SKU: 67082258195

Red Stakes Golf RSG Pro Golf Simulator Studio Bundle 4K

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Description

Red Stakes Golf RSG Pro Golf Simulator Studio Bundle 4KRed Stakes Golf RSG PRO Studio Bundle 4K Build The Bay. Done Right. You're not testing the water. You're building the dedicated room you've been planning for years the finished basement, the converted garage, the third bedroom your kids moved out of. The PRO Studio Bundle is built for the bay you'll still be playing in ten years from now: the ceiling mounted RSG PRO launch monitor with dual high speed cameras and infrared sensors capturing 12 data

Red Stakes Golf · RSG PRO Studio Bundle 4K

Build The Bay.
Done Right.

You're not testing the water. You're building the dedicated room you've been planning for years — the finished basement, the converted garage, the third bedroom your kids moved out of. The PRO Studio Bundle is built for the bay you'll still be playing in ten years from now: the ceiling-mounted RSG PRO launch monitor with dual high-speed cameras and infrared sensors capturing 12 data points on every swing, an 4K short throw projector matched to the screen, a full enclosure with impact-rated screen, a pro hitting mat, and the software — all from one vendor, all matched to each other, all built around a Michigan-made launch monitor designed to outlast the room around it.

Built around the Michigan-made RSG PRO by Red Stakes Golf — the American-made evolution of OptiShot, with a team carrying 100+ years of combined golf-simulation experience and 18,000+ golfers already playing on the engine that powers it.

Why This Beats Every Other Path

Three Reasons The PRO Bundle Exists.

Most buyers at this tier are committing to a permanent room and want the best data money can buy. Here's why the PRO is the answer.

12 Data Points, Overhead Vantage

Dual high-speed cameras read your swing from directly above — center-strike, zero perceptible latency, every club from driver to putter, right- and left-handed in the same round.

Built In Michigan To Outlast The Room

Aircraft-grade aluminum construction, U.S.-based support, no annual subscription required to play. The launch monitor is designed for thousands of sessions, not 200.

One Vendor, One Bay

Launch monitor, projector, enclosure, impact screen, hitting mat, software — all matched, all from one delivery. No sourcing project, no spec sheets, no projector throw calculations.

Who This Is Built For

You Probably Recognize Yourself In One Of These.

The three buyers we see most often when the PRO Studio Bundle ships out the door.

01

You're Building Your Forever Bay

A permanent room, not a setup that gets packed away

  • You have the room, the budget, and the vision
  • You want a ceiling-mounted unit that keeps the floor clear
  • You want hardware built to hold up over thousands of sessions

Why this fits: overhead Michigan-built launch monitor engineered for a permanent install, paired with everything else the bay needs.

02

You Want The Best Data Money Buys

Coaching, training, single-digit handicap chasing

  • You want club path, face angle, attack angle — not just distance
  • You're using the bay to train, not just to play simulator rounds
  • Accuracy and repeatability matter more than visual immersion

Why this fits: 12 measured data points on every swing — woods, irons, putter, right- and left-handed, no repositioning.

03

You Don't Want To Source Five Vendors

Time-pressed buyer building a serious room

  • You're not coordinating three deliveries from three companies
  • You don't want to spec a projector throw against a screen size
  • You want one dealer to call when something needs to be sorted out

Why this fits: one purchase from an authorized Red Stakes Golf dealer, with U.S.-based support throughout.

Six Components, One Box.

Here's every piece of the bay, and why you're not sourcing any of it separately.

01 · Launch monitor

RSG PRO overhead unit

Dual high-speed cameras and infrared sensors. Ceiling-mounted, center-strike — right- and left-handed in the same round, no repositioning.

02 · Visuals

4K short throw projector

Crystal-clear visuals on the included impact screen. Already matched in size, throw, and lumens — no spec work on your end.

03 · Bay

Enclosure + impact screen

Full enclosure with a durable impact screen rated for repeated full-speed strikes. Four sizes at checkout to fit your room.

04 · Surface

Pro hitting mat

True-to-turf hitting surface built for repeated daily use. Choose 4'×5' or 4'×10' at checkout.

