I wrote "Behold, He Cometh," because the Book of Revelation has been buried under speculation, headlines, and man-made systems, while the plain meaning of the text has been neglected. Revelation was not written to confuse the church, but to reveal Jesus Christ and to give God’s people confidence about the future.

This study approaches Revelation the same way it was originally given—literally, chronologically, and scripturally. Rather than reading current events into the text, I allow the text to speak for itself. Revelation 1:19 provides the God-given outline, and that outline governs the entire book.

I reject the idea that Revelation is symbolic mythology or spiritual allegory. John was told to write what he saw, and what he saw was real. The judgments are real. The persecutions are real. The return of Christ is real. This book treats Revelation as prophecy, not poetry.

Throughout this work, I rely heavily on Scripture itself, comparing Scripture with Scripture, and using the King James Bible exclusively. Historical background is included where it clarifies the text, but human opinion is never allowed to override the Word of God.

This book is written for believers who want clarity rather than confusion, structure rather than speculation, and confidence rather than fear. Revelation was meant to strengthen the church, not frighten it, and to fix our eyes on the Lamb who is worthy.

If you are looking for a straightforward, Bible-driven study of Revelation that takes God at His word and keeps Christ at the center, this book was written for you.

I wrote, “Thy word is truth,” because many so-called Bible believers do not actually believe the Bible. That fact is evident in how they handle the Scriptures. They do not believe God can preserve His word in English, so they run to the Greek. They do not believe the Bible stands on its own authority, so they insist you must know the culture of the time before you can understand it. They do not believe the Scriptures are sufficient, so they claim archaeology and history must support or prove the Bible.

But the truth is this: the Bible does not need to be corrected by Greek, explained away by culture, or validated by archaeology. God’s word is truth, and it stands complete, preserved, and authoritative just as it is.