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Prophecy

Prophecy is the communication of a message believed to reveal a divine will or the future, typically delivered by a person regarded as inspired or a seer. The term derives from the Greek prophētēs, meaning “one who speaks before,” formed from pro- “before” and phēmi “to speak.” Prophecy can be oral, written, or visionary, and its authority partly rests on the status of the speaker within a religious tradition.

In many ancient cultures, prophecy shaped political and religious life. In the ancient Near East, oracles interpreted

Prophecies vary in content and method. They may foretell future events, exhort ethical reform, or offer apocalyptic

Reception and evaluation of prophecies depend on interpretation, fulfillment, and context. Many prophecies are contested, ambiguous,

Notable examples include biblical figures such as Isaiah and Jeremiah, the Delphic Oracle, Nostradamus, and prophetic

the
will
of
gods
to
guide
rulers
and
communities.
In
classical
Greece,
the
Oracle
of
Delphi
mediated
between
the
divine
and
human
affairs.
In
the
Hebrew
Bible,
prophets
such
as
Isaiah
and
Jeremiah
proclaimed
messages
about
judgment,
covenant
fidelity,
and
future
restoration.
In
Islam,
prophethood
refers
to
messengers
through
whom
God
conveys
guidance
to
humankind.
visions.
Channels
include
dreams,
visions,
voices,
ecstasy,
or
interpretive
readings
of
signs
and
scriptures.
Some
prophecies
are
considered
predictive,
others
are
exhortatory
or
symbolic,
and
distinctions
between
personal
revelation
and
communal
instruction
are
common
across
traditions.
or
reinterpreted
over
time;
in
modern
secular
thought,
prophecy
is
often
treated
as
literature,
historical
belief,
or
sociocultural
phenomenon
rather
than
a
verifiable
forecast.
traditions
within
Islam.
Prophecy
continues
to
appear
in
religious
practice,
literature,
and
contemporary
discussions
about
future
trends.