This blog is about the New Testament and Early Christianity. Initial thoughts are not final thoughts, and almost everything here is up for discussion...
Monday, November 21, 2011
Justice and Peace
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Overview of Revelation - Fee
Extracted from G. D. Fee, How To Read the Bible Book by Book.
Friday, September 16, 2011
Revelation - Authorship
John must normally have been active as a prophet in the churches to which he writes. The seven messages to the churches reveal detailed knowledge of each local situation, and 2:21 presumably refers to an earlier prophetic oracle of his, addressed to the prophetess he calls Jezebel at Thyatira. John was no stranger to these churches but had exercised a prophetic ministry in them and knew them well. (Bauckham, The Theology of the Book of Revelation)
There was a certain man with us whose name was John, one of the apostles of Christ, who prophesied by a revelation that was made to him, that those who believe in our Christ would dwell a thousand years in Jerusalem; and that thereafter the general, and in short, the eternal resurrection and judgment of all men would likewise take place.
Outline of Revelation - Bauckham
Title and Beatitude (1:1-3)
Epistolary Opening (1:4—5a)
Doxology (1:5b-6)
A Scriptural Testimony (1:7)
A Prophetic Oracle (1:8)
Inaugural Vision of Jesus Christ among the Churches and his Messages to the Seven Churches (1:9-3:22)
John's Vision and Commission (1:9—20)
The Message to Ephesus (2:1—7)
The Message to Smyrna (2:8-11)
The Message to Pergamum (2:12-17)
The Message to Thyatira (2:18—29)
The Message to Sardis (3:1—6)
The Message to Philadelphia (3:7-13)
The Message to Laodicea (3:14-22)
Inaugural Vision of Heaven (4:1-5:14)
God on the Throne (4:1—11)
The Lamb on the Throne (5:1-14)
The Seven Seals (6:1-8:5)
The First Four Seals (6:1-8)
The Fifth Seal (6:9-11)
The Sixth Seal (6:12-17)
Interlude: The Sealing of the Elect (7:1-17)
The Seventh Seal (8:1-5)
The Seven Trumpets (8:6—11:19)
The First Four Trumpets (8:6-12)
The Fifth Trumpet (8:13-9:11)
The Sixth Trumpet (9:12—21)
Interlude: (a) The Scroll Given to John (10:1—n)
Interlude: (b) The Content of the Scroll (11:1-13)
The Seventh Trumpet (11:14-19)
The Story of God's People in Conflict with Evil (12:1—15:4)
The Woman, the Dragon and the Child (12:1—6)
Michael and the Dragon (12:7-12)
The Dragon and the Woman (12:13-17)
The Monster from the Sea (12:18—13:10)
The Monster from the Land (13:11—18)
The Lamb and the 144,000 (14:1-5)
Three Angelic Messages and a Voice from Heaven (14:6-13)
The Harvest of the Earth and the Vintage of the Earth (14:14-20)
The Song of the Conquerors (15:1-4)
The Seven Bowls (15:5-16:21)
Introduction (15:5—16:1)
The First Five Bowls (16:2—11)
The Sixth Bowl (16:12-16)
The Seventh Bowl (16:17-21)
Babylon the Harlot (17:1-19:10)
The Harlot: (a) The Vision (17:1—6a)
The Harlot: (b) The Interpretation (17:6b-18)
The Fall of Babylon: (a) The Voice of an Angel (18:1-3)
The Fall of Babylon: (b) A Voice from Heaven (18:4-20)
The Fall of Babylon: (c) The Voice of Another Angel (18:21-4)
The Fall of Babylon: (d) Voices from Heaven (19:1-8)
John and the Angel (19:9—10)
Transition from Babylon to the New Jerusalem (19:11-21:8)
The Rider from Heaven and his Victory (19:11-21)
The Millennium (20:1-10)
The Judgment of the Dead (20:11-15)
The New Heaven and the New Earth (21:1—4)
God Speaks (21:5-8)
The New Jerusalem the Bride (21:9—22:9)
General View of the City (21:9—14)
The Walls and the Gates of the City (21:15-21)
The Glory of God in the Temple-City (21:22-7)
The Throne of God in the City (22:1—5)
John and the Angel (22:6—9)
Epilogue (22:10—21)
The Angel's Instructions (22:10-11)
A Prophetic Oracle (22:12-13)
Beatitude (22:14-15)
A Scriptural Testimony (22:16)
Invitation to Come to the Water of Life (22:17)
Warning to Preserve the Book's Integrity (22:18—19)
A Prophetic Oracle and Response (22:20)
This is taken from Richard Bauckham's commentary on Revelation in the Oxford Bible Commentary.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Reading an Apocalyptic Prophecy - Revelation
Friday, September 04, 2009
How to Read Revelation - Bauckham
Monday, December 19, 2005
Revelation - Stuff
Steve Moyise on Revelation
- The Psalms in the Book of Revelation in The Psalms in the New Testament (eds S.Moyise & M.J.J.Menken), T & T Clark, 2004: 231-246
- Singing the Song of Moses and the Lamb: John's Dialogical Use of Scripture AUSS 42, 2004:347-360
- Intertextuality and the Use of Scripture in the Book of Revelation Scriptura 84, 2003:391-401.
