why cessationism is wrong: good article

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A

atwhatcost

Guest
#41
Pardon me, but at first I thought this thread was about secessionism. And I might have weighed in on the virtues of seceding from the onion.
How does one secede from an onion?

(One tiny little letter off, and look what happens. Just messing with you and enjoying how my imagination even had onion layers in tiny little uniforms riding tiny little horses. lol)
 

crossnote

Senior Member
Nov 24, 2012
30,712
3,651
113
#42
How does one secede from an onion?

(One tiny little letter off, and look what happens. Just messing with you and enjoying how my imagination even had onion layers in tiny little uniforms riding tiny little horses. lol)
i see some have not fully recovered from the '60's :rolleyes:
 
P

pottersclay

Guest
#43
I wasn't going there but with that being said crossbones I agree...lol
 
A

atwhatcost

Guest
#44

Name a great prophet that lived after 100AD.
Just one? Tough choice. Okay. I pick Francis Schaeffer.

No inspired books (knowledge) have been written since then either.
You really don't read much, do you? I've read so many inspired books (knowledge :confused:) written usually in the last 200 years, that I have no idea why you think they don't exist.

And the miracle of tongues has not been repeated.
Not much for even reading anything on the thread you chose to respond to either, hunh? I already showed one event on this thread. You really don't read much, do you?

Those who babble and claim they're speaking in tongues are sensationalist. I believe that cessationism is correct, the evidence, or lack thereof, supports that these things no longer occur. If you disagree, show me a true prophet and I'll change my mind, otherwise I'm convinced these things ceased after the first century... jmo
Yup, JYO indeed, not based on anything. No books, no reading anything anyone else said, straight up just your opinion. How are you going to change your mind when you haven't even figure out someone already showed a prophetic gift and even published volumes of his insight, when you refuse to read anything to gain knowledge?

I seriously doubt my proof will change your mind, because it's closed tighter than the International Space Station?
 
P

pottersclay

Guest
#46
Crossbones I ment crossnote....Lynn stop breathing on me...lol
 
Feb 21, 2012
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#48
My opinion is that they will cease when...

For we know in part, and we prophesy in part. But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away.
(1Co 13:9-10)


Now we see only an indistinct image in a mirror, but then we will be face to face. Now what I know is incomplete, but then I will know fully, even as I have been fully known.
(1Co 13:12)

When we see Jesus.
Or when the everlasting kingdom is ushered in and everything is "perfect", "complete" wherein our relationship with God will be restored fully and we will walk and talk with God "face to face" . . . just as Adam and Eve did in the garden of Eden. :)
 
Feb 21, 2012
3,794
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#49
I haven't really seen anyone deal with the full context of 1 Cor. 13:8-12 specifically the phrase "face to face".

What does face to face have to do with completed canon?

If we look back in scripture regarding the phrase "face to face", it has been "face to face" with a person, with God or with an angelic being.

Gen. 32:30 So Jacob called the place Peniel, saying, "It is because I saw God face to face, and yet my life was spared.
Ex. 33:11 The LORD would speak to Moses face to face, as one speaks to a friend . . . .
Num. 14:14 And they will tell the inhabitants of this land about it. They have already heard that you, LORD, are with these people and that you, LORD, have been seen face to face, that you cloud stays over them . . . . .
Deut. 5:4 The LORD spoke to you face to face out of the fire on the mountain . . .
Deut. 34:10 Since then, no prophet has risen in Israel like Moses, whom the LORD knew face to face . . . .
etc., etc., etc.

Scripture is not to be "of any private interpretation" (there's that word idios again meaning one's own) so therefore scripture must interpret itself. Scripture with scripture . . . .

2 John 1:12 I have much to write to you, but I do not want to use paper and ink. Instead, I hope to visit you and talk to you face to face, so that our joy may be complete. (also 3 John 13)
Acts 25:16 as in . . . . faced their accusers

"face" means "face, countenance, presence, person - so until we see someone or something come that is "complete in perfection" and see "face to face"; we remain "knowing in part". Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known . . . . Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when Christ appears, we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is. . . . .
 

