Folks,
Let's back up a little bit.
I'm not the one who proposed that Wisdom was making a prophecy. Othocat did. He said the verses under question were a prophecy.
I replied, if so, then it did not come to pass.
The prophecy was that Jesus would not die on the cross; and Orthcat ties the prophecy to the comments of the passerbys---if he's God, let him come down.
Obviously, we all agree Jesus died on the cross.
Orthocat then got the definition of a prophet/cy from Deuteronomy (it must come to pass and it must not lead you astry).
The conversation then waffled a bit. Was it a prophecy or not? Was it wicked men or not?
Bottom line. If it's a prophecy, it failed. If it's not a prophecy, then Orthocat and whoever agrees its a prophecy need to clarify their thoughts. What do you say?
		
		
	 
The entire Bible is prophecy. From the first verse of Genesis to the final word of Revelation, it is all prophecy, because it is all forth-telling God's word. Only some of the prophecy of the Bible foretells events. It is all prophecy nevertheless.
 
When the Bible foretells an event, and a certain generation lives to see those events become or to note those events have already become a part of their history, those foretold events become evidence of the divine inspiration of the Scripture. Without fulfilled foretold events we do not have that sort of evidence.
 
Prophecy does not always begin with the words, "Thus says the Lord". If every statement of the entire Bible had to be preceeded with that statement an entire library could not contain such a Bible of that size.
 
Prophecy does not always begin with the identity of the speaker being definitively shown to be a person who is a known prophet. If every statement of the entire Bible had to be preceeded with the identity of the speaker being identified as a known prophet we would have to remove Job, Esther, Chronicles, many Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and Song of Solomon.
 
But will we now say those books are not the word of God? No. They are considered the word of God, they are therefore prophecy.
 
The following is an example of fulfilled, foretold, prophecy of an event. Before it was evident that this was to be fulfilled at the cross of Christ it was no less prophecy. What makes this example so telling is it is prophecy that foretells what the enemies of Messiah would say just as was done by the writer of Wisdom. (Clue: don't stop reading before verse 8)
 
Psalm 22
 
1 My God, my God, why have You forsaken me? 
Far from my deliverance are the words of my groaning. 
2 O my God, I cry by day, but You do not answer; 
And by night, but I have no rest. 
3 Yet You are holy, 
O You who are enthroned upon the praises of Israel. 
4 In You our fathers trusted; 
They trusted and You delivered them. 
5 To You they cried out and were delivered; 
In You they trusted and were not disappointed. 
6 But I am a worm and not a man, 
A reproach of men and despised by the people. 
7 All who see me sneer at me; 
They separate with the lip, they wag the head, saying, 
8 Commit yourself to the LORD; let Him deliver him; 
Let Him rescue him, because He delights in him. 
 
Please notice that the enemies of Christ are foretold to say about Christ, "
Commit yourself to the LORD; let Him deliver him; 
Let Him rescue him, because He delights in him."
 
Prophecy. The speaker of those words are God's enemies. This is a confirmed, fulfilled, foretelling according to Matthew 27.