- The Language of the Psalms in the Book of Revelation Neotestamentica 2003:68-83 PDF
- Does the Author of Revelation Misappropriate the Scriptures? AUSS 40 (2002): 3-21 PDF
- Does the Lion Lie Down with the Lamb?in Moyise (ed), Studies in the Book of Revelation (2001): 181-194 PDF
- Authorial Intention and the Book of Revelation AUSS 39 (2001): 35-40
- The Language of the Old Testament in the Apocalypse JSNT 76 (1999): 97-113
- Intertextuality and the Book of Revelation ExpT 104 (1993): 295-8
- The Old Testament in the Book of Revelation [Sheffield Academic Press, 1995] (ISBN 1-85075-554-X) Ch1 Introduction; Ch2 The use of scripture in Revelation 2-3; Ch3 John's use of Daniel; Ch4 John's use of Ezekiel; Ch5 The use of scripture at Qumran; Ch6 Revelation and Intertextuality; Ch7 Epilogue
Dissertations
- Letseli, Tankiso Letseli - The Kingship of God as a theological motif in the hymns of the Apocalypse of John.
- Mnisi, Mhingwana George - How God takes responsibility for his church in this world with reference to Revelation 11.
- Manikam, Terrel - From downfall to victory: the worship situation in Revelation 17:1-19:10.
Articles on the Apocalypse
- A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Revelation of St. John R. H. Charles
- IVP Revelation Commentary J. Ramsey Michaels
- Who Says? Who Hears? The Narrative Rhetoric of John's Apocalypse David Barr
- Using Plot to Discern Structure in John's Apocalypse David Barr
- Transforming the Imagination: John’s Apocalypse as Story David Barr
- The Book of Revelation, Apocalyptic Literature, and Millennial Movements Felix Just
- Cities of Revelation Craig Koester
- Towards an Ethical Reading of The Apocalypse: Reflections on John's Use of Power, Violence, and Misogyny by David L. Barr
- "Honouring the Emperor or Assailing the Beast: Participation in Civic Life among Associations (Jewish, Christian and Other) in Asia Minor and the Apocalypse of John," Philip Harland
- "On the Verge of the Millennium: A History of the Interpretation of Revelation," Craig R. Koester
Blogs
- Bauckham's Micro-Structure of Revelation.
- Alan Bandy, The Macro-Structure of Revelation from Bauckham
- John-Revelation Project
- Gospel Intertextuality
And of course, one should always keep a close eye on Café Apocalypsis.
From my cursory reading the most helpful commentaries on Revelation thus far have been [in order of easy to difficult]- G. B. Caird, The Revelation of St. John [I'm biased towards Caird and I don't agree with all of it but it's still a very stimulating commentary by a master exegete]
- Craig Keener, NIV Application Commentary: Revelation [Best preaching commentary on Revelation I've found]
- Ben Witherington, Revelation [Skips issues but helps you to actually understand the text, very helpful introduction and bibliography]
- Grant Osbourne, Revelation [Most of the time summarises the major views and then explains his choice of exegesis]
- David Aune, Revelation [Comprehensive background and parallels but I wonder if he doesn't miss the forrest for the trees at times.]
Unfortunately, I haven't been able to get my grubby paws on Beale's tome yet, but hope to in the near future. The best little book I've read on Revelation has to be Bauckham's Theology of the Book of Revelation. I reckon if one reads this book, one is more than half way to understanding what Revelation is actually about. But this is all I've read and so I'm still an apocalyptic baby...