Galatians2-20

Senior Member
Mar 17, 2013
261
19
18
#50
New American Standard Bible
Erastus remained at Corinth, but Trophimus I left sick at Miletus.

New American Standard Bible
No longer drink water exclusively, but use a little wine for the sake of your stomach and your frequent ailments.

The 1000 year reign is yet future. the only millennial kingdom that has come is satans counterfeit reign.

Pauls gift of healing was fading and he never mentions tongues in his later epistles.

The perfect is not Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is never referred to in the NEUTER gender. Christ is always in the masculine gender, He is not a thing or an it.

Sir, there are many examples of the spirituals gifts still in action throughout the writings of the early Church fathers of the 2nd & 3rd centuries a.d. Many during this time would not boast of the miraculous due to the intense persecution that they faced during this period. The last thing they wanted to do was to incite the wrath of a Roman Emperor who percieved himself to be a god.
 

Galatians2-20

Senior Member
Mar 17, 2013
261
19
18
#51

Name a great prophet that lived after 100AD. No inspired books (knowledge) have been written since then either. And the miracle of tongues has not been repeated. Those who babble and claim they're speaking in tongues are sensationalist. I believe that cessationism is correct, the evidence, or lack thereof, supports that these things no longer occur. If you disagree, show me a true prophet and I'll change my mind, otherwise I'm convinced these things ceased after the first century... jmo
For starters, after 70 A.D. both Jews and Christians faced intense persecution. The Church was an underground operation that did everything possible not to draw attention to itself.

Second, as persecution began to die down, the entity that calls itself the "Orthodox Church" of the era began to embrace Amillennialism which clearly taught against and supressed the use of the gifts of the Spirit.

If you would take time to study the writings of the early Church fathers, you will find many instances where the gifts of the Holy Spirit were still in operation.

I am rather taken back by the amount of people who are willing to embrace a doctrine that has been clearly built and thrives upon the people's unwillingness to educate themselves.
 
E

ember

Guest
#52
New American Standard Bible
Erastus remained at Corinth, but Trophimus I left sick at Miletus.

New American Standard Bible
No longer drink water exclusively, but use a little wine for the sake of your stomach and your frequent ailments.

The 1000 year reign is yet future. the only millennial kingdom that has come is satans counterfeit reign.

Pauls gift of healing was fading and he never mentions tongues in his later epistles.

The perfect is not Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is never referred to in the NEUTER gender. Christ is always in the masculine gender, He is not a thing or an it.

ok this is not logical

why would someone assume that Christ is the perfect when He had ALREADY come?

if you state when He comes AGAIN? yeah, that starts to make sense and also lines up with the passage in that knowledge (forget tongues and prophecy for a minute) has not ceased!

tongues are associated with knowlege and prophecy, so we see them together here in a manner that suggests the ceasing will begin when the perfect...God's kingdom...comes

I have no understanding why cessationists insist that we think the perfect means Jesus


 
E

ember

Guest
#53
Pauls gift of healing was fading and he never mentions tongues in his later epistles.
this also makes no sense whatsoever

his gift was fading? you mean like a pair of old jeans? come on!

what you are really saying, is that the Holy Spirit was fading and I guess to some He might be because y'all forget Him often enough

cessationists need to begin to understand that without the Spirit of God they have nothing, nada, zip, zero, rien, and a big balloon with the skin off.

all believers are sealed by the Holy Spirit at conversion

In Him, you also, after listening to the message of truth, the gospel of your salvation-- having also believed, you were sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise, Eph 1:13

Why are you saved? Is it YOUR doing? How is it recorded that you are saved? How does the devil know you no longer belong to him?

BECAUSE you are SEALED with...what now? ... your faith? NO!! THE HOLY SPIRIT and he is supposed to remain active in your life as a believer...not pushed to the side and sometimes outright denied

 
Aug 21, 2015
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#54
Just one? Tough choice. Okay. I pick Francis Schaeffer.


You really don't read much, do you? I've read so many inspired books (knowledge :confused:) written usually in the last 200 years, that I have no idea why you think they don't exist.


