness. In the days that followed, she secretly read more. And then she reached Daniel 5.
A king. A feast. Holy vessels mocked. A hand writing on the wall. The river drying. The city falling. And all during a party. It felt like an echoâtoo close to ignore. Elina couldnât explain why, but she knew: this was more than history. It was a warning.
Meanwhile, Babylon Central prepared for its biggest event yet: âGlobal Unity Nightââa worldwide festival of light and oneness. It was marketed as âthe modern Babel in lightââa night without religion, without gods, where humanity alone would be celebrated. EuphrateX pulsed in gold and blue, and AI-crafted symphonies echoed through the city. Everything was ready. Everythingâexcept Elinaâs heart.
She had started praying. Quietly, hesitantly.
âGod, if you’re real⊠if you’re speaking⊠speak to me.â
And He didânot in a voice, not in lightning, but in a growing unease. A stirring: Go. Warn. Do something.
On the night of the festival, the skies above Babylon turned crimsonâsatellite staging, nanoparticle light, holographic dancers. But Elina didnât go to the square. She entered the old maintenance tunnel beneath EuphrateX. Her hands trembledânot in fear, but in conviction. The system would fallânot by her hand, but because its source would be cut.
She carried a small USB stickâwith a message. No virus. No hack. Just one verse:
âBehold, I come like a thief. Blessed is the one who stays awake and keeps their clothes with them.â â Revelation 16:15
She plugged it into the old server hub, knowing she was being watched. But it didnât matter. At that moment, the EuphrateX systemâs pressure dropped. The flow stopped. The city flickered. Not because of Elinaâbut because someone had redirected the source. Sabotage? Divine act? Within minutes, districts went dark. The light show froze. The âinvincible Babylon codeâ was broken. People screamed. Some kept dancing. Many thought it was part of the show. But it wasnât.
In the cityâs command center, a voice cried: âRun emergency protocol! Reboot!â
But nothing worked.
An analyst whispered, âThe river⊠is dry.â
Elina stood in the dark tunnel. Tears on her cheeks. No fear. No triumph. Just a whisper inside:
âNow you see why I prepared you.â
In the week that followed, the city fell. Not with bombs, but with silence. A system collapsedânot from attack, but because its godless foundation crumbled.
But Elina wasnât alone. Others had read the message, shared it in secret, opened their hearts. Like a new people stepping out of old Egypt, they left Babylon. Not perfect. But awake. Ready.
And while the world tried to explain the collapse, while new EuphrateX versions were being planned, some began to readâsecretly, undergroundâthe ancient stories. Daniel. Revelation. And the Gospel of a King who truly cameânot to party, but to save.
âThe city will fall. Not with noise. But with light. And dancing. And indifference. But those who watch wonât be naked. Those who believe wonât be shaken.â
