Continuationism or Cessationism

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BenFTW

Senior Member
Oct 7, 2012
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#41
Desdichado,

I've read that a high percentage of former Mu ham mad dans and people from Jewish backgrounds who come to Christ do so after having had a dream or vision, maybe in the 30% range. I forget the figure.

One thing to keep in mind is that there is not even a prooftext to do away with healing or miracles. Cessationists have none.

As far as cessationist and unbelief go the disciples had some faith in Jesus, but they also struggled with doubts at times. Jesus had faith when he stepped on the water, but he doubted and sank. If he didn't believe he could do the miracle and looked at the situation, he couldn't do it. And that was the apostle Peter.
Typo, lol. You meant Peter. :p
 

Desdichado

Senior Member
Feb 9, 2014
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#42
Ooookay. As long as their sincerity and status as believers isn't being called into question, that's all I'm really asking at the moment.

Most other things, I'm approaching with an open mind for purposes of getting the most out of discussion in this thread.

God saw such gifts fit to equip His saints to edify one another. Who are they to disagree with our sovereign God on this matter, to even suggest them as being unnecessary? Dangerous? I suppose they could be if misused but dangerous to what? Unity? Evangelism? This is why its important to listen to God's leading and the wisdom that is found in 1 Corinthians 14.

We would get into another discussion if I were to start speaking on hope and faith, but suffice it to say that if a person doesn't know God's will how will they have faith and not just hope? They could hope God heals them, but if they don't know His will on the matter, what faith can there be or expectation, beyond hoping He will? Many believe He can, but that is no surprise. He is God. Who believes He will? There is faith.

All of that to say, people are confused as to God's will on healing, miracles, and even the gifts of the Spirit. They subscribe to doctrines of Cessationism and then criticize those that believe yet what foundation do they have to mock when they themselves are found to be in doubt and ignorance? If only they'd believe, they'd see.

I am not discrediting them as believers. They simply are uninformed and may God open their eyes so that they can wake up to the ways in which God has equipped them to serve others.
 

Desdichado

Senior Member
Feb 9, 2014
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#43
A fair criticism of Cessationists so far is that they've brought few if any prooftexts to the table.

Ooookay guys, I know you have them hiding somewhere. Sling'em at me.

Normally I detest the prooftext game, but it'd be helpful to see key passages from both sides.

Notuptome was most helpful in that regard. Thanks, buddy.
 

Desdichado

Senior Member
Feb 9, 2014
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#44
Rereading the thread, 1 Corinthians seems to be the best place to start for a serious study on the matter.

I'll do my due diligence today. Thank you!
 

TMS

Senior Member
Mar 21, 2015
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#45
1Co 13:8 Charity never faileth: but whether there be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be knowledge, it shall vanish away.
1Co 13:9 For we know in part, and we prophesy in part.
1Co 13:10 But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away.
1Co 13:11 When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.
1Co 13:12 For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
1Co 13:13 And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.
How to interpret this 1Co 13:10 But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away.

I say if you keep it simple and in context than Paul is saying, at the second coming everything that is done imperfectly will be done away

because this is written after the first coming i don't think its about the first coming.

I'm new to the concepts so i'll just say it how I understand it.

God can talk through a donkey and lead animals into an ark or control the weather, there isn't anything that God can't do. There were times when it seemed like God wasn't around in history (no signs or prophets) and there were times when God spoke directly to the people.
Mat 16:4 A wicked and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign; and there shall no sign be given unto it, but the sign of the prophet Jonas. And he left them, and departed.

In Gods time the prophets came and left, The true prophets were often persecuted.
Mat 24:24 For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect.

1Co 13:13 And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.

I'll focus on faith, hope and Love and when it comes to prophets, signs and miracles i'll test them all to the scriptures to know if they are from God.
 
P

popeye

Guest
#46
The Holy Spirit must have put the word "knowledge" in there knowing some would park on salvation and not have the slightest interest in Mat 18:18, nor the Elisha component. ( greater works than these shall you do")
 

notuptome

Senior Member
May 17, 2013
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#47
1Co 13:8 Charity never faileth: but whether there be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be knowledge, it shall vanish away.
1Co 13:9 For we know in part, and we prophesy in part.
1Co 13:10 But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away.
1Co 13:11 When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.
1Co 13:12 For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
1Co 13:13 And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.
How to interpret this 1Co 13:10 But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away.

I say if you keep it simple and in context than Paul is saying, at the second coming everything that is done imperfectly will be done away

because this is written after the first coming i don't think its about the first coming.

