Note: The numerical probabilities used in this analysis are not meant to be precise measurements, as if one could calculate prophecy-likelihood down to decimal points. Rather, they serve as conservative estimates deliberately tilted in favor of H_{1} (divine authorship). This means the numbers were chosen to give the benefit of the doubt to the divine-prophecy hypothesis wherever possible. Even under these conditions, the resulting likelihood ratio overwhelmingly favors H_{2} (human postdiction/retrofit). The important takeaway is not the exact percentages, but the striking asymmetry: the observed features of prophecy consistently align far more closely with human authorship than with divine design.

◉ A plain English walkthrough of the symbolic logic above.

We are comparing two hypotheses:

  • H₁: Biblical prophecies were authored by God with the intent of providing supernatural evidence.
  • H₂: Biblical prophecies were written and later interpreted by humans, often through postdiction or retrofit.

To test which fits the evidence better, we look at the main features of prophecies and ask: “Are these features more expected if God authored them, or if humans did?”

The features we focus on are:

  • Ambiguity: Many prophecies are vague or non-specific (e.g., Isaiah 7:14, Matthew 24).
  • Timing problems: Some show signs of being written after the fact, or have timing mistakes (e.g., Daniel 11, Isaiah 45:1).
  • Manipulability: Some prophecies can be staged or fulfilled by human planning (e.g., Jesus arranging the donkey ride in Zechariah 9:9).
  • Clustered accuracy with horizon limits: Prophecies sometimes appear accurate up to the writer’s own time, but fail beyond it (e.g., Daniel 11 suddenly going wrong after Antiochus IV).
  • Non-uniqueness: Similar prophecy styles exist in other religions and mythologies, suggesting human universality.

We then estimate: If prophecy really came from God (H₁), how likely are these features? And if prophecy came from humans (H₂), how likely are they?

  • For ambiguity, under H₁ it should be rare (≈15%), but under H₂ it is common (≈60%). So the evidence is only about one-quarter as likely under H₁ as under H₂.
  • For timing problems, under H₁ we’d expect accuracy (≈20%), but under H₂ we’d expect flaws (≈60%). So again, the evidence is about one-third as likely under H₁.
  • For manipulability, under H₁ we’d expect no staged fulfillment (≈10%), but under H₂ we’d expect it often (≈80%). The ratio is about one-eighth as likely under H₁.
  • For clustered accuracy with horizon limits, under H₁ this shouldn’t happen (≈15%), but under H₂ it’s expected (≈70%). So only about one-fifth as likely under H₁.
  • For non-uniqueness, under H₁ prophecy should stand out as unique (≈20%), but under H₂ common overlap with other traditions is expected (≈80%). Ratio is about one-quarter.

When we multiply these together, we find that overall:

  • The observed pattern is only about 0.6% as likely under divine authorship as it is under human retrofit.
  • Put the other way around, it is about 180 times more likely under human authorship than under divine authorship.

Worked examples confirm this:

  • In Daniel 11, accuracy continues only up to the writer’s lifetime, then fails — exactly what we’d expect from human knowledge, not divine foresight.
  • In Isaiah 45:1, Cyrus is named retrospectively after his rise — fitting postdiction, not genuine prediction.

Conclusion: Even if we start neutral, the massive tilt of the evidence toward human retrofit means the posterior judgment lands overwhelmingly in favor of H₂. The shape of biblical prophecy matches what we would expect from human literary practices, not from a God attempting to provide clear, evidential prophecies.


◉ Flowing Narrative Summary

When we examine biblical prophecy through a careful comparative lens, two competing explanations emerge. The first, which believers often assume, is that prophecy was authored by God as a way of providing supernatural evidence of His existence and plan. The second, more naturalistic explanation, is that prophecy is a human product, shaped by literary creativity, retroactive fitting, and cultural patterns of mythmaking.

To assess these explanations, we can ask: what features do the prophecies actually display, and which explanation makes those features more probable? What we find is that prophecies are typically vague, riddled with ambiguity, and often require interpretive stretching before they can be linked to later events. They also reveal serious timing issues, such as signs of having been written after the events they describe or predicting accurately only up to the writer’s own historical horizon before collapsing into error. Many prophecies are staged or manipulated so that the narrative conforms to a pre-existing script—Jesus’ arranged donkey ride into Jerusalem being a textbook example. Moreover, prophecy as a genre is not unique to the Bible; nearly every religious tradition has its share of symbolic forecasts and retrospective fulfillments.

If prophecy were divinely authored, we would expect something quite different: precise predictions that are unambiguous, immune to manipulation, and consistently accurate well beyond the writer’s own time. Instead, what we actually observe fits far more naturally under the hypothesis of human authorship. The statistical weight of the evidence, when modeled carefully, indicates that the observed features of prophecy are roughly 180 times more likely if prophecy is human rather than divine in origin.

Case studies reinforce this imbalance. Daniel 11 remains accurate only until the events of the author’s own day, then collapses into failed forecasting—an outcome fully consistent with human guesswork but hardly with divine foresight. Similarly, Isaiah 45:1 names Cyrus retrospectively, not as a supernatural vision of the future but as a retroactive insertion once the identity of the Persian king was already known.

When taken together, these patterns paint a consistent picture: prophecy looks less like the voice of an omniscient God and more like the handiwork of human authors attempting to make sense of their world, often retrofitting their texts to align with later developments. The evidential arrow points firmly in one direction: the Bible’s prophecies are best explained not as divine revelations, but as literary constructions born of human ingenuity and cultural convention.


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