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Alphabetical    [«  »]
proper 5
prophe 1
prophecies 74
prophecy 136
prophesied 8
prophesies 1
prophesy 7
Frequency    [«  »]
141 them
140 time
136 only
136 prophecy
136 shall
135 see
132 jerusalem
H.L. Ellison”
Old Testament prophets

IntraText - Concordances

prophecy

    Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,1 | distinction between normal prophecy and the apocalyptic visions 2 1,3 | History as Prophecy. ~ We can now understand 3 1,4 | Early Prophecy. ~ In the historical books 4 1,7 | Unfulfilled Prophecy. ~ One of the major problems 5 1,7 | the problem of unfulfilled prophecy. The question is normally 6 1,7 | or by spiritualizing the prophecy and referring it to the 7 1,7 | in spiritual depth. If a prophecy obviously does not refer 8 1,7 | head in Ezek. 26. This is a prophecy of the complete destruction 9 1,7 | found in Jer. 18:7-10. Every prophecy is con­ditional, even when 10 1,7 | condition is unexpressed. A prophecy of good may be annulled 11 1,7 | may suspend or reverse a prophecy of evil. We must make an 12 1,7 | difficulty with the “unfulfilledprophecy of the destruction of Nineveh. 13 1,7 | stances elsewhere, where prophecy has not been fulfilled. 14 1,7 | evidential value of fulfilled prophecy.~ For all this, “unfulfilled” 15 1,7 | the conditional nature of prophecy.~ ~ ~ 16 1,8 | Is. 60:13).~Here is the prophecy about Christ by this same 17 2,2 | obvious inference from his prophecy that he lived in Judea. 18 2,2 | underlies all written Hebrew prophecy.~ ~ 19 2,4 | immediate cause of Joel’s prophecy was an exception­ally severe 20 2,4 | immediate past, others a prophecy of the future, but the most 21 2,7 | 21).~ All Old Testament prophecy sees in the final setting 22 2,7 | for an early date for the prophecy.~ ~ ~ 23 4,2 | We can, however, from his prophecy recognize how he had been 24 4,2 | reasonably certain that his prophecy was given at the great autumn, 25 4,2 | well be that it was Amosprophecy of the coming earthquake ( 26 4,2 | earthquake (8:8; 9:5) — a prophecy fulfilled by one of the 27 5,5 | disentangled from Hosea’s prophecy.~ 1. The immorality of Israel, 28 5,6 | regard ch. 2 as one connected prophecy.~ Chapter 1:2-9 is the story 29 5,7 | and degradation, so his prophecy closes with the picture 30 6,2 | authorship of the whole prophecy. It must, however, be stressed 31 6,3 | rather than spoken. No open prophecy was possible in the time 32 6,3 | a new sphere of Isaiah’s prophecy. If “Deutero-Isaiah” is 33 6,3 | for such an exceptional prophecy ? We are of the opinion 34 6,6 | whenever they occur in the prophecysee vers. 4 and 27 (her 35 6,7 | here, as else­where in the prophecy, present, future and final 36 6,8 | twenty-five times in the prophecy, including thirteen times 37 6,2 | commerce, while a second prophecy against Babylon forms the 38 6,2 | now clear why 22:1-14, a prophecy about Jerusalem, is in this 39 6,4 | 14:3.1) shows that the prophecy has no connexion with the 40 6,5 | uncertain whether the earlier prophecy had been fulfilled at the 41 6,8 | Jerusalem. 28:1-6 is an older prophecy by Isaiah against Ephraim 42 6,2 | the understanding of the prophecy. Though these chapters form 43 6,2 | written rather than spoken prophecy, and the most sustained 44 6,5 | Deutero-Isaiah” is primarily a prophecy of the return from exile; 45 6,5 | To do so is to empty the prophecy of all coherent meaning, 46 6,5 | impossible so to apply the prophecy as a whole.~ The traditional 47 6,8 | sufferings of the Messiah is the prophecy of Isaiah, which occupies 48 6,8 | and all of the 53rd). This prophecy contains such details of 49 6,8 | BC. We present here this prophecy.~ ~“Who has believed our 50 6,8 | introductory phrase of this prophecy (who has believed our report? 51 6,8 | the Messiah. The present prophecy speaks of His voluntary 52 6,8 | Messiah, the ancient enigmatic prophecy of the patriarch Jacob becomes 53 6,8 | chapter. Here we give the prophecy of Judah fully: “Judah is 54 6,8 | Gen. 49:9-11). In this prophecy the Lion with his greatness 55 6,8 | in the next chapter.~ The prophecy, no less definite, of Zechariah, 56 6,8 | noteworthy that, according to the prophecy, the forgiveness of the 57 6,8 | The second part of the prophecy, found in the 12th chapter, 58 6,8 | correctly understood the prophecy in the 53rd chapter of the 59 6,8 | great a significance the prophecy of Isaiah had for strengthening 60 6,9 | although the wording in this prophecy is in the plural: “Come 61 6,3 | give the fulfilment of that prophecy. We are convinced that any 62 6,7 | chapters on The Immanuel Prophecy are of special value.~ ~ ~ 63 7,2 | impression created by the prophecy that Micah was a younger 64 7,3 | specified. As it now stands the prophecy serves rather as an introduction 65 7,4 | section closes with a drastic prophecy of the complete destruction 66 7,5 | prophets employ the earlier prophecy they use in common in similar 67 7,5 | in Micah on Isaiah. The prophecy in Isa. 39:6 is to be dated 68 7,5 | scribal adaptation of the prophecy even as Stephen (Acts 7: 69 7,6 | this verse as a separate prophecy acting as a transition from 70 7,7 | one of juxtaposition. The prophecy ends with a prayer (7:14- 71 8,2 | made by this section of the prophecy.