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Revelation: An Introduction and Commentary (Paul) is unavailable, but you can change that!

The Book of Revelation is a remarkable text. A fascinating piece of Scripture as well as an extraordinary piece of literature, its interpretation has affected our theology, art and worship, and even international politics. Yet it is widely neglected in the church and almost entirely avoided from the pulpit. In this Tyndale Commentary, Ian Paul takes a disciplined approach to the text, paying...

seem that John is stepping out of ‘vision report’ mode and adding his own response alongside his audience (see comments on 18:14 and 20). Despite these changes of microgenre, this book makes its strongest claims to be three things. First, it is an apocalypse, that is, a revelation from God. John is claiming to offer us a perspective on the world that we could not work out for ourselves, and so we need to pay attention, to look and listen. This is emphasized in his repeated interjection of ‘Behold!’ (twenty-six
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