17 - Revelation Flashcards
4 main interpretive approaches
pretorist, historicist/timeline, futurist, idealist/symbolic
preterist approach 2
- most common among modern commentators
- reads in relation to its 1century historical context, for ex as seeing the roman empire as an enemy of the gospel/church
historicist/timeline approach
attempts to decode various symbols in application to major events, periods, and figures that have unfolded in western world history
futurist approach
attempts to decode symbols and applies them to predictions ab major events, periods, and figures yet to take place in a period prior to Christ’s return, often held to include the rapture
idealist/symbolic approach 2
- reads apocalyptic visions metaphorically as representing the continuing contest between good and evil, and the experience and struggle of believers in all ages
- intended to reassure them that the cross has defeated sin and death, the righteous will be vindicated, and the wicked punished, God’s purposes fully and finally restored
literary form
apocalyptic prophecy in the form of a circular letter
apocalypse form 3
- seeks to reveal (greek word) the divine will at work in the world, seen in 2 key theological features
- aims to reveal and communicate a transcendent perspective upon the world
- addresses an urgent question common to all apocalypses: who is Lord over all? God is, not roman emperor
prophetic form 3
- john is a Christian prophet who uses ot prophecies in relation to their fulfillment in Jesus
- is saturated with allusions and echoes of the ot
- draws on and adapts for its own purposes a startling series of images from OT architecture, rituals, and festivals
circular letter
sent to 7 churches in Asia Minor, which are representative of all other churches
letters to the churches common pattern 6
- opening instruction to write to a specific church
- Jesus identified with a brief description
- statement “I know” followed with an account of the church’s situation
- praised for endurance or blamed for abandoning the faith (ephesus both)
- encouraged and or exhorted in some way
- final word
cycles
- always cycle through themes of vindication, judgement, and God’s glory
- always end with God being praised
act 1 cycles 3
- 1 - Christ and the 7 churches in Asia Minor
- 2 - heavenly thone room and the 7 scrolls unsealed
- 3 - 7 trumpets
act 2 cycles 3
- 4 - dragon and the beasts
- 5 - 7 bowls, the beast, the harlot
- 6 - Christ defeats the dragon and the milennial kd, then final conflict and new heaven and new earth
ch 4 and the vision of God 4
- set in divine throne room
- portrays worship of God
- uses temple imagery
- political imagery
divine throne room
- gives John’s readers a heavenly perspective upon the nature of and final resolution to their earthly situation