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Understanding how genre shapes our reading of Scripture is one of the most foundational—and often overlooked—keys to interpreting the Bible faithfully. In this 10th installment of the ongoing Bible Series, Mike Erre and Tim Stafford deep-dive into the importance of reading Scripture on its own literary terms rather than applying a flat, literalistic lens. Using the book of Revelation as a case study, they dismantle sensationalist and futurist interpretations and explore how genre—apocalyptic, prophetic, and epistolary—provides clarity rather than confusion when rightly understood.
This conversation re-centers the idea that faithfulness begins with relational engagement, not theological rigidity, and highlights how communal reading of Scripture transforms our approach to modern Western misreadings.
Key Takeaways: • Understanding Revelation Through Genre Cues – How Revelation explicitly tells us it is an apocalypse, a prophecy, and a letter—and why that matters. • Deconstructing the Flat Reading of the Bible – Why reading the Bible like a single, uniform book misrepresents what the authors intended and leads to harmful misinterpretations. • Prophecy ≠ Prediction – Why biblical prophecy isn’t fortune telling—but a call to faithfulness in the present. • How Revelation Encouraged Its First Audience – The radical notion that the first-century recipients of Revelation fully understood it without charts or timelines. • Using Literary Lenses to Encounter Jesus – Why reading with genre-awareness leads us to Jesus, not away from Him.
Resources Mentioned: • Book: How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth by Gordon Fee and Douglas Stuart • Isaiah 13 – Example of apocalyptic language in prophetic literature • Revelation 1:1-4 – Exploring Revelation’s opening "thesis" and genre signals • The Mars Hill Podcast (bonus reflections) • Voxology Radio – Spotify playlists from past series and worship music linked here
Call to Action: Join us as we continue to reimagine our engagement with Scripture—outside rigid systems and within a vibrant, questioning community. Subscribe to the podcast, leave a review, and follow us on social to keep the conversation going.
As always, we encourage and would love discussion as we pursue. Feel free to email in questions to [email protected], and to engage the conversation on Facebook and Instagram.
We're on YouTube (if you're into that kinda thing): VOXOLOGY TV
Our Merch Store! ETSY
Learn more about the Voxology Podcast
Subscribe on iTunes or Spotify
Support the Voxology Podcast on Patreon
The Voxology Spotify channel can be found here: Voxology Radio
Follow us on Instagram: @voxologypodcast and "like" us on Facebook
Follow Mike on Twitter: www.twitter.com/mikeerre
Music in this episode by Timothy John Stafford
Instagram & Twitter: @GoneTimothy
As always, we encourage and would love discussion as we pursue. Feel free to email in questions to [email protected], and to engage the conversation on Facebook and Instagram.
We're on YouTube (if you're into that kinda thing): VOXOLOGY TV.
Our Merch Store! ETSY
Learn more about the Voxology Podcast
Subscribe on iTunes or Spotify
Support the Voxology Podcast on Patreon
The Voxology Spotify channel can be found here: Voxology Radio
Follow us on Instagram: @voxologypodcast and "like" us on Facebook
Follow Mike on Twitter: www.twitter.com/mikeerre
Music in this episode by Timothy John Stafford
Instagram & Twitter: @GoneTimothy
4.8
10571,057 ratings
Understanding how genre shapes our reading of Scripture is one of the most foundational—and often overlooked—keys to interpreting the Bible faithfully. In this 10th installment of the ongoing Bible Series, Mike Erre and Tim Stafford deep-dive into the importance of reading Scripture on its own literary terms rather than applying a flat, literalistic lens. Using the book of Revelation as a case study, they dismantle sensationalist and futurist interpretations and explore how genre—apocalyptic, prophetic, and epistolary—provides clarity rather than confusion when rightly understood.
This conversation re-centers the idea that faithfulness begins with relational engagement, not theological rigidity, and highlights how communal reading of Scripture transforms our approach to modern Western misreadings.
Key Takeaways: • Understanding Revelation Through Genre Cues – How Revelation explicitly tells us it is an apocalypse, a prophecy, and a letter—and why that matters. • Deconstructing the Flat Reading of the Bible – Why reading the Bible like a single, uniform book misrepresents what the authors intended and leads to harmful misinterpretations. • Prophecy ≠ Prediction – Why biblical prophecy isn’t fortune telling—but a call to faithfulness in the present. • How Revelation Encouraged Its First Audience – The radical notion that the first-century recipients of Revelation fully understood it without charts or timelines. • Using Literary Lenses to Encounter Jesus – Why reading with genre-awareness leads us to Jesus, not away from Him.
Resources Mentioned: • Book: How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth by Gordon Fee and Douglas Stuart • Isaiah 13 – Example of apocalyptic language in prophetic literature • Revelation 1:1-4 – Exploring Revelation’s opening "thesis" and genre signals • The Mars Hill Podcast (bonus reflections) • Voxology Radio – Spotify playlists from past series and worship music linked here
Call to Action: Join us as we continue to reimagine our engagement with Scripture—outside rigid systems and within a vibrant, questioning community. Subscribe to the podcast, leave a review, and follow us on social to keep the conversation going.
As always, we encourage and would love discussion as we pursue. Feel free to email in questions to [email protected], and to engage the conversation on Facebook and Instagram.
We're on YouTube (if you're into that kinda thing): VOXOLOGY TV
Our Merch Store! ETSY
Learn more about the Voxology Podcast
Subscribe on iTunes or Spotify
Support the Voxology Podcast on Patreon
The Voxology Spotify channel can be found here: Voxology Radio
Follow us on Instagram: @voxologypodcast and "like" us on Facebook
Follow Mike on Twitter: www.twitter.com/mikeerre
Music in this episode by Timothy John Stafford
Instagram & Twitter: @GoneTimothy
As always, we encourage and would love discussion as we pursue. Feel free to email in questions to [email protected], and to engage the conversation on Facebook and Instagram.
We're on YouTube (if you're into that kinda thing): VOXOLOGY TV.
Our Merch Store! ETSY
Learn more about the Voxology Podcast
Subscribe on iTunes or Spotify
Support the Voxology Podcast on Patreon
The Voxology Spotify channel can be found here: Voxology Radio
Follow us on Instagram: @voxologypodcast and "like" us on Facebook
Follow Mike on Twitter: www.twitter.com/mikeerre
Music in this episode by Timothy John Stafford
Instagram & Twitter: @GoneTimothy
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