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Difference between revisions of "Prophet"

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== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_56821" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_56821" /> ==
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== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_37031" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_37031" /> ==
<p> nabiy' , from naaba' "to bubble forth as a fountain," as Psalms 45:1, "my heart is bubbling up a good matter," namely, inspired by the [[Holy]] Spirit; 2 Peter 1:19-21; Job 32:8; Job 32:18-19; Job 32:20. Roeh , "seer," from raah "to see," was the term in Samuel's days (1 Samuel 9:9) which the sacred writer of 1 Samuel calls "beforetime"; but nabi was the term as far back as the Pentateuch, and roeh does not appear until Samuel's time, and of the ten times of its use in seven it is applied to Samuel. Chozeh , "seer," from the poetical chazeh "see," is first found in 2 Samuel 24:11, and is frequent in Chronicles; it came into use when roeh was becoming less used, nabi being resumed. Νabi existed long before, and after, and alongside of roeh and chozeh . Chazon is used in the Pentateuch, Samuel, Chronicles, Job, and the prophets for a prophetic revelation. [[Lee]] (Inspir. 543) suggests that chozeh designates the king's "seer" (1 Chronicles 21:9; 2 Chronicles 29:25), not only David's seer [[Gad]] (as Smith's [[Bible]] Dictionary says) but [[Iddo]] in Solomon's reign (2 Chronicles 9:29; 2 Chronicles 12:15). </p> <p> Jehu, Hanani's son, under [[Jehoshaphat]] (1 Chronicles 19:2). [[Asaph]] and [[Jeduthun]] are called so (1 Chronicles 29:30; 1 Chronicles 35:15); also Amos 7:12; also 2 Chronicles 33:18. Chozeh "the gazer" upon the spiritual world (1 Chronicles 29:9), "Samuel the seer (roeh ), [[Nathan]] the prophet (nabi ), Gad the gazer" (chozeh ). As the seer beheld the visions of God, so the prophet proclaimed the divine truth revealed to him as one of an official order in a more direct way. [[God]] Himself states the different modes of His revealing Himself and His truth (Numbers 12:6; Numbers 12:8). [[Prophet]] (Greek) means the interpreter (from pro , feemi , "speak forth" truths for another, as [[Aaron]] was Moses' prophet, i.e. spokesman: Exodus 7:1) of God's will (the mantis was the inspired unconscious utterer of oracles which the prophet interpreted); so in [[Scripture]] the divinely inspired revealer of truths be fore unknown. [[Prediction]] was a leading function of the prophet (Deuteronomy 18:22; Jeremiah 28:9; 1 Samuel 2:27; Acts 2:30; Acts 3:18; Acts 3:21; 1 Peter 1:10; 2 Peter 3:2). </p> <p> But it is not always attached to the prophet. For instance, the 70 elders, (Numbers 11:16-29); Asaph and Jeduthun, etc., "prophesied with a harp" (1 Chronicles 25:3); [[Miriam]] and [[Deborah]] were "prophetesses" (Exodus 15:20; Judges 4:4, also Judges 6:8); John the Baptist, the greatest of prophets of the Old [[Testament]] order. The New Testament prophet (1 Corinthians 12:28) made new revelations and preached under the extraordinary power of the Holy [[Spirit]] "the word of wisdom" (1 Corinthians 12:8), i.e. imparted with ready utterance new revelations of the divine wisdom in redemption. The "teacher" on the other hand, with the ordinary and calmer operation of the Spirit, had "the word of knowledge," i.e. supernaturally imparted ready utterance of truths already revealed (1 Corinthians 14:3-4). The nabi was spokesman for God, mediating for God to man. [[Christ]] is the Antitype. As God's deputed representative, under the theocracy the prophet spoke in God's name. </p> <p> [[Moses]] was the highest concentration of the type; bringing in with mighty signs the legal dispensation, as Christ did the gospel (Deuteronomy 18:15; Deuteronomy 34:10-11; John 1:18; John 1:45; John 3:34; John 15:24), and announcing the program of God's redemption scheme, which the rest of the Bible fills up. [[Prophecy]] is based on God's unchanging righteousness in governing His world. It is not, as in the [[Greek]] drama, a blind fate threatening irrevocable doom from which there is no escape. Prophecy has a moral purpose, and mercifully gives God's loving fatherly warning to the impenitent, that by turning from sin they may avert righteous punishment. So Jonah 3; Daniel 4:9-27. The prophets were Jehovah's remembrancers, pleading for or against the people: so [[Elijah]] (1 Kings 17; 1 Kings 18:36-37; Romans 11:2-3; James 5:16; James 5:18; Revelation 11:6). God as King of the theocracy did not give up His sovereignty when kings were appointed; but as occasion required, through the prophets His legates, superseded, reproved, encouraged, set up, or put down kings (as [[Elisha]] in Jehu's case); and in times of apostasy strengthened in the faith the scattered remnant of believers. </p> <p> The earlier prophets took a greater share in national politics. The later looked on to the new covenant which should comprehend all nations. [[Herein]] they rose above [[Jewish]] exclusiveness, drew forth the living spirit from beneath the letter of the law, and prepared for a perfect, final, and universal church. There are two periods: the Assyrian, wherein Isaiah is the prominent prophet; and the Chaldaean, wherein Jeremiah takes the lead. The prophets were a marked advance on the ceremonial of Leviticus and its priests: this was dumb show, prophecy was a spoken revelation of Christ more explicitly, therefore it fittingly stands in the canon between the law and the New Testament The same principles whereon God governed [[Israel]] in its relation to the world, in the nation's history narrated in the books of Samuel and Kings, are those whereon the prophecies rest. This accounts for those historical books being in the canon reckoned among "the prophets." The history of [[David]] and his seed is part of the preparation for the antitypical [[Son]] of David of whom the prophets speak. </p> <p> Daniel on the other hand is excluded from them, though abounding in the predictive element, because he did not belong to the order of prophets officially, but ministered in the pagan court of the world power, Babylon. Joshua, Judges, 1 and 2 Samuel, 1 and 2 Kings were "the former prophets"; Isaiah to Malachi "the latter prophets." The priests were Israel's regular teachers; the prophets extraordinary, to rouse and excite. In northern Israel however, where there was no true priesthood, the prophets were God's regular and only ministers, more striking prophetic deeds are recorded than in Judah. Moses' song (Deuteronomy 32) is "the magna charta of prophecy" (Eichhorn). The law was its basis (Isaiah 8:16; Isaiah 8:20; Deuteronomy 4:2; Deuteronomy 13:1-3); they altered not a tittle of it, though looking forward to the Messianic age when its spirit would be written on the heart, and the letter be less needed (Jeremiah 3:16; Jeremiah 31:31). Their speaking in the name of the true God only and conforming to His word, and their predictions being fulfilled, was the test of their' divine mission (Deuteronomy 13; Deuteronomy 18:10-11; Deuteronomy 18:20; Deuteronomy 18:22). </p> <p> Also the prophet's not promising prosperity without repentance, and his own assurance of his divine mission (sometimes against his inclination: Jeremiah 20:8-9; Jeremiah 26:12) producing inward assurance in others. [[Miracles]] without these criteria are not infallible proof (Deuteronomy 13). Predictions fulfilled established a prophet's authority (1 Samuel 3:19; Jeremiah 22:11-12; Ezekiel 12:12-13; Ezekiel 12:24). As to symbolic actions, ninny are only parts of visions, not external facts, being impossible or indecent (Jeremiah 13:1-10; Jeremiah 25:12-38; Hosea 1:2-11). The internal actions, when possible and proper, were expressed externally (1 Kings 22:11). The object was vivid impressiveness. Christ gave predictions, for this among other purposes, that when the event came to pass men should believe (John 13:19). So [[Jehovah]] in the Old Testament (Isaiah 41:21-23; Isaiah 43:9; Isaiah 43:11-12; Isaiah 44:7-8.) </p> <p> The theory of a long succession of impostors combining to serve the interests of truth, righteousness, and goodness from age to ago by false pretensions, is impossible, especially when they gained nothing by their course but obloquy and persecution. Nor can they be said to be self deceivers, for this could not have been the case with a succession of prophets, if it were possible in the case of one or two. However, various in other respects, they all agree to testify of [[Messiah]] (Acts 10:43). Definiteness and curcumstantiality distinguish their prophecies from vague conjectures. [[Thus]] Isaiah announces the name of [[Cyrus]] ages before his appearance; so as to Josiah, 1 Kings 13:2. [[Prophets]] as an order. The priests at first were Israel's teachers in God's statutes by types, acts, and words (Lee, 10:11). But when under the judges the nation repeatedly apostatized, and no longer regarded the acted lessons of the ceremonial law, God sent a new order to witness for Him in plainer warnings, namely, the prophets. Samuel, of the [[Levite]] family of [[Kohath]] (1 Chronicles 6:28; 1 Chronicles 9:22), not only reformed the priests but gave the prophets a new standing. </p> <p> Hence he is classed with Moses (Jeremiah 15:1; Psalms 99:6; Acts 3:24). Prophets existed before: Abraham, and the patriarchs as recipients of God's revelations, are so designated (Psalms 105:15; [[Genesis]] 15:12; Genesis 20:7); but Samuel constituted them into a permanent order. He instituted theological colleges of prophets; one at [[Ramah]] where he lived (1 Samuel 19:12; 1 Samuel 19:20), another was at [[Bethel]] (2 Kings 2:3), another at [[Jericho]] (2 Kings 2:5), another at [[Gilgal]] (2 Kings 4:38, also 2 Kings 6:1). [[Official]] prophets seem to have continued to the close of the Old Testament, though the direct mention of "the sons of the prophets" occurs only in Samuel's, Elijah's, and Elisha's time. A "father" or "master" presided (2 Kings 2:3; 1 Samuel 10:12), who was "anointed" to the office (1 Kings 19:16; Isaiah 61:1; Psalms 105:15). </p> <p> They were "sons." The law was their chief study, it being what they were to teach, Not that they were in antagonism to the priests whose duty it had been to teach the law; they reprove bad priests, not to set aside but to reform and restore the priesthood as it ought to be (Isaiah 24:2; Isaiah 28:7; Malachi 2:1; Malachi 1:14); they supplemented the work of the priests. [[Music]] and poetry were cultivated