Digital Logos Edition
Since its first publication in 2001, Revelation and the End of All Things has been a highly readable guide to one of the most challenging books in the Bible. Engaging the questions people most frequently ask about Revelation and sensationalistic scenarios about the end of the world, Craig Koester takes his readers through the entirety of Revelation, offering perspectives that are clear and compelling.
In the second edition Koester provides new insights from recent scholarship and responses to the latest popular apocalyptic voices. Study questions make this new edition ideal for use in classrooms and study groups. Revelation and the End of All Things offers an accessible, engaging, and profoundly hopeful interpretation for students and general readers alike.
“Revelation, however, does not offer a review of history but instead, as we will see, leads readers through overlapping cycles of visions that do not fall into a clear chronological sequence. The result is that Revelation does not disclose future events in a linear fashion, but it gives alternating messages of warning and encouragement that are designed to promote faithful endurance.” (Page 30)
“First, there was persecution, but at a local level.” (Page 32)
“Second, several congregations faced issues of assimilation” (Page 32)
“One of the most important of these questions is whether the visions in Revelation refer to future events or to timeless realities.” (Page 2)
“Together, Augustine’s use of Tyconius’s interpretation of Revelation and Jerome’s edited version of Victorinus’s commentary made a timeless and spiritualized reading of Revelation the dominant viewpoint for centuries to come.” (Page 8)
This book offers an innovative introduction to Revelation. . . . Highly recommended for ministry students, church study groups, and general readers.
—Adela Yarbro Collins, Yale Divinity School
Anyone looking for a good, interesting, and nontechnical study of the book of Revelation will want to consider this fine work.
—The Bible Today
A popular and easy-to-read work on Revelation. . . . For laity and those in the churches who are seeking alternatives to the unsound and popular views of Revelation, Koester’s book is a good recommendation.
—Review & Expositor
33 ratings
Dino
7/29/2024
Wallace Scaife
10/22/2023
Matlyn Collins
9/22/2023
Richard Aaron Thomas
6/27/2023
Kiyah
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Sharon
1/20/2023
Richard C. Hammond, Jr.
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Alessandro
10/14/2022
darksweet102
9/17/2022
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