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Prophet

110 bytes added, 23:05, November 19, 2018
Editing for clarity
===Major prophets===
* [[Book of Isaiah|]], [[Isaiah]] * [[Book of Jeremiah|]], [[Jeremiah]] includes book of [[Baruch]] and the [[Letter of Jeremiah]]* [[Book of Ezekiel|]], [[Ezekiel]] * [[Book of Daniel]], [[Prophet Daniel|Daniel]]
===Minor prophets===
The books of the 12 so-called ''minor prophets'':
* [[Book of Hosea|]], [[Hosea]] * [[Book of Joel|]], [[Joel]] * [[Book of Amos|]], [[Amos]] * [[Book of Obadiah|]], [[Obadiah]] * [[Book of Jonah|]], [[Jonah]] * [[Book of Micah|]], [[Micah]] * [[Book of Nahum|]], [[Nahum]] * [[Book of Habakkuk|]], [[Habakkuk]] * [[Book of Zephaniah|]], [[Zephaniah]] * [[Book of Haggai|]], [[Haggai]] * [[Book of Zechariah|]], [[Zechariah]] * [[Book of Malachi|]], [[Malachi]]
==The End of Prophecy==
Orthodoxy teaches that John the Baptist (also known as John the Forerunner) was the last of the prophets, thus tightly linking the period of prophecy in the Old Testament with [[Jesus Christ|Jesus]], who delivered the fullness or fulfillment of the law.
Some Protestant (and thus heretical) sects hold that prophecy continues to this day, including Pentecostals and Quakers. In doing so, they often manage to diminish the role of [[Holy Tradition]] by overemphasizing such new "revelations." [[Mormonism|Mormons]] also think that the current president of their "church" is a prophet. An early Christian heresy centering around continuing prophecy was [[Montanism]], whose most notable adherent was [[Tertullian]].
This, however, is not to say that the spirit of prophecy is dead in the Church; there are many instances of saints and other Orthodox receiving prophetic dreams or visions. The term "prophet" itself, though, is generally reserved for Old Testament figures.
[[Category:Saints]]
[[fr:Prophète]]
[[ro:Prooroc]]
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