Abstract:
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has again confirmed our obsession with,
and misuse of, the Book of Revelation. Of course, this is definitely not the first time that
Revelation’s themes and imagery have been pulled out and used to try and explain the current
situation. In fact, the Book of Revelation is well-known as ‘the’ book of the New Testament
where information about the present as well as the future can be found. Unfortunately, in
situations like these, people simply do not bother to draw from the reservoir of experiences on
which the author of Revelation naturally expected his hearer or reader to draw. This
phenomenon is made worse by the fact that the primary study of the text has moved into the
academic institution and, by inference, away from the faith movement. This may make earnest
scholarly biblical study of the Apocalypse seem irrelevant to the general concerns of the faith
community and the world. But the Book of Revelation does provide an indispensable resource
for helping Christians conceive of their place in the contemporary world and meditate on the
role the church is to play in a modern, secular society. John’s Apocalypse is not a mere nostalgic
trip down memory lane; it is a form of anamnesis or recollection – in recalling or performing the
narrative, the past is made physically present. By way of a performative reading of the Book of
Revelation, this article makes use of a more practical exegetical dimension.
CONTRIBUTION : This method brings the Apocalypse as New Testament text back into the life of
the community of faith it belongs to and should be performed in, thus also increasing the
usage and impact of the Book of Revelation in the faith community.
Description:
This article is based on ideas first explored in my DTh
thesis – Ritual functions of the Book of Revelation: Hope in
dark times – obtained in 2016 from the University of South
Africa under the supervision of Prof. P.J.J. Botha in the
Department of New Testament and Early Christian Studies
(now a unit within the larger Department of Biblical and
Ancient Studies).