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Revelation has often been taught as a divine schedule — a coded timeline meant to help believers predict the future and brace for disaster. But that interpretation has produced fear, anxiety, and obsession rather than faithfulness.
This episode reframes the Book of Revelation as what it actually is: apocalyptic literature meant to unveil, not terrify. Written to persecuted believers living under empire, Revelation was never designed to forecast distant events or reward those who could crack a prophetic code. It was written to expose systems of power, confront false gods, and remind suffering communities who is truly in control.
Instead of answering the question “When will this end?” Revelation confronts a deeper one: “Who holds authority when truth is costly?”
Listeners are invited to release fear-based theology, step away from timeline obsession, and rediscover Revelation as a call to presence, faithfulness, and resistance in the here and now.
By Sashauni AaeliyaeRevelation has often been taught as a divine schedule — a coded timeline meant to help believers predict the future and brace for disaster. But that interpretation has produced fear, anxiety, and obsession rather than faithfulness.
This episode reframes the Book of Revelation as what it actually is: apocalyptic literature meant to unveil, not terrify. Written to persecuted believers living under empire, Revelation was never designed to forecast distant events or reward those who could crack a prophetic code. It was written to expose systems of power, confront false gods, and remind suffering communities who is truly in control.
Instead of answering the question “When will this end?” Revelation confronts a deeper one: “Who holds authority when truth is costly?”
Listeners are invited to release fear-based theology, step away from timeline obsession, and rediscover Revelation as a call to presence, faithfulness, and resistance in the here and now.