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Eugene Boring addresses the issue of how thinking Christians who want to live faithfully and responsibility in today's world can hear the Word of God in Revelation. He explores the meaning of Revelation as an example of Christian prophecy, emphasizing the central phenomenon of Revelation, which is the risen Jesus Christ speaking to his churches through the Spirit. The message should not be...

the throne is not vacant. The universe is not a chaos nor is it ruled by blind fate. Someone is in charge. The words “one seated on the throne” occur twelve times in Revelation; it is John’s way of saying “God.” Like the drama as a whole, this scene is theocentric. Knowing the future is not a matter of obtaining information but of knowing God who holds the future. The ultimate future is not an item of information to be analyzed but a person to be encountered. Despite his heavy dependence on Ezekiel,
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