Ezekiel in Revelation : literary and hermeneutics

Concerning John's use of the OT in Revelation, recent scholarship has observed that in terms of closeness, the book of Ezekiel, among many other OT books, enjoys a particular status. For, not only have its many materials been adopted in Revelation, but the order of these materials appearing in...

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Main Author: Lo, W.
Published: University of Edinburgh 1999
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230
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.653989
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6539892015-08-04T03:54:07ZEzekiel in Revelation : literary and hermeneuticsLo, W.1999Concerning John's use of the OT in Revelation, recent scholarship has observed that in terms of closeness, the book of Ezekiel, among many other OT books, enjoys a particular status. For, not only have its many materials been adopted in Revelation, but the order of these materials appearing in the two books is, by and large, the same. These features, then, suggest that Revelation is literarily dependent on Ezekiel. Specifically, the four cases examined in this thesis are, (1) The comparison of Ezekiel's use of Eden tradition (Gen 1-3) in Ezekiel 28:11-19 with John's use of Ezekiel's oracle against the nation Tyre (Ezek 26-28) in Revelation 18; (2) The comparison of Ezekiel's use of the foe-from-the-north tradition in Ezekiel 38-39 with John's use of Gog oracle (Ezek 38-39) in Revelation 19-20. (3) The comparison of Ezekiel's use of the model of battle camp (Num 2-3) in Ezekiel 48: 30-35 with John's use of the prophet's restoration programme (Ezek 40-48) in Revelation 21; and (4) The comparison of Ezekiel's use of Eden tradition (Gen 2-3) in Ezekiel 47:1-12 with John's use of this river-of-life tradition (Ezek 47:1-12) in Revelation 22. These four case studies show that though various interpretative principles have been involved in Ezekiel's use of his sources, these principles have been followed by John in his use of Ezekielian materials. This observation then leads us to the following conclusions: John, as the follower and witness of Jesus Christ (Rev 1:2, 9), is, in terms of hermeneutics, a true heir of the prophet Ezekiel. As to the implications of the findings for the understanding of Revelation, the four case studies, in turn, argue for (1) the identification of the great harlot Babylon (Rev 18) as Rome, (2) the Amillennial view for Revelation 20:1-10, (3) the identification of the new Jerusalem (Rev 21) as the New Testament church, and (4) the view taking the river of life (Rev 22) as the symbol for salvation.230University of Edinburghhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.653989Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 230
spellingShingle 230
Lo, W.
Ezekiel in Revelation : literary and hermeneutics
description Concerning John's use of the OT in Revelation, recent scholarship has observed that in terms of closeness, the book of Ezekiel, among many other OT books, enjoys a particular status. For, not only have its many materials been adopted in Revelation, but the order of these materials appearing in the two books is, by and large, the same. These features, then, suggest that Revelation is literarily dependent on Ezekiel. Specifically, the four cases examined in this thesis are, (1) The comparison of Ezekiel's use of Eden tradition (Gen 1-3) in Ezekiel 28:11-19 with John's use of Ezekiel's oracle against the nation Tyre (Ezek 26-28) in Revelation 18; (2) The comparison of Ezekiel's use of the foe-from-the-north tradition in Ezekiel 38-39 with John's use of Gog oracle (Ezek 38-39) in Revelation 19-20. (3) The comparison of Ezekiel's use of the model of battle camp (Num 2-3) in Ezekiel 48: 30-35 with John's use of the prophet's restoration programme (Ezek 40-48) in Revelation 21; and (4) The comparison of Ezekiel's use of Eden tradition (Gen 2-3) in Ezekiel 47:1-12 with John's use of this river-of-life tradition (Ezek 47:1-12) in Revelation 22. These four case studies show that though various interpretative principles have been involved in Ezekiel's use of his sources, these principles have been followed by John in his use of Ezekielian materials. This observation then leads us to the following conclusions: John, as the follower and witness of Jesus Christ (Rev 1:2, 9), is, in terms of hermeneutics, a true heir of the prophet Ezekiel. As to the implications of the findings for the understanding of Revelation, the four case studies, in turn, argue for (1) the identification of the great harlot Babylon (Rev 18) as Rome, (2) the Amillennial view for Revelation 20:1-10, (3) the identification of the new Jerusalem (Rev 21) as the New Testament church, and (4) the view taking the river of life (Rev 22) as the symbol for salvation.
author Lo, W.
author_facet Lo, W.
author_sort Lo, W.
title Ezekiel in Revelation : literary and hermeneutics
title_short Ezekiel in Revelation : literary and hermeneutics
title_full Ezekiel in Revelation : literary and hermeneutics
title_fullStr Ezekiel in Revelation : literary and hermeneutics
title_full_unstemmed Ezekiel in Revelation : literary and hermeneutics
title_sort ezekiel in revelation : literary and hermeneutics
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 1999
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.653989
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