Beyond Publishing has released Dean McMullen's 'The Structure of Revelation,' a work that presents the biblical Book of Revelation as a mathematically structured blueprint. The book combines military discipline, academic precision, and biblical study to offer what McMullen describes as an unprecedented perspective on prophecy.
McMullen's research began after his deployment to the Gulf War, where he encountered interpretations linking that conflict to the Fifth Trumpet prophecy. He examined thirteen prophetic indicators and found each aligned with events he experienced. This became the foundation for years of study culminating in this publication.
The book provides a prophetic roadmap aligning Daniel's 70 Weeks with the seals, voices, trumpets, and vials in exact sequence. McMullen explains the Four Horsemen as active global belief systems, analyzes the Rapture through the Sixth Seal, and identifies the 144,000 as scriptural 'firstfruits' of redemption. Through narrative, charts, and teaching, the work demonstrates how every prophetic detail fits into what McMullen calls a flawless divine structure.
'This book is not a new doctrine,' McMullen states on the Beyond Publishing website. 'It is simply taking the Bible for what it says and allowing its perfect timeline to speak for itself.'
The publication matters because it represents a significant interpretive approach to biblical prophecy that claims mathematical precision. For readers interested in eschatology, it offers a structured framework that differs from many existing interpretations. In the publishing industry, works that bridge academic research, personal narrative, and religious study continue to find audiences seeking alternative perspectives on traditional texts.
Beyond Publishing, which released the book globally, describes itself as committed to transformative voices and groundbreaking works. The publisher focuses on clarity, accessibility, and impact across genres. McMullen's work joins their catalog of books designed to inspire, challenge, and inform readers worldwide.
The implications extend to how religious texts are studied and interpreted, particularly regarding prophecy and eschatology. By claiming a mathematical structure within Revelation, the book enters ongoing discussions about biblical interpretation methods. For the general reader, it offers a potentially new way to understand one of the Bible's most complex books, while for scholars and theologians, it presents claims that may invite further examination and debate.