as subordinate helps (compare Exodus 15:20; Judges 4:4; Judges 5:1). Elijah stirred up the prophetic gift within him by a minstrel (2 Kings 3:15); so Asaph, Heman, and Jeduthun (1 Chronicles 25:5-6). [[Sacred]] songs occur in the prophets (Isaiah 12:1; Isaiah 26:1; Jonah 2:2; Habakkuk 3:2). Possibly the students composed verses for liturgical use in the temple. The prophets held meetings for worship on new moons and Sabbaths (2 Kings 4:23). Elisha and the elders were sitting in his house, officially engaged, when the king of Israel sent to slay him (2 Kings 6:32). </p> <p> So Ezekiel and the elders, and the people assembled (Ezekiel 8:1; Ezekiel 20:1; Ezekiel 33:31). The dress, like that of the modern dervish, was a hairy garment with leather girdle (Isaiah 20:2; Zechariah 13:4; Matthew 3:4). Their diet was the simplest (2 Kings 4:10; 2 Kings 4:38; 1 Kings 19:6); a virtual protest against abounding luxury. Prophecy. Some of the prophetic order had not the prophetic gift; others having the gift of inspiration did not belong to the order; e.g., Amos, though called to the office and receiving the gift to qualify him for it, yet did not belong to the order (Amos 7:14). Of the hundreds trained in the colleges of prophets only sixteen have a place in the canon, for these alone had the special call to the office and God's inspiration qualifying them for it. The college training was but a preparation, then in the case of the few followed God's exclusive work: Exodus 3:2, Moses; 1 Samuel 3:10, Samuel; Isaiah, Isaiah 6:8; Jeremiah, Jeremiah 1:5; Ezekiel. Ezekiel 2:4. </p> <p> Each fresh utterance was by "vision" (Isaiah 6:1) or by "the word of Jehovah" (Jeremiah 2:1). The prophets so commissioned were the national poets (so David the psalmist was also a prophet, Acts 2:30), annalists (2 Chronicles 32:32), theocratic patriots (Psalm 48; 2 Chronicles 20:14-17), promoters of spiritual religion (Isaiah 1), extraordinarily authorized expounders of the spirit of the law (Isaiah 58:3-7; Ezekiel 18; Micah 6:6-8; Hosea 6:6; Amos 5:21) which so many sacrificed to the letter, official pastors, and a religious counterpoise to kingly despotism and idolatry, as Elijah was to Ahab. Their utterances being continued at intervals throughout their lives (as Isaiah in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah) show that they did not earn their reputation as prophets by some one happy guess or oracle, but maintained their prophetical character continuously; which excludes the probability of imposture, time often detecting fraud. Above all, the prophets by God's inspiration foretold concerning [[Jesus]] the Messiah (Matthew 1:22-23 with Isaiah 7:4; Isaiah 8:8). </p> <p> The formula "that it might be fulfilled" implies that the divine word spoken through the prophets ages before produced the result, which followed in the appointed time as necessarily as creation followed from the creative word. Christ appeals to the prophets as fulfilled in Himself: Matthew 13:14 (Isaiah 6:9), Matthew 15:7 (Isaiah 29:13), John 5:46; Luke 24:44. Matthew (Matthew 3:3) quotes Isaiah 40:3 as fulfilled in John the Baptist; so Matthew 4:13-15 with Isaiah 9:1-2; Matthew 8:17 with Isaiah 53:4; Matthew 12:17 with Isaiah 42:1. So also Jeremiah, Matthew 2:18; Hebrews 8:8; Daniel, Matthew 24:15; Hosea, Matthew 2:15; Romans 9:25; Joel, Acts 2:17; Amos, Acts 7:42; Acts 15:16; Jonah, Matthew 12:40; Micah, Matthew 12:7; Habakkuk, Acts 13:41; Haggai, Hebrews 12:26; Zechariah, Matthew 21:5; Mark 14:27; John 19:37; Malachi, Matthew 11:10; Mark 1:2; Luke 7:27. </p> <p> The Psalms are 70 times quoted, and often as predictive. The prophecies concerning Ishmael, Nineveh, Tyre, Egypt, the four empires Babylon, Medo-Persia, Graeco-Macedonia, and Rome, were notoriously promulgated before the event; the fulfillment is dear; it could not have been foreseen by mere human sagacity. The details as to Messiah scattered through so many prophets, yet all converging in Him, the race, nation, tribe, family, birthplace, miracles, humiliation, death, crucifixion with the wicked yet association with the rich at death, resurrection, extension of His seed the church, are so numerous that their minute conformity with the subsequent fact can only be explained by believing that the prophets were moved by the Holy Spirit to foretell the event. What is overwhelmingly convincing is, the [[Jews]] are our sacred librarians, who attest the prophets as written ages before, and who certainly would not have corrupted them to confirm Jesus' Messianic claims which they reject. Moreover, the details are so complicated, and seemingly inconsistent, that before the event it would seem impossible to make them coincide in one person. </p> <p> A "son," yet "the everlasting Father"; a "child," yet "the mighty God"; "Prince of peace," sitting "upon the throne of David," yet coming as [[Shiloh]] (the peace-giver) when "the sceptre shall depart from Judah"; Son of David, yet Lord of David; a Prophet and Priest, yet also a King; "God's Servant," upon whom He "lays the iniquity of us all," Messiah cut off, yet given by the [[Ancient]] of days "an everlasting dominion." The only key that opens this immensely complicated lock is the gospel narrative of Jesus, written ages after the prophets. The absence of greater clearness in the prophets is due to God's purpose to give light enough to guide the willing, to leave darkness enough to confound the willfully blind. Hence the prophecy is not dependent for its interpretation on the prophet; nay, he was often ignorant of the full meaning of his own word (2 Peter 1:20-21). Moreover, if the form of the prophecies had been direct declaration the fulfillment would have been liable to frustration. If also the time had been more distinctly marked believers would have been less in a state of continued expectancy. </p> <p> The prophecies were designedly made up of many parts (polumeros; Hebrews 12:1); fragmentary and figurative, the temporary and local fulfillment often foreshadowing the Messianic fulfillment. The obscurity, in some parts, of prophecies of which other parts have been plainly fulfilled is designed to exercise our faith, the obscure parts yet awaiting their exhaustive fulfillment; e.g. prophecies combining the first coming and the second coming of Christ, the parts concerning the latter of course yet require patient and prayerful investigation. Moreover, many prophecies, besides their references to events of the times of the sacred writer, look forward to ulterior fulfillments in Messiah and His kingdom; for "the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy" (Revelation 19:10). Thus the foretold deliverance from [[Babylon]] by Cyrus foreshadows the greater deliverance from the antitypical Babylon by Cyrus' Antitype, Messiah (Isaiah 44:28; Isaiah 45:1-5; Isaiah 45:13; Isaiah 45:22-25; Jeremiah 51:6-10; Jeremiah 51:25; compare Revelation 18:4; Revelation 17:4; Revelation 14:8; Revelation 8:8). </p> <p> So the prophet Isaiah's son is the sign of the immediate deliverance of [[Judah]] from [[Rezin]] and Pekah; but language is used which could not have applied to him, and can only find its full and exhaustive accomplishment in the antitypical [[Immanuel]] (Isaiah 7:14-16; Isaiah 8:3-12; Isaiah 8:18; Isaiah 9:6-7; Matthew 1:18-23). So too our Lord's prophecy of the destruction of [[Jerusalem]] is couched in language receiving its exhaustive fulfillment only in the judgments to be inflicted at His second coming (Matthew 24); as in the sky the nearer and the further off heavenly bodies are, to the spectator, projected into the same vault. The primary sense does not exclude the secondary, not even though the sacred writer himself had nothing in his thought; beyond the primary, for the Holy Spirit is the true Author, who often made the writers unconsciously utter words reaching far beyond the primary and literal sense; so Hosea 11:1, compare Matthew 2:15; so Caiaphas, John 11:50-52. They diligently inquired as to the deep significancy of their own words, and were told that the full meaning would only be known in subsequent gospel times (Daniel 12:8-9; Zechariah 4:5; 1 Peter 1:10-12). </p> <p> The prophet, like his Antitype, spoke not of himself (John 7:17-18; Numbers 11:17; Numbers 11:25; Numbers 11:29; 1 Samuel 10:6; 1 Samuel 19:20; Numbers 12:6-8). The dream and vision were lower forms of inspiration than Moses enjoyed, namely, "mouth to mouth, not in dark speeches"; directly, without the intervention of dream, vision, or person (compare Exodus 33:11 with Joel 2:28; Daniel 1:17). The prophets did net generally speak in ecstatic unconsciousness, but with self possession, for "the spirits of the prophets are subject to the prophets" (1 Corinthians 14:32); but sometimes they did (Genesis 15; Daniel 7; Daniel 8; Daniel 10; Daniel 11; Daniel 12, "the visions of Daniel"); "the vision of Isaiah" (Isaiah 6); "the vision of Ezekiel" (Ezekiel 1); "the visions of Zechariah" (Zechariah 1; Zechariah 4; Zechariah 5; Zechariah 6); the vision of Peter (Acts 10); of [[Paul]] (Acts 22:17; Acts 22:2 Corinthians 12); Job (Job 4:13-16; Job 33:15-16); John (Revelation 1:10) "in the Spirit," i.e. in a state of ecstasy, the outer world shut out, the inner spirit being taken possession of by God's Spirit, so that an immediate connection was established with the invisible world. </p> <p> [[Whereas]] the prophet speaks in the Spirit the apocalyptic seer is wholly in the Spirit, he intuitively and directly sees and hears (Isaiah 6:1; Zechariah 2:1; Micah 1:1; Habakkuk 1:1; Acts 10:11; Acts 22:18; Revelation 1:12); the subjects of the vision are in juxtaposition (as in a painting), independent of relations of time. But however various might be the modes of inspiration, the world spoken or written by the inspired prophets equally is God's inspired infallible testimony. Their words, in their public function, were not their own so much as God's (Haggai 1:13); as private individuals they searched diligently into their far-reaching meaning. Their words prove in the fulfillment to be not of their own origination, therefore not of their own individual (compare 1 Peter 1:10-12) interpretation (idias epiluseos ou ginetai ), but of the Holy Spirit's by whom they were "moved"; therefore we must look for the Holy Spirit's illumination while we "take heed to the word of prophecy (now become) more sure" (through the fulfillment of part of it already, namely, that concerning Christ's sufferings; and through the pledge given in His transfiguration witnessed by Peter, that the rest will come to