Kingdom Economy - Heaven’s Wealth and Babylon’s Fall
“Come out of her, my people, lest you share in her sins, and lest you receive of her plagues.” - Revelation 18:4
“Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you.” - Matthew 6:33
In every age, the economy reveals the heart of a kingdom. Babylon’s economy is driven by greed, control, and the illusion of scarcity. It entices with promises of security while quietly enslaving. But the Kingdom of God operates on a completely different axis, not on the currency of fear, but on the abundance of the Father’s heart. We are entering the age where the two systems will stand in stark contrast, and the elect must choose which one they will trust.
Babylon’s Economy - The System That Devours
Babylon’s wealth is not neutral. It is sustained by cycles of debt, by the exploitation of labor, and by the commodification of life itself. The merchants of the earth grow rich not by giving life, but by draining it from others. Babylon sells everything, from the bodies of men to the souls of the unwary.
This system thrives on fear. Fear of lack keeps the masses compliant, working endlessly for wages that never truly satisfy. Babylon measures worth in possession and position, yet nothing it gives can survive the fire of eternity.
The elect must see that Babylon’s economy is not simply a financial system; it is a spiritual network that trades in allegiance. To partake of her wealth without discernment is to come under her yoke. This is why heaven calls, “Come out of her.” The call is not to abandon provision, but to abandon trust in the counterfeit source.
The Nature of Kingdom Provision
“The earth is the Lord’s, and all its fullness.” - Psalm 24:1
The Kingdom economy operates from a revelation of ownership: everything belongs to the King. The sons of God are not owners in the Babylonian sense; they are stewards of what has been entrusted to them. In this stewardship, there is no fear of lack because the source is inexhaustible.
In the Kingdom, multiplication flows from obedience. Five loaves feed thousands when placed in the Master’s hands. A widow’s jar of oil does not run out when surrendered to the prophetic word. This is because the Kingdom’s supply is not bound to earthly markets; it is tied to the abundance of heaven.
Those who live in this economy do not hoard, they release. They understand that generosity is not loss, but participation in the endless circulation of the King’s provision. They store treasure where moth and rust cannot touch it, investing in eternity rather than temporal gain.
Living Free from the Spirit of Mammon
“You cannot serve God and Mammon.” - Matthew 6:24
Mammon is not just money; it is the spirit that demands worship through trust in wealth. It promises control, comfort, and safety, but it enslaves those who bow to it. In the Kingdom, wealth is a tool, never a master.
The elect overcome Mammon not by poverty for its own sake, but by refusing to let resources define identity or dictate obedience. They live with open hands, ready to receive and ready to release, knowing their true inheritance is incorruptible.
Freedom from Mammon’s grip means you can be entrusted with true riches, the authority, wisdom, and eternal resources of the Kingdom. These cannot be bought or sold, yet they can transform nations more than any currency.
The Collapse of Babylon’s Market
Revelation declares that Babylon’s market will collapse in a single hour. Merchants will weep, kings will lament, and the entire network of earthly power will crumble. This is not simply economic downturn, it is the judgment of a system built on injustice.
For the elect, this is not a moment of fear, but of transition. While the systems of man shake, the unshakable Kingdom will stand. Those who have already shifted their trust from Babylon’s table to the Lamb’s table will find themselves sustained while others panic.
The fall of Babylon is the rise of the manifest Kingdom economy. It is the moment when the world will see that there is another way to live, another source to draw from, and another King to serve.
The call is clear: come out of Babylon’s economy and live from the abundance of heaven. The King has no recession, no deficit, no scarcity. His storehouses are never empty, His resources never fail, and His generosity never ends. The sons of the Kingdom will not be defined by what they hold in their hands, but by who holds them in His.
— Joe Restman
Mystic-Scribe | Flame-Bearer
Quill Dipped in Lightning