35 episodes

This is quite possibly the most comprehensive verse by verse treatment of the Book of Revelation ever written. David Chilton has tackled what Calvin and Luther never even attempted. Following in the train of thought of his Paradise Restored, Chilton sees the Church triumphant to the end with Satan defeated at the return of Christ. The Apostle John presents a vision of victorious Christians who overcome all opposition through the work of Jesus Christ. Chilton asserts that for too long the Church has labored under the delusion that failure is her only role in the world. An inviting, yet non-threatening commentary for the layman as well as the scholar. From the very beginning, cranks and crackpots have attempted to use Revelation to advocate some new twist on the Chicken Little Doctrine: "The Sky Is Falling!" But, as David Chilton shows in this careful, detailed exposition, St. John's Apocalypse teaches instead that Christians will overcome all opposition through the work of Jesus Christ. Most of the confusion over the meaning of the prophecy has resulted from a failure to apply five crucial interpretive keys to the Book of Revelation: 1. Revelation is the most "Biblical" book in the Bible - St. John quotes hundreds of passages from the Old Testament, often with subtle allusions to little-known rituals of the Ancient Near East. In order to understand Revelation, we need to know our Bibles backward and forward (or, at least, own a commentary that explains it!) 2. Revelation is a prophecy about imminent events - Events that were about to break loose on the world of the first century. Revelation is not about nuclear warfare, space travel, or the end of the world. Again and again it specifically warns that "the time is near!" Revelation cannot be understood unless this fundamental fact is taken seriously. 3. Revelation has a system of symbolism - Everyone recognized that St. John wrote his message in symbols. But the meaning of those symbols is not up for grabs. There is a systematic structure in Biblical symbolism. in order to understand Revelation properly, we must become familiar with the "language" in which it is written. 4. Revelation is a worship service - St. John did not write a textbook on prophecy. Instead, he recorded a heavenly worship service in progress. One of his major concerns, if fact, is that the worship of God is central to everything in life. It is the most important thing we do. 5. Revelation is a book about dominion - Revelation is not a book about how terrible the Antichrist is, or how powerful the devil is. It is, as the very first verse says, "The revelation of Jesus Christ." It tells us about His lordship over all; it tells us about our salvation and victory in the New Covenant, God's "wonderful plan for our life"; it tells us that the kingdom of the world has become the Kingdom of our God, and of His Christ; and it tells us that He shall reign forever and ever. "David Chilton has done it. He has finally done it. He has written a book on Revelation that is sure to spark an eschatological revolution. With Paradise Restored, he embalmed the old corpse of 'pessimillenialism.' But now, with The Days of Vengeance, he has nailed shut the sarcophagus, sealed the crypt, and made off into the night rehearsing profound eulogies. But, not only does he return the zombies of the end times doomsaying to the dust from whence they came, Chilton has resurrected with cogency, clarity, and admirable consistency a genuinely Biblical 'optimillenialism.' The Days of Vengeance is an extraordinary exposition of the book of Revelation and will undoubtedly be welcomed as a cool drenching rain upon a dry, thirsty ground. Long parched and impoverished by speculative spectacularization, the evangelical scholastic wilderness can do naught but soak in Chilton's careful and literate commentary."  –Gary North, Author and Economist "The Days of Vengeance is phenomenal. It is big (nearly 750 pages big, going where no com

The Days of Vengeance: An Exposition of The Book of Revelation - Reconstructionist Radio (Audiobook‪)‬ David Chilton

    • Religion & Spirituality
    • 5.0 • 17 Ratings

This is quite possibly the most comprehensive verse by verse treatment of the Book of Revelation ever written. David Chilton has tackled what Calvin and Luther never even attempted. Following in the train of thought of his Paradise Restored, Chilton sees the Church triumphant to the end with Satan defeated at the return of Christ. The Apostle John presents a vision of victorious Christians who overcome all opposition through the work of Jesus Christ. Chilton asserts that for too long the Church has labored under the delusion that failure is her only role in the world. An inviting, yet non-threatening commentary for the layman as well as the scholar. From the very beginning, cranks and crackpots have attempted to use Revelation to advocate some new twist on the Chicken Little Doctrine: "The Sky Is Falling!" But, as David Chilton shows in this careful, detailed exposition, St. John's Apocalypse teaches instead that Christians will overcome all opposition through the work of Jesus Christ. Most of the confusion over the meaning of the prophecy has resulted from a failure to apply five crucial interpretive keys to the Book of Revelation: 1. Revelation is the most "Biblical" book in the Bible - St. John quotes hundreds of passages from the Old Testament, often with subtle allusions to little-known rituals of the Ancient Near East. In order to understand Revelation, we need to know our Bibles backward and forward (or, at least, own a commentary that explains it!) 2. Revelation is a prophecy about imminent events - Events that were about to break loose on the world of the first century. Revelation is not about nuclear warfare, space travel, or the end of the world. Again and again it specifically warns that "the time is near!" Revelation cannot be understood unless this fundamental fact is taken seriously. 3. Revelation has a system of symbolism - Everyone recognized that St. John wrote his message in symbols. But the meaning of those symbols is not up for grabs. There is a systematic structure in Biblical symbolism. in order to understand Revelation properly, we must become familiar with the "language" in which it is written. 4. Revelation is a worship service - St. John did not write a textbook on prophecy. Instead, he recorded a heavenly worship service in progress. One of his major concerns, if fact, is that the worship of God is central to everything in life. It is the most important thing we do. 5. Revelation is a book about dominion - Revelation is not a book about how terrible the Antichrist is, or how powerful the devil is. It is, as the very first verse says, "The revelation of Jesus Christ." It tells us about His lordship over all; it tells us about our salvation and victory in the New Covenant, God's "wonderful plan for our life"; it tells us that the kingdom of the world has become the Kingdom of our God, and of His Christ; and it tells us that He shall reign forever and ever. "David Chilton has done it. He has finally done it. He has written a book on Revelation that is sure to spark an eschatological revolution. With Paradise Restored, he embalmed the old corpse of 'pessimillenialism.' But now, with The Days of Vengeance, he has nailed shut the sarcophagus, sealed the crypt, and made off into the night rehearsing profound eulogies. But, not only does he return the zombies of the end times doomsaying to the dust from whence they came, Chilton has resurrected with cogency, clarity, and admirable consistency a genuinely Biblical 'optimillenialism.' The Days of Vengeance is an extraordinary exposition of the book of Revelation and will undoubtedly be welcomed as a cool drenching rain upon a dry, thirsty ground. Long parched and impoverished by speculative spectacularization, the evangelical scholastic wilderness can do naught but soak in Chilton's careful and literate commentary."  –Gary North, Author and Economist "The Days of Vengeance is phenomenal. It is big (nearly 750 pages big, going where no com

    Foreword

    Foreword

    • 1 min
    Author’s Preface

    Author’s Preface

    • 11 min
    Publisher’s Preface

    Publisher’s Preface

    • 48 min
    Introduction

    Introduction

    • 2 hr 3 min
    PART 1: PREAMBLE – The Son of Man (Revelation 1)

    PART 1: PREAMBLE – The Son of Man (Revelation 1)

    • 4 min
    Chapter 1: King of Kings

    Chapter 1: King of Kings

    • 1 hr 37 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
17 Ratings

17 Ratings

O,C, Jones ,

Awesome

This is so cool I was looking for audio of this book and have now fond. As I’ve been reading a book on 4 view of revelation and was going to supplement that with 1 book from each view and this book looked very interesting I can’t wait to start listening.

Edit this was a very good book one thing I didn’t agree in was his view of 666 and the post-mil view , but a great book for sure.

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