Resource Pages for Biblical Studies

by Georg S. Adamsen · June 30, 2008 – 21:35

For many years Professor Torrey Seland, PhiloBlogger, has maintained a very valuable site: Resource Pages for Biblical Studies (RPBS). His section on Revelation includes several valuable resources.

Page Two of Resource Pages for Biblical Studies

Articles etc related to the Book of Revelation

RPBS is worth a visit! If you want to be informed of changes, subscribe to the RPBS Blog.

Torrey Seland is Professor of New Testament Studies at the School of Mission and Theology, Stavanger, Norway.

ESV Study Bible and Revelation

by Georg S. Adamsen · June 14, 2008 – 22:16

Translations are very important tools. Good translations are helpful. Bad ones not so. Study Bibles may be very helpful. Or they may be quite the opposite.

ESV is, as far as I know, a good translation. An ESV Study Bible is in preparation. It will very likely be used by very many. Dennis Johnson, Fuller Theological Seminary, is the study notes contributor to Revelation. Johnson is the author of Triumph of the Lamb: A Commentary on Revelation. Phillipsburg, New Jersey: P&R Publishing, 2001.

The Introduction to Revelation is available from the ESV Study Bible website: http://www.esvstudybible.org/images/excerpt-revelation-intro.pdf.

Here is a small sample:

esv-study-bible-rev-intro-2.jpg

What do you think about the introduction to Revelation? It would be nice to see your evaluation in the comments!

Hoffman’s maps of Patmos and the seven cities

by Georg S. Adamsen · May 15, 2008 – 15:57

As Mark Hoffman wrote in his comment, there are good uncopyrighted maps of Patmos and the seven churches available.

BibleMapper / Bible Mapper Maps

This is a map that displays the location of Patmos and the seven churches mentioned in Revelation 2-3.The zip file contains 4 JPGs in color and in B/W with and without an inset.

Johann Albrecht Bengel

by Georg S. Adamsen · April 26, 2008 – 12:30

Johann Albrecht Bengel, who is also known by the English rendering: John Albert Bengel, was born in Württemberg i Germany in 1687. He died in 1752. He was contemporary with Johann Sebastian Bach who lived from 1685 to 1750. While Bach was a North German, Bengel was from the South of Germany.

Bengel served as a pastor and an ecclesiastical leader in the beginning and in the end of his career. For twenty-eight years, however, he lived at Denkendorf where he headed the cloister school that prepared young men for an education for Lutheran ministry as the University of Tübingen (1714-1741).

Bengel became “the father of textual criticism” (K. Aland, cited in Weborg, p. 185). Bengel was very proficient at languages and prepared critical editions of Latin and Greek texts, including the New Testament.

Influenced perhaps by Spinoza and certainly by Francke of Leipzig, Bengel explored “the role of the feelings in interpretation” (John Weborg, p. 186, citing Bengel’s New Testament Word Studies [The Gnomon]. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Kregel, 1978, nos. 12 and 15). Bengel “developed Cocceius’s exegesis of biblical prophecies and his chiliastic orientation” (Willem J. van Asselt, in: Trevor A. Hart, The Dictionary of Historical Theology, p. 133 [Carlisle, Cumbria, U.K.: Paternoster Press, 2000]).

Bengel’s influence was enormous. His Gnomon was republished many times, and through John Wesley, “Bengel became part of the the confessional corpus of the Methodist church” (Weborg, p. 186). Indeed, the Lutheran Jaroslav Pelikan says that Bengel’s Gnomon “was commonplace in the libraries of evangelical pastors” (Weborg, p. 186).

Apocalyptic interests

Of most interest at this site is Bengel’s apocalyptic interests:

Bengel is noted for his apocalyptic interests. He calculated a date for the beginning of the thousand-year reign of Christ: 1836. He wrote two major books on the Book of Revelation and two works specifically coordinating time, nature and astronomy with the prophetic material. His Ordo temporum (1741) attempted to be a history of the divine economy [one of the major interests of Bengel] and a proper accounting of prophecy and how parts and whole form one story. The Cyclus (1945) especially tried to link astronomy with prophetic material, and the Explained Revelation (1740), a massive commentary on the text, concludes with six excurses detailing the history of the exegesis of Revelation. (Weborg, p. 187).

Bengel’s Explained Revelation, i.e. Erklärte Offenbarung Johannis, is now accessible at Google Books in its 3rd, 1758 edition. Bengel also published sixty devotional speeches on Revelation: “Sechzig erbauliche Reden über die Offenbarung Johannis” (1747). According to Weborg, this work has a strong “theocentric character” and “a strong emphasis on God’s glory and holiness” (p. 187).

Bengel’s interpretation of Revelation was of the historicist type, as was, e.g., Luthers. Bengel, however, lacked Luther’s reservations about the validity of this approach.

The exegete of Pietism

Bengel was “the exegete of Pietism” (J. Weborg, DMBI, p. 184). Weborg is right in mentioning the Lutheran Johann Brenz as part of Bengel’s context. One may question, however, whether Brenz would have approved of Bengel’s pietism. In fact, Bengel was criticised by Lutherans for his eschatological and apocalyptic views. When Weborg states that the critics of Bengel based “their criticism on Article 17 of the Augsburg Confession,” one may add that they did so because they were certain that this article was based on the clear teachings of the Bible. Thus, “many Lutheran scholars accused him of being either Judaistic or Anabaptistic because of his defense of an earthly millennium and literal fulfillment of prophecy” (Weborg, p. 187).

