The Book of Revelation: Apocalypse and Empire

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Oxford University Press, 1997 M02 13 - 280 páginas
About seventy years after the death of Jesus, John of Patmos sent visionary messages to Christians in seven cities of western Asia Minor. These messages would eventually become part of the New Testament canon, as The Book of Revelation. What was John's message? What was its literary form? Did he write to a persecuted minority or to Christians enjoying the social and material benefits of the Roman Empire? In search of answers to these penetrating questions, Thompson critically examines the language, literature, history, and social setting of the Book of the Apocalypse. Following a discussion of the importance of the genre apocalypse, he closely analyzes the form and structure of the Revelation, its narrative and metaphoric unity, the world created through John's visions, and the social conditions of the empire in which John wrote. He offers an unprecedented interpretation of the role of boundaries in Revelation, a reassessment of the reign of the Emperor Domitian, and a view of tribulation that integrates the literary vision of Revelation with the reality of the lives of ordinary people in a Roman province. Throughout his study, Thompson argues that the language of Revelation joins the ordinary to the extra-ordinary, earth to heaven, and local conditions to supra-human processes.
 

Contenido

Introduction
1
Orientation
9
The Script Wholeness and the Language of the Book of Revelation
35
The Stage Roman Society and the Province of Asia
93
The Play The Apocalypse and the Empire
169
Recent Theories about the Social Setting of the Book of Revelation
202
Abbreviations
211
Notes
213
Works Cited
241
Additional Sources
251
Subject Index
255
Index of Ancient Sources
263
Index of Modern Authors
265
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