Book,  Chap.

 1   1,   4|                   4. Concerning prophecy.~D. What is prophecy? M.
 2   1,   4| Concerning prophecy.~D. What is prophecy? M. The manifestation--from
 3   1,   4|       or future. ~[2] D. Give a prophecy in the case of past events.
 4   1,   4|        pointed out the power of prophecy in the manifestation of
 5   1,   4|         5] D. In which books is prophecy taken up? M. In seventeen:
 6   1,   4|         except for a proof of a prophecy, as in Isaiah (cc. 7, 36,
 7   1,   4|        but the intention of the prophecy is not to compile exploits,
 8   1,   4|  inspiration. ~[7] D. What does prophecy share with the others? M.
 9   1,   5|        M. It has in common with prophecy the fact that on the surface
10   1,   5|        that neither history nor prophecy is mixed with it; and it
11   1,   6|    neither composes history nor prophecy, nor speaks proverbially,
12   1,   7|      and plain teaching; but in prophecy, books of moderate authority
13   2,  16|      definition even concerning prophecy, what is the difference?
14   2,  16|      the difference? M. That in prophecy by means of words (in view
15   2,  16|     definition that we say that prophecy is a type in words, in view
16   2,  16|         conversely, a type is a prophecy in events, to what extent
17   2,  24|       father Zechariah, and the prophecy of Zechariah himself (Lk
18   2,  24|       come, as for instance the prophecy of Agabus (Acts 11:28).
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