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Breaking the Bread of Revelation #1

Breaking the Bread of Revelation

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Making sense of the Book of Revelation doesn't have to be hard. In fact, God wants you to be aware of end-time events. Gaining a clear understanding of Revelation will eliminate fear and enable you to be at peace about the future.

143 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 1988

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About the author

Brian K. McCallum

5 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for cloudyskye.
907 reviews44 followers
March 3, 2019
So encouraging, just like the book of Revelation was meant to be. Which I definitely need to reread and then read this book again. Not by Kenneth Hagin, but clearly of the same school: letting the Bible explain itself. More, please!
2 reviews
September 1, 2025
Key Takeaway: Jesus is the one who conquers. Jesus is the one who wins.

Brain McCallums first book in a 3 part series on Revelation is a deep dive from chapter 1 to chapter 6. Not on deep “what if thoughts” and his personal beliefs on certain topics in Revelation, but on the truth of what the Bible is saying and letting us, the reader choose our belief. He keeps the book focused on the main theme of Revelation, Jesus, focusing on who He is, and how He wins. Of course other topics are looked at, the church, our part, spiritual warfare, and the nation of Israel. McCallum does an amazing job of clearly stating what is happening in the text, along with referencing Old Testament scripture and explaining how that fits in the story.

The book's strength is also its weakness. McCallum will spend so much time focused on bringing a Old Testament scripture reference, (that I do believe is sound and accurate theology for what we are reading in Revelation) that entire chapters will be focused on explaining Old Testament prophecy and theology that he gets so far from the the main idea of Revelation and what we as the reader care to learn about. Many times I found myself asking “Why is he explaining this for so long” or “He did not have to go that in depth into talking about __”. I found myself wanting to skip many pages. That information isn't wrong or bad, but in the end it feels just as if you order an amazing spaghetti, salad, and bread at a restaurant and they serve you a big bowl of salad and bread with a small side of spaghetti. Alot of time on the side, not alot on the main.

Profile Image for Bri Santos.
43 reviews1 follower
January 19, 2026
So good. I have never read a book like this before. I’m excited to read the others in the series. I’m hungry for it. I can feel how an understanding of end-times is helping me see the importance of the timing in which I am alive now.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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