
Revelation – After It’s All Been Said and Done Bible Teaching
Shawn's teaching on Revelation highlights its Jewish context, Preterist view, Jesus' role, and unity through faith. Emphasizes spiritual growth, divine authority, and salvation.
Verse by Verse Teachings is an in-depth, methodical study of the Bible led by Shawn McCraney. Launched in 2013, these teachings are dedicated to helping individuals understand every single verse scripture in its purest, most contextual form—free from institutional biases or doctrinal agendas.
Whether you’re new to the Bible or seeking deeper insights, these teachings will equip you to understand the text in historical, cultural and exegetical context – outside of the bounds of religious tradition.
Shawn's teaching on Revelation highlights its Jewish context, Preterist view, Jesus' role, and unity through faith. Emphasizes spiritual growth, divine authority, and salvation.
Shawn's teaching on Revelation highlights the transition from the 'present age' to the 'age to come,' focusing on early church challenges, prophecy fulfillment, and spiritual transformation.
Shawn's teaching on Revelation 21-22 highlights the New Jerusalem as a symbol of God's people under the new covenant, emphasizing spiritual victory, transformation, and divine presence.
Revelation 21:9-21 describes the New Jerusalem's descent, symbolizing the New Covenant's inclusivity. Shawn highlights Revelation 21:1-8's themes of renewal and judgment. The Shekinah glory now rests on the Church, symbolizing believers' unity. The city, with gates and foundations named after tribes and apostles, signifies universal access to God's kingdom. The cube-shaped city, adorned with precious stones, represents purity. Revelation 21:22-27 emphasizes God's eternal light. The integration of Gentiles and submission of kings to Christ are current realities, not future events. The vision portrays a transformative era under the new covenant.
Revelation 21 symbolizes the New Jerusalem as the faithful Church, emphasizing spiritual fulfillment over material, transitioning from old to new covenant, and eternal life through Christ.
Revelation 21 describes a new heaven and earth, New Jerusalem as a heavenly city, symbolizing the church's spiritual identity, unity in Christ, and life beyond death.
Shawn's teaching focuses on Revelation 20:8-15, the transition from the Old to New Covenant with Jerusalem's fall in 70 AD, and the imminent fulfillment of prophecies.
Shawn teaches Full Preterism, asserting all biblical prophecies are fulfilled, including Christ's return. Revelation is allegorical, focusing on persecution under Nero, with Gog and Magog symbolizing eschatological conflicts. Christ's spiritual kingdom fulfills Davidic prophecies, countering premillennial views.
EBV claims the resurrection occurred in 70 AD with Christ's parousia, ending God's redemptive history. It emphasizes spiritual transformation, ongoing salvation, and rejects new revelations.
Shawn examines Matthew 27:52-53, arguing for a temporary resurrection like Lazarus, not eternal. He aligns with Covenant Eschatology, emphasizing fulfillment by 70 AD.
Shawn teaches resurrection as a spiritual event, not physical, emphasizing love and spiritual truths over literal interpretations. He critiques traditional doctrines and encourages diverse views.
Shawn's teaching reinterprets Revelation 20, emphasizing Satan's defeat by Jesus, the symbolic "thousand years" as martyrs reigning with Christ, and judgment from heaven.
Script currently unavailable.
Shawn contrasts Russell's view of the Millennium starting in 70 AD with full preterism's past event view (30-70 AD). McKensie suggests "premillennial preterism," starting the Millennium at AD 70.
Script currently unavailable.
Shawn's teaching explores Revelation 19's prophecy fulfillment, focusing on the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD, preterist views, and eschatological interpretations like amillennialism and postmillennialism.
Shawn's teaching on Revelation 19 highlights the symbolic end of Judaism, the spiritual marriage of the Bride of Christ, and the necessity of spiritual readiness. It emphasizes the unified message of Jesus throughout the Bible, portraying Him as the Messiah with divine authority, and discusses prophetic imagery and historical events like Jerusalem's destruction.
Revelation 19 highlights heavenly celebration for God's judgment, Jesus as "Faithful and True," defeat of evil, and the Church as the Bride. Shawn emphasizes God and Jesus' distinct roles, "Hallelujah" as worship, and the Church's preparation for spiritual union with Christ.
Shawn's teaching links Babylon's fall in Revelation to Jerusalem's 70 AD destruction, highlighting idolatry, covenant shift, and temple's end, using biblical and historical parallels.
Revelation 18 details Babylon's fall, symbolizing corruption. Shawn's teaching highlights spiritual desolation, urging believers to separate from sin and maintain faithfulness.