This article examines the interpretation of Hebrew prophecy by German Protestant scholars in the era of 1880-1920. It argues, first, that Old Testament interpreters valued the prophets since they presented God as the guiding force behind human history and, second, that these theologians cum philologians saw the prophetic conception of history as anticipating their own understanding of God in the world. The inquiry bases this argument on a reading of numerous exegetes, both leading lights and forgotten figures. Moreover, it traces this interpretative tendency across a range of sources, including specialist studies, theologicalmonthlies, political and literary journals, popular works, public speeches, and pedagogical literature. Rather than l...