pass, namely, His foretold glory: 2 Peter 1:19-21 Greek, compare 2 Samuel 23:2; Hosea 9:7). </p> <p> Messianic prophecy. Prophecy and miracles are the direct evidences of the truth of revelation; the morals, propagation, and suitableness of [[Christianity]] to man's needs, combined together with the two former, are its irrefragable proofs. All subsequent prophecy of Messiah develops the primary one (Genesis 3:15). This only defined the [[Saviour]] as about to be the woman's seed. Noah's prophecy that He should be of the Semitic branch of the human race, (Genesis 9:26; Genesis 12:3; Genesis 22:18; Genesis 28:14) of the family of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, (Genesis 49:10) of the tribe of Judah, a Shiloh or tranquilizer, yet one who will smite with a sceptre and come as a star (Numbers 24:17); a prophet, like Moses (Deuteronomy 18:15); a king, of David's seed, reigning forever (2 Samuel 7:16; [[Psalm]] 18; 61; 89); the Son of God, as well as Son of David (Psalms 2:2; Psalms 2:6-7; Psalms 2:8; Psalms 110:1-4, etc.). </p> <p> [[Anointed]] by Jehovah as David's Lord, King of Zion, [[Inheritor]] of the whole earth, dashing in pieces His enemies like a potter's vessel with a rod of iron, "it [[Priest]] forever after the order of Melchizedek"; severely afflicted, "hands and feet pierced," betrayed by "His own familiar friend," "His garments parted and lots cast for His vesture," "His ears opened" to "come" and "do God's will" at all costs, when God would not have animal "sacrifice" (Psalm 22; Psalm 40; Psalm 55; Psalm 69; Psalm 102; Psalm 109). [[Raised]] from the grave without His flesh seeing corruption (Psalm 16; Psalm 17); triumphant King, espousing the church His bride (Psalm 45); reigning in peace and righteousness from the river to the ends of the earth (Psalm 72). There are four groups of the 16 prophets. </p> <p> Of the northern Israel, Hosea, Amos, Joel, Jonah; of Judah, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Obadiah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah; prophets of the captivity, Ezekiel and Daniel; prophets of the restoration, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi. Each adds some fresh trait to complete the delineation of Messiah. Isaiah 52:13-15; Isaiah 53, is the most perfect portrait of His vicarious sufferings, the way of salvation to us and of consequent glory to Him, and eternal satisfaction in seeing His spiritual seed. (See ISAIAH.) The arrangement in the canon is chronological mainly. But as the twelve lesser prophets are regarded as one work, Jeremiah and Ezekiel are placed at the close of the greater prophets, and before the lesser, whose three last prophets are subsequent to Jeremiah and Ezekiel. Hosea being longest of the lesser is placed first of them, though not so chronologically. </p>
<p> nabiy' , from naaba' "to bubble forth as a fountain," as Psalms 45:1, "my heart is bubbling up a good matter," namely, inspired by the Holy Spirit; 2 Peter 1:19-21; Job 32:8; Job 32:18-19; Job 32:20. Roeh , "seer," from raah "to see," was the term in Samuel's days (1 Samuel 9:9) which the sacred writer of 1 Samuel calls "beforetime"; but nabi was the term as far back as the Pentateuch, and roeh does not appear until Samuel's time, and of the ten times of its use in seven it is applied to Samuel. Chozeh , "seer," from the poetical chazeh "see," is first found in 2 Samuel 24:11, and is frequent in Chronicles; it came into use when roeh was becoming less used, nabi being resumed. Νabi existed long before, and after, and alongside of roeh and chozeh . Chazon is used in the Pentateuch, Samuel, Chronicles, Job, and the prophets for a prophetic revelation. [[Lee]] (Inspir. 543) suggests that chozeh designates the king's "seer" (1 Chronicles 21:9; 2 Chronicles 29:25), not only David's seer [[Gad]] (as Smith's [[Bible]] Dictionary says) but [[Iddo]] in Solomon's reign (2 Chronicles 9:29; 2 Chronicles 12:15). </p> <p> Jehu, Hanani's son, under [[Jehoshaphat]] (1 Chronicles 19:2). [[Asaph]] and [[Jeduthun]] are called so (1 Chronicles 29:30; 1 Chronicles 35:15); also Amos 7:12; also 2 Chronicles 33:18. Chozeh "the gazer" upon the spiritual world (1 Chronicles 29:9), "Samuel the seer (roeh ), Nathan the prophet (nabi ), Gad the gazer" (chozeh ). As the seer beheld the visions of God, so the prophet proclaimed the divine truth revealed to him as one of an official order in a more direct way. God Himself states the different modes of His revealing Himself and His truth (Numbers 12:6; Numbers 12:8). Prophet (Greek) means the interpreter (from pro , feemi , "speak forth" truths for another, as [[Aaron]] was Moses' prophet, i.e. spokesman: Exodus 7:1) of God's will (the mantis was the inspired unconscious utterer of oracles which the prophet interpreted); so in [[Scripture]] the divinely inspired revealer of truths be fore unknown. [[Prediction]] was a leading function of the prophet (Deuteronomy 18:22; Jeremiah 28:9; 1 Samuel 2:27; Acts 2:30; Acts 3:18; Acts 3:21; 1 Peter 1:10; 2 Peter 3:2). </p> <p> But it is not always attached to the prophet. For instance, the 70 elders, (Numbers 11:16-29); Asaph and Jeduthun, etc., "prophesied with a harp" (1 Chronicles 25:3); [[Miriam]] and [[Deborah]] were "prophetesses" (Exodus 15:20; Judges 4:4, also Judges 6:8); John the Baptist, the greatest of prophets of the Old [[Testament]] order. The New Testament prophet (1 Corinthians 12:28) made new revelations and preached under the extraordinary power of the Holy Spirit "the word of wisdom" (1 Corinthians 12:8), i.e. imparted with ready utterance new revelations of the divine wisdom in redemption. The "teacher" on the other hand, with the ordinary and calmer operation of the Spirit, had "the word of knowledge," i.e. supernaturally imparted ready utterance of truths already revealed (1 Corinthians 14:3-4). The nabi was spokesman for God, mediating for God to man. Christ is the Antitype. As God's deputed representative, under the theocracy the prophet spoke in God's name. </p> <p> Moses was the highest concentration of the type; bringing in with mighty signs the legal dispensation, as Christ did the gospel (Deuteronomy 18:15; Deuteronomy 34:10-11; John 1:18; John 1:45; John 3:34; John 15:24), and announcing the program of God's redemption scheme, which the rest of the Bible fills up. [[Prophecy]] is based on God's unchanging righteousness in governing His world. It is not, as in the Greek drama, a blind fate threatening irrevocable doom from which there is no escape. Prophecy has a moral purpose, and mercifully gives God's loving fatherly warning to the impenitent, that by turning from sin they may avert righteous punishment. So Jonah 3; Daniel 4:9-27. The prophets were Jehovah's remembrancers, pleading for or against the people: so Elijah (1 Kings 17; 1 Kings 18:36-37; Romans 11:2-3; James 5:16; James 5:18; Revelation 11:6). God as King of the theocracy did not give up His sovereignty when kings were appointed; but as occasion required, through the prophets His legates, superseded, reproved, encouraged, set up, or put down kings (as Elisha in Jehu's case); and in times of apostasy strengthened in the faith the scattered remnant of believers. </p> <p> The earlier prophets took a greater share in national politics. The later looked on to the new covenant which should comprehend all nations. [[Herein]] they rose above Jewish exclusiveness, drew forth the living spirit from beneath the letter of the law, and prepared for a perfect, final, and universal church. There are two periods: the Assyrian, wherein Isaiah is the prominent prophet; and the Chaldaean, wherein Jeremiah takes the lead. The prophets were a marked advance on the ceremonial of Leviticus and its priests: this was dumb show, prophecy was a spoken revelation of Christ more explicitly, therefore it fittingly stands in the canon between the law and the New Testament The same principles whereon God governed Israel in its relation to the world, in the nation's history narrated in the books of Samuel and Kings, are those whereon the prophecies rest. This accounts for those historical books being in the canon reckoned among "the prophets." The history of David and his seed is part of the preparation for the antitypical Son of David of whom the prophets speak. </p> <p> Daniel on the other hand is excluded from them, though abounding in the predictive element, because he did not belong to the order of prophets officially, but ministered in the pagan court of the world power, Babylon. Joshua, Judges, 1 and 2 Samuel, 1 and 2 Kings were "the former prophets"; Isaiah to Malachi "the latter prophets." The priests were Israel's regular teachers; the prophets extraordinary, to rouse and excite. In northern Israel however, where there was no true priesthood, the prophets were God's regular and only ministers, more striking prophetic deeds are recorded than in Judah. Moses' song (Deuteronomy 32) is "the magna charta of prophecy" (Eichhorn). The law was its basis (Isaiah 8:16; Isaiah 8:20; Deuteronomy 4:2; Deuteronomy 13:1-3); they altered not a tittle of it, though looking forward to the Messianic age when its spirit would be written on the heart, and the letter be less needed (Jeremiah 3:16; Jeremiah 31:31). Their speaking in the name of the true God only and conforming to His word, and their predictions being fulfilled, was the test of their' divine mission (Deuteronomy 13; Deuteronomy 18:10-11; Deuteronomy 18:20; Deuteronomy 18:22). </p> <p> Also the prophet's not promising prosperity without repentance, and his own assurance of his divine mission (sometimes against his inclination: Jeremiah 20:8-9; Jeremiah 26:12) producing inward assurance in others. [[Miracles]] without these criteria are not infallible proof (Deuteronomy 13). Predictions fulfilled established a prophet's authority (1 Samuel 3:19; Jeremiah 22:11-12; Ezekiel 12:12-13; Ezekiel 12:24). As to symbolic actions, ninny are only parts of visions, not external facts, being impossible or indecent (Jeremiah 13:1-10; Jeremiah 25:12-38; Hosea 1:2-11). The internal actions, when possible and proper, were expressed externally (1 Kings 22:11). The object was vivid impressiveness. Christ gave predictions, for this among other purposes, that when the event came to pass men should believe (John 13:19). So Jehovah in the Old Testament (Isaiah 41:21-23; Isaiah 43:9; Isaiah 43:11-12; Isaiah 44:7-8.) </p> <p> The theory of a long succession of impostors combining to serve the interests of truth, righteousness, and goodness from age to ago by false pretensions, is impossible, especially