Consider the following article, when ascertaining what is meant at back of the term
"apocalyptic literature" (not that everyone who uses the term comes at it from this perspective, but that the scholars who tout it likely do):
[quoting excerpt from Dr Paul Martin Henebury--more at link, below]
"
If you have been keeping abreast of evangelical treatments of the books of Daniel, Ezekiel, and Zechariah, or the Olivet Discourse or Book of Revelation you will have run into the term “Apocalyptic literature.” It’s the favorite go-to for anyone who wants to stop the mouths of the prophets while sounding scholarly.
"I realize that opening line is a bit testy, but I write it as one who has
spent some time studying the major works on Apocalyptic – all written by critical liberal scholars – and have read the almost threadbare regurgitations of conservatives who are content to use this scholarship to support their reading of the Bible while retaining traditional beliefs.
"It is hard to find an evangelical treatment of apocalyptic language and literature that has any depth.
Evangelical discussions of the genre lean heavily on liberal work, and are often both cursory and deficient in their reporting of the state of the matter. Only a few evangelical scholars, like Brent Sandy (
Plowshares and Pruning Hooks)† , provide any in-depth work on the genre,
and his work is heavily dependent on liberal scholarship and the kind of philosophical hermeneutics which relies on an evolutionary view of language. Small wonder then that Sandy has moved further left in his commitments.
(For example, his The Lost World of Scripture, co-authored with John Walton, is an insidious attack on inerrancy and authorship via appeal to extra-biblical authorities).
"
In saying this I am not claiming that there is no such thing as apocalyptic. But I am saying that a truly biblical approach to it will have to look very different than the standard critical proposals. This is because the assumptions which force critical scholarship into interpreting the genre contradict the Bible’s own worldview, including the origin and purpose of language and the function of the prophet."
--Dr Paul Martin Henebury, "
Apocalyptic Fixation" [end quoting; bold mine]
-
https://drreluctant.wordpress.com/2017/12/28/apocalyptic-fixation/
____________
Just something to consider... and somewhat of a caution.