The City Record

The City Record
Author: New York (N.Y.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1190
Release: 1906
Genre: New York (N.Y.)
ISBN:

Includes Official canvas of votes (varies slightly) 1878-1943.

The Annual Practice

The Annual Practice
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1960
Release: 1949
Genre: Court rules
ISBN:

A collection of the statutes, orders, and rules relating to the general practice, procedure and jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.

Climatological Data

Climatological Data
Author: United States. Environmental Data Service
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1102
Release: 1953
Genre: California
ISBN:

All Power to the Lamb

All Power to the Lamb
Author: James R. Johnson
Publisher: Xulon Press
Total Pages: 600
Release: 2010-12
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1612151140

Book Summary If you were God, writing a book you wanted men to understand, would you write it in such a way that men would have to make up meaning in order to understand it, or would you write it in such a way that those that seek to understand could actually come to a knowledge of its truth (Mt 7:7)? The present commentary takes the position that God wrote Revelation in such a way that with sufficient effort and intellectual honesty, readers can understand it. Certainly there are symbols in Revelation, but when God does use symbols, He provides inspired interpretations of the symbols. This commentary seeks to avoid the mistakes of the views that use the symbolical approach to Revelation (preterist, continuous historical, spiritualist, and idealist). These approaches suffer from two basic flaws: assuming the text is symbolical when it is not and making up meaning regarding the text based on stream of consciousness word association, much as one would do looking at Rorschach inkblots. This commentary seeks to avoid telling God what He should have said and strives to understand what God actually meant. Of all the approaches to understanding Revelation, this commentary is most closely aligned with the dispensationalist (premillennialist) view in that it views Revelation from a literalist, futurist perspective. It is different from the typical dispensationalist schema in that it views the seven seals as the powers of the Lamb, understands the exercise of the powers of the seven seals to be simultaneous processes, and casts chapters 8-22 as three parallel prophecies of the Lamb's power over the course of the histories of Israel, the nations, and the saints. This commentary also makes use of many of the non-canonical works that provide insight into the spirit world and detail regarding the end of the present age.