Not much for even reading anything on the thread you chose to respond to either, hunh? I already showed one event on this thread. You really don't read much, do you?


Yup, JYO indeed, not based on anything. No books, no reading anything anyone else said, straight up just your opinion. How are you going to change your mind when you haven't even figure out someone already showed a prophetic gift and even published volumes of his insight, when you refuse to read anything to gain knowledge?

I seriously doubt my proof will change your mind, because it's closed tighter than the International Space Station?
Who is Francis Scheaffer? I have never heard of him
 
H

hind_let_loose

Guest
#55
...

1. Historically speaking, where do you come up with most of the sign gifts disappeared for most of the time in the last 1900 years? They didn't cease when believers were hiding as they were being persecuted in the Early Church. I've missed the entire history of the church from @ the 300's to the first millennium. (Never bothered researching it, not to be confused with there was no history back then. lol) I only know what happened in Europe during the Middle Ages, so have no idea what was happening in Africa and Asia. (Fairly certain Christianity hadn't shown up in Aussie and the Americas yet for obvious reasons. lol) You seem to know they showed up again during the Reformation. (I trust you know that. Something I haven't read.) And from what I know of missionaries and people who grew up with true missionary parents or heard stories of missionary work in their family from a generation or two before that, it's still happening in places that aren't so "civilized" that they simply stopped expecting the gifts to cease. So between the gaps in my knowledge, possible gaps in your knowledge too, what has happened in the more recent centuries (The Welsh Revival, Jonathan Edwards, Azusa Street, and the Jesus Movement), and what is happening in Third World countries through missionary work, where is this historic proof they ever ceased? I can definitely say it happened often on Azusa Street and often during the Jesus Movement.
Making general claims about church history can be difficult. So I probably shouldn't have categorically said that most of the sign gifts disappeared most of the last 1900 years of church history. The issue is complex enough that it deserves more than that.

You're completely right that there are many different periods in church history where people claim that these gifts were active. When I try to evaluate these claims (or evidence of activity), I fit them into one of three categories:

1) Third-person, friendly historical claims (for instance, someone today who has a vested interest in believing that the gifts were always active claims that they were active in the 2nd century, etc.);
2) Third-person, unfriendly claims (for instance, in the early church, pagans sometimes conceded to Christian apologists that, yes, Christians in fact were casting out demons);
3) First-person, friendly 'personal-experience' claims or straight-up observational evidence (an example of observational evidence: I have seen that John Knox prophesied in print that the queen would die suddenly before x months, and I have confirmed that it happened just as he said it would; an example of personal-experience claims: all the people who say that they personally have spoken in tongues, have been healed by such-and-such pastor, etc.).

In and of themselves, each of these types of evidence varies in strength. When pagans were conceding to apologists that Christians were casting out demons in the early church, for instance, that's a fairly compelling reason to believe that this was still happening at that time. That is much more compelling, for instance, than if someone tells me they know this still happens from personal experience. Unlike the pagan, they're much more likely to want to believe what they're saying and, so, wishful thinking, etc., may affect their judgement. (Of course, they may be spot on, too. So they aren't discounted out-of-hand. It is just that they get less of the benefit of the doubt than an enemy of Christ who has to concede something he'd refute in a heartbeat, supposing he could.)

In addition to this, there's another thing we have to keep in mind when evaluating miracle claims. (I'm including predictive prophesy and tongue-speaking as 'miracles'.) In particular, we know from Scripture that false and very deceptive miracles were prophesied -- so deceptive they would almost persuade the elect. This tells us that (a) it is possible that a compelling case could be made for false miracles and (b) that we ought to be on-guard against getting duped. As for being on-guard against being duped? Our only safety on this front is to put Biblical theology before miracles, and to put the theology of miracle-workers on trial as much as their miracles. If the miracles are used to support theological error, then I automatically discount them as coming from the Spirit of God (aka, the "Spirit of Truth").

