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Eugene Peterson not only produces Bible translations, he also is a poet. Likewise, he sees John who wrote the Revelation as a poet with an amazing imagination. Peterson argues that the intent of revelation is not to "inform" us about God but to "involve" us in God.
In Peterson's own words: "Marks on paper, via the imagination, make pictures and sounds that involve us as living persons who hear and see and touch in our encounter with reality. The famous blessing that stands on the first page of the Revelation (Revelation 1:3) is not for those who read for information or knowledge, but for those who read aloud and those who hear, reconstituting the words as oral and visual realities that pull us into personal encounter with the personal God. 'Anything can make us look,' says poet Archibald MacLeish, 'only art makes us see.' The Revelation makes us see: 'I turned to see the voice' " (Revelation 1:12).
In Peterson's own words: "Marks on paper, via the imagination, make pictures and sounds that involve us as living persons who hear and see and touch in our encounter with reality. The famous blessing that stands on the first page of the Revelation (Revelation 1:3) is not for those who read for information or knowledge, but for those who read aloud and those who hear, reconstituting the words as oral and visual realities that pull us into personal encounter with the personal God. 'Anything can make us look,' says poet Archibald MacLeish, 'only art makes us see.' The Revelation makes us see: 'I turned to see the voice' " (Revelation 1:12).
