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  1. Sep 3, 2021 · In many respects, it is outstanding. Beale’s commentary is the place to turn for insight on the many Old Testament allusions and echoes in the book of Revelation. My fundamental reservation about the book has to do with Beale’s modified idealist approach. Revelation is a prophecy (1:3; 19:10; 22:7, 10, 18, 19).

  2. Beeke’s commentary is structured as a series of 36 sermons that show how the Book of Revelation consists in seven cycles that describe God’s work in heaven and on earth from the crucifixion to his return in judgment. Beeke shows how each cycle encourages the church in its last-days trials. Purchase.

  3. The best commentaries on Revelation ranked by scholars and reviewers: (1) G. K. Beale in NIGTC, (2) Robert H. Mounce in NICNT, (3) Grant R. Osborne in BECNT

  4. Jul 2, 2004 · The format for the main body of Revelation, chapters 4 through 19, consists of four columns for the four major views: the historicist, the preterist, the futurist, and the spiritual approach. The historicist view sees Revelation as a record of the course of history from the time of the apostles to the end of the world; it is thus still in progress.

  5. As he argues, “in spite of gaps in our historical knowledge, the book of Revelation is able to communicate a powerful message that resonates across the centuries” (p. 9). For Hoskins, John depicts a great conflict that stretches from the Genesis narratives through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Consequently, “the biblical ...

  6. Oct 12, 2021 · Old not in the sense that it was written in, say, the 18 th century, but old in the sense that it was written in the THIRD century. That’s old. The commentary was written by a little-known church leader, Victorinus, who was bishop of Pettau (modern Ptuj in Slovenia). We don’t know a lot about him. He wrote a number of other biblical ...

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  8. www.concordiamlcms.com › home › 180019619Bible Study: Revelation

    1“The Author of the Book of Revelation is God, and the writer is John (Rev. 1:1). We take this John to be the disciple and the writer of the Fourth Gospel and the three epistles of John.” The Rev. Luther Poellot, Revelation, Concordia Classic Commentary Series, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, rpr. 1987, p. 1.

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