when they gained nothing by their course but obloquy and persecution. Nor can they be said to be self deceivers, for this could not have been the case with a succession of prophets, if it were possible in the case of one or two. However, various in other respects, they all agree to testify of Messiah (Acts 10:43). Definiteness and curcumstantiality distinguish their prophecies from vague conjectures. Thus Isaiah announces the name of [[Cyrus]] ages before his appearance; so as to Josiah, 1 Kings 13:2. [[Prophets]] as an order. The priests at first were Israel's teachers in God's statutes by types, acts, and words (Lee, 10:11). But when under the judges the nation repeatedly apostatized, and no longer regarded the acted lessons of the ceremonial law, God sent a new order to witness for Him in plainer warnings, namely, the prophets. Samuel, of the [[Levite]] family of [[Kohath]] (1 Chronicles 6:28; 1 Chronicles 9:22), not only reformed the priests but gave the prophets a new standing. </p> <p> Hence he is classed with Moses (Jeremiah 15:1; Psalms 99:6; Acts 3:24). Prophets existed before: Abraham, and the patriarchs as recipients of God's revelations, are so designated (Psalms 105:15; [[Genesis]] 15:12; Genesis 20:7); but Samuel constituted them into a permanent order. He instituted theological colleges of prophets; one at [[Ramah]] where he lived (1 Samuel 19:12; 1 Samuel 19:20), another was at [[Bethel]] (2 Kings 2:3), another at [[Jericho]] (2 Kings 2:5), another at [[Gilgal]] (2 Kings 4:38, also 2 Kings 6:1). [[Official]] prophets seem to have continued to the close of the Old Testament, though the direct mention of "the sons of the prophets" occurs only in Samuel's, Elijah's, and Elisha's time. A "father" or "master" presided (2 Kings 2:3; 1 Samuel 10:12), who was "anointed" to the office (1 Kings 19:16; Isaiah 61:1; Psalms 105:15). </p> <p> They were "sons." The law was their chief study, it being what they were to teach, Not that they were in antagonism to the priests whose duty it had been to teach the law; they reprove bad priests, not to set aside but to reform and restore the priesthood as it ought to be (Isaiah 24:2; Isaiah 28:7; Malachi 2:1; Malachi 1:14); they supplemented the work of the priests. Music and poetry were cultivated as subordinate helps (compare Exodus 15:20; Judges 4:4; Judges 5:1). Elijah stirred up the prophetic gift within him by a minstrel (2 Kings 3:15); so Asaph, Heman, and Jeduthun (1 Chronicles 25:5-6). [[Sacred]] songs occur in the prophets (Isaiah 12:1; Isaiah 26:1; Jonah 2:2; Habakkuk 3:2). Possibly the students composed verses for liturgical use in the temple. The prophets held meetings for worship on new moons and Sabbaths (2 Kings 4:23). Elisha and the elders were sitting in his house, officially engaged, when the king of Israel sent to slay him (2 Kings 6:32). </p> <p> So Ezekiel and the elders, and the people assembled (Ezekiel 8:1; Ezekiel 20:1; Ezekiel 33:31). The dress, like that of the modern dervish, was a hairy garment with leather girdle (Isaiah 20:2; Zechariah 13:4; Matthew 3:4). Their diet was the simplest (2 Kings 4:10; 2 Kings 4:38; 1 Kings 19:6); a virtual protest against abounding luxury. Prophecy. Some of the prophetic order had not the prophetic gift; others having the gift of inspiration did not belong to the order; e.g., Amos, though called to the office and receiving the gift to qualify him for it, yet did not belong to the order (Amos 7:14). Of the hundreds trained in the colleges of prophets only sixteen have a place in the canon, for these alone had the special call to the office and God's inspiration qualifying them for it. The college training was but a preparation, then in the case of the few followed God's exclusive work: Exodus 3:2, Moses; 1 Samuel 3:10, Samuel; Isaiah, Isaiah 6:8; Jeremiah, Jeremiah 1:5; Ezekiel. Ezekiel 2:4. </p> <p> Each fresh utterance was by "vision" (Isaiah 6:1) or by "the word of Jehovah" (Jeremiah 2:1). The prophets so commissioned were the national poets (so David the psalmist was also a prophet, Acts 2:30), annalists (2 Chronicles 32:32), theocratic patriots (Psalm 48; 2 Chronicles 20:14-17), promoters of spiritual religion (Isaiah 1), extraordinarily authorized expounders of the spirit of the law (Isaiah 58:3-7; Ezekiel 18; Micah 6:6-8; Hosea 6:6; Amos 5:21) which so many sacrificed to the letter, official pastors, and a religious counterpoise to kingly despotism and idolatry, as Elijah was to Ahab. Their utterances being continued at intervals throughout their lives (as Isaiah in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah) show that they did not earn their reputation as prophets by some one happy guess or oracle, but maintained their prophetical character continuously; which excludes the probability of imposture, time often detecting fraud. Above all, the prophets by God's inspiration foretold concerning Jesus the Messiah (Matthew 1:22-23 with Isaiah 7:4; Isaiah 8:8). </p> <p> The formula "that it might be fulfilled" implies that the divine word spoken through the prophets ages before produced the result, which followed in the appointed time as necessarily as creation followed from the creative word. Christ appeals to the prophets as fulfilled in Himself: Matthew 13:14 (Isaiah 6:9), Matthew 15:7 (Isaiah 29:13), John 5:46; Luke 24:44. Matthew (Matthew 3:3) quotes Isaiah 40:3 as fulfilled in John the Baptist; so Matthew 4:13-15 with Isaiah 9:1-2; Matthew 8:17 with Isaiah 53:4; Matthew 12:17 with Isaiah 42:1. So also Jeremiah, Matthew 2:18; Hebrews 8:8; Daniel, Matthew 24:15; Hosea, Matthew 2:15; Romans 9:25; Joel, Acts 2:17; Amos, Acts 7:42; Acts 15:16; Jonah, Matthew 12:40; Micah, Matthew 12:7; Habakkuk, Acts 13:41; Haggai, Hebrews 12:26; Zechariah, Matthew 21:5; Mark 14:27; John 19:37; Malachi, Matthew 11:10; Mark 1:2; Luke 7:27. </p> <p> The Psalms are 70 times quoted, and often as predictive. The prophecies concerning Ishmael, Nineveh, Tyre, Egypt, the four empires Babylon, Medo-Persia, Graeco-Macedonia, and Rome, were notoriously promulgated before the event; the fulfillment is dear; it could not have been foreseen by mere human sagacity. The details as to Messiah scattered through so many prophets, yet all converging in Him, the race, nation, tribe, family, birthplace, miracles, humiliation, death, crucifixion with the wicked yet association with the rich at death, resurrection, extension of His seed the church, are so numerous that their minute conformity with the subsequent fact can only be explained by believing that the prophets were moved by the Holy Spirit to foretell the event. What is overwhelmingly convincing is, the Jews are our sacred librarians, who attest the prophets as written ages before, and who certainly would not have corrupted them to confirm Jesus' Messianic claims which they reject. Moreover, the details are so complicated, and seemingly inconsistent, that before the event it would seem impossible to make them coincide in one person. </p> <p> A "son," yet "the everlasting Father"; a "child," yet "the mighty God"; "Prince of peace," sitting "upon the throne of David," yet coming as [[Shiloh]] (the peace-giver) when "the sceptre shall depart from Judah"; Son of David, yet Lord of David; a Prophet and Priest, yet also a King; "God's Servant," upon whom He "lays the iniquity of us all," Messiah cut off, yet given by the [[Ancient]] of days "an everlasting dominion." The only key that opens this immensely complicated lock is the gospel narrative of Jesus, written ages after the prophets. The absence of greater clearness in the prophets is due to God's purpose to give light enough to guide the willing, to leave darkness enough to confound the willfully blind. Hence the prophecy is not dependent for its interpretation on the prophet; nay, he was often ignorant of the full meaning of his own word (2 Peter 1:20-21). Moreover, if the form of the prophecies had been direct declaration the fulfillment would have been liable to frustration. If also the time had been more distinctly marked believers would have been less in a state of continued expectancy. </p> <p> The prophecies were designedly made up of many parts (polumeros; Hebrews 12:1); fragmentary and figurative, the temporary and local fulfillment often foreshadowing the Messianic fulfillment. The obscurity, in some parts, of prophecies of which other parts have been plainly fulfilled is designed to exercise our faith, the obscure parts yet awaiting their exhaustive fulfillment; e.g. prophecies combining the first coming and the second coming of Christ, the parts concerning the latter of course yet require patient and prayerful investigation. Moreover, many prophecies, besides their references to events of the times of the sacred writer, look forward to ulterior fulfillments in Messiah and His kingdom; for "the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy" (Revelation 19:10). Thus the foretold deliverance from [[Babylon]] by Cyrus foreshadows the greater deliverance from the antitypical Babylon by Cyrus' Antitype, Messiah (Isaiah 44:28; Isaiah 45:1-5; Isaiah 45:13; Isaiah 45:22-25; Jeremiah 51:6-10; Jeremiah 51:25; compare Revelation 18:4; Revelation 17:4; Revelation 14:8; Revelation 8:8). </p> <p> So the prophet Isaiah's son is the sign of the immediate deliverance of [[Judah]] from [[Rezin]] and Pekah; but language is used which could not have applied to him, and can only find its full and exhaustive accomplishment in the antitypical [[Immanuel]] (Isaiah 7:14-16; Isaiah 8:3-12; Isaiah 8:18; Isaiah 9:6-7; Matthew 1:18-23). So too our Lord's prophecy of the destruction of Jerusalem is couched in language receiving its exhaustive fulfillment only in the judgments to be inflicted at His second coming (Matthew 24); as in the sky the nearer and the further off heavenly bodies are, to the spectator, projected into the same vault. The primary sense does not exclude the secondary, not even though the sacred writer himself had nothing in his thought; beyond the primary, for the Holy Spirit is the true Author, who often made the writers unconsciously utter words reaching far beyond the primary and literal sense; so Hosea 11:1, compare Matthew 2:15; so Caiaphas, John 11:50-52. They diligently inquired as to the deep significancy of their own words, and were told that the full meaning would only be known in subsequent gospel times (Daniel 12:8-9; Zechariah 4:5; 1 Peter 1:10-12). </p> <p> The prophet, like his Antitype, spoke not of himself (John 7:17-18; Numbers 11:17; Numbers 11:25; Numbers 11:29; 1 Samuel 10:6; 1 Samuel 