Revelation
I.
Introduction
Revelation
(book of Bible), last
book of the New Testament. It is rich in allegory
and continues to be the subject of widely divergent
interpretations. The book is sometimes called the
Apocalypse.
Both
English titles are derived from the first word in
the Greek original, apokalypsis (revelation).
II.
Authorship
The
author of Revelation calls himself John, and ecclesiastical
tradition has held Saint John the Evangelist to
be the author. However, in view of such evidence
as the linguistic differences between Revelation
and the Gospel of John, also traditionally ascribed
to John the Evangelist, many scholars have been
inclined to attribute Revelation to some other prominent
early Christian writer. They suggest, for instance,
Saint Mark or John the Elder.
The
place of composition is generally supposed to have
been the island of Pátmos, one of the Dodecanese
islands in the Aegean Sea, to which the author had
been banished "on account of the word of God and
the testimony of Jesus" (1:9).
There,
perhaps in the reign of Roman emperor Vespasian,
from 69 to 79, but most probably in the reign of
Roman emperor Domitian, from 81 to 96, "a loud voice
like a trumpet" reportedly was heard by the author
saying "write what you see in a book and send it
to the seven churches, to Ephesus and to Smyrna
and to Pergamum and to Thyatira and to Sardis and
to Philadelphia and to Laodicea" (1:10-11).
Revelation
was written to prepare the church for the last intervention
of God in human affairs. The Christians of the 1st
century believed this event to be close at hand.
When it occurred, a new age of the world would begin,
in which Christ and the church would be triumphant.
Meanwhile, however, the evils and terrors of the
existing world order would increase and intensify.
The
author of Revelation seems to have regarded the
worsening of conditions for Christians in the Roman
Empire under Domitian as signifying that this catastrophic
period had begun. Apparently, he wrote chiefly to
encourage the church to endure this terrifying final
crisis in the confident expectation of an imminent
eternally just age.
III.
Literary Form
In
communicating to his fellow Christians "what you
see, what is and what is to take place hereafter"
(1:19), the author deliberately chose a literary
vehicle that would tend to conceal his message from
the enemies of the church. This vehicle was the
apocalypse, a Jewish literary form characterized
by an often elaborately symbolic interpretation
and prediction of events (see Apocalyptic
Writings).
The
apocalyptic symbols of Revelation are derived from
prophetic books of the Old Testament and from the
common Christian tradition. No doubt the earliest
readers of the book understood its visions and imagery,
but in the centuries since Revelation was written,
the key to the original meaning of its symbolism
was lost.
Efforts to recover it have produced widely divergent systems
of interpretation but no general recognition of any one system
as nearest to the author's meaning. Apart from its religious
message, Revelation continues to be valued today for its magnificent
literary qualities and for its depiction of a historical crisis
in Christianity.
"Revelation
(book of Bible)," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia
2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.