With that background in mind, I tend to discount most miracle claims throughout church history -- though not all. I'm not quick to discount ones directly performed by God, for instance. If we pray for someone to be healed, and they're healed, give God the glory. I do, however, believe it is prudent for Christians to take a default skeptical stance -- initially, at least -- toward any claim that a person laid hands on people and healed them, cast out a demon, etc., while yet remaining open to the evidence. In a few cases at different times in church history, I think the evidence is actually sufficient to think the supposed miracle is probably genuine. They fit into those periods I mentioned above.

As for the specific events you mentioned: The Welsh Revival, Jonathan Edwards, Azusa Street, and the Jesus Movement. Jonathan Edwards is perhaps my favorite theologian, and I've read his works extensively. He dealt with ecstasies and elevated emotional states in the members of his church and community, but I don't know of any evidence that the miraculous gifts were in play at that time. As for the other revivals/movements: I only know a little about them by hearsay, and I don't know enough about the theology that went with them to really evaluate them carefully.

2. You say gifts were for authenticity of new claims. Then here are my questions on that:


a. Given the Bible is about God, and throughout the whole thing, he kept claiming and proving more things about himself, exactly how do you get that it only happened there at that time? For instance, I know Jehovah made himself known in the Far East, because they had a word for God way back before there was even a China. There is historic record of Jao, the great I Am. Since then, they reduced it down to something else (Tao), but there was Jao. There was the great Jove of pre-Roman history. He was THE Jove. He was the great I Am. Only later did they reduce him to Jupiter and give him human characteristics. There is historic proof others heard from the great I Am that I Am. The significance of the Bible also only shows the significance of the Middle East because that's where the great I Am created his path to coming down to redeem those he chose. It's not like God only talked to those we saw in the OT.
I don't believe that every instance of God revealing Himself to someone in ancient times was revealed to us. We know, for instance, that prior to any Scripture being written God communicated to some people in visions, in dreams, and in "sundry" other manners (Heb. 1:1).

"Now a thing was secretly brought to me, and mine ear received a little thereof. In thoughts from the visions of the night, when deep sleep falleth on men, fear came upon me.... Then a spirit passed before my face; the hair on my flesh stood up: it stood still, but I could not discern the form thereof: ... and I heard a voice, saying, Shall mortal man be more just than God? shall a man be more pure than his maker?" (Job 4:12-17)

But we also know that Satan and his demons deceive people with communications, as well. And false religions have sprung up all around the globe, many of them sharing some features with the truth. (Satan is, after all, a great counterfeiter.) So, while I can't entirely discount the claim that very early in history God revealed Himself to some people in the far east, I think there are decent reasons to be skeptical that we can know that He revealed Himself to some people there simply because the name of one of their gods resembles the name of God and possibly even has an overlapping meaning. In fact, if their 'god' had a Satanic character, it would be just as possible that Satan wanted to receive the praise and glory of God and, as a result, "revealed" himself to pagans under similar names and attributes. This is especially the case because divine revelation has been progressive, and the earlier we go in history (after the fall), the less specific his revelation was. So it would be surprising if He was giving His exact name to people in the far east. Notice in the quotation from the book of Job above that Eliphaz (speaking) said "I could not discern the form [of the spirit]." I take this to be a confirmation that -- even in a clear case of a divine revelation at that point in history -- the revelation was murky, unclear, and deficient. Which is why revelation became more and more clear until we finally had the completed canon of Scripture -- everything we need, clearly laid out for us.

b. What makes you think they aren't still needed for authentication? What has changed? Most folks STILL don't trust in God, so he still proves himself for our benefit every day. What has changed other than God has put down, in print, everything he needs us to know about him. The Bible tells us about God. It really does. But God proves himself to many people every single day of the week, every decade, century, millennium since the beginning of Man. Just because we never make the pages of the Bible doesn't mean nothing genuinely miraculous can't and doesn't happen to us. Just because in our limited scope of history we may never know someone who still is gifted like the NT apostles, doesn't mean those people don't exist.
The miraculous gifts of the Spirit are gifts that come from God. As such, they are gifts that will only be given if they are, in God's judgement, going to give Him more glory than not giving them. God, after all, does all things for His own glory.

