000 01804nam0a2200241 n 4500
001 963
090 _a963
100 _a19920422d1989 m||y0engy50
101 0 _aeng
102 _aUS
200 1 _aRevelation verse by verse
_fHenry Feyerabend
210 _aLondon [Ont.]
_aBerrien Springs, MI
_cDestiny/Arts International
_cMaracle Press Limited
_d♭1989
215 _avi, 204 p.
327 1 1 _bRevelation 1
_p7
_bRevelation 2
_p19
_bRevelation 3
_p29
_bRevelation 4
_p41
_bRevelation 5
_p49
_bRevelation 6
_p55
_bRevelation 7
_p67
_bRevelation 8
_p79
_bRevelation 9
_p85
_bRevelation 10
_p93
_bRevelation 11
_p99
_bRevelation 12
_p111
_bRevelation 13
_p119
_bRevelation 14
_p133
_bRevelation 15
_p145
_bRevelation 16
_p149
_bRevelation 17
_p159
_bRevelation 18
_p167
_bRevelation 19
_p175
_bRevelation 20
_p183
_bRevelation 21
_p191
_bRevelation 22
_p199
330 _aRevelation has been considered to be the most difficult book in the Bible. Calvin refused to write a commentary on it. Luther avoided its teachings for years. A 20th century preacher suggested that "Christ's resumption of the sacred tongue of heaven caused Him to forget the mortal language of earth." In spite of its difficulties, this book, like a magnet, irresistibly draws clergy, theologians and laymen to a study of its messages. G. Campbell Morgan once said, "There is no book to which I turn more eagerly in hours of depression than to this, with all its mystery, all the details of which I do not understand."
541 1 _zukr
_a
541 1 _zrus
_a
605 _2lc
_aBible
_iRevelation
_xCriticism, interpretation, etc
675 _a26
700 1 _aFeyerabend
_bH.
_91172
_f1931-2006
_gHenry
801 1 _aUA
_bUA-BuIAS
_c20170601
942 _2udc
_n0
_cBOOK
_h26
_j26 / F33
_vF33