The Book of Revelation: A Summary for the Church*
How Not to Read This Book Revelation has suffered more at the hands of speculative interpreters than almost any other book of Scripture. Newsstand prophecy charts have taught us to read it as a coded newspaper, a puzzle to be solved by matching beasts and bowls to this week's headlines. But that is not how the book announces itself. Revelation calls itself an apokalypsis — an unveiling — given to strengthen suffering churches by showing them that the slain Lamb, not Caesar, sits on the throne. It is a pastoral book before it is a predictive one. Reading It as Symbol, Not Timetable I read Revelation as what scholars call an idealist, or symbolic. That means the visions are not chiefly a forecast of specific future events, nor merely a record of first-century persecution, nor a code for successive centuries of church history. Rather, John's symbols depict recurring realities that mark the entire age between Christ's first and second comings: the church's sufferin...