by jimwalton » Mon Oct 31, 2022 10:04 am
God is the source of the prophecy, and Jesus is the agent of it. Jesus is most likely a subjective genitive: he is the agent through which the prophecy comes, not the object of it. (Source: Marvin Vincent, Word Studies of the NT, Vol. 2 p. 407; Merrill Tenney, Interpreting Revelation p. 29).
God (the subject) gave the revelation (the apocalypse) to "him," to Jesus.
To show to his—God's (the subject)—servants. Though in grammar we typically reference the the pronoun to the nearest anaphoric antecedent unless there is indication to do otherwise, in this case Revelation is consistent in regarding believers as the servants of God: 7.3, 10.7, 11.18, 15.3, 19.2 & 5, 22.6.
God is the source of the prophecy, and Jesus is the agent of it. Jesus is most likely a subjective genitive: he is the agent through which the prophecy comes, not the object of it. (Source: Marvin Vincent, Word Studies of the NT, Vol. 2 p. 407; Merrill Tenney, Interpreting Revelation p. 29).
God (the subject) gave the revelation (the apocalypse) to "him," to Jesus.
To show to his—God's (the subject)—servants. Though in grammar we typically reference the the pronoun to the nearest anaphoric antecedent unless there is indication to do otherwise, in this case Revelation is consistent in regarding believers as the servants of God: 7.3, 10.7, 11.18, 15.3, 19.2 & 5, 22.6.