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The Lion and the Lamb (Paperback)
Loot Price: R302
Discovery Miles 3 020
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The Lion and the Lamb (Paperback)
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Loot Price R302
Discovery Miles 3 020
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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An easy to read introduction to the book of Revelation by a
respected biblical scholar.; Do you find Revelation hard to
understand? Help is at hand! Dr Pieter J. Lalleman, Tutor of
Biblical Studies at Spurgeon's College, London, takes the reader
step by step through the challenges of the Bible's last and most
difficult to understand book.Details: The book of Revelation is
first and foremost a letter addressed to seven churches in Asia
Minor (modern day Turkey). Like any normal letter the book contains
references to the situation of the readers. As later readers we
look over the shoulders of the original readers into a
correspondence which initially was not directed to us.Yet
Revelation is also a prophetic book. John himself makes this claim
in 1:3 and 22:7, 10, 18 and 19; in 10:11 his work is called
prophesying. But what is prophecy in the Bible? People such as
Elijah, Isaiah and Jeremiah were messengers of God who spoke his
word to their contemporaries. God gave them spiritual insight into
their time so that they could shine God's light on it. They knew
God's precepts and applied these to the situation. Prophets warned
people if they were not living as God wanted, but on the other hand
they encouraged positive developments. Prophets pointed people to
the consequences of their behaviour and in that context they also
spoke about the future.Jewish and Christian prophecy is thus not
primarily a form of prediction of the future. It was first and
foremost relevant for those who were being addressed; it confronted
them with God's opinion of their situation, with his hopes, his
promises, and sometimes also with his judgement in case they would
not listen. But when they repented, God adapted his plans, as we
see in the book of Jonah. We will approach Revelation in the same
way in which we handle all prophecy: by asking what kind of
situation is in view and what was expected of the first hearers.
Subsequently we will raise the question how this might be relevant
to us in the twenty-first century.Revelation is a letter and a
prophecy, but it is also an apocalyptic book. The Greek word for
'revelation' in 1:1 is 'apocalypse'. We often use this word in such
expressions as 'an apocalyptic event', but we must be careful that
our modern language does not hinder our understanding of the Bible.
Apocalyptic texts are books which claim to contain revelations
about the heavenly world and/or about the future, but not
necessarily about disasters. And they challenge us to check our
behaviour.The studies in this book discuss the more readily
accessible parts of Revelation, with special attention to the
connections of these passages with the Old Testament.About the
AuthorRev. Dr. Pieter J. Lalleman is Tutor in Biblical Studies at
Spur-geon's College, London. His previous works include: The Acts
of John, A Critical Companion to the Bible: A Literary Refer-ence,
and 1, 2 en 3 Johannes (Commentary on the Johannine Epistles in
Dutch).
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