I'm new to the concepts so i'll just say it how I understand it.

God can talk through a donkey and lead animals into an ark or control the weather, there isn't anything that God can't do. There were times when it seemed like God wasn't around in history (no signs or prophets) and there were times when God spoke directly to the people.
Mat 16:4 A wicked and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign; and there shall no sign be given unto it, but the sign of the prophet Jonas. And he left them, and departed.

In Gods time the prophets came and left, The true prophets were often persecuted.
Mat 24:24 For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect.

1Co 13:13 And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.

I'll focus on faith, hope and Love and when it comes to prophets, signs and miracles i'll test them all to the scriptures to know if they are from God.
The that which is perfect is not the second coming of Christ. If that were the case the text would say that which is perfect is come again. The word of God is perfect the canon of the NT was not perfect meaning complete at the time Paul was writing to the Corinthians.

A study of Joel 2 which Peter cited at Pentecost would demonstrate that the gifts present at the tribulation which is just prior to the return of Christ are gifts given to Israel specifically to prepare them for the return of Christ.

Not all of the gifts cited in 1 Cor have ended only three. That is not limiting God only accepting His determinate will to build the church according to the word of God and not by dazzling demonstrations of the supernatural. The church is built on the Living Word of God who is Christ. The Holy Spirit's ministry is not one of preeminence but of submission to the will of the Father.

For the cause of Christ
Roger
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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#48
The default understanding should be continuationism, believing that the gifts still exist unless clearly proven otherwise.
 

zone

Senior Member
Jun 13, 2010
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#49
The default understanding should be continuationism, believing that the gifts still exist unless clearly proven otherwise.
the gibberish-speaking and false prophets abounding proves they ceased
 

zone

Senior Member
Jun 13, 2010
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#50
....A study of Joel 2 which Peter cited at Pentecost would demonstrate that the gifts present at the tribulation which is just prior to the return of Christ are gifts given to Israel specifically to prepare them for the return of Christ...
peter said Pentecost WAS THAT spoken by joel.
it happened for Israel exactly as prophesied.
done.
 
G

GODisLOVE7

Guest
#51
Cessationists are not unbelievers. Many of them are very strong Christians with a very real appreciation for the power of the Holy Spirit and His status as God.

Cessationism and continuationism differ not in levels of belief in that regard, but rather how precisely the Holy Spirit acts. Why should they seek extra revelation or spiritual experience if they have reason via Scripture to believe such things are unnecessary and possibly dangerous?

Even as a Bush League Continuationist, I would argue that Cessationism shouldn't cease. It's a sign that people are having a care with how they interpret Scripture and living by it rather than opening Pandora's box at the other end of the spectrum.

My issue as it stands now with Cessationism is that it just seems incomplete in a way. Granpa and GodisLove touched on this too- but when the Lord sets out to find that one lost sheep, can He not use any crazy means at His disposal?

A car that automatically turns on. A supernatural visit to a Iranian who never heard of Jesus because that Iranian had to know.

If these things orient people toward God and His revealed Word and a life of faith, who is to say it didn't happen? Who is to say it wasn't God.

I mean I guess they could claim it to be an hallucination, but did God not use the hallucination?

This is my quandary, I suppose. Especially in light of the stories I've been hearing of late. A man on here had a vision while under the influence of drugs that led him to saving faith (he isn't here anymore). Another just picked up a Bible with no prompting and the Words seemed to speak to her. An Iranian Muslim pulls a 180 after a supernatural encounter.

The Gospel itself is the miracle of miracles. Wouldn't small miracles here and there serve to support that miracle?
I really enjoy this thread...

We are told to look at one's fruit. So if someone had a crazy God experience, their fruit appears to be good and match (apple from an apple tree, orange from an orange tree), are proclaiming the Gospel, pointing people to the Bible and have a humble heart... Well, are we going to criticise them because they didn't have their eyes opened in the same old traditional way?

As you said, God can reach anyone, anywhere, any time. There is no magic formula. I've met Christians who have been believers all their lives and the outside is all shiny but after getting to know them the inside is all filled with yucky stuff and their actions don't align with what the Bible teaches. Not that there needs to be perfection... Certainly we stumble and fall down longer than we would like to. I've taken way too many faceplants.

For me when I try and put God and His ways into a box (and think that I've got it figured out) is the exact moment God takes that box, rips it to shreads, throws it in my face and tells me to go back to the Bible and pray for more wisdom.
 

Cee

Senior Member
May 14, 2010
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#52
From my understanding Cessationists primarily use one Scripture for their theology.