19:20; Numbers 12:6-8). The dream and vision were lower forms of inspiration than Moses enjoyed, namely, "mouth to mouth, not in dark speeches"; directly, without the intervention of dream, vision, or person (compare Exodus 33:11 with Joel 2:28; Daniel 1:17). The prophets did net generally speak in ecstatic unconsciousness, but with self possession, for "the spirits of the prophets are subject to the prophets" (1 Corinthians 14:32); but sometimes they did (Genesis 15; Daniel 7; Daniel 8; Daniel 10; Daniel 11; Daniel 12, "the visions of Daniel"); "the vision of Isaiah" (Isaiah 6); "the vision of Ezekiel" (Ezekiel 1); "the visions of Zechariah" (Zechariah 1; Zechariah 4; Zechariah 5; Zechariah 6); the vision of Peter (Acts 10); of Paul (Acts 22:17; Acts 22:2 Corinthians 12); Job (Job 4:13-16; Job 33:15-16); John (Revelation 1:10) "in the Spirit," i.e. in a state of ecstasy, the outer world shut out, the inner spirit being taken possession of by God's Spirit, so that an immediate connection was established with the invisible world. </p> <p> [[Whereas]] the prophet speaks in the Spirit the apocalyptic seer is wholly in the Spirit, he intuitively and directly sees and hears (Isaiah 6:1; Zechariah 2:1; Micah 1:1; Habakkuk 1:1; Acts 10:11; Acts 22:18; Revelation 1:12); the subjects of the vision are in juxtaposition (as in a painting), independent of relations of time. But however various might be the modes of inspiration, the world spoken or written by the inspired prophets equally is God's inspired infallible testimony. Their words, in their public function, were not their own so much as God's (Haggai 1:13); as private individuals they searched diligently into their far-reaching meaning. Their words prove in the fulfillment to be not of their own origination, therefore not of their own individual (compare 1 Peter 1:10-12) interpretation (idias epiluseos ou ginetai ), but of the Holy Spirit's by whom they were "moved"; therefore we must look for the Holy Spirit's illumination while we "take heed to the word of prophecy (now become) more sure" (through the fulfillment of part of it already, namely, that concerning Christ's sufferings; and through the pledge given in His transfiguration witnessed by Peter, that the rest will come to pass, namely, His foretold glory: 2 Peter 1:19-21 Greek, compare 2 Samuel 23:2; Hosea 9:7). </p> <p> Messianic prophecy. Prophecy and miracles are the direct evidences of the truth of revelation; the morals, propagation, and suitableness of [[Christianity]] to man's needs, combined together with the two former, are its irrefragable proofs. All subsequent prophecy of Messiah develops the primary one (Genesis 3:15). This only defined the [[Saviour]] as about to be the woman's seed. Noah's prophecy that He should be of the Semitic branch of the human race, (Genesis 9:26; Genesis 12:3; Genesis 22:18; Genesis 28:14) of the family of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, (Genesis 49:10) of the tribe of Judah, a Shiloh or tranquilizer, yet one who will smite with a sceptre and come as a star (Numbers 24:17); a prophet, like Moses (Deuteronomy 18:15); a king, of David's seed, reigning forever (2 Samuel 7:16; Psalm 18; 61; 89); the Son of God, as well as Son of David (Psalms 2:2; Psalms 2:6-7; Psalms 2:8; Psalms 110:1-4, etc.). </p> <p> [[Anointed]] by Jehovah as David's Lord, King of Zion, [[Inheritor]] of the whole earth, dashing in pieces His enemies like a potter's vessel with a rod of iron, "it Priest forever after the order of Melchizedek"; severely afflicted, "hands and feet pierced," betrayed by "His own familiar friend," "His garments parted and lots cast for His vesture," "His ears opened" to "come" and "do God's will" at all costs, when God would not have animal "sacrifice" (Psalm 22; Psalm 40; Psalm 55; Psalm 69; Psalm 102; Psalm 109). [[Raised]] from the grave without His flesh seeing corruption (Psalm 16; Psalm 17); triumphant King, espousing the church His bride (Psalm 45); reigning in peace and righteousness from the river to the ends of the earth (Psalm 72). There are four groups of the 16 prophets. </p> <p> Of the northern Israel, Hosea, Amos, Joel, Jonah; of Judah, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Obadiah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah; prophets of the captivity, Ezekiel and Daniel; prophets of the restoration, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi. Each adds some fresh trait to complete the delineation of Messiah. Isaiah 52:13-15; Isaiah 53, is the most perfect portrait of His vicarious sufferings, the way of salvation to us and of consequent glory to Him, and eternal satisfaction in seeing His spiritual seed. (See ISAIAH.) The arrangement in the canon is chronological mainly. But as the twelve lesser prophets are regarded as one work, Jeremiah and Ezekiel are placed at the close of the greater prophets, and before the lesser, whose three last prophets are subsequent to Jeremiah and Ezekiel. Hosea being longest of the lesser is placed first of them, though not so chronologically. </p>
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_53471" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_53471" /> ==
<p> <strong> PROPHET </strong> (in NT). <strong> 1. </strong> The spirit of prophecy, as it meets us under the Old Dispensation, runs on into the New, and there are prophets in the NT who are properly to be described as <em> OT prophets </em> . Such as [[Anna]] the prophetess ( Luke 2:36; cf. Miriam, Deborah, and [[Huldah]] in the OT); Zacharias, who is expressly said to have prophesied ( Luke 1:67 ff.); Simeon, whose <em> Nunc Dimittis </em> is an utterance of an unmistakably prophetic nature ( Luke 2:25 ff.) But above all there is John the Baptist, who was not only recognized by the nation as a great prophet ( Matthew 14:5; Matthew 21:26 , Mark 11:32 , Luke 20:6 ), but was declared by [[Jesus]] to be the greatest prophet of the former dispensation, while yet less than the least in the [[Kingdom]] of heaven ( Matthew 11:9 ff. = Luke 7:26 ff.) </p> <p> <strong> 2. </strong> <em> Jesus Himself </em> was a prophet. It was in this character that the [[Messiah]] had been promised ( Deuteronomy 18:16; Deuteronomy 18:18; cf. Acts 3:22; Acts 7:37 ), and had been looked for by many ( John 6:14 ). During His public ministry it was as a prophet that He was known by the people ( Matthew 21:11; cf. Luke 7:16 ), and described by His own disciples ( Luke 24:19 ), and even designated by Himself ( Matthew 13:57 , Luke 13:33 ). And according to the teaching of the NT, the exalted [[Christ]] still continues to exercise His prophetic function, guiding His disciples into all the truth by the [[Spirit]] whom He sends ( John 16:7; John 16:13 ), and ‘building up the body’ by bestowing upon it Apostles, prophets, and teachers ( Ephesians 4:8 ff.). </p> <p> <strong> 3. </strong> From the prophetic office of her exalted [[Head]] there flowed the prophetic endowment of <em> the [[Church]] </em> . Joel had foretold a time when the gift of prophecy should be conferred upon all ( Joel 2:28 f.), and at [[Pentecost]] we see that word fulfilled ( Acts 2:16 ff.). Ideally, all the Lord’s people should be prophets. For ‘the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy’ ( Revelation 19:10 ), and in proportion as [[Christians]] are filled with the Pentecostal Spirit they will desire, like the members of the newborn Church, to bear testimony to their [[Master]] (cf. Numbers 11:29 , 1 Corinthians 14:5 ). </p> <p> <strong> 4. </strong> But even in the Spirit-filled Church diversities of gifts quickly emerged, and a special power of prophetic utterance was bestowed upon certain individuals. <em> A prophetic ministry </em> arose, a ministry of [[Divine]] inspiration, which has to be distinguished from the official ministry of human appointment (see art. Ministry). In a more general sense, all those who ‘spoke the word of God’ ( Hebrews 13:7 ) were prophets. The ministry of the word ( Acts 6:4 ) was a prophetic ministry, and so we find St. [[Paul]] himself described as a prophet long after he had become an [[Apostle]] ( Acts 13:1 ). </p> <p> <strong> 5. </strong> But in a more precise use of the term we find <em> the specific NT prophet </em> distinguished from others who ‘speak the word of God,’ and in particular from the Apostle and the teacher ( 1 Corinthians 12:28 f., cf. Ephesians 4:11 ). The distinction seems to be that while the Apostle was a missionary to the unbelieving ( Galatians 2:7-8 ), the prophet was a messenger to the Church ( 1 Corinthians 14:4; 1 Corinthians 14:22 ); and while the teacher explained or enforced truth that was already possessed ( Hebrews 5:12 ), the prophet was recognized by the spiritual discernment of his hearers ( 1 Corinthians 2:15; 1 Corinthians 14:29 , 1 John 4:1 ) as the Divine medium of fresh revelations ( 1 Corinthians 14:25; 1 Corinthians 14:30-31 , Ephesians 3:6; cf. <em> Did </em> . iv. 1). </p> <p> Three main types of prophesying may be distinguished in the NT ( <em> a </em> ) First, there is what may be called the ordinary ministry of prophecy in the Church, described by St. Paul as ‘edification and comfort and consolation’ ( 1 Corinthians 14:3 ). ( <em> b </em> ) Again, there is, on special occasions, the authoritative announcement of the Divine will in a particular case, as when the prophets of Antioch, in obedience to the [[Holy]] Ghost, separate [[Barnabas]] and [[Saul]] for the work of missionary evangelization ( Acts 13:1 ff.; cf. Acts 22:21; Acts 16:5 ff.). ( <em> c </em> ) Rarely there is the prediction of a future event, as in the case of [[Agabus]] ( Acts 11:28; Acts 21:10; cf. v. Acts 21:4 ). </p> <p> Of [[Christian]] prophets in the specific sense several are mentioned in the NT: [[Judas]] and [[Silas]] (Acts 15:32 ), the prophets at [[Antioch]] ( Acts 13:1 ), Agabus and the prophets from [[Jerusalem]] ( Acts 11:27 f., Acts 21:10 ), the four daughters of [[Philip]] the evangelist ( Acts 21:9 ). But these few names give us no conception of the numbers and influence of the prophets in the [[Apostolic]] Church. For light upon these points we have to turn especially to the [[Pauline]] [[Epistles]] ( <em> e.g. </em> 1Co 12:28 f., 1 Corinthians 12:14 , Ephesians 2:20; Ephesians 3:5; Ephesians 4:11 ). [[Probably]] they were to be found in every Christian community, and there might even be several of them in a single congregation ( 1 Corinthians 14:29 ). [[Certain]] of them, possessed no doubt of conspicuous gifts, moved about from church to church ( Acts 11:27 f., Acts 21:10; Cf. Matthew 