Abstract
Research into the early Christian prophecy has been brought by an unexpected kick in the eighties of the last century in transition. The early Christian writers have the prophecy basically understood as charisma that qualifies its support in a special way. It is therefore a degree of handover in the life of the early Church and indeed the highest and most important for their existence. As such, the prophecy is not simply part of the 'intellectual', 'charismatic' area that could be the 'official'. The inherited, fatal polarity between charism and ministry, that projected modern ways of thinking in the life and the thinking of the early Church, should be definitively obsolete. This wide and varied effect of the prophetic word necessarily implies a diversity of forms and types through which it occurs. The original text of the chapter is in French. Keywords: Christian prophecy; charisma
Published Version
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