1 Co 13:18 Love never ends. As for prophecies, they will pass away; as for tongues, they will cease; as for knowledge, it will pass away.

But, the driving point of Paul's writings 1 Co 12-14 is not to forbid giftings, but to explain the importance of pursuing love first.

We see this in his summarized estimation:

1 Co 14:1 Pursue love, yet desire earnestly spiritual gifts, but especially that you may prophesy.

The other issue is that Cessationists use two meanings for tongues. On one end they say tongues (unknown tongues) will cease. And then on the other hand they say Biblical tongues was never unknown tongues.

Completely ignoring this Scripture:

1 Co 14:2 For anyone who speaks in a tongue does not speak to people but to God. Indeed, no one understands them; they utter mysteries by the Spirit.

Why do they ignore this Scripture? From my understanding, their POV is that it's simply "sarcasm".

However Paul is clear when he says they utter mysteries by the Spirit. That he's expressly talking about the function and origin of their gifted speech. The idea that Paul is simply using sarcasm fails another test as well because Paul goes on to explain the function of speaking in tongues with an illustration.

1 Co 14:23Therefore if the whole church assembles together and all speak in tongues, and ungifted men or unbelievers enter, will they not say that you are mad?

And today just as Paul illustrated, people think those who speak in tongues are crazy.

C.
 
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shittim

Senior Member
Dec 16, 2016
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#53
I know what you mean GodisLove7! There was a period where i was instructed to pray for situations knowing He would fulfill
it, and thinking how He would do it, only to see it fulfilled in a way I would never have imagined.
Book only people seem to know "about" G-d and seem less successful in experiencing G-d.
Revelation speaks of how some will hear, "get out of my presence, I never KNEW you!" Very clear it is about relationship, and of course we get there by hearing the Word but we are not to stop and rest at salvation.
best wishes
 

shittim

Senior Member
Dec 16, 2016
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#54
They may "cease" when we are in His presence, which we will be forever after this life.
The balance of this life is the only period we will be away from His presence for eternity.
 
Dec 28, 2016
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#55
Why do you 'bleck' that? They took cloths that Paul had touched to the sick and they were healed in Acts?
Yes. But Paul was an Apostle. Ppl lined up just to have Peter's shadow come upon them. Acts is a book of transition where things that happened then don't now.

An elder at a church I attended was hesitant about anointing the sick with oil. He said that back then, oil was considered to be like a medicine and considered anointing with oil to be the cultural equivalent of giving an aspirin. I told him if that were the case, then the Bible teaches that oil is medicine, so he should anoint with oil.

The other elders were anointing the sick with oil, and one day he just decided to join in. I guess he wasn't from a church background that did that.

Are you against anointing the sick with oil, too? Is praying for the person while laying hands on the cloth and sending the cloth to that person any different?
I am not entirely settled on this. In context, those who were healed also had their sins forgiven. None in today's churches have this ability to forgive sins.
 

BenFTW

Senior Member
Oct 7, 2012
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#56
Cessationists have no foundation for their belief that tongues have ceased by attributing them as a sign to Israel and unbelieving Jews. We have scripture that plainly contradicts the gift of tongues as only being for that use. It may have served that use but that was only one purpose of a gift that serves many.

Throughout Corinthians we learn about the gift of tongues and that with them one may pray in tongues, minister in tongues, worship/sing in tongues and even edify others with the gift (with interpretation). We learn that tongues are not spoken to men but to God and no man understands him because he speaks mysteries in the spirit.

This means that the tongues are not for the understanding, necessarily, of those listening until such tongues are interpreted (with a supernatural gift of interpretation). We are not talking about a person speaking Chinese and then a Chinese speaker is present to interpret. We are speaking of a believer, possibly, speaking Chinese and another non-Chinese speaking person interpreting the language for all to hear. This is a gift of the Spirit, not some naturalistic understanding of spiritual gifts to disavow their... miraculous authenticity.