Now, if this is right and it is also true that the miraculous gifts were used to authenticate leaders at periods of radical change in the history of redemption, then here's the question we should be asking:

Q. Now that the canon is complete and we are in the final major period of the history of redemption (besides, possibly, the millennium), which of the following gives God more glory: (a) people converting because they have seen a sign and believe God is speaking in the Bible because His people are miracle workers, or (b) people converting because they hear God speaking in the Scripture and receive its teachings by faith?

I think option (b) harmonizes with Scripture better than option (a). God does not, in general, seek to satisfy a generation that seeks signs or requires signs and miracles to believe. Even when Christ was walking the earth and performing miracles around every corner, there were people who loved signs and miracles too much for His taste. And he called a generation that seeks signs "wicked". And so on. Meanwhile, the simplicity of faith that simply hears the voice of God in Scripture and humbly submits to it -- without all the fireworks -- is something where God is going to get all the glory. (Too often, when there are human miracle-workers involved, people give the individual too much credit and personality cults form, etc.)

Either way, if it is the case that God receives more glory when people believe without signs and wonders when we're in a stable period of the history of redemption, then that's why the current period would be without them.

One of my hubby's old friends is just such a guy. He was one of the Philadelphia street preachers who brought people to the Lord through words, signs, and miracles in the early 70's during the Jesus Movement. They lost touch in the decades after that only to meet again in a church that believes in systematic theology. The guy was home for a sabbatical (and to seek more backing for his work.) Usually he was in Kenya developing a church planting there as a missionary and told of the signs and wonders he still participated in. He heard the tongues -- the local elders told him what language it was, who understood it, and why the speaker couldn't know what he was saying. (Old language only learned by well educated people and the guy speaking it wasn't educated at all.) The miracles still happened, because in Africa they aren't programmed to believe they can't like First World Nations are. (I have no idea if prophecy happened. Hubby only talked to him for a couple of hours and the subject never came up. He was talking to an old friend, not doing an interview, so much didn't come up then. lol)

How do you wrap that up into systematic theology? It's still happening. I'm going with it never stopped except to people who are programmed to believe it had to have stopped.
Cases like this one in Africa are interesting - especially since they are consistent with the Biblical use of tongues as real languages and used for communication. If the miracles are legit and the theology taught is orthodox and Biblical, then I would probably lean towards this explanation: these miracles can accompany the expansion of Christianity to regions where it hasn't been before because, in a sense, Pentecost is only just happening in those regions now. But once the Gospel has made inroads and Scripture has been established as the word of God, we should expect these signs and wonders to become less and less common until people are completely satisfied by the Word of God alone. Something like that is how I would probably fit it into my systematic theology. But I would be open to hearing arguments for other options.
 
A

atwhatcost

Guest
#56
Who is Francis Schaeffer? I have never heard of him
Whoa, dude! You're missing some great reads. He was a Christian philosopher of the 20th century. He and Koop (former Surgeon General, but that's the least of who he was and this was before that) made a documentary refuting all of Carl Sagan's Cosmos. He told where we were heading before we got here. It was prophetic, but he knew because he knew the nature of Man apart from God. Really cool, yet disturbing, stuff. Try How Should We Then Live? to start to know who he is.
 
Aug 21, 2015
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#57
Whoa, dude! You're missing some great reads. He was a Christian philosopher of the 20th century. He and Koop (former Surgeon General, but that's the least of who he was and this was before that) made a documentary refuting all of Carl Sagan's Cosmos. He told where we were heading before we got here. It was prophetic, but he knew because he knew the nature of Man apart from God. Really cool, yet disturbing, stuff. Try How Should We Then Live? to start to know who he is.
Cool!! Thank You
 
A

atwhatcost

Guest
#58
I'm not sure how much space we get to post something, but I suspect not enough to include your words plus my response. AND today is a day for being outside a lot, so I refuse to spend this beautiful afternoon responding point by point. (Not that I won't respond point-by-point. I will. I'm just saying this is going to take a lot of time. lol)

So, keep checking back to see my response. Don't, until tomorrow. (Tomorrow is our Sabbath this week -- we go by an odd schedule. Long story, but we do follow the Sabbath as best we can given our circumstances. lol) I suspect my first response to the first part has to wait until late tonight or tomorrow morning depending on when I can sleep and when I'm wide awake enough to respond. If you'd prefer, knowing you've got a hectic schedule, I can just PM you again when I finally done responding, so you know to come back. Which would you prefer?

