Revelation is impossible to understand without the Hebrew Scriptures
The book of Revelation is an extraordinary book not for those with a mathematical mind nor for those with a logistical or computerised and high-scholars but for dummies. This book is for uncomplicated people, who under the injustice or oppression of a system, or culture, can understand the interpretation much better than ones who examine the book as a preterist; futurist or historicist views. This book is a guide needed tool for those without help, without hope, without breath. On the other hand, this book is a tool of judgement, where mans power and desire for indulgence in sin, guilds and idolatry are exposed by Christ, the One who sits among the lamp stands. Over the years, this book has become a message without help, without hope and without breath for those who have made out of it nothing but a black list of restrictions which could only be understood by great Scholars or great Preachers, ruling out the ordinary preacher and Christians who struggles with their pressures of life, culture and faith.
In this essay we want to turn the unimaginable to reality by brining the significance and the message of this book back to the people. Many of those who profess high-quality teaching will be surprised to find out that this book could be so well understood by a farmer who is not only with his head in the book but with his hands and feet on the ground, experiencing what he reads. In view of this, we want to highlight the understanding of this book within the framework of the Hebrew Scriptures, offering to it an explored background, a revelation of God and His Son, and later, a revelation of ourselves, who are the recipients of this letter.


