The Book of Revelation
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Lesson OneThe Background of Revelation3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson TwoContent and Structure3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson ThreeThe King and His Kingdom3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Course Wrap-UpCourse Completion1 Activity|1 Assessment
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Question 1 of 31
1. Question
The Book of Revelation is a little like a _______. It’s full of tiny prophecies that draw much of their meaning from other prophecies around them. And it’s message is most clear when the book is read as a whole, and see the big picture it’s drawing for us.
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Question 2 of 31
2. Question
John wrote the book of Revelation to encourage ______ Christians to remain faithful until Jesus returns.
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Question 3 of 31
3. Question
What are the two types of messages to the seven churches in Asia Minor in the Book of Revelation?
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Question 4 of 31
4. Question
One of the purposes of the warnings of curses in the Book of Revelation is to teach the faithful Christians that justice delayed is not ______ ______.
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Question 5 of 31
5. Question
A second purpose of the threats of curses in the Book of Revelation was to warn Christians to resist temptation.
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Question 6 of 31
6. Question
Dr. Mark L. Strauss says, The message of Revelation really is that this world is a stage on which a great _____________ is taking place, and our actions with regard to that battle are significant.
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Question 7 of 31
7. Question
What phrase introduces the four large visions in the Book of Revelation?
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Question 8 of 31
8. Question
Put the four central visions of the Book of Revelation in their proper order.
Sort elements
- Vision of Christ
- Vision about coming events
- Vision describing the punishment of the Great Prostitute
- Vision of the bride, the wife of the Lamb
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First
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Second
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Third
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Fourth
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Question 9 of 31
9. Question
How is hope defined in the lesson?
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Question 10 of 31
10. Question
What is the meaning of the description of Jesus walking among the seven lamp stands?
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Question 11 of 31
11. Question
Who were the Nicolaitans?
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Question 12 of 31
12. Question
The lesson teaches that zeal is like fuel in the tank, but ______ are the steering wheel.
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Question 13 of 31
13. Question
Match these four churches with the unique aspect of the message given to each.
Sort elements
- They had lost their first love.
- They were neither hot nor cold.
- They failed to reject the Nicolaitans.
- There was no rebuke for them.
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Ephesus
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Laodicea
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Pergamum
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Smyrna
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Question 14 of 31
14. Question
What is the recapitulation theory of interpretation of the Book of Revelation?
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Question 15 of 31
15. Question
According to the lesson, what does the scroll with the seven seals represent?
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Question 16 of 31
16. Question
According to the lesson, what do the seven trumpets represent?
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Question 17 of 31
17. Question
While the visions of the seals and trumpets focused on divine judgments, the seven histories portrayed ___________.
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Question 18 of 31
18. Question
Identify what each of the following items found in the seven histories represent.
Sort elements
- The birth of Jesus
- Satan
- All political powers that oppose Christ
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The pregnant woman
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The red dragon with 7 heads and 10 horns
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The beast from the sea
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Question 19 of 31
19. Question
The readers of Revelation from the first century would have associated the beast from the sea and the beast from the earth with ________.
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Question 20 of 31
20. Question
What does the seventh bowl of wrath represent?
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Question 21 of 31
21. Question
What does the Great Prostitute (also called Babylon) represent?
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Question 22 of 31
22. Question
Identify the concept of each school of interpretation of the thousand year reign mentioned in Revelation 20:1-10.
Sort elements
- historic premillennialism
- dispensational premillennialism
- postmillennialism
- amillennialism
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When Jesus returns He will restore the nation of Israel and visibly reign over the nations from His throne in Jerusalem for a thousand years. Near the end of the millennium, Satan will rebel and be defeated. There will be a last judgment, followed by God's eternal reign over the new heavens and new earth.
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The millennium is not literally a thousand years, but the entire period between the first and second comings of Jesus, meaning that Jesus reigns over the earth from His throne in heaven and through the Church. Christians will experience both the blessings of the kingdom and tribulation. After the millennium, Jesus will return to reign over the new heavens and the new earth.
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After Jesus returns, Satan will be bound and there will be a thousand years of peace and prosperity. Only believers will receive eternal resurrected bodies at this time, while the unbelievers will still die. At the end of the millennium, Satan will rebel and there will be a final judgment, followed by God's eternal reign over the new heavens and the new earth.
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The millennium reign means that the kingdom expands to cover and improve the entire earth. During the millennium, which is not literally a thousand years, Jesus rules from heaven through the Church. Jesus returns after the millennium to reign eternally over the new heavens and new earth.
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Question 23 of 31
23. Question
What does the New Jerusalem that comes down from heaven in Revelation 21:9 represent?
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Question 24 of 31
24. Question
Match each view of how the prophecies of the Book of Revelation are fulfilled with its description.
Sort elements
- Most prophecies of Revelation were fulfilled in the distant past.
- The visions in Revelation won't begin to be fulfilled until the final crisis immediately before the second coming of Christ.
- The visions of Revelation offer a chronological outline of church history from the first century until the second coming.
- The scenes of Revelation depict general patterns of spiritual warfare, not specific events or chronologies.
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preterism
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futurism
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historicism
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idealism
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Question 25 of 31
25. Question
Identify the positive points of each view of how the prophecies of Revelation are fulfilled, according to the lesson.
Sort elements
- It focuses on the original audience and has application for their situation.
- It looks forward to Christ's return, the final judgment, and the final restoration of all things.
- It begins with the original audience and ends with the second coming, showing how it all leads toward a climax. It encourages people in all ages to persevere because God is in control.
- It acknowledges the thematic arrangement of Revelation, shows the consistency of Satan, recognizes inaugurated eschatology, and emphasizes modern application.
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preterism
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futurism
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historicism
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idealism
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Question 26 of 31
26. Question
Identify the negative points of each view of how the prophecies of Revelation are fulfilled, according to the lesson.
Sort elements
- It does not give a complete perspective, because it doesn't include much about the future, and doesn't help interpret history since the first century.
- It overlooks ways in which Revelation spoke to the original audience.
- It assumes a chronological order in Revelation that does not reflect the structure of the book. It depends on the Reformation as a key point in history, which focuses only on western Europe.
- It fails to identify the symbols of Revelation with historical events.
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preterism
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futurism
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historicism
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idealism
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Question 27 of 31
27. Question
Which of the following best describes the view proposed in the lesson regarding how the prophecies of Revelation are fulfilled?
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Question 28 of 31
28. Question
The lesson teaches that a key theme of Revelation is that Christ’s life, death, resurrection and heavenly reign have made him _____________.
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Question 29 of 31
29. Question
The lesson says that a key theme of Revelation is that Christ’s complete victory over evil is ______.
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Question 30 of 31
30. Question
The lesson teaches that a key application from the book of Revelation is that we are motivated to persevere under hardship, because we now know that it will not last long.
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Question 31 of 31
31. Question
One of the similarities between John’s original audience and today’s audience is that many Christians face hostility from __________.
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