Making general claims about church history can be difficult. So I probably shouldn't have categorically said that most of the sign gifts disappeared most of the last 1900 years of church history. The issue is complex enough that it deserves more than that.

You're completely right that there are many different periods in church history where people claim that these gifts were active. When I try to evaluate these claims (or evidence of activity), I fit them into one of three categories:

1) Third-person, friendly historical claims (for instance, someone today who has a vested interest in believing that the gifts were always active claims that they were active in the 2nd century, etc.);
2) Third-person, unfriendly claims (for instance, in the early church, pagans sometimes conceded to Christian apologists that, yes, Christians in fact were casting out demons);
3) First-person, friendly 'personal-experience' claims or straight-up observational evidence (an example of observational evidence: I have seen that John Knox prophesied in print that the queen would die suddenly before x months, and I have confirmed that it happened just as he said it would; an example of personal-experience claims: all the people who say that they personally have spoken in tongues, have been healed by such-and-such pastor, etc.).

In and of themselves, each of these types of evidence varies in strength. When pagans were conceding to apologists that Christians were casting out demons in the early church, for instance, that's a fairly compelling reason to believe that this was still happening at that time. That is much more compelling, for instance, than if someone tells me they know this still happens from personal experience. Unlike the pagan, they're much more likely to want to believe what they're saying and, so, wishful thinking, etc., may affect their judgement. (Of course, they may be spot on, too. So they aren't discounted out-of-hand. It is just that they get less of the benefit of the doubt than an enemy of Christ who has to concede something he'd refute in a heartbeat, supposing he could.)

In addition to this, there's another thing we have to keep in mind when evaluating miracle claims. (I'm including predictive prophesy and tongue-speaking as 'miracles'.) In particular, we know from Scripture that false and very deceptive miracles were prophesied -- so deceptive they would almost persuade the elect. This tells us that (a) it is possible that a compelling case could be made for false miracles and (b) that we ought to be on-guard against getting duped. As for being on-guard against being duped? Our only safety on this front is to put Biblical theology before miracles, and to put the theology of miracle-workers on trial as much as their miracles. If the miracles are used to support theological error, then I automatically discount them as coming from the Spirit of God (aka, the "Spirit of Truth").

With that background in mind, I tend to discount most miracle claims throughout church history -- though not all. I'm not quick to discount ones directly performed by God, for instance. If we pray for someone to be healed, and they're healed, give God the glory. I do, however, believe it is prudent for Christians to take a default skeptical stance -- initially, at least -- toward any claim that a person laid hands on people and healed them, cast out a demon, etc., while yet remaining open to the evidence. In a few cases at different times in church history, I think the evidence is actually sufficient to think the supposed miracle is probably genuine. They fit into those periods I mentioned above.

As for the specific events you mentioned: The Welsh Revival, Jonathan Edwards, Azusa Street, and the Jesus Movement. Jonathan Edwards is perhaps my favorite theologian, and I've read his works extensively. He dealt with ecstasies and elevated emotional states in the members of his church and community, but I don't know of any evidence that the miraculous gifts were in play at that time. As for the other revivals/movements: I only know a little about them by hearsay, and I don't know enough about the theology that went with them to really evaluate them carefully.



I don't believe that every instance of God revealing Himself to someone in ancient times was revealed to us. We know, for instance, that prior to any Scripture being written God communicated to some people in visions, in dreams, and in "sundry" other manners (Heb. 1:1).

