He may have seen the thousands of Jews killed and thousands of others carried to Rome as slaves. We may imagine John, Pagels suggests, as an old Jew who had lived through the Jewish war with Rome, during which Jerusalem was decimated and the Temple destroyed in the year 70. John wrote his vision, prefaced with messages to seven churches in Asia Minor (modern western Turkey), from the island of Patmos in the Aegean Sea.
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But we have no reason to doubt that his name was really John. And that same Greek word provides the label for all sorts of ancient literature that scholars call “apocalyptic.” The biblical text purports to relate a real vision experienced by an otherwise unknown Jew named John - not the Apostle John, nor the same person as the anonymous author of what we call the Gospel of John. Scholars also refer to the document as the Apocalypse of John. “Revelation” is from the Latin translation of the Greek word apocalypsis, which can designate any unveiling or revealing, fantastic or ordinary.
#REVELATIONS ELAINE PAGELS SUMMARY SERIES#
Her thesis is that apocalyptic literature - visions, prophecies, predictions of cataclysm - has always carried political ramifications, both revolutionary and reactionary, liberal and conservative, from the very beginning up until today, as seen in conservative iterations of millennial dispensationalism and the hugely popular “Left Behind” series of novels about the end of the world. Pagels also discusses the afterlife of Revelation in the Christianity of late antiquity through the fourth century.
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Her account highlights several prophetic works and visionaries, from Ezekiel to Paul to the ancient sect of prophesying Christians called the Montanists, and others. Elaine Pagels may be playing on that common error with the title of her latest book, “Revelations,” though in this case it is accurate: she places the biblical Book of Revelation in the context of other ancient narratives of visions and prophecy.
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Many people mistakenly call the last book of the Christian Bible “Revelations.” It is actually the (one) Revelation to John.