10:41 , <em> Did </em> . xiii. 1). Others, endowed with literary powers, would commit their ‘visions and revelations’ to writing, just as some prophets of the OT had done, though of this literary type of prophecy we have only one example in the NT the [[Book]] of Revelation (cf. Revelation 1:3; Revelation 22:7; Revelation 22:9-10; Revelation 22:19 ). </p> <p> [[Quite]] a flood of light is shed upon the subject of the NT prophets by the evidence of the <em> [[Didache]] </em> . We see there that about the end of the first century or the beginning of the second the prophet is still held in the highest estimation (xi. 7, xiii.), and takes precedence, wherever he goes of the local ministry of bishops and deacons (x. 7). But we also see the presence in the Church of those influences which gradually led to the elimination of the prophetic ministry. One influence is the abundance of false prophets (xi. 8 ff.; cf. Matthew 7:15; Matthew 24:11; Matthew 24:24 , 1 John 4:1 ), tending to make the Church suspicious of all prophetic assumptions, and to bring prophecy as such into disrepute. [[Another]] is the growing importance of the official ministry, which begins to claim the functions previously accorded to the prophets alone (xv. 1). Into the hands of the official class all power in the Church gradually passed, and in spite of the outburst of the old prophetic claims, during the latter half of the 2nd cent., in connexion with the Montanist movement, the prophet in the distinctive NT sense disappears entirely from the [[Catholic]] Church, while the ministry of office takes the place of the ministry of inspiration. </p> <p> J. C. Lambert. </p>
<p> <strong> PROPHET </strong> (in NT). <strong> 1. </strong> The spirit of prophecy, as it meets us under the Old Dispensation, runs on into the New, and there are prophets in the NT who are properly to be described as <em> OT prophets </em> . Such as Anna the prophetess ( Luke 2:36; cf. Miriam, Deborah, and [[Huldah]] in the OT); Zacharias, who is expressly said to have prophesied ( Luke 1:67 ff.); Simeon, whose <em> Nunc Dimittis </em> is an utterance of an unmistakably prophetic nature ( Luke 2:25 ff.) But above all there is John the Baptist, who was not only recognized by the nation as a great prophet ( Matthew 14:5; Matthew 21:26 , Mark 11:32 , Luke 20:6 ), but was declared by Jesus to be the greatest prophet of the former dispensation, while yet less than the least in the Kingdom of heaven ( Matthew 11:9 ff. = Luke 7:26 ff.) </p> <p> <strong> 2. </strong> <em> Jesus Himself </em> was a prophet. It was in this character that the Messiah had been promised ( Deuteronomy 18:16; Deuteronomy 18:18; cf. Acts 3:22; Acts 7:37 ), and had been looked for by many ( John 6:14 ). During His public ministry it was as a prophet that He was known by the people ( Matthew 21:11; cf. Luke 7:16 ), and described by His own disciples ( Luke 24:19 ), and even designated by Himself ( Matthew 13:57 , Luke 13:33 ). And according to the teaching of the NT, the exalted Christ still continues to exercise His prophetic function, guiding His disciples into all the truth by the Spirit whom He sends ( John 16:7; John 16:13 ), and ‘building up the body’ by bestowing upon it Apostles, prophets, and teachers ( Ephesians 4:8 ff.). </p> <p> <strong> 3. </strong> From the prophetic office of her exalted Head there flowed the prophetic endowment of <em> the Church </em> . Joel had foretold a time when the gift of prophecy should be conferred upon all ( Joel 2:28 f.), and at [[Pentecost]] we see that word fulfilled ( Acts 2:16 ff.). Ideally, all the Lord’s people should be prophets. For ‘the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy’ ( Revelation 19:10 ), and in proportion as [[Christians]] are filled with the Pentecostal Spirit they will desire, like the members of the newborn Church, to bear testimony to their [[Master]] (cf. Numbers 11:29 , 1 Corinthians 14:5 ). </p> <p> <strong> 4. </strong> But even in the Spirit-filled Church diversities of gifts quickly emerged, and a special power of prophetic utterance was bestowed upon certain individuals. <em> A prophetic ministry </em> arose, a ministry of Divine inspiration, which has to be distinguished from the official ministry of human appointment (see art. Ministry). In a more general sense, all those who ‘spoke the word of God’ ( Hebrews 13:7 ) were prophets. The ministry of the word ( Acts 6:4 ) was a prophetic ministry, and so we find St. Paul himself described as a prophet long after he had become an Apostle ( Acts 13:1 ). </p> <p> <strong> 5. </strong> But in a more precise use of the term we find <em> the specific NT prophet </em> distinguished from others who ‘speak the word of God,’ and in particular from the Apostle and the teacher ( 1 Corinthians 12:28 f., cf. Ephesians 4:11 ). The distinction seems to be that while the Apostle was a missionary to the unbelieving ( Galatians 2:7-8 ), the prophet was a messenger to the Church ( 1 Corinthians 14:4; 1 Corinthians 14:22 ); and while the teacher explained or enforced truth that was already possessed ( Hebrews 5:12 ), the prophet was recognized by the spiritual discernment of his hearers ( 1 Corinthians 2:15; 1 Corinthians 14:29 , 1 John 4:1 ) as the Divine medium of fresh revelations ( 1 Corinthians 14:25; 1 Corinthians 14:30-31 , Ephesians 3:6; cf. <em> Did </em> . iv. 1). </p> <p> Three main types of prophesying may be distinguished in the NT ( <em> a </em> ) First, there is what may be called the ordinary ministry of prophecy in the Church, described by St. Paul as ‘edification and comfort and consolation’ ( 1 Corinthians 14:3 ). ( <em> b </em> ) Again, there is, on special occasions, the authoritative announcement of the Divine will in a particular case, as when the prophets of Antioch, in obedience to the Holy Ghost, separate [[Barnabas]] and [[Saul]] for the work of missionary evangelization ( Acts 13:1 ff.; cf. Acts 22:21; Acts 16:5 ff.). ( <em> c </em> ) Rarely there is the prediction of a future event, as in the case of [[Agabus]] ( Acts 11:28; Acts 21:10; cf. v. Acts 21:4 ). </p> <p> Of Christian prophets in the specific sense several are mentioned in the NT: Judas and Silas (Acts 15:32 ), the prophets at [[Antioch]] ( Acts 13:1 ), Agabus and the prophets from Jerusalem ( Acts 11:27 f., Acts 21:10 ), the four daughters of [[Philip]] the evangelist ( Acts 21:9 ). But these few names give us no conception of the numbers and influence of the prophets in the Apostolic Church. For light upon these points we have to turn especially to the [[Pauline]] Epistles ( <em> e.g. </em> 1Co 12:28 f., 1 Corinthians 12:14 , Ephesians 2:20; Ephesians 3:5; Ephesians 4:11 ). Probably they were to be found in every Christian community, and there might even be several of them in a single congregation ( 1 Corinthians 14:29 ). [[Certain]] of them, possessed no doubt of conspicuous gifts, moved about from church to church ( Acts 11:27 f., Acts 21:10; Cf. Matthew 10:41 , <em> Did </em> . xiii. 1). Others, endowed with literary powers, would commit their ‘visions and revelations’ to writing, just as some prophets of the OT had done, though of this literary type of prophecy we have only one example in the NT the Book of Revelation (cf. Revelation 1:3; Revelation 22:7; Revelation 22:9-10; Revelation 22:19 ). </p> <p> [[Quite]] a flood of light is shed upon the subject of the NT prophets by the evidence of the <em> [[Didache]] </em> . We see there that about the end of the first century or the beginning of the second the prophet is still held in the highest estimation (xi. 7, xiii.), and takes precedence, wherever he goes of the local ministry of bishops and deacons (x. 7). But we also see the presence in the Church of those influences which gradually led to the elimination of the prophetic ministry. One influence is the abundance of false prophets (xi. 8 ff.; cf. Matthew 7:15; Matthew 24:11; Matthew 24:24 , 1 John 4:1 ), tending to make the Church suspicious of all prophetic assumptions, and to bring prophecy as such into disrepute. Another is the growing importance of the official ministry, which begins to claim the functions previously accorded to the prophets alone (xv. 1). Into the hands of the official class all power in the Church gradually passed, and in spite of the outburst of the old prophetic claims, during the latter half of the 2nd cent., in connexion with the Montanist movement, the prophet in the distinctive NT sense disappears entirely from the Catholic Church, while the ministry of office takes the place of the ministry of inspiration. </p> <p> J. C. Lambert. </p>
          
          
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_74294" /> ==
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_74294" /> ==
<p> Prophet. The ordinary [[Hebrew]] word for prophet is nabi, derived from a verb signifying, "to bubble forth", like a fountain; hence, the word means one who announces, or pours forth, the declarations of God. The English word comes from the [[Greek]] prophetes (profetes), which signifies, in classical Greek, one who speaks for another, especially one who speaks for a god, and so interprets his will to man; hence, its essential meaning is "an interpreter". </p> <p> The use of the word in its modern sense as "one who predicts" is post-classical. The larger sense of interpretation has not, however, been lost. In fact, the English word has been used in a closer sense. The different meanings, or shades of meanings, in which the abstract noun is employed in [[Scripture]] have been drawn out by Locke as follows: "Prophecy comprehends three things: prediction; singing by the dictate of the Spirit; and understanding and explaining the mysterious, hidden sense of Scripture by an immediate illumination and motion of the Spirit." </p> <p> [[Order]] and office. - The sacerdotal order was originally the instrument, by which the members of the [[Jewish]] theocracy were taught, and governed in things spiritual. Teaching by act and teaching by word were alike their task. But during the time of the judges, the priesthood sank into a state of degeneracy, and the people were no longer affected by the acted lessons of the ceremonial service. They required less enigmatic warnings and exhortations, under these circumstances, a new moral power was evoked; the Prophetic Order. </p> <p> Samuel, himself [[Levite]] of the family of Kohath, 1 Chronicles 6:28, and almost certainly a priest, was the instrument used, at once, for effecting a reform in the sacerdotal order, 1 Chronicles 9:22, and for giving to the prophets, a position of importance, which they had never before held. Nevertheless, it is not to be supposed that Samuel created the prophetic order as a new thing before unknown. The germs, both of the prophetic and of the regal order, are found in the law as given to the [[Israelites]] by Moses, Deuteronomy 13:1; Deuteronomy 17:18; Deuteronomy 18:20, but they were not yet developed, because there was not yet the demand for them. </p> <p> Samuel took measures to make his work of restoration permanent, as well as, effective for the moment. For this purpose, he instituted companies or colleges of prophets. One, we find in his lifetime at Ramah, 1 Samuel 19:19-20, others, afterward, at Bethel, 2 Kings 2:3, Jericho, 2 Kings 2:2; 2 Kings 2:5, Gilgal; 2 Kings 4:38, and elsewhere. 