Page:Darby - Notes on the Book of Revelations, 1839.djvu/9

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INTRODUCTION.


The following pages pretend to be nothing more whatsoever than what is presented in the title. There is no attempt at a general exposition of this most instructive and important book : and those who seek for an exciting application to surrounding and past events will not find it here. The writer has noted down in reading, what struck him in the text (often, he believes, overlooked in the framing of some general theory), and he has published what has struck his own mind for the purpose of drawing attention to the book itself. He has added some notes containing more the expression of the light thus elicited from the text; and in these and in the commencement, as he was writing really for the use of Christian brethren, he has not been afraid to communicate freely what thus struck him, desiring it to be as freely weighed, by this and other Scriptures, before the Lord. In teaching, he would feel it wrong to teach any thing which (however still