As to the significance of Bengel, see John Weborg’s concluding section.

Select online sources

More on Bengel in Wikipedia and Wikisource, and, especially, in Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon.

Select bibliography:

Bengel, Johann Albrecht. 60 erbauliche Reden über die Offenbarung Johannis oder vielmehr Jesu Christi …. Stuttgardt, 1748.
________. Bengel’s New Testament Commentary. Translated by Charlton Thomas Lewis, and Marvin Richardson Vincent. [1864]. Repr. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Kregel Publications, 1981.
________. Erbauliche Reden über die Offenbarung Johannis. [Berlin-Dahlem]: Der Christliche Zeitschriftenverlag, 1946.
________. Gnomon. Translated by C. F. Werner. 8. Aufl. Mit einem Vorwort von Egon W. Gerdes; und dem Vorwort von Johann Albrecht Bengel ed. Stuttgart: Steinkopf, 1970.
________. Die Offenbarung des Johannes: Nach d. Auslegung von Johann Albrecht Bengel. Translated by Berthold Burgbacher. Metzingen, Württemberg: Franz, 1975.

David deSilva, Socio-Rhetorical Criticism

by Georg S. Adamsen · April 24, 2008 – 22:52

A very prolific scholar is professor David (Arthur) deSilva. Lately, I mentioned one of his recent articles here. However, there is more, much more. I will return to deSilva’s contributions later. Here I will call attention to the article that deSilva published recently:

deSilva, David Arthur. “What Has Athens To Do With Patmos? Rhetorical Criticism of the Revelation of John (1980-2005).” Currents in Biblical Research 6, no. 2 (2008): 256-89.

deSilva has published several articles on Revelation since 1991. Sometimes this means that a commentary is in preparation. And indeed! His homepage reveals:

A Socio-rhetorical Commentary on the Revelation of John (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, [to be submitted to the publisher in] 2008).

Personally, I look very much forward to yet another socio-rhetorical commentary, in addition to the one by Ben Witherington.

Additional works by deSilva on Revelation: deSilva, David Arthur. “The ‘Image of the Beast’ and the Christians in Asia Minor: Escalation of Sectarian Tension in Revelation 13.” Trinity Journal 12 (1991): 185-208.

________. “The Revelation to John: A Case Study in Apocalyptic Propaganda and the Maintenance of Sectarian Identity.” Sociological Analysis 53 (1992): 375-95.

________. “The Social Setting of the Revelation to John: Conflicts Within, Fears Without?” Westminster Theological Journal 54 (1992): 273-302.

________. “Honor Discourse and the Rhetorical Strategy of the Apocalypse of John.” Journal for the Study of the New Testament 21, no. 71 (1998): 79-110.

________. “A Socio-Rhetorical Investigation of Revelation 14:6-13: A Call to Act Justly Toward the Just and Judging God.” Bulletin for Biblical Research 9 (1999): 65-117.

________. “Final Topics: The Rhetorical Functions of Intertexture in Revelation 14:14-16:21.” Pages 215-41 in The Intertexture of Apocalyptic Discourse in the New Testament. Edited by Duane F. Watson. Atlanta, Georgia: Society of Biblical Literature, 2002.

________. “X Marks the Spot? A Critique of the Use of Chiasm in Macro-Structural Analyses of Revelation to John.” Journal for the Study of the New Testament 30 (2008): 343-71.

Domitian - the Beast?

by Georg S. Adamsen · April 20, 2008 – 19:55

Take a look at the blog One coin at a time. Brett Telford is the owner of a fine collection of coins with The Twelve Caesars.

The entry “DOMITIAN!!!!!” displays two very fine photographs of a coin with Domitian.

Ethelbert Stauffer was a German Protestant theologian who held that gematria, the numerology of the Hebrew language and alphabet, could be used to explain the Biblical number 666. Stauffer computed this “Number of the Beast” using the short form of Domitian’s names and titles: Imperator Caesar Domitianus Augustus Germanicus…

How? Don’t hesitate to visit this entry and Mr. Telford’s collection.

Otto A. Piper’s 1959 review of four Revelation commentaries

by Georg S. Adamsen · April 19, 2008 – 18:57

Theology Today - Vol 16, No. 1 - April 1959 - BOOK REVIEW - The Book of Revelation & The Revelation of Jesus Christ & The Last Book of the Bible & Interpreting Revelation

The Book of Revelation
By Thomas S. Kepler
232 pp. New York, Oxford University Press, 1957. $4.50;

The Revelation of Jesus Christ
By Donald W. Richardson
Fourth Edition. 195 pp. Richmond, John Knox Press, 1957. Paper, $1.50;

The Last Book of the Bible
By Hanns Lilje
Translated by Olive Wyon
286 pp. Philadelphia, Muhlenberg Press, 1957. $4.50;

Interpreting Revelation
By Merrill C. Tenney
220 pp. Grand Rapids, Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1957. $3.50.