Friday, December 16, 2005
Gospel Intertextuality in Revelation
Revelation contains a handful of clear allusions to Jesus traditions. The following passages are among the most striking: Revelation 1:3, "blessed are those who hear and who keep what is written in it [the words of the prophecy]; for the time is near" (cf. Lk 11:28); Revelation 1:7, with its conflation of Daniel 7:13 and Zechariah 12:10, is closely related to Mt 24:30. In Revelation 3:3 (and cf. Rev 16:15) the Parousia of Christ is likened to the coming of a thief, as in the Q tradition (Mt 24:42–23 par. Lk 12:39–40). A Q tradition (Mt 10:32 par. Lk 12:8) also lies behind Revelation 3:5: "I will confess your name before my Father and before his angels." Revelation 13:10, "if you kill with the sword, with the sword you must be killed," is dependent on the Jesus tradition in Matthew 26:52. Most intriguing of all is the use in Revelation of the "hearing formula," "let anyone with ears to hear, listen," which is found in several strands of the Synoptic tradition (Mk 4:9 par. Mt 13:9 par. Lk 8:8; Mk 4:23; Mt 11:15; Mt 13:43; Lk 14:35). [Stanton, Jesus Traditions, DLNTD]
Monday, December 12, 2005
John-Revelation Project
To date, the most thorough application of literary intertextuality and typological hermeneutic to the interpretation of Revelation is Warren A. Gage's groundbreaking study, St. John's Vision of the Heavenly City (Ph.D. diss., University of Dallas, 2001). Gage identifies a pervasive lexical concordance between Revelation and, of all things, the Gospel of John, which in turn exposes an astounding array of consecutive and chiastic correspondences between the books. Not only does this concordance establish common authorship; it also compels the necessity of a lectionary reading of the two books as companion volumes (much like Luke and Acts), the one hermeneutical to the other.In reading through Revelation, one is struck by the similarity of words and concepts it presents. How far does this go to suggesting a common authorship between the writer of the gospel of John and the Apocalypse? This is a fascinating exercise in historical enquiry. And I've not even got into it in any great depth! Anyway, the John-Revelation project looks interesting for those keen on delving into these issues... One should also frequent Alan Bandy's Cafe Apocalypse for regular comments on such issues.
Thursday, December 08, 2005
Steve Moyise on Revelation
- The Psalms in the Book of Revelation in The Psalms in the New Testament (eds S.Moyise & M.J.J.Menken), T & T Clark, 2004: 231-246
- Singing the Song of Moses and the Lamb: John's Dialogical Use of ScriptureAUSS 42, 2004:347-360
- Intertextuality and the Use of Scripture in the Book of RevelationScriptura 84, 2003:391-401.
- The Language of the Psalms in the Book of RevelationNeotestamentica 2003:68-83 PDF
- Does the Author of Revelation Misappropriate the Scriptures? AUSS 40 (2002): 3-21 PDF
- Does the Lion Lie Down with the Lamb?in Moyise (ed), Studies in the Book of Revelation (2001): 181-194 PDF
- Authorial Intention and the Book of Revelation AUSS 39 (2001): 35-40
- The Language of the Old Testament in the ApocalypseJSNT 76 (1999): 97-113
- Intertextuality and the Book of Revelation ExpT 104 (1993): 295-8
- The Old Testament in the Book of Revelation [Sheffield Academic Press, 1995] (ISBN 1-85075-554-X) Ch1 Introduction; Ch2 The use of scripture in Revelation 2-3; Ch3 John's use of Daniel; Ch4 John's use of Ezekiel; Ch5 The use of scripture at Qumran; Ch6 Revelation and Intertextuality; Ch7 Epilogue
Article & Dissertations
- Messianic Hope and Figures in Late Antiquity -Craig Evans
Dissertations
- Dercksen, Marlene - Symbolism of water in John.
- Dercksen, Petrus Hendrik - Understanding John 20:21-23 from the perspective of the Johannine literature -
- Moruthane, Sepadi W.D - The metaphor of the family in John 4:1-42.
- Letseli, Tankiso Letseli - The Kingship of God as a theological motif in the hymns of the Apocalypse of John.
- Manikam, Terrel - From downfall to victory: the worship situation in Revelation 17:1-19:10.
- Mnisi, Mhingwana George - How God takes responsibility for his church in this world with reference to Revelation 11.
- Pretorius, Mark - The Holy Spirit in the theological context of sonship and Covenant according to Romans 1-8.
- Stegmann, Robert Norman - The Christ story as a narrative substructure of the Pauline ethos.
Tuesday, December 06, 2005
Cities of the Apocalypse
- IVP Revelation Commentary J. Ramsey Michaels
- Cities of Revelation Craig Koester
My main interest this week will be to explore the cities of Pergamum, Thyatira, & Sardis within the story of Revelation. Osbourne and Witherington will be my faithful guides [Bauckham's Theology doesn't really address this...], as Aune & Beale are currently residing on my shelf in SA. Oh, the joys of having one's library spread across the planet! :/
I wonder if Alan Bandy shouldn't do a Top 10 Books/Articles on Revelation. Much like the ones done for Jesus and Paul, see Michael Pahl's list. Anyway, if I find anything interesting, I'll post on it then - and those in the know can offer their various critiques...