Jeong, Donghyun. Reading Revelation Without Millennialism. Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary. 2024. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://www.austinseminarydigital.org/documents/detail/7619.
APA citation style
Jeong, D. (2024). Reading Revelation without Millennialism. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://www.austinseminarydigital.org/documents/detail/7619.
Chicago citation style
Jeong, Donghyun.Reading Revelation without Millennialism. Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary. 2024. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://www.austinseminarydigital.org/documents/detail/7619.
Note:
These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
The Book of Revelation is a text so many of us want to understand, and too many have used for one single purpose: to build theories of the end times in our world. Readers often seek to find a one-to-one correspondence between what is prophesied in the book and what we are seeing in the political landscape or modern technological innovations. Are there other ways to read Revelation? Why is it important to resist the temptation to become clever astrologists? How can we live out ultimate hope in Revelation faithfully?
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