Apocalypse vs Prophecy - What's the difference?
apocalypse | prophecy |
A revelation.
(Christianity) The unveiling of events prophesied in the ; the second coming and the end of life on Earth; global destruction.
A disaster; a cataclysmic event.
* 2009 , (Diarmaid MacCulloch), A History of Christianity , Penguin 2010, p. 699:
A prediction, especially one made by a prophet or under divine inspiration.
* 1967 , George King, The Five Temples Of God , The Aetherius Society (2014 edition),
* Marjorie Garber, “ ” (Quotation Marks)'' in 2001 , S.I. Salamensky, ''Talk, Talk, Talk: The Cultural Life of Everyday Conversation , Routledge,
* 2013 , Theodor Adorno, The Jargon of Authenticity , Routledge,
* 2014 , Emran El-Badawi, The Qur'an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions , Routledge,
As a proper noun apocalypse
is (countable|biblical) the written account of a revelation of hidden things given by god to a chosen prophet.As a noun prophecy is
a prediction, especially one made by a prophet or under divine inspiration.As a verb prophecy is
.apocalypse
English
Noun
(en noun)- The early development of Perl 6 was punctuated by a series of apocalypses by Larry Wall.
- The Spanish mission in America soon became not so much crusade as apocalypse .
Synonyms
* armageddon * doomsday * judgement day * nuclear holocaust * Ragnarok (Ragnarök) * Final Judgment * end times * eschatonDerived terms
* apocalyptic * apocalypticism * snowpocalypseprophecy
English
(wikipedia prophecy)Noun
(prophecies)- French writer Nostradamus made a prophecy in his book .
Derived terms
* self-fulfilling prophecy * self-defeating prophecyVerb
(en-verb)page 19:
- The manipulation of these tremendous beneficient energies helped the world so well that the vast majority of these prophecied catastrophies did not happen.
page 142:
- One prophecied a change of fortunes for the club:
page 135:
- The Heideggerian tone of voice is indeed prophecied in Schiller’s discussion of dignity.
page 85:
- the parable in Mark 12:1—5 where some of Jesus’s followers who prophecied and were martyred in Antioch (Q 36;13—25; cf. 11:91);