2 Kings 6:1. Their constitution and object similar to those of theological colleges. Into them were gathered promising students, and here, they were trained for the office which they were , afterward, destined to fulfill. So successful were these institutions that, from the time of Samuel to the closing of the canon of the Old Testament, there seems never to have been wanting, due supply of men to keep up the line of official prophets. </p> <p> Their chief subject of study was, no doubt, the law and its interpretation; oral, as distinct from symbolical, teaching being, thenceforward, tacitly transferred from the priestly to the prophetic order. Subsidiary subjects of instruction were music and sacred poetry, both of which had been connected with prophecy from the time of Moses, Exodus 15:20, and the judges. Judges 4:4; Judges 5:1. </p> <p> But, to belong to the prophetic order, and to possess the prophetic gift, are not convertible terms. Generally, the inspired prophet came from the college of prophets, and belonged to prophetic order; but this was not always the case. Thus, Amos, though called to the prophetic office, did not belong to the prophetic order. Amos 7:14 . The sixteen prophets, whose books are in the canon, have that place of honor because they were endowed with the prophetic gift as well as ordinarily, (so far as we know), belonging to the prophetic order. </p> <p> Characteristics. - What then are the characteristics of the sixteen prophets thus called, and commissioned, and intrusted with the messages of [[God]] to his people? </p> <p> They were the national poets of Judea. </p> <p> They were annalists and historians. A great portion of Isaiah, of Jeremiah, of Daniel of Jonah, of Haggai, is direct or in direct history. </p> <p> They were preachers of patriotism, - their patriotism being founded on the religious motive. </p> <p> They were preachers of morals and of spiritual religion. The system of morals put forward by the prophets, if not higher or sterner or purer than that of the law, is more plainly declared, and with greater, because now more needed, vehemence of diction. </p> <p> They were extraordinary, but yet authorized exponents of the law. </p> <p> They held a pastoral or quasi-pastoral office. </p> <p> They were a political power in the state. </p> <p> But the prophets were something more than national poets and annalists, preachers of patriotism moral teachers, exponents of the law, pastors and politicians. Their most essential characteristic is that they were instruments of revealing God's will to man, as in other ways, so specially by predicting future events, and in particular, foretelling the incarnation of the Lord [[Jesus]] Christ, and the redemption effected by him. We have a series of prophecies which are so applicable to the person and earthly life of Jesus [[Christ]] as to be thereby shown to have been designed to apply to him. And, if they were designed to apply to him, prophetical prediction is proved. Objections have been urged. We notice only one, namely, vagueness. It has been said that the prophecies are too darkly and vaguely worded to be proved predictive, by the events which they are alleged to foretell. But to this might be answered. </p> <p> That God never forces men to believe, but that there is such a union of definiteness and vagueness in the prophecies, as to enable those who are willing to discover the truth, while the willfully blind are not forcibly constrained to see it. </p> <p> That, had the prophecies been couched in the form of direct declarations, their fulfillment would have, thereby, been rendered impossible or at least capable of frustration. </p> <p> That the effect of prophecy would have been far less beneficial to believers, as being less adapted to keep them in a state of constant expectation. </p> <p> That the [[Messiah]] of revelation could not be so clearly portrayed in his varied character as God and man, as prophet, priest and king, if he had been the mere "teacher." </p> <p> That the state of the prophets, at the time of receiving the divine revelation, was, such as necessarily, to make their predictions fragmentary figurative, and abstracted from the relations of time. </p> <p> That some portions of the prophecies were intended to be of double application, and some portions, to be understood only on their fulfillment. Compare John 14:29; Ezekiel 36:33. </p>
<p> Prophet. The ordinary Hebrew word for prophet is nabi, derived from a verb signifying, "to bubble forth", like a fountain; hence, the word means one who announces, or pours forth, the declarations of God. The English word comes from the Greek prophetes (profetes), which signifies, in classical Greek, one who speaks for another, especially one who speaks for a god, and so interprets his will to man; hence, its essential meaning is "an interpreter". </p> <p> The use of the word in its modern sense as "one who predicts" is post-classical. The larger sense of interpretation has not, however, been lost. In fact, the English word has been used in a closer sense. The different meanings, or shades of meanings, in which the abstract noun is employed in Scripture have been drawn out by Locke as follows: "Prophecy comprehends three things: prediction; singing by the dictate of the Spirit; and understanding and explaining the mysterious, hidden sense of Scripture by an immediate illumination and motion of the Spirit." </p> <p> Order and office. - The sacerdotal order was originally the instrument, by which the members of the Jewish theocracy were taught, and governed in things spiritual. Teaching by act and teaching by word were alike their task. But during the time of the judges, the priesthood sank into a state of degeneracy, and the people were no longer affected by the acted lessons of the ceremonial service. They required less enigmatic warnings and exhortations, under these circumstances, a new moral power was evoked; the Prophetic Order. </p> <p> Samuel, himself Levite of the family of Kohath, 1 Chronicles 6:28, and almost certainly a priest, was the instrument used, at once, for effecting a reform in the sacerdotal order, 1 Chronicles 9:22, and for giving to the prophets, a position of importance, which they had never before held. Nevertheless, it is not to be supposed that Samuel created the prophetic order as a new thing before unknown. The germs, both of the prophetic and of the regal order, are found in the law as given to the [[Israelites]] by Moses, Deuteronomy 13:1; Deuteronomy 17:18; Deuteronomy 18:20, but they were not yet developed, because there was not yet the demand for them. </p> <p> Samuel took measures to make his work of restoration permanent, as well as, effective for the moment. For this purpose, he instituted companies or colleges of prophets. One, we find in his lifetime at Ramah, 1 Samuel 19:19-20, others, afterward, at Bethel, 2 Kings 2:3, Jericho, 2 Kings 2:2; 2 Kings 2:5, Gilgal; 2 Kings 4:38, and elsewhere. 2 Kings 6:1. Their constitution and object similar to those of theological colleges. Into them were gathered promising students, and here, they were trained for the office which they were , afterward, destined to fulfill. So successful were these institutions that, from the time of Samuel to the closing of the canon of the Old Testament, there seems never to have been wanting, due supply of men to keep up the line of official prophets. </p> <p> Their chief subject of study was, no doubt, the law and its interpretation; oral, as distinct from symbolical, teaching being, thenceforward, tacitly transferred from the priestly to the prophetic order. Subsidiary subjects of instruction were music and sacred poetry, both of which had been connected with prophecy from the time of Moses, Exodus 15:20, and the judges. Judges 4:4; Judges 5:1. </p> <p> But, to belong to the prophetic order, and to possess the prophetic gift, are not convertible terms. Generally, the inspired prophet came from the college of prophets, and belonged to prophetic order; but this was not always the case. Thus, Amos, though called to the prophetic office, did not belong to the prophetic order. Amos 7:14 . The sixteen prophets, whose books are in the canon, have that place of honor because they were endowed with the prophetic gift as well as ordinarily, (so far as we know), belonging to the prophetic order. </p> <p> Characteristics. - What then are the characteristics of the sixteen prophets thus called, and commissioned, and intrusted with the messages of God to his people? </p> <p> They were the national poets of Judea. </p> <p> They were annalists and historians. A great portion of Isaiah, of Jeremiah, of Daniel of Jonah, of Haggai, is direct or in direct history. </p> <p> They were preachers of patriotism, - their patriotism being founded on the religious motive. </p> <p> They were preachers of morals and of spiritual religion. The system of morals put forward by the prophets, if not higher or sterner or purer than that of the law, is more plainly declared, and with greater, because now more needed, vehemence of diction. </p> <p> They were extraordinary, but yet authorized exponents of the law. </p> <p> They held a pastoral or quasi-pastoral office. </p> <p> They were a political power in the state. </p> <p> But the prophets were something more than national poets and annalists, preachers of patriotism moral teachers, exponents of the law, pastors and politicians. Their most essential characteristic is that they were instruments of revealing God's will to man, as in other ways, so specially by predicting future events, and in particular, foretelling the incarnation of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the redemption effected by him. We have a series of prophecies which are so applicable to