- Jul 18, 2019
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In another thread, a conversation came up over when Revelation was written. I hold to the view that it was written between 90-100AD. Others believe Revelation was written prior to 70AD.
There seems to be external evidence that Revelation was written around 90-100AD. But then again that begs for a case of credibility.
There seems to be context evidence that Revelation was written prior to 70AD considering John made no reference to the destruction of Jerusalem.
The reason why I still hold to 90-100AD still being the time when Revelation was written is because there could be at least two answers as to why John did not reference the destruction of Jerusalem. The first reason, I agree that Jerusalem's destruction was significant. I would imagine during these days it would have been common knowledge. The second reason, Revelation is about future events and he was commanded to write down what he saw, not what has happened in Jerusalem's history.
I believe some clues that may help us further, though also require external evidence, are the other churches listed in the seven letters and the faithful witness Antipas who was martyred.
I know what I present from my view isn't exhaustive or necessarily convincing, if I am to be honest with myself my view isn't necessarily complete. I would much rather learn from other points of view and evidence that will be shared in this thread.
There seems to be external evidence that Revelation was written around 90-100AD. But then again that begs for a case of credibility.
There seems to be context evidence that Revelation was written prior to 70AD considering John made no reference to the destruction of Jerusalem.
The reason why I still hold to 90-100AD still being the time when Revelation was written is because there could be at least two answers as to why John did not reference the destruction of Jerusalem. The first reason, I agree that Jerusalem's destruction was significant. I would imagine during these days it would have been common knowledge. The second reason, Revelation is about future events and he was commanded to write down what he saw, not what has happened in Jerusalem's history.
I believe some clues that may help us further, though also require external evidence, are the other churches listed in the seven letters and the faithful witness Antipas who was martyred.
I know what I present from my view isn't exhaustive or necessarily convincing, if I am to be honest with myself my view isn't necessarily complete. I would much rather learn from other points of view and evidence that will be shared in this thread.