"Now a thing was secretly brought to me, and mine ear received a little thereof. In thoughts from the visions of the night, when deep sleep falleth on men, fear came upon me.... Then a spirit passed before my face; the hair on my flesh stood up: it stood still, but I could not discern the form thereof: ... and I heard a voice, saying, Shall mortal man be more just than God? shall a man be more pure than his maker?" (Job 4:12-17)

But we also know that Satan and his demons deceive people with communications, as well. And false religions have sprung up all around the globe, many of them sharing some features with the truth. (Satan is, after all, a great counterfeiter.) So, while I can't entirely discount the claim that very early in history God revealed Himself to some people in the far east, I think there are decent reasons to be skeptical that we can know that He revealed Himself to some people there simply because the name of one of their gods resembles the name of God and possibly even has an overlapping meaning. In fact, if their 'god' had a Satanic character, it would be just as possible that Satan wanted to receive the praise and glory of God and, as a result, "revealed" himself to pagans under similar names and attributes. This is especially the case because divine revelation has been progressive, and the earlier we go in history (after the fall), the less specific his revelation was. So it would be surprising if He was giving His exact name to people in the far east. Notice in the quotation from the book of Job above that Eliphaz (speaking) said "I could not discern the form [of the spirit]." I take this to be a confirmation that -- even in a clear case of a divine revelation at that point in history -- the revelation was murky, unclear, and deficient. Which is why revelation became more and more clear until we finally had the completed canon of Scripture -- everything we need, clearly laid out for us.



The miraculous gifts of the Spirit are gifts that come from God. As such, they are gifts that will only be given if they are, in God's judgement, going to give Him more glory than not giving them. God, after all, does all things for His own glory.

Now, if this is right and it is also true that the miraculous gifts were used to authenticate leaders at periods of radical change in the history of redemption, then here's the question we should be asking:

Q. Now that the canon is complete and we are in the final major period of the history of redemption (besides, possibly, the millennium), which of the following gives God more glory: (a) people converting because they have seen a sign and believe God is speaking in the Bible because His people are miracle workers, or (b) people converting because they hear God speaking in the Scripture and receive its teachings by faith?

I think option (b) harmonizes with Scripture better than option (a). God does not, in general, seek to satisfy a generation that seeks signs or requires signs and miracles to believe. Even when Christ was walking the earth and performing miracles around every corner, there were people who loved signs and miracles too much for His taste. And he called a generation that seeks signs "wicked". And so on. Meanwhile, the simplicity of faith that simply hears the voice of God in Scripture and humbly submits to it -- without all the fireworks -- is something where God is going to get all the glory. (Too often, when there are human miracle-workers involved, people give the individual too much credit and personality cults form, etc.)

Either way, if it is the case that God receives more glory when people believe without signs and wonders when we're in a stable period of the history of redemption, then that's why the current period would be without them.



Cases like this one in Africa are interesting - especially since they are consistent with the Biblical use of tongues as real languages and used for communication. If the miracles are legit and the theology taught is orthodox and Biblical, then I would probably lean towards this explanation: these miracles can accompany the expansion of Christianity to regions where it hasn't been before because, in a sense, Pentecost is only just happening in those regions now. But once the Gospel has made inroads and Scripture has been established as the word of God, we should expect these signs and wonders to become less and less common until people are completely satisfied by the Word of God alone. Something like that is how I would probably fit it into my systematic theology. But I would be open to hearing arguments for other options.
 
H

hind_let_loose

Guest
#59
I'm not sure how much space we get to post something, but I suspect not enough to include your words plus my response. AND today is a day for being outside a lot, so I refuse to spend this beautiful afternoon responding point by point. (Not that I won't respond point-by-point. I will. I'm just saying this is going to take a lot of time. lol)

So, keep checking back to see my response. Don't, until tomorrow. (Tomorrow is our Sabbath this week -- we go by an odd schedule. Long story, but we do follow the Sabbath as best we can given our circumstances. lol) I suspect my first response to the first part has to wait until late tonight or tomorrow morning depending on when I can sleep and when I'm wide awake enough to respond. If you'd prefer, knowing you've got a hectic schedule, I can just PM you again when I finally done responding, so you know to come back. Which would you prefer?
Whichever you prefer is fine by me. PM-ing may be the way to go in this case, especially since our conversation seems to be its own thing. You're call, though. I'll do my best to stay on top of it in either place.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
56,481
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#60
I'm not sure how much space we get to post something,
Please shorten it to 20000 characters long is part of a message you will get if your post is too long; the first part of the error message tells you how many characters your post is.