05 · Software

RSG CLUB software

10 real-world courses and 3 practice ranges, lifetime access — no annual subscription required to play.

06 · Accessories

Cables, balls & tees

30' Ethernet cable and power cord, 3× TaylorMade TP5 Pix golf balls, and 2× BirTee golf tees.

RSG PRO Studio Bundle Specs & Data Captured

Launch MonitorRSG PRO Overhead
Data Points12 Measured
Projector4K Short Throw
Courses Included10 + 3 Ranges
12 measured data points
Club Speed
Ball Speed
Launch Direction
Launch Angle
Backspin
Sidespin
Club Path
Face Offset
Face Angle
Vertical Attack Angle
Carry Distance
Total Distance
Plays your whole game
Woods
Irons
Putter
Right-Handed
Left-Handed
No Repositioning

Overhead positioning measures every club without repositioning the unit — right- and left-handed golfers play the same round together.

Backed by Swing Sphere's authorized dealer guarantee — full Red Stakes Golf warranty support, 30-day returns, and real golfers on the phone at (833) 796-4777.
A Closer Look

The Components, And Why You're Not Sourcing Them.

Four cards on the four pieces of the bay that take the most time to figure out yourself.

The Launch Monitor That Reads From Above

The RSG PRO mounts to the ceiling above the tee and reads your swing from directly overhead. Two high-speed cameras paired with infrared sensors capture 12 measured ball and club metrics on every shot — club speed, ball speed, spin, club path, face angle, attack angle, the full picture. Because the cameras read from above, right- and left-handed golfers play the same round with no one moving the unit. Zero perceptible latency.

Cameras
Dual, overhead
Sensors
Infrared
Data points
12 measured
Built in
Michigan, USA

The HD Projector You're Not Spec'ing

You don't pick the throw distance, the lumens, the screen compatibility, or the mounting depth. The 4K short throw projector in the bundle arrives sized for the included impact screen — mount it, plug it in, and the bay looks the way the bundle photo looks. The 4K bundle exists if you want to step up the resolution. For most home-bay viewing distances, the HD projector is the right pick.

Resolution
4K
Throw type
Short throw
Sizing
Matched to enclosure
Setup
Plug and project

The Bay That Contains The Mess

A real enclosure does two things that turn out to matter once you've actually mishit a shot in your basement: it contains stray balls, and it makes the bay feel like a bay instead of a tarp behind a screen. The impact screen is rated for repeated full-speed strikes. Pick your enclosure dimensions at checkout — four sizes to fit your room.

Enclosure
Full bay, contained
Screen
Durable impact-rated
Sizes
4 options at checkout
Stray balls
Contained

Software That Doesn't Charge You Twice

RSG CLUB ships with 10 real-world courses and 3 practice ranges, lifetime access, no annual fee — no upsell to unlock the next five courses, no subscription required just to swing. When you eventually want to compete online with other golfers, that's a separate optional upgrade, never a tax on owning the simulator you bought.

Included
10 courses + 3 ranges
Annual fee
None for base play
Access
Lifetime
Online (optional)
$199/yr, 35+ courses
What's included

What Ships To Your Door

Everything in the bay except the computer. The only thing you'll source yourself is a Windows 11 PC — we'll help you spec one if you need.

  • RSG PRO Golf Simulator (overhead launch monitor)
  • Enclosure with impact screen
  • 4K short throw projector
  • Pro hitting mat (4'×5' or 4'×10')
  • RSG CLUB software — 10 courses + 3 ranges
  • 30' Ethernet cable + power cord
  • 3 × TaylorMade TP5 Pix golf balls
  • 2 × BirTee golf tees

Not included: a Windows 11 PC is required to run the software. It's the only thing not in the box. Call Swing Sphere at (833) 796-4777 and we'll help you spec a compatible computer.

Space & system requirements — please read before you buy

The RSG PRO is ceiling-mounted and runs on a Windows 11 PC. Confirm your ceiling height, room depth, and computer before ordering — call (833) 796-4777 and we'll size the enclosure with you.

Ceiling height
8'9" – 10'6"
Tee to screen
9–10.5 ft (8 ft min)
Mounting
Overhead / ceiling
Players
Right & left-handed
Computer
Windows 11 PC required
Not compatible with
Mac, iOS, iPad

Play The World.
When You're Ready.

