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718 illustrations across all 22 chapters
Revelation 22: In the way of Jesus, it calls the community to costly discipleship and peaceable witness.
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Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21 invites a pilgrim’s heart: return, receive grace, and keep walking with the saints.
Revelation 22: Within the deposit of faith, it meets us gently—draws us into grace through the Church’s sacramental life.
Revelation 21: From the underside of history, it meets us gently—names oppression as sin and calls the Church to liberating praxis.
Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21 invites us to practice mercy with hands, budgets, and policies—not just feelings.
In Revelation 21:1-6, the text presses one question: will we trust God’s Word and live it?
Revelation 1: As Law and Gospel, it doesn’t flatter us—exposes our need and comforts us with Christ’s gift.
Revelation 21:10, 22-22:5 confronts comfortable religion—God sides with the exploited, not the exploiters—today, not someday.
Revelation 21: In context, it calls us to live the text’s core truth with integrity.
In Revelation 21:10, 22-22:5, hope steadies the Church—God’s promises will not fail—today, not someday.
Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21 invites us to mutual aid—no one follows Jesus alone—today, not someday.
Revelation 1: In soul liberty before God, it meets us gently—calls for personal faith that bears public fruit.
Revelation 22: In the Church’s witness, it doesn’t flatter us—calls us to repent, believe, and walk in holy obedience.
Revelation 21:1-6 reminds the Church: God’s Word forms God’s people through worship, holiness, and mission.
Revelation 22: In the way of Jesus, it doesn’t flatter us—calls the community to costly discipleship and peaceable witness.
In Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21, Christ meets us as Physician, tending wounds we can’t name.
Revelation 1: From the underside of history, it names oppression as sin and calls the Church to liberating praxis.
Revelation 7:9-17 exposes pious excuses—if faith never costs power, it’s probably not liberation—today, not someday.
Revelation 21: By prevenient grace, it meets us gently—invites a real response that grows into holy love.
If Revelation 5:11-14 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire—today, not someday.
Revelation 22: In context, it calls us to live the text’s core truth with integrity.
If Revelation 1:4-8 never leads to holiness, what you call “power” may be performance—today, not someday.
Revelation 22: From the struggle for freedom, it proclaims hope, dignity, and God’s liberating justice.
Revelation 21:1-6 comforts the faithful: God keeps His promises and strengthens His Church to endure.