Revelation Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Revelation Revelation by Craig S. Keener
169 ratings, 4.30 average rating, 24 reviews
Open Preview
Revelation Quotes Showing 1-8 of 8
“God alone is God, and he alone merits first place—beyond every other love, every other anxiety, every other fear that consumes us.”
Craig S. Keener, Revelation
“The book of Revelation is a book of worship that summons us to recognize the awesome majesty of our Lord.”
Craig S. Keener, Revelation
“Only by depending on God’s power can we offer worship truly worthy of his honor.”
Craig S. Keener, Revelation
“Revelation addresses many issues that have not changed because human nature and God’s character have remained constant. It”
Craig S. Keener, Revelation
“parallel to all other ages, not a chronological series of events. Indeed, one of the great marvels of God’s gracious activity toward us is that it occurs in real time without being prejudiced in favor of any particular age. Just because we are the latest does not mean we are the best. The effects of sin prevent any age—including ours—from being “golden,” at least in the spiritual sense. Every Christian generation learns equally the lessons of Revelation—that God is in control, that the powers of the world are minuscule when compared with God, that God is as likely to work through apparent weakness and failure as through strength and success, and that in the end God’s people will prevail. Revelation is the last book of the Bible. It reveals important truths about the end times. But it is also last in another important sense—it calls on all the hermeneutical courage, wisdom, and maturity one can muster in order to be understood properly. In many ways it serves as a graduation exercise for the NIV Application Commentary Series, an opportunity to fully apply the many lessons we have learned in the Bridging Contexts sections of previous volumes. God’s time is his, not ours. The story of God’s gracious activity on our behalf will be fulfilled in a great and glorious conclusion. But all Christians, everywhere and at all times, have equal access to the time. That access has been and is made possible by God’s message in the book of Revelation. Terry C. Muck Author’s Preface AS A NEW CHRISTIAN recently converted from atheism, I eagerly hurried through Paul’s letters, reaching Revelation as soon as possible. Once I reached it, however, I could hardly understand a word of it. I listened attentively to the first few “prophecy teachers” I heard, but even if they had not contradicted one another, over the years I watched as most of their detailed predictions failed to materialize. Perhaps six years after my conversion, as I began to read Revelation in Greek for the first time, the book came alive to me. Because I was now moving through the text more carefully, I noticed the transitions and the structure, and I realized it was probably addressing something much different from what I had first supposed. At the same time, I catalogued parallels I found between Revelation and biblical prophets like Daniel, Ezekiel, and Zechariah. I also began reading an apocalypse contemporary with Revelation, 4 Ezra (2 Esdras in the Apocrypha), to learn more about the way Revelation’s original, first-century audience may have heard its claims. Yet even in my first two years as a Christian, Revelation and other end-time passages proved a turning point for me. As a young Christian, I was immediately schooled in a particular, popular end-time view, which I respectfully swallowed (the”
Craig S. Keener, Revelation
“Is Western Christianity genuinely different enough from our cultures to delay God’s judgment on our societies?”
Craig S. Keener, Revelation
“Revelation announces that God is still in control and that he will conclude this stage of history the way he has promised. He”
Craig S. Keener, Revelation
“Every Christian generation learns equally the lessons of Revelation—that God is in control, that the powers of the world are minuscule when compared with God, that God is as likely to work through apparent weakness and failure as through strength and success, and that in the end God’s people will prevail.”
Craig S. Keener, Revelation