All we know about the Book of Revelation is that it is signed by 'John', who wrote from the island of Patmos. At some point, the Revelation to John of Patmos was associated with the John's Gospel solely because of the common name. Later still, Christian traditions arose as to how the Apostle John must have found his way to Patmos in order to write the book from there.
Because of the association with the Apostle John, Revelation was preserved for posterity and given the status of an apostolic writing. Even so, there were doctors of the church who questioned its authenticity and complained about its theology.
The second century Roman teacher, Gaius, called Revelation "heretical" and claimed that it was written by John's worst enemy, Cerinthus. The Church Father, Eusebius, called the Book of Revelation 'spurious'.
There were not only serious doubts in the early Church as to the authenticity of Revelation, but we now know from analysis of the text that it was not written by the Apostle John at all.
The gospel of JOHN 1 John, 2 John, 3 John Revelation
Neither. The author signs himself as John, so most scholars and many theologians call him "John of Patmos". At some point, Revelation was associated with the writings of the Johannine school, and by tradition with the apostle John, solely because of the common name.AnswerThe Apostle John was the author of Revelation. The Apostle is the only John that fits the comments made about himself within the text, he was known to be the author from the earliest times, and the vocabulary and context fit with the other books known to be written by the Apostle John. Additionally, there is no good reason to believe that anyone else was the author. Paul is not considered to be the author by any scholar.
There is no evidence that the apostle John was ever on the island of Patmos. Simply because the Book of revelation was signed by a person called John, it was decided late in the second century that this must have been the apostle John. Whoever this John was, it clearly was not the author of John's Gospel, as the style and the theology are too different. Today, many theologians refer to the author of Revelation as "John of Patmos", although some continue to believe that both authors really were the apostle John.After the decision to attribute Revelation to the apostle John, a tradition evolved that the apostle John was exiled to Patmos because he miraculously survived all attempts to kill him. Even if true, the tradition does not seem to say how long he lived in exile.
The Book of Revelation was signed by a person called John, so Paul could not have written it. The book was at one stage attributed to the apostle John, because of the coincidence of name, and in fact was accepted into the New Testament solely because of that attribution. Modern scholars say that the author could not have been the apostle John and simply call the book's author 'John of Patmos'.
A:The consensus of biblical scholars is that the apostle John wrote neither the Gospel that now bears his name, nor Revelation. In any case, they say it is clear that the two books had completely different authors and now commonly use the name John of Patmos as the author of Revelation, to distinguish the two. At some point after the Church Fathers decided that the Gospel was probably written by the apostle John, they associated Revelation with him solely because its author also used the same name. Others, including even Origen and Eusebius doubted the authenticity of Revelation.
God chose Apostle John to receive the Revelation because of his strong faith, steadfastness in persecution, and his close relationship with Jesus Christ. John was known as the "disciple whom Jesus loved," and he had a deep understanding of spiritual matters. These qualities made him a fitting vessel to receive the visions and messages contained in the Book of Revelation.
The apostle john
Revelation
Public revelation began with the apostle Abraham, and ended with the death of the apostle St. John.
Both St. John the Baptist & St. John the Apostle(the author of Revelation)refer to Christ as the Lamb.
It was the apostle John the in the book in Revelation.
The gospel of JOHN 1 John, 2 John, 3 John Revelation
Neither. The author signs himself as John, so most scholars and many theologians call him "John of Patmos". At some point, Revelation was associated with the writings of the Johannine school, and by tradition with the apostle John, solely because of the common name.AnswerThe Apostle John was the author of Revelation. The Apostle is the only John that fits the comments made about himself within the text, he was known to be the author from the earliest times, and the vocabulary and context fit with the other books known to be written by the Apostle John. Additionally, there is no good reason to believe that anyone else was the author. Paul is not considered to be the author by any scholar.
There is no evidence that the apostle John was ever on the island of Patmos. Simply because the Book of revelation was signed by a person called John, it was decided late in the second century that this must have been the apostle John. Whoever this John was, it clearly was not the author of John's Gospel, as the style and the theology are too different. Today, many theologians refer to the author of Revelation as "John of Patmos", although some continue to believe that both authors really were the apostle John.After the decision to attribute Revelation to the apostle John, a tradition evolved that the apostle John was exiled to Patmos because he miraculously survived all attempts to kill him. Even if true, the tradition does not seem to say how long he lived in exile.
The Book of Revelation was signed by a person called John, so Paul could not have written it. The book was at one stage attributed to the apostle John, because of the coincidence of name, and in fact was accepted into the New Testament solely because of that attribution. Modern scholars say that the author could not have been the apostle John and simply call the book's author 'John of Patmos'.
Wrong St. John. It was the Apostle which wrote the Book of Revelation. The Bride was the Church.
A:The consensus of biblical scholars is that the apostle John wrote neither the Gospel that now bears his name, nor Revelation. In any case, they say it is clear that the two books had completely different authors and now commonly use the name John of Patmos as the author of Revelation, to distinguish the two. At some point after the Church Fathers decided that the Gospel was probably written by the apostle John, they associated Revelation with him solely because its author also used the same name. Others, including even Origen and Eusebius doubted the authenticity of Revelation.