RSG CLUB plays out of the box with 10 real-world courses and no annual fee. The day you decide you want to compete online — closest-to-the-pin contests, full tournaments, head-to-head rounds with friends — RSG Club Online is $199 a year to unlock the full library and global multiplayer. It's an upgrade, never a requirement.

35+ courses onlineThe full RSG course library, with new courses added every year.
Multiplayer up to 10 playersPrivate rounds with friends and public tournaments against golfers worldwide.
Live competitionClosest-to-the-pin contests, tournaments, and global leaderboards.
OPTIONAL ONLINE UPGRADE
RSG CLUB

$199/yr · 35+ courses · multiplayer rounds & tournaments worldwide.

See The RSG PRO In Action.

A closer look at the overhead cameras, the data they capture, and the way the PRO plays in a finished bay.

Powered By Red Stakes Golf

Built By A Team That Has Done This For Years.

The RSG PRO isn't a first attempt. Red Stakes Golf is the same Michigan team that built OptiShot — they've shipped this engine to more than 18,000 golfers already.

100+ yr
Combined team experience

The Red Stakes Golf team carries over 100 years of combined golf-simulation experience, going back to the OptiShot era.

18,000+
Golfers served

More than 18,000 customers have played on the RSG Club game engine that powers the RSG PRO.

USA
Designed & built in Michigan

The RSG PRO launch monitor at the center of the bundle is engineered and assembled in the United States.

How It Compares

Where The PRO 4K Bundle Fits.

The three real choices most buyers consider when committing to a serious home bay.

Capability RSG ONE Studio Bundle RSG PRO Studio Bundle 4K RSG PRO Studio Bundle HD
Launch monitor RSG ONE, rear-positioned RSG PRO, overhead
Cameras Single high-speed Dual high-speed
Data points 9 measured 12 measured
Ceiling work required None Yes — overhead mount
Projector HD or 4K included HD short throw
Enclosure + impact screen Included, matched Included, matched
Hitting mat Included Included
Courses included 10 + 3 ranges, lifetime 10 + 3 ranges, lifetime
Permanence Free-standing, movable Permanent install
Authorized dealer support ✓ (Swing Sphere) ✓ (Swing Sphere)
Typical investment $7,500 – $9,850 $12,500 – $13,050

If you're building a permanent dedicated room and want the maximum data the RSG lineup captures, the PRO 4K is the answer. If you want to stop one tier earlier and keep things rear-positioned, the ONE Studio Bundle is the same matched-bundle approach with a different launch monitor. If you want the sharpest possible projector, step down to the PRO HD.

PC requirements — Windows only, not Mac or iOS

Windows 11 64-bit · Intel Core i5 or newer · dedicated graphics card (OpenGL 4.6, 4GB GDDR5) · 16GB RAM · 6GB free storage · dedicated Ethernet port · persistent internet connection (10 Mbps or faster). The RSG PRO is not compatible with macOS, iOS, or iPad. A Windows 11 PC is the only component not included in the Studio Bundle.

FAQ

RSG PRO Studio Bundle 4K — Frequently Asked Questions

The questions you'd ask us on the phone, answered here too.