~ There are grounds for 72 8,2 | the local colour of his prophecy, obviously lived in Jerusalem, 73 9,1 | Fall of Nineveh.~ The whole prophecy of Nahum revolves around 74 9,1 | ch. 3).~ The date of the prophecy can be fixed within fairly 75 9,1 | dislike to admitting more dear prophecy of the future than is absolutely 76 10,2| had been suggested for the prophecy.).~ 4. The simplest explanation, 77 10,2| to refuse to see a normal prophecy in Habakkuk. It is a record 78 10,3| 2. The centre of the prophecy is obviously the short message ( 79 10,5| connexion with the preceding prophecy, we see in that a proof 80 11,4| sequel of 3:5), but in a prophecy probably only a little later ( 81 11,4| to note even in his early prophecy that deep sympathy and feeling 82 11,7| ver. 19 of an independent prophecy (3:6-13) of slightly later 83 11,7| 3:14-18 is an even later prophecy, perhaps from the time of 84 11,0| religion under Josiah. Huldah’s prophecy (IIKings 22:18-20) was doubtless 85 11,5| understand the nature of true prophecy better. We may reasonably 86 11,5| understand the true nature of prophecy, an under­standing of real 87 11,6| and their position in the prophecy, are the work of Jeremiah 88 11,8| had written His will.~ All prophecy is of necessity partial ( 89 12,1| behaved in such a way as the prophecy suggests at the capture 90 12,1| 22 are quoting an older prophecy. That this is possible may 91 12,3| in the second half of the prophecy.~ We have a play upon words 92 12,4| the closing words of the prophecy show that he knew that all 93 13,4| have misinterpreted his prophecy for centuries; that it is 94 13,6| is continued in ch. 6, a prophecy against the idolatrous high 95 13,1| On Prophecy and the Prophets (12:21- 96 13,3| oath (vers. 13f, 16). This prophecy concludes with the parabolic 97 13,7| involved, we believe that the prophecy does refer to the king of 98 13,8| certain fulfilment of his prophecy of doom on Jerusalem, God 99 13,0| what is the climax of his prophecy (vers. 24-27) Ezekiel makes 100 13,1| not so much as a definite prophecy of identifiable nations, 101 13,2| to the Messianic king of prophecy.~ Finally, it seems imperative 102 13,3| Prophecy and Apocalyptic. ~ As the 103 13,3| particularly the case in Messianic prophecynote especially the timeless 104 13,3| introduced to a new form of prophecy. The first peculiarity is 105 13,3| 7-12 that this form of prophecy reaches its Old Testament 106 13,3| distinguish this form of prophecy from that usually found 107 13,3| prophet (Matt. 24:15), but prophecy stretches from a prophet’ 108 13,3| between apocalyptic and normal prophecy as the modern scholar. Then, 109 14,1| Post-exilic Prophecy.~ Jewish tradition confined 110 14,1| confined recorded post-exilic prophecy to the contents of Haggai, 111 14,1| our picture of post-exilic prophecy.~ It seems to be clear that 112 14,1| It seems to be clear that prophecy died out very largely because 113 15,4| suggested by his introductory prophecy. The acceptance of Joshua 114 15,5| be to run counter to all prophecy. In addition the promise 115 15,5| the disappoint­ment the prophecy was distorted by substituting 116 15,5| person crowned with the prophecy.~ Note that we are not dealing 117 15,7| all taint of sin~and false prophecy.~ l) 13:7ff. The smiting 118 16,4| traditionalists look upon it as a prophecy of the spread of Christianity. 119 16,4| we are in the twilight of prophecy, for the priest is now to 120 17,9| evidence that students of prophecy are drawing gradually nearer 121 17,9| startlingly new.~ c) The one prophecy where unanimity might reasonably 122 17,1| reminding the Jews of the prophecy of Daniel (Mat. 8:20, 9: 123 17,2| Such an extension of the prophecy hardly seems to justify 124 17,3| If in­deed we have here a prophecy of Jesus Christ, then Daniel 125 17,3| agreement seems to deprive the prophecy of most of its evidential 126 17,3| Prophet Daniel wrote the prophecy of the time of the Messiah’ 127 17,3| Dan. 9:24-27).~ ~In this prophecy, the entire time from the 128 17,3| The meaning of the given prophecy is this: for the Judaic 129 17,3| way.~ In accordance to the prophecy, the Messiah was to suffer 130 17,3| 37 AD, according to the prophecy, that the Messiah was to 131 17,3| reminded Christians of this prophecy and warned His listeners, 132 17,3| remaining in the city. The prophecy of Daniel about the weeks 133 17,3| coincidence of the given prophecy with the subsequent historical 134 17,4| have detailed historical prophecy of a type unique in the 135 17,4| Antiochus Epiphanes a genuine prophecy of Daniel’s was worked over 136 17,4| We do not doubt that this prophecy passes over from Antiochus


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