Description
The Book of Revelation is placed last in the Bible for good reason! It should be the last book of the Bible that anyone seeks to become an expert on. The reason for this is simple. Without a thorough understanding of the rest of Scripture most of Revelation will neither make sense nor be appropriately appreciated. Most of the Book of Revelation is saturated in Old Testament imagery. Its language is highly symbolic and to be regarded as apocalyptic (revealing the future). It has clear echoes from the Books of Daniel and Zechariah where we also find similar apocalyptic passages.
The Book of Revelation is not necessarily filled with detailed and titillating predictions about the future of a world filled with super-computers, high-tech commerce, and “big-brotherish” governments, then just what is its theme? We have too long craved for Christian soothsayers and their confident fortune telling who look not into a crystal ball, but into the pages of Bible. The surfeit of speculative paperback Christian books on end times teaching is testament to this. Often when I have presented an exegesis of Revelation and Matthew 24 I have been asked, “Well, what does the Bible say is going to happen then?” My response is to direct our attention back to the Word of God itself, and to guard against going beyond what it clearly says. Because of this desire, I have felt the need to write this commentary on Revelation.


