Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2022
In chapter XXXII, he instructs his readers to be very skeptical about new prophets, especially when they announce religious reforms: “Out of the Holy Scripture that there be two marks by which together, not asunder, a true prophet is to be known. One is the doing of miracles; the other is the not teaching any other religion than that which is already established. Asunder, I say, neither of these is sufficient.” Since “miracles now cease, we have no sign left whereby to acknowledge the pretended revelations or inspirations of any private man; nor obligation to give ear to any doctrine, farther than it is conformable to the Holy Scriptures, which since the time of our Saviour supply the place and sufficiently recompense the want of all other prophecy.” We no longer have prophets, Hobbes reassures us, and we do not need them at all.
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