How is this different from the RSG ONE Studio Bundle?+
The RSG ONE is rear-positioned (sits 6 ft behind you), uses a single high-speed camera with infrared sensors, and captures 9 data points. The RSG PRO is ceiling-mounted, uses dual high-speed cameras with infrared sensors, and captures 12 data points. The ONE Studio Bundle is $7,500–$9,850; the PRO Studio Bundle is $12,500–$13,050 (HD) or $14,300–$14,850 (4K). If you're building a permanent dedicated room and want the max-data overhead setup, the PRO is the answer. If you want flexibility or a smaller budget, start with the ONE.
What's the difference between the HD and 4K PRO bundles?+
Same everything except the projector. The 4K bundle uses a Full 4K short throw projector and is about $1,800 less than the 4K. The 4K steps up to a 4K projector for sharper visuals at the higher price. For most home-bay viewing distances the HD is plenty — if you're playing within 8 feet of a 130-inch-plus screen, 4K starts to matter. Not sure? Call us at (833) 796-4777.
Is everything included to start playing?+
Almost — you'll need a Windows 11 PC to run the software. Everything else is in the bundle: the RSG PRO launch monitor, enclosure, impact screen, 4K short throw projector, hitting mat, RSG Club software, Ethernet cable, power cord, golf balls, and tees. Call (833) 796-4777 and we'll help you spec a PC if you need one.
Does it require a subscription to play?+
No. 10 real-world courses and 3 practice ranges are included for life, no annual fee. Online play with 35+ courses and global multiplayer is an optional $199/yr add-on — never required to use the simulator you own.
What ceiling height and depth do I need?+
The RSG PRO mounts overhead and requires 8'9" to 10'6" of ceiling height above the hitting surface. Position the tee 9 to 10.5 feet from the screen, with a minimum of 8 feet. The enclosure is offered in four sizes at checkout — call (833) 796-4777 and we'll help you pick the right one for your room.
Does it work for left-handed golfers?+
Yes. The overhead positioning creates a center-strike environment, so right- and left-handed golfers can play the same round together without moving or adjusting the unit. It measures every club, including the putter.
Is it compatible with Mac or iPad?+
No. The RSG PRO requires a Windows 11 64-bit PC and isn't compatible with macOS, iOS, or iPad. A dedicated Ethernet port and a dedicated graphics card are also required.
What's the return policy?+
30-day hassle-free returns on every order. If you're unsure whether the bundle fits your room, call (833) 796-4777 before you order — that's actually our preference.
Is financing available?+
Yes. Shop Pay Installments at checkout lets you split the purchase into monthly payments with no hidden fees.
Authorized Dealer

Real golfers on the phone, not call-center scripts.

Call (833) 796-4777 with the dumb questions, the smart questions, and the "will this enclosure size fit my basement" questions. Authorized Red Stakes Golf dealer · full warranty support · simulator build advice.

Ask a question
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SKU: 67082258195

