Greek · G4395

προφητεύω

To prophesy

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προφητεύω G4395
Pronunciation prophēteúō

What does προφητεύω (prophēteúō) mean in the Bible?

Prophēteuō means to prophesy or speak a prophetic message. Its New Testament uses range from claims made by people rejected by Christ, to Spirit-enabled praise, congregational speech that exposes the heart, and the commissioned witness of Revelation.

Reader summary

Full entry for προφητεύω (G4395) · Open the biblical lexicon

Questions this entry answers

What does προφητεύω (prophēteúō) mean in the Bible?

Prophēteuō means to prophesy or speak a prophetic message. Its New Testament uses range from claims made by people rejected by Christ, to Spirit-enabled praise, congregational speech that exposes the heart, and the commissioned witness of Revelation.

How does the BSB render G4395?

The BSB source-word alignment has 28 aligned rows for this entry. Common renderings include prophesied (6), prophesies (5), Prophesy (5), they will prophesy (2), did we not prophesy (1).

Where does προφητεύω (prophēteúō) appear in Scripture?

The source-word alignment first shows this entry at Matthew 7:22. Its strongest book concentrations include 1 Corinthians (11), Acts (4), Matthew (4), Luke (2).

What This Word Actually Means

Prophēteuō means to prophesy or speak a prophetic message. Its New Testament uses range from claims made by people rejected by Christ, to Spirit-enabled praise, congregational speech that exposes the heart, and the commissioned witness of Revelation. The verb therefore does not certify a speaker merely because prophetic activity is claimed or experienced. Matthew 7:22 places the claim beneath Christ's final judgment.

First Corinthians places prophetic speech beneath intelligibility, edification, order, and discernment in the gathered church. Luke shows Zechariah speaking under the Holy Spirit, while Revelation portrays witnesses authorized by God. A responsible study asks who speaks, by what authority, with what content, and under what apostolic tests.

Sources