Revelation Chapter 17 introduces another extreme image: the "whore of Babylon," which we will learn is the personification of Rome, and the seductive power of all human empires. While it is a striking and memorable image, presented without any context, it can support ideas about women's roles in society that have been unhelpful in the past, and continue to be unhelpful today.
Too often women who do not conform to a given society's view of faithfulness are cast aside as "whores." There is no name you can call a man, no matter unfaithful he has been, that cuts quite as deep. So, rather than dive right in with Revelation's image of unfaithfulness personified in a female form, I would like to first set a counterexample, also from the New Testament: Mary Magdalene, the "apostle to the apostles."
Though Mary herself was maligned by a medieval Pope with an overactive imagination, what we know from the New Testament is that Mary was freed from seven demons by Jesus' healing, that she followed Jesus along with his disciples and provided for them from her own financial resources, and that she was the first of his followers to see him after his resurrection.
Mary Magdalene also stands out in the Bible as being one of only a few women not defined by her relationship to a man. Contrary to modern theories that Mary Magdalene was Jesus' wife, we hear nothing of the sort from the New Testament. Mary Magdalene is not known as a wife of a husband or mother to a son, but as a disciple among disciples, and a witness among witnesses. In fact, some describe her as "apostle to the apostles," for Mary was the first to proclaim that Jesus is risen from the dead.
My poetic Excursus on MARY MAGDALENE
Excursus II: The Faithful Witness of Magdala
A village, on the shores of Galilee,
Where seven unclean spirits claim one soul,
In Magdala, one woman is set free;
Dear Mary, by her Savior, is made whole.
Disciple, patron, witness, with the twelve,
She follows Jesus and proclaims God’s Reign;
Supporting with the food from her own shelves;
Three women’s generosity, Christ’s gain.
Returning to the tomb, when all is lost,
From gardener to rabbi, with one word
“Mary!” cries he who just was on the cross;
She preaches early, “I have seen the Lord!”
She, for that moment, the whole Church must be,
By whose strong witness all in Christ are free.