Why Humanity Overlooks Prophets - Canonical Recognition and Expectation Drift in Abrahamic Traditions
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This paper asks why figures later accepted as prophets within the Abrahamic traditions were repeatedly ignored, rejected, or dismissed when they first appeared, and argues that the traits historically present at the moment of recognition are now treated as disqualifying within contemporary recognition tools. The analysis reconstructs the recognition time profile of canonically accepted prophets using shared scriptural and historical sources across Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, focusing on how these figures appeared before authority, acceptance, or canonization followed. The core finding is that present frameworks emphasize traits that emerged only after recognition, such as institutional approval, public legitimacy, confidence, and affirmation, while filtering out the reluctance, social marginality, conflict, and lack of validation that marked recognition at origin. As a result, the tools used to identify legitimacy are structurally misaligned with the historical pattern and would be likely to overlook the same profile today. This paper does not claim that prophets exist today, that prophecy continues, or that any individual should be evaluated, and is offered solely as a methodological examination of how recognition tools perform against their own historical record.