Hello Pterist,
Hello,
The author you cite states, "by “recapitulation,” I mean “the repetition of the same basic pattern in a variety of specific formulations” The word “plot” might be clearer than Collins word “pattern.”
James Stuart Russell essentially agrees, "the several visions [of the Revelation] may be described as only varied representations of the same facts or events; re-arrangements and new combinations of the same constituent elements. This is obviously the case with two of the great divisions, viz. the vision of the seven trumpets and that of the seven vials. These are almost counterparts of each other; and though the resemblance between the other visions is not so marked, yet it will be found that they are all different aspects of the same great event.
"the visions are not telescopic, looking at the distant; but kaleidoscopic,---every turn of the instrument producing a new combination of images, exquisitely beautiful and gorgeous, while the elements which compose the picture remain substantially the same.
"As Pharoah’s dream was one, though seen under two different forms, so the visions of the Apocalypse are one, though presented in seven different aspects. The reason of the repetition is probably in both cases the same. ‘For that the dream was doubled to Pharoah twice, it is because the thing is established by God, and God will shortly bring it to pass'’(Gen. xli. 32). In like manner the events foreshadowed in the Apocalypse are declared by their sevenfold repetition to be sure and near."
Because J.S. Russell approaches the Revelation as a Jewish document and accepts the explicit statements about the nearness of Jerusalem's destruction, I find his treatment more satisfying.
Bye for now!
T