@article{Nowińska_2016, title={Pokój - zawsze dostępny? (Ap 1,4; 6,4)}, volume={30}, url={https://czasopisma.kul.pl/index.php/vv/article/view/1736}, DOI={10.31743/vv.1736}, abstractNote={<p>There are two passages in the Book of Revelation where the author evokes the subject of peace (Rev 1:4; 6:4) and, through analysis, we can detect semantic connections between them. God is presented as the source and owner of peace, offering it to human beings (Rev 1:4). Then again, God also allows the second horseman, after the breaking of the seal, to take peace from the earth (Rev 6:4). The union between peace and love/mercy is dependent upon receiving <em>charis</em> from God (Rev 6:4), the result being peace in the world and in the human heart. It implies the need to love one another, with the lack of it leading to hostility (Rev 6:4). The author strengthened that reflection by a series of sensory depictions of peace, in Rev 7:15b-17 and Rev 21:1–22:5, where peace is manifested as an internal experience. On a personal level, the emphasis lies on the value of an individual’s decision to turn to God and thus receive the blessings of peace.</p>}, journal={Verbum Vitae}, author={Nowińska, Joanna}, year={2016}, month={Dec.}, pages={195–210} }