the person and earthly life of Jesus Christ as to be thereby shown to have been designed to apply to him. And, if they were designed to apply to him, prophetical prediction is proved. Objections have been urged. We notice only one, namely, vagueness. It has been said that the prophecies are too darkly and vaguely worded to be proved predictive, by the events which they are alleged to foretell. But to this might be answered. </p> <p> That God never forces men to believe, but that there is such a union of definiteness and vagueness in the prophecies, as to enable those who are willing to discover the truth, while the willfully blind are not forcibly constrained to see it. </p> <p> That, had the prophecies been couched in the form of direct declarations, their fulfillment would have, thereby, been rendered impossible or at least capable of frustration. </p> <p> That the effect of prophecy would have been far less beneficial to believers, as being less adapted to keep them in a state of constant expectation. </p> <p> That the Messiah of revelation could not be so clearly portrayed in his varied character as God and man, as prophet, priest and king, if he had been the mere "teacher." </p> <p> That the state of the prophets, at the time of receiving the divine revelation, was, such as necessarily, to make their predictions fragmentary figurative, and abstracted from the relations of time. </p> <p> That some portions of the prophecies were intended to be of double application, and some portions, to be understood only on their fulfillment. Compare John 14:29; Ezekiel 36:33. </p>
          
          
== Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words <ref name="term_78801" /> ==
== Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words <ref name="term_78801" /> ==
<div> 1: Προφήτης (Strong'S #4396 — Noun Masculine — prophetes — prof-ay'-tace ) </div> <p> "one who speaks forth or openly" (see [[Prophecy]] , A), "a proclaimer of a divine message," denoted among the [[Greeks]] an interpreter of the oracles of the gods. In the Sept. it is the translation of the word roeh, "a seer;" 1 Samuel 9:9 , indicating that the "prophet" was one who had immediate intercourse with God. It also translates the word nabhi, meaning "either one in whom the message from [[God]] springs forth" or "one to whom anything is secretly communicated." Hence, in general, "the prophet" was one upon whom the [[Spirit]] of God rested, Numbers 11:17-29 , one, to whom and through whom God speaks, Numbers 12:2; Amos 3:7,8 . In the case of the OT prophets their messages were very largely the proclamation of the [[Divine]] purposes of salvation and glory to be accomplished in the future; the "prophesying" of the NT "prophets" was both a preaching of the Divine counsels of grace already accomplished and the foretelling of the purposes of God in the future. </p> Matthew 5:12Mark 6:15Luke 4:27John 8:52Romans 11:3Matthew 10:4121:46Mark 6:4Matthew 21:26Luke 1:76Acts 13:115:3221:101 Corinthians 12:28,2914:29,32,37Ephesians 2:203:54:11John 1:216:147:40Acts 3:227:37Mark 6:15Luke 7:16Luke 24:19 John 4:199:17Revelation 11:10,18Titus 1:12Luke 24:27Acts 8:28 <div> 2: Ψευδοπροφήτης (Strong'S #5578 — Noun Masculine — pseudoprophetes — psyoo-dop-rof-ay'-tace ) </div> <p> "a false prophet," is used of such (a) in OT times, Luke 6:26; 2 Peter 2:1; (b) in the present period since Pentecost, Matthew 7:15; 24:11,24; Mark 13:22; Acts 13:6; 1 John 4:1; (c) with reference to a false "prophet" destined to arise as the supporter of the "Beast" at the close of this age, Revelation 16:13; 19:20; 20:10 (himself described as "another beast," Revelation 13:11 ). </p>
<div> 1: Προφήτης (Strong'S #4396 — Noun Masculine — prophetes — prof-ay'-tace ) </div> <p> "one who speaks forth or openly" (see [[Prophecy]] , A), "a proclaimer of a divine message," denoted among the [[Greeks]] an interpreter of the oracles of the gods. In the Sept. it is the translation of the word roeh, "a seer;" 1 Samuel 9:9 , indicating that the "prophet" was one who had immediate intercourse with God. It also translates the word nabhi, meaning "either one in whom the message from God springs forth" or "one to whom anything is secretly communicated." Hence, in general, "the prophet" was one upon whom the Spirit of God rested, Numbers 11:17-29 , one, to whom and through whom God speaks, Numbers 12:2; Amos 3:7,8 . In the case of the OT prophets their messages were very largely the proclamation of the Divine purposes of salvation and glory to be accomplished in the future; the "prophesying" of the NT "prophets" was both a preaching of the Divine counsels of grace already accomplished and the foretelling of the purposes of God in the future. </p> Matthew 5:12Mark 6:15Luke 4:27John 8:52Romans 11:3Matthew 10:4121:46Mark 6:4Matthew 21:26Luke 1:76Acts 13:115:3221:101 Corinthians 12:28,2914:29,32,37Ephesians 2:203:54:11John 1:216:147:40Acts 3:227:37Mark 6:15Luke 7:16Luke 24:19 John 4:199:17Revelation 11:10,18Titus 1:12Luke 24:27Acts 8:28 <div> 2: Ψευδοπροφήτης (Strong'S #5578 — Noun Masculine — pseudoprophetes — psyoo-dop-rof-ay'-tace ) </div> <p> "a false prophet," is used of such (a) in OT times, Luke 6:26; 2 Peter 2:1; (b) in the present period since Pentecost, Matthew 7:15; 24:11,24; Mark 13:22; Acts 13:6; 1 John 4:1; (c) with reference to a false "prophet" destined to arise as the supporter of the "Beast" at the close of this age, Revelation 16:13; 19:20; 20:10 (himself described as "another beast," Revelation 13:11 ). </p>
          
          
== Charles Buck Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_20363" /> ==
== Charles Buck Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_20363" /> ==
<p> A person who foretells future events. It is particularly applied to such inspired persons among the [[Jews]] as were commissioned by [[God]] to declare his will and purposes to that people. </p> <p> See PROPHECY. False Prophets. </p> <p> See IMPOSTORS; and Josephus's Hist. of the Jews. Some of the Prophets, an appellation given to young men who were educated in the schools or colleges under a proper master, who was commonly, if not always, an inspired prophet in the knowledge of religion, and in sacred music, and thus were qualified to be public preachers, 1 Samuel 10:1-27 : 1 Samuel 11:1-15 : 2 Samuel 19:1-43 : 2 Kings 2:1-25 : </p>
<p> A person who foretells future events. It is particularly applied to such inspired persons among the Jews as were commissioned by God to declare his will and purposes to that people. </p> <p> See PROPHECY. False Prophets. </p> <p> See IMPOSTORS; and Josephus's Hist. of the Jews. Some of the Prophets, an appellation given to young men who were educated in the schools or colleges under a proper master, who was commonly, if not always, an inspired prophet in the knowledge of religion, and in sacred music, and thus were qualified to be public preachers, 1 Samuel 10:1-27 : 1 Samuel 11:1-15 : 2 Samuel 19:1-43 : 2 Kings 2:1-25 : </p>
          
          
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_62274" /> ==
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_62274" /> ==
<p> PROPH'ET, n. L. propheta. </p> 1. One that foretells future events a predicter a foreteller. 2. In Scripture, a person illuminated, inspired or instructed by [[God]] to announce future events as Moses, Elijah, David, Isaiah, &c. 3. An interpreter one that explains or communicates sentiments. Exodus 7 4. One who pretends to foretell an imposter as a false prophet. Acts 13 . <p> of the prophets, among the Israelites, a school or college in which young men were educated and qualified for public teachers. These students were called sons of the prophets. </p>
<p> PROPH'ET, n. L. propheta. </p> 1. One that foretells future events a predicter a foreteller. 2. In Scripture, a person illuminated, inspired or instructed by God to announce future events as Moses, Elijah, David, Isaiah, &c. 3. An interpreter one that explains or communicates sentiments. Exodus 7 4. One who pretends to foretell an imposter as a false prophet. Acts 13 . <p> of the prophets, among the Israelites, a school or college in which young men were educated and qualified for public teachers. These students were called sons of the prophets. </p>
          
          
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_33088" /> ==
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_33088" /> ==
<li> The prophets of the Restoration, viz., Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. <div> <p> [[Copyright]] StatementThese dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., Illustrated [[Bible]] Dictionary, [[Third]] Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. Public Domain. </p> <p> Bibliography InformationEaston, Matthew George. Entry for 'Prophet'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/p/prophet.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
<li> The prophets of the Restoration, viz., Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. <div> <p> Copyright StatementThese dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Third Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. Public Domain. </p> <p> Bibliography InformationEaston, Matthew George. Entry for 'Prophet'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/p/prophet.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
          
          
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_161755" /> ==
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_161755" /> ==
<p> (1): </p> <p> (n.) One who prophesies, or foretells events; a predicter; a foreteller. </p> <p> (2): </p> <p> (n.) One inspired or instructed by [[God]] to speak in his name, or announce future events, as, Moses, Elijah, etc. </p> <p> (3): </p> <p> (n.) An interpreter; a spokesman. </p> <p> (4): </p> <p> (n.) A mantis. </p>
<p> (1): (n.) One who prophesies, or foretells events; a predicter; a foreteller. </p> <p> (2): (n.) One inspired or instructed by God to speak in his name, or announce future events, as, Moses, Elijah, etc. </p> <p> (3): (n.) An interpreter; a spokesman. </p> <p> (4): (n.) A mantis. </p>
          
          
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_48523" /> ==
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_48523" /> ==
<p> See [[Prophecy]] </p>
<p> See Prophecy </p>
          
          
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_57008" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_57008" /> ==
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==References ==
==References ==