Divine Prophecy
Definition
A divine prophecy is a specific, detailed, and accurate foretelling of a future event that could not have been known or predicted through natural means and thus attributed to a divine source.
Criteria
For a prophecy to serve as compelling evidence of divine revelation, it must be irrefutable—meaning it must be so precise and unlikely that it could not be explained by chance, vague language, manipulation, or retroactive interpretation.
Using Occam’s Razor, which states that the simplest explanation requiring the fewest assumptions is most likely to be correct, a prophecy must be irrefutable to avoid unnecessary and ad hoc explanations. If a prophecy is vague, unverifiable, or could have been reasonably deduced by human foresight, then the simplest explanation is that it was a human prediction rather than divine revelation.
Therefore, in order to distinguish a genuine divine prophecy from coincidence, educated guesswork, or later reinterpretation, it must meet the following highest standards of specificity, prior documentation, and independent verification.
Criteria for Irrefutable Prophecy
1. Chronology The prophecy must be clearly memorialized and documented in written or verifiable form before the occurrence of the predicted event. This ensures the claim to prophecy is neither anachronistic nor retroactively constructed or modified to fit later developments.
2. Clarity The prophecy must use clear, unambiguous language, avoiding vague, symbolic and metaphorical terms.
3. Specificity The prophecy must specify precisely what, where, when, and how the event will occur, leaving no room for interpretation.
4. Measurability The prophecy must be of an event that is observable and measurable, with features, characteristics and metrics that can be objectively verified.
5. Probability The prophecy must be of an event that is highly improbable - approaching impossibility - based on the knowledge, circumstances and trends at the time the prophecy is made, reducing the probability - approaching impossibility - of mere coincidence or intelligent forecast.
6. Independence from Human Influence The prophecy must not be self-fulfilling or manipulated by those aware of it. It should occur independently of human intent to “prove” it.
7. Universal Verifiability The prophecy must be of an event that is testable and verifiable by independent observers, regardless of their beliefs or biases.
Criteria for the Irrefutable Realization of an Irrefutable Prophecy
1. Chronology The realization of the prophecy must be clearly memorialized and documented in written or verifiable form during or after the occurrence of the predicted event.
2. Exact Match to the Prophecy The realization must align perfectly with all details of the prophecy (e.g., time, location, nature of the event). Partial or approximate matches are insufficient.
3. Objective Documentation The realization must be documented in a way that is verifiable, with reliable evidence such as photographs, videos, or credible eyewitness accounts.
4. Impossibility of Alternate Explanation There must be no plausible natural, scientific, or human-made explanation for the event that would undermine its status as the fulfillment of the prophecy.
5. Independent Corroboration Multiple independent sources, ideally from diverse backgrounds, must corroborate the occurrence and its alignment with the prophecy.
6. Irreproducibility The event must be one-of-a-kind or not easily replicable under normal conditions.
7. Lack of Manipulation Evidence must confirm that the event was not engineered or fabricated to appear as though it fulfilled the prophecy.
8. Global Recognition The realization must be acknowledged as fulfillment by a broad, unbiased consensus of experts and laypeople alike.