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Sweet Revelation

Sweet Revelation
Author: Davida Blanton
Publisher: WestBow Press
Total Pages: 191
Release: 2015-10-26
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1512706930

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How is the God of heaven showing Himself to the world? How has He shown Himself to you? Sweet Revelation is one womans revelation story, a narrative memoir written to people in all walks of life. Author Davida Blanton describes times throughout her life when God showed Himself real to her. In her darkest moments of fear, disappointment, and grief, Gods arm brought comfort to Davida and healed her brokenness, wrapping her in truth, embracing her in love, protecting her in light. The word revelation means an unveiling. When something is unveiled before our eyes, it is made visible. When eternal things are unveiled before us, allowing us to see in the spiritual realm, our lives are affected in profound ways. We are changed. This happens differently for each person, because every man and woman has unique needs and experiences. This book tells how its happened for one woman and invites you to consider how its happened in your own life. Jesus said, The person who has my commands and keeps them really loves me; and whoever really loves me...I will love him and will show Myself to him. I will let Myself be clearly seen by him and make Myself real to him. (John 14:21 AMP) Revelation of the sweetest kind. I anoint your eyes with eye salve, that you may see. -Words of Christ recorded in Revelation 3:18 (NKJV)


Revelation

Revelation
Author: Wilfrid J. Harrington
Publisher: Liturgical Press
Total Pages: 306
Release: 1993
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780814658185

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"A Michael Glazier book." Includes bibliographical references and indexes.


Reading Revelation

Reading Revelation
Author: Gordon W. Campbell
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 454
Release: 2022-01-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 022717383X

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The Book of Revelation can be read in various ways. Where interpretation opts not to venture beyond Revelation or approach the book as a forecast of end-time events, it typically favours either going behind the text, in search of a socio-historical context of origin to which it might refer, or else standing in front of the text and investigating the book’s reception history, or its present relevance and impact. Comparatively little interpretative work has been undertaken inside the text, exploring the mechanics of how Revelation ‘works’, still less how its complex parts might fit together into a meaningful whole. Gordon Campbell considers Revelation to be a coherent narrative composition that draws its hearer or reader into its text-world. In Reading Revelation: A Thematic Approach, Campbell gives an innovative account of Revelation’s sophisticated thematic content. Mindful of Revelation's narrative verve, or its architecture en mouvement (as Jacques Ellul once put it), Campbell plots a series of thematic trajectories through the book. On this reading, parody and parallelism fundamentally shape the whole narrative. As a first-ever integrated account of Revelation’s macro-themes, Reading Revelation makes an important contribution to Revelation scholarship. In its light, the book may justifiably be seen as the ‘crowning achievement’ of the Scriptures.


Revelation

Revelation
Author: John Christopher Thomas
Publisher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Total Pages: 692
Release: 2016-04-11
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1467445495

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The book of Revelation is perhaps the most theologically complex and literarily sophisticated — and also the most sensual — document in the New Testament. In this commentary John Christopher Thomas’s literary and exegetical analysis makes the challenging text of Revelation more accessible and easier to understand. Frank Macchia follows up with sustained theological essays on the book’s most significant themes and issues, accenting especially the underappreciated place of the Holy Spirit in the theology of Revelation.


The Book of Revelation

The Book of Revelation
Author: G. K. Beale
Publisher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Total Pages: 1153
Release: 2013-09-07
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1467422304

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This monumental commentary on the book of Revelation, originally published in 1999, has been highly acclaimed by scholars, pastors, students, and others seriously interested in interpreting the Apocalypse for the benefit of the church. Too often Revelation is viewed as a book only about the future. As G. K. Beale shows, however, Revelation is not merely a futurology but a book about how the church should live for the glory of God throughout the ages -- including our own. Engaging important questions concerning the interpretation of Revelation in scholarship today, as well as interacting with the various viewpoints scholars hold on these issues, Beale's work makes a major contribution in the much-debated area of how the Old Testament is used in the Apocalypse. Approaching Revelation in terms of its own historical background and literary character, Beale argues convincingly that John's use of Old Testament allusions -- and the way the Jewish exegetical tradition interpreted these same allusions -- provides the key for unlocking the meaning of Revelation's many obscure metaphors. In the course of Beale's careful verse-by-verse exegesis, which also untangles the logical flow of John's thought as it develops from chapter to chapter, it becomes clear that Revelation's challenging pictures are best understood not by apparent technological and contemporary parallels in the twentieth century but by Old Testament and Jewish parallels from the distant past.


Revelation's Rhapsody

Revelation's Rhapsody
Author: Robert Lowery
Publisher: College Press
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2006
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780899009469

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This excellent resource is designed to help the Bible student study the book of Revelation. It is not a commentary, but guide to effective, accurate study of this very important book of the Bible.


Johannine Literature

Johannine Literature
Author: Barnabas Lindars
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2000-05-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781841270814

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The highly popular Sheffield New Testament Guides are being reissued in a new format, grouped together and prefaced by one of the best known of contemporary Johannine scholars. This new format is designed to ensure that these authoritative introductions remain up to date and accessible to seminary and university students of the New Testament while offering a broader theological and literary context for their study. Alan Culpepper introduces the Johannine Writings as a whole, illuminating their distinctive historical and theological features and their importance within the New Testament canon.


The Conversion of the Nations in Revelation

The Conversion of the Nations in Revelation
Author: Allan J. McNicol
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 177
Release: 2011-04-28
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0567102440

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Allan McNicol examines the 'Conversion of the Nations' in the book of Revelation together with the author's vision for final redemption. Allan McNicol examines the longstanding tension between the author of Revelation 's description of the destruction of unrepentant nations early in the book in contrast with their final experience of salvation in Rev 21.24-26. McNicol examines how the author of Revelation interprets and refashions both scripture and the myths of the age in order to lay out his vision of redemption - leading to his ultimate conclusion that human political power (Rome) will crumble before the influence of the crucified Jesus. Through careful attention to references to the 'pilgrimage to the Gentiles' in prophetic literature, McNicol is able to draw valuable conclusions as to how the core tension examined may be resolved. This exegesis is in turn able show how the author of Revelation's alternative voice to Rome's power emerged among a small minority community in the Eastern Roman Empire and gained plausibility. This voice not only could articulate a construct of its own vindication (thus empowering its own converts) but it also construed a new destiny for the nations themselves separate and apart from Rome.


Revelation Unsealed

Revelation Unsealed
Author: James L. Resseguie
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2021-10-11
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 900449748X

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This narrative commentary systematically examines John's Apocalypse from a narrative critical perspective. After an introduction to narrative criticism, the volume focuses on point of view, setting, rhetoric, character, and plot in the Book of Revelation. The rhetorical and symbolic significance of numerals are discussed at length as are the multifaceted characters in the book such as demonic animals (locust, beasts, dragon, birds) and apocalyptic animals (lamb, four living creatures). The symbolic significance of topographical, architectural, agricultural, and other settings is emphasized. The final chapter of the book is a summary of some of the major theological themes of Revelation. The volume provides a useful methodology for the study of a much disputed book of the Bible.


The Revelation of John

The Revelation of John
Author: James L. Resseguie
Publisher: Baker Academic
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2009-04
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 080103213X

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Shows how to discern the theological and homiletical message of the book of Revelation through narrative analysis.