Abstract
This article depends on much else that I have written elsewhere. Most of it has long since become public property, but some is recent enough to have gone unnoticed. My recent book, The Book of Revelation,1 devotes two chapters to Olivi as an exegete. Some of what I will say in the early part of this article is also presented there, because my aim in these chapters of the book was to show that the locus for Olivi's development of an apocalyptic program was not simply his Revelation commentary but his exegesis as a whole. be it of Isaiah, Matthew, Job, Genesis or John. In fact, his threefold division of church history in line with Christ's three advents, which is featured in his...