Thats another issue with Cessationism. Attempting to naturalize spiritual gifts in such a way as to ignore their supernatural occurrence. Attempting to take the super out of supernatural. Putting into the text what is not there. Cessation-ism itself is a doctrine that cannot even be defended efficiently. It is based upon one verse that if interpreted in their way would contradict so very much of the Bible. For what reason would the Holy Spirit go into such depth about the gifts and their operation through the Apostle Paul if such gifts ceased? What a waste of pages and people's time. No?
 

shittim

Senior Member
Dec 16, 2016
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#57
"The Church" didn't forgive sins then either, Christ forgives sins.
Christ healed through the power of the Holy Spirit, which He received through John the Baptist, the same which was imparted at Pentecost. Recall Him saying "I only do what I see the Father do"? Also recall how scripture tells "He could do no great works because of their unbelief"?
No one has a special healing power aside from the working of the Holy Spirit in a situation.
Granted, the dark side can work some "signs and lying wonders" and will in the future according to scripture
and we are to develop discernment to discern these things.
We still have churches that want people to believe salvation and relationship
is through the church and/or some people in the church, priest, pastor or whatever
can forgive sin. I don't think that is true.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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#58
A fair criticism of Cessationists so far is that they've brought few if any prooftexts to the table.
Prooftests? How about a quarter to a third of the Gospels, depending on which one, every account of a a miracle in Acts, I Corinthians 12 through 14, and every reference to a vision or gift of the Spirit in the epistles and the book of Revelation.

I could also point out the fact that according to Joel, as seen in Acts 2, the last days is characterized by the outpouring of the Spirit, prophecy, dreams, visions, etc.

Paul said to imitate him as he imitated Christ. Paul was a miracle worker. Jesus was a miracle worker. Signs and wonders played a role in how they evangelized.

I Corinthians 12 says that the Spirit gives certain gifts to members in the body of Christ, including gifts such as the word of wisdom, the word of knowledge, prophecy, gifts of healing, the working of miracles, Cessationists say he does not. Some cessationists pick a few from the list and say the verses are not true anymore for this day and age.

Let's not forget there are commands of scripture for the church that cessationism would have people not obey. Paul says to earnestly desire spiritual gifts, especially that ye may prophesy. Are cessationists in favor of desiring to receive words of knowledge, speak in tongues and interpret, or prophesy?

When it comes to prophesying, there are cessationists who just redefine the word to mean something different than it meant in the first century, who would say covet to prophesy, but with a different definition of the word.

The Bible also commands
Quench not the Spirit. Despise not prophesyings. Prove all things. Hold fast to that which is good.

How can you do that if you are a cessationist? Cessationism has led many to reject prophecies out of hand, which is despising prophesyings.

Cessationism would have us believe that God is not willing to work in the church the way the scriptures demonstrate that God works in the church.

So the default understanding should be continuationism.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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#59
Yes. But Paul was an Apostle. Ppl lined up just to have Peter's shadow come upon them. Acts is a book of transition where things that happened then don't now.
Paul said to imitate him as he imitated Christ.

Let's look at a pattern in scripture. Peter said the Spirit would be poured out on all flesh. First, in Acts, the apostles worked miracles.

Then we see there were other people gifted in the church as prophets. The seven were appointed to feed widows. Then, two of them started evangelizing, one after the other, and doing signs and wonders. By the time we get to I Corinthians, regular members of the body of Christ, even those from pagan backgrounds, were able to operate in gifts like prophesying, gifts of healing, the working of miracles, and various other gifts as the Spirit wills.

I don't find this idea that Acts is a book of transitions and so we should not do like the apostles anywhere in the Bible. Why bring extra-biblical theories into the mix when interpreting scripture?


I am not entirely settled on this. In context, those who were healed also had their sins forgiven. None in today's churches have this ability to forgive sins.
I take it to imply that they confessed their sins, based on the next verses to confess sins to one another and pray for one another that they may be healed. That seems to be implied, IMO, that James had the general way sins are forgiven in view.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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#60
peter said Pentecost WAS THAT spoken by joel.
it happened for Israel exactly as prophesied.
done.
Peter quotes Joel describing the 'last days.' Do you have evidence that the characteristics of the last days have changed, or that we are no longer in the last days?

the gibberish-speaking and false prophets abounding proves they ceased


Let's say that there are people out there who speak pure gibberish. I suppose some alleged tongues could fall into that category. There was a poster arguing that pagans spoke gibberish on another thread, so there was gibberish back then. There were likely false prophets. There was 'that woman Jezebel' in the first century.

Using the same reasoning, one could argue that there were no genuine spiritual gifts in the first century. But there were.

Jesus said He was sending prophets, and He warned against false prophets who would arise and deceive many. Jesus said regarding false prophets 'Ye shall know them by their fruits....' He did NOT say 'ye shall know them by the fact that they prophesy more than 60 years from now.'

Biblically, we should expect true prophets and false prophets.

There are various commands the apostle Paul left us with in regard to prophesying, such as
Earnestly desire spiritual gifts, especially that you m...
Covet to prophesy, and forbid not to speak with tongues...
Quench not the Spirit. Despise not prophesyings.
 
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