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Revealing Revelation

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Living out his final days in the prison of Patmos, John endured much heartbreak. Until the day of the Heavenly invite: “Come up here and I will show you…” John would stand on the threshold of eternity and live to write about it. That’s what makes the book at the end of the Bible so intriguing. And, as John was never the same, so it is for those who dare to open the eyes of faith and see what he saw.

Thanks to Weldon E. Warnock and his scholarly yet practical approach to John’s Revelation. Thanks to Luke Weldon Adams for his painstaking work in retyping and revising this special work. We believe this book will serve as a valuable resource for years to come.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1—The Background
Chapter 2—The Preface (1:1–8)
Chapter 3—The Majestic Christ (1:9–20)
Chapter 4—Jesus in the Churches (2:1–3:22)
Chapter 5—The Throne Scene (4:1–5:14)
Chapter 6—The Seven Seals (6:1–8:5)
Chapter 7—The Seven Trumpets (8:6–11:19)
Chapter 8—The Seven Personages (12:1–14:20)
Chapter 9—The Seven Bowls of Wrath (15:1–16:21)
Chapter 10—The Doom of Babylon (17:1–18:24)
Chapter 11—The Vision of Victory (19:1–20:15)
Chapter 12—The New Jerusalem (21:1–22:5)
Chapter 13—The Conclusion (22:6–21)

77 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 2015

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Profile Image for Matt DeVore.
50 reviews6 followers
January 5, 2022
68 typos in 72 pages of the main body text seems a bit egregious for any published book. The very first word in the book is misspelled. Citations of Scripture and secondary sources are carelessly misquoted. I checked.

The substance of the interpretation of Revelation was worthwhile and interesting. Warnock relates much of the conflict being between God and his people against the Devil and Rome. I agree. But I found the interpretation of New Jerusalem as the church on earth released from persecution quite unusual. I disagree with that perspective.
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