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L
LG
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 4
Nicely made and easy to read
Format: Hardcover
This arrived well packaged, but despite this, the two top corners of the book were somewhat smashed and there was more significant damage at the bottom of the spine where it was smashed. There is also some damage on the spine itself at about the level where Crossway is printed. The book appears well made and the paper is a good quality and thick. The print is of a nice size. One will most likely never access all the information enclosed in this commentary. In addition, one will most likely not agree with everything written, which should be expected of all commentaries. Commentaries are simply that and not authoritative. One hopes that by reading they might learn something new or be prompted to look more closely at a subject or issue. Let's look at Leviticus 11, for example, where the dietary guidelines are given to the Israelites. In the comments regarding pigs being forbidden, it is noted that the Philistines raised pigs for food. Knowing that, one can come to a conclusion that this may be why they were forbidden, so as to make a difference, or distinction, between the two peoples and not necessarily that pigs were bad to eat. In addition, throughout the commentary the reader is taken not just to other Old Testament passages, but where applicable the New Testament is referenced. Again using Leviticus 11, at the end of the chapter the commentary brings up the Jerusalem Council in Acts 15 when they issued the four requirements for Gentiles. It is noted that, "The Jerusalem Council agreed on four nonnegotiables to bring Jewish and Gentile believers to the same table, drawn in large measure from Leviticus's laws on holy living for the resident alien."
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2025
D
Dave V.
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
The Final Volume of An Excellent Commentary Series Does Not Disappoint
Format: Hardcover
After 7 years, Crossway has completed their ESV Expository Commentary set. Ironically, Vol. 1, was the last of the twelve volumes to be completed. It fully lives up to the standard the other eleven set. Like the other volumes, it focuses on a passage by passage commentary of each book, followed by a ‘Response’ section that is usually some form of practical application of belief or behavior. For example, in my copy, the ribbon marker was already in Exodus 17:1-7’s ‘Response’ page, and it discussed the question of ‘Why Does God Test His People?’. Jay Sklar’s response includes this wisdom: ‘testing not only gives us an opportunity to show faithfulness; it also helps us to to become more faithful.’ (pg. 578). While I have not yet read the whole thing, Crossway seems to have balanced some well-known scholars with other lesser known ones. Genesis in this volume is covered by Iain Duguid, noted OT scholar currently teaching at Westminster Seminary. Exodus is examined by Covenant Seminary Professor of Old Testament, Jay Sklar, who is a well-known expert on all five books of the Pentateuch. I had not heard of Christine Palmer (Leviticus) or Ronald Bergey (Numbers) before, but Crossway has earned my trust, and I presume their contributions will live up to the standards of others in this series. The commentary is pretty beefy, and the hardcover binding (if my previous volumes are any indication) will need to be handled with care - especially if you are like me, and sometimes try to photocopy pages so you don’t have to carry the whole commentary to a coffee shop or library! All in all, if you are a pastor, Bible student, or lead a Bible study, this series, and this volume, will be a benefit to you.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 20, 2025
L
Lori A Alsdorf
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent, Readable Bible Commentary
Format: Hardcover, Format: Hardcover
I feel more than a little inadequate writing a review of this first volume of the Expository Commentary which uses the English Standard Version (ESV) of the Holy Bible. The ESV has become my favorite Bible translation due to its excellent readability and reliability, thus influencing my decision to order this commentary. Just as readability influences my choice of Bible translations, this commentary also does an excellent job of maintaining readability across all four authors, each one having authored one complete book- Genesis through Numbers. This is a scholarly work and as such it uses references to a large body of additional scholarly works, more than three full pages worth, and lists abbreviations for each with those abbreviations noted throughout the text of the commentary for each book in the volume. These references include ancient as well as more contemporary works, most have English titles and a number are works grounded in the original Hebrew. Another help for any expositor are the ongoing references to other Bible passages that relate to the text of the commentary. Each of these references, and there are thousands of them, are listed in a Scripture Index organized from Genesis to Revelation that require nearly sixty pages at the very back of the volume. Though I’ve not read all 1392 pages, I’ve found editing to be excellent, though I did find one error on page 34 that had no consequence for understanding the meaning. I know many prefer the ease of using digital resources for study due to quick access, portability, and easy storage (I found this resource is also available digitally). I can easily recommend this resource without reservation.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2025
J
Verified Purchase
JustinHoca
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Helpful and informative
Format: Kindle
Four Views on the Book of Revelation (Counterpoints: Bible and Theology) edited by Stanley N. Gundry and C. Marvin Pate I read this book after previously reviewing Revelation in Context: John’s Apocalypse and Second Temple Judaism. That book was helpful for me to understand Revelation as apocalyptic literature, one example of the genre with similarities to others from the first and second centuries. Interpreting Revelation as apocalyptic literature is itself a choice, and some approaches to Revelation, such as classic dispensationalism with its emphasis on grammatical-historical hermeneutics are skeptical of that approach. As Thomas writes in his chapter “To understand any passage of Scripture in a nonliteral way violates principles of grammatical-historical interpretation unless contextual features signal a need to interpret otherwise” (p. 244). I found Revelation in Context helpful for introducing various apocalyptic books of the age in providing greater context for Jewish thought up to and after John wrote Revelation. The editors