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https://thenarrowpath.com | Channel not run by Steve Gregg | Steve Gregg continues laying out a biblical framework for reading the Old Testament prophets accurately, emphasizing historical context, covenantal assumptions, and literary conventions. He explains that the prophets were primarily covenant prosecutors speaking to Israel and Judah about real historical situations, not distant future predictors detached from their own time. Gregg highlights how prophetic language frequently uses poetic imagery, hyperbole, and apocalyptic symbolism, especially when describing judgment and restoration. He stresses that promises of restoration, judgment on nations, and messianic hope must be interpreted in light of Israel’s covenant relationship with God, rather than through modern speculative or futurist lenses. The lecture aims to guard students from misreading prophetic texts while helping them grasp their theological and moral relevance for both ancient Israel and Christians today. TRANSCRIPT https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BK-q... OUTLINE https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zjdU... Outline I. Review of Foundational Principles Prophets must be read in continuity with the Law (Torah) Their message assumes covenant blessings and curses (Deuteronomy 28) Prophecy is primarily forth-telling before it is fore-telling II. The Historical Focus of the Prophets Prophets addressed specific historical audiences Warnings were tied to real sins (idolatry, injustice, covenant unfaithfulness) Fulfillment often occurred within or shortly after the prophet’s lifetime Later readers must first ask: What did this mean to them? III. Prophetic Language and Literary Style Heavy use of poetry, metaphor, and symbolism Cosmic language used to describe national judgment: Sun, moon, and stars going dark Heavens shaking Such language should not be read as literal astrophysical events Similar imagery appears across multiple prophets for different events IV. Judgment Oracles Against Nations Prophets spoke not only to Israel but also to surrounding nations Nations judged for violence, pride, cruelty, and injustice Demonstrates God’s sovereignty over all peoples, not just Israel These judgments often already occurred historically V. Restoration Promises Judgment is rarely the final word Restoration language often includes: Return from exile National renewal Peace and prosperity Gregg cautions against reading all restoration texts as: End-of-the-world events Modern geopolitical predictions Many were fulfilled in post-exilic Israel or in Christ VI. Messianic Expectations Messianic prophecies emerge organically from Israel’s hope Often embedded within broader restoration promises Not all prophetic hope is explicitly messianic The New Testament provides authoritative guidance on fulfillment in Christ VII. Common Errors in Reading the Prophets Treating every prophecy as futuristic Ignoring historical fulfillment Over-literalizing poetic imagery Reading modern political events into ancient texts VIII. Proper Christian Use of the Prophets Learn God’s character: justice, mercy, faithfulness Understand the seriousness of covenant faithfulness See Christ as the ultimate fulfillment where Scripture itself points there Apply the moral and theological principles, not speculative timelines IX. Final Encouragement The prophets are not mysterious codebooks They are passionate preachers of repentance, hope, and faithfulness Proper interpretation leads to clarity, not confusion Reading them well deepens trust in God’s purposes throughout history #prophecy #endtimes #lastdays #Eschatology #replacementtheology #hermeneutics #dispensationalism #premillennial #amillenialism #preterism #partialpreterism #thenarrowpath #stevegregg