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Bishop Alexander (Mileant)
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The author.

The author of the Apocalypse refers to himself as John (Rev. 1:1, 4 and 9, and 22:8). In the

opinion of all the Holy Fathers of the Church, he was the Apostle John, the beloved disciple

of Christ, who had received the distinctive name “Theologian” because of the extent of his

studies regarding the Word of God. His authorship of the Apocalypse is substantiated in

factual basis in the Apocalypse itself, as well as by many internal and external signs. To the

inspired pen of John the Theologian belongs one of the Gospels and also three Epistles to the

churches. The author of the Apocalypse states that he was on the island of Patmos “for the

Word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ” (Rev. 1:9). It is known from Church history

that of all the Apostles, only St. John the Theologian was subjected to incarceration on this

island.

The proof of authorship of the Apocalypse by St. John the Theologian is in the similarity

of this book with his Gospel and the Epistles, similarity not only in spirit, but also in the

writing style, and especially in certain characteristic expressions. Thus, for example, the

Apostolic sermon is referred to here as “witnessing” or “testimony” (Rev. 1:2-9; 20:4; also

see John 1:7; 3:11; 21:24; 1 John 5:9-11). The Lord Jesus Christ is referred to as “the Word”

(Rev. 19:13 and John 1:1-14 and 1 John 1:1) and “the Lamb” (Rev. 5:6 and 17:14; also see

John 1:36). The prophetic words of Zechariah, “Then they will look on Me Whom they have

pierced” (Zech. 12:10), both in the Gospel and in the Apocalypse are quoted in the same

manner, according to the Greek translation of the Seventy(Rev. 1:7 and John 19:37,

Septuagint translation). Some differences can be seen in the language between the Apocalypse

and other writings by the Holy Apostle John. They are explained as being differences in

context as well as in circumstances of origin of the Holy Apostle's writings. St. John, being a

Jew by birth and, although having a command of the Greek language, finding himself incarcerated

and away from living, spoken Greek, naturally imprinted on the Apocalypse the

influence of his native tongue. It is evident to the unbiased reader of the Apocalypse that its

total content bears the mark of the Apostle's great spirit of love and contemplation.

St. John's disciple St. Papias of Hierapolis refers to the writer of the Apocalypse as

John the Elder,just as the Apostle refers to himself in his Epistles (2 John 1:1 and 3 John

1:1). Of great importance is also the opinion of St. Justin Martyr, who lived in Ephesus prior

to his conversion to Christianity, where the Apostle John had also lived many years before

him. Many Holy Fathers of the second and third centuries quote from the Apocalypse, as

from a God-inspired book written by St. John the Theologian. One of them was St. Hippolytus,

a Roman pope and student of Irenaeus of Lyons, who wrote an apologia on the Apocalypse.

Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian, and Origen also acknowledge St. John as the author

of the Apocalypse. Other, later Fathers of the Church are equally convinced in this: Sts.

Ephraem the Syrian, Epiphanius, Basil the Great, Hillary, Athanasius the Great, Gregory the

Theologian, Didymus, Ambrose of Milan, Augustine the Blessed, and Jerome the Blessed.

The thirty-third canon of the Council of Carthage, by attributing the Apocalypse to St. John

the Theologian, places it in the ranks of other canonical books of Holy Scripture. Especially

of great value is the attestation of Irenaeus of Lyons regarding the authorship as being that of

St. John the Theologian because St. Irenaeus was a student of St. Polycarp of Smyrna, who in

turn was a student of St. John the Theologian, heading, under his Apostolic guidance, the

Church of Smyrna.




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