of Four Views provide a good overview of the four views presented as well as a good introduction to Revelation. The four authors and their positions are: Kenneth L. Gentry, Jr. (preterist) Sam Hamstra, Jr. (idealist) C. Marvin Pate (progressive dispensationalist) Robert L. Thomas (classical dispensationalist) Each author made a case for his position and responded briefly to points by the other authors. Thomas is the most insistent in his argument and spends the most time critiquing the others’ positions. The differences stem entirely from their hermeneutics, each has a different approach to the book and each calls “foul” with the others’ misuse or lack of consistency of their own hermeneutics. For me, the winner was the preterist position, as I’d never truly been exposed to this paradigm. The author allows it to speak for itself, and I found it appealing because of how well the events of 68-70 AD as described (mainly) by Josephus line up eerily well with the words of Revelation. In some cases, it seems Josephus is quoting Revelation, which made me wonder whether the authors had taken liberties with the actual translation of Josephus’ works. After reading Gentry Jr.’s view, reading Revelation with a preterist’s viewpoint in mind made it a completely different book for me. Whether the position is correct or not, it allowed me to read Revelation again for the first time, so to speak– that was a gift. Thomas drove home for me that classical dispensationalism demands a special place for the ethnic people of Israel including a rebuilding of the temple along with its sacrifices. Babylon on the Euphrates is literally the Babylon of old and must also be rebuilt, which he interprets to be a Persian/Iranian empire that will come to fruition again. I think I can see how this view is at long last falling out of favor. Some of the writers may be somewhat heterodox. Gentry, for example, leaves open some possibilities for partial preterism or has some reasoning other preterists don’t have. Thomas is appalled at progressive dispensationalism’s “now and not yet” mentality as violating rules of grammatical-historical interpretation. Pate leaves the door open to Revelation having an earlier authorship and more sections being fulfilled in the first century than Thomas allows. Hamstra is in a field of his own, the “idealist” position sees Revelation as purely symbolic and not specific to any time period– everyone undergoing persecution is experiencing the spirit of the Antichrist, etc. Since reading this book, I’ve been checking out podcasts on preterism while pondering how covenantalists I know seem to sound like progressive dispensationalists. I am glad this book was published and will check out similar works in this series. Five stars.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2026
A
Verified Purchase
Andrew A. Carr
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
A Little Gem
Format: Paperback
This little book is a wonderful resource for teachers, pastors, and all who want to gain a better understanding of the book of Revelation. The introduction by Marvin Pate is a real gem. It gives a helpful (and sometimes humorous) overview of the various positions expounded in the remainder of the book, and it offers a valuable apology for the study of prophecy. He points out that neither fanaticism nor the neglect of biblical prophecy is a healthy option for the follower of Christ. The heart of this volume is the presentation of four common interpretations of the book of Revelation. Kenneth Gentry does a nice job of presenting the preterist position, which is normally linked to postmillennialism. This position found a resurgence in the late 1980’s and 90’s after being on the brink of extinction. Gentry gives a good deal of historical information from Josephus’s Jewish War to bolster his interpretation of Revelation, yet questions remain. Do the atrocities of which Josephus writes reach the global proportions mentioned in Revelation? In addition, do the many passages quoted in support of a glorious earthly kingdom really affirm a postmillennial kingdom? Finally, the preterist position articulated by Gentry necessitates a pre 70 AD date for the composition of Revelation. While this is not impossible, it is improbable, as most NT scholars hold to a post 70 date. The idealist view is ably defended by Sam Hamstra. The idealist view is often associated with amillennialism and has a long history stretching back to Augustine. It sees Revelation as a representation of the ongoing battle between good and evil. It denies a chronological and literal reading of revelation. The real value of this position is that it excels in bringing out the timeless theological truths which are embedded in Revelation. These truths can provide hope and encouragement for saints of any time or place. However, it does seem questionable whether Revelation was intended to be read in a nonchronological manner. The other difficulty is that it tends to strip Revelation of historical specificity. By saying that the prophecies of Revelation can apply to any age in general, one comes close to saying that they apply to no age in particular. The final view is that of premillennialism, which is represented by both a classical dispensationalist and a progressive dispensationalist. The two views have much in common as they both read Revelation more literally than the other two positions, and both see chronological progression in the book of Revelation. Robert Thomas defends the classical dispensationalist approach by stressing a literal hermeneutic and a chronological reading of Revelation. Marvin Pate represents progressive dispensationalism which synthesizes many of the positive features of the other three views while still maintaining a distinction between Israel and the church. One of the key elements of progressive dispensationalism is the emphasis on “pattern prophecy”. This understanding of prophecy allows for the repetition of prophetic events throughout history with escalating levels of fulfillment. Classical dispensationalist writers include John Walvoord, Dwight Pentecost, and Charles Ryrie. Progressive dispensationalism is represented by Darrell Bock and Craig Blaising. While dispensationalism is grounded in biblical soil, some would question whether it does justice to the highly symbolic and figurative language of biblical prophecy, and whether those prophecies should be seen as referring to actual future events that will occur in a chronological progression. This book is especially helpful when comparing eschatological systems and how they influence the interpretation of the book of Revelation. If one is looking to study the book of Revelation, this is a great place to start.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2013

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