Journal of Biblical and Pneumatological Research. Paul Elbert

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Название Journal of Biblical and Pneumatological Research
Автор произведения Paul Elbert
Жанр Религия: прочее
Серия
Издательство Религия: прочее
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781498275316



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of Jesus in ch. 1, through the other passages (5:5–6, 9:1–12, 13–19, 11:15–18, 16:1–7, 19:1–21:8) and concludes with the final passage in 21:9–22:5. In each passage, the vision functions along with the “word” to convey the point about the nature of God’s reign and the role judgment plays in it. In fact, the message develops as it progresses through the text until the final passage virtually explodes with almost a complete visionary chapter.

      Analysis of the Eight Pertinent Passages

      As mentioned above, it is clear that the author of the Apocalypse is intentionally distinguishing between “seeing/hearing” and “hearing/seeing.” When seeing is the primary analogue, the hearing analogue adds to and deepens the information (e.g., the worship scenes of ch. 4 and the seals in ch. 6). In contrast, when hearing is the primary analogue, both scenarios are reinterpreted to convey a new prophetic perspective. The next question that emerges is, what is the new perspective added by the “seeing” analogue? A consideration of each of the passages suggests that the visions provide a prophetic context to what is heard. Argumentation is embedded within each of the visions to emphasize the main points. Further, each passage builds upon each other to create this prophetic scenario. Pattern 2b (hear/see/hear/comment) heightens this prophetic component by means of an additional comment.

      Passage 1. Revelation 1:10–16: The Glorified Christ

      Passage 2. Revelation 5:5–6: The lion/Lamb

      Passages 3 & 4. Revelation 9: 1–12; 13–21: Two of the Three Woes

      In Rev 9, there are 2 separate “hearing/seeing” analogues. John hears the 5th and 6th trumpets corresponding to two of the three “woes.” It is noteworthy that the 1st through 4th trumpets include the motif as “seeing/hearing” whereas the motif in the three woes is “hearing/seeing.” In each of the woes, the trumpet is heard and then the prophetic vision unfolds.

      In 9:1–4, the vision that follows the 5th trumpet is of the fallen star, the bottomless pit, and the plague of locusts. These locusts particularly reflect the revelation of God’s judgment in Joel; the vision provides the rationale for God’s prophetic judgment.

      In 9:13–19, John hears the 6th trumpet, hears the voice from the altar, sees the consequence of the trumpet blast, and hears the number of the troops and then the vision reveals not only the nature of the troops as horses and riders but their function as vehicles of the final judgment. Once again, the vision sets “hearing” into the perspective of the prophetic scenario of God’s final judgments. The prophetic component is heightened further by the author’s comment in vv. 20–21. The main point here is that the hearing/ seeing motif, followed by a comment, in each of the three woes is important: what John sees gives new perspective to what he hears.

      It should be noted here, that there is a significant difference between the first four and the last three trumpets. In each case of the sounding of the first four trumpets, the angel is seen, the trumpet implicitly heard; and the consequence of the blast is seen (8: 7, 8, 10, 12). In contrast, the final three trumpets are introduced by an eagle seen (ei]don) and heard (h!kousa), calling out in a loud voice, “woe, woe, woe” (9:13). The blasts of the fifth and sixth trumpets follow immediately, but they exhibit a notably different pattern from the first four, in that the seeing and hearing (implicit, like the first four) is followed in each case by an author’s comment emphasizing the prophetic nature of the event. The 7th trumpet (11:15–19) is followed by an even more extensive passage — the appearance of two “great signs in heaven” (in both cases, w!fqh): the sun-clothed woman and the great red dragon (both in ch. 12).

      Passage 5. Revelation 11:15–19: The 7th Trumpet

      Passage 6. Revelation 16:1–7: The First Three Bowls of God’s Wrath

      This passage describes the pouring out of the bowls or vials of the first three of the final judgments. In the introduction (v. 1), John hears (h!kousa) the loud voice from the temple commanding the angels to pour out their bowls on the earth. Each angel pours (implicit sight) and the effect (again implicitly seen) is described. After the pouring by the third angel, John hears two voices affirming that God’s judgments are just: first, the angel of the waters (v. 5); second the voice of the altar itself (v. 7). These messages embedded in the hearing/seeing passage make a clear statement