You have just started a different thread thought altogether. I will be more than happy to discuss it with ....however YOU are not going to like it.
1 Corinthians 13:8-9........
"Love never fails. But where there are prophecies, they will cease; where there are tongues, they will be stilled; where there is knowledge, it will pass away. 9For we know in part and we prophesy in part, but when the perfect comes, what is in part disappears."
That is the actual words. TONGUES will CEASE.
KNOWLEDGE will pass away.
PROPHECIES will CEASE.
The only question is..........What is the PERFECT that when it comes all of those temporary things will end.
From what you have already posted to me, I am sure that you do not accept that the PERFECT is the Completed Word Of Word as written in the Bible.
Generally, there are three primary interpretations concerning the meaning of the phrase “that which is perfect is come” of 1 Corinthians 13:10:
(1) Some people believe that that is a reference to us dying and going to heaven,
(2) others believe that it refers to when Jesus returns to earth, and
(3) others believe that it refers to the completed Bible.
The only sound view—in light of context, in light of grammar, in light of Scripture—
Why would you argue that 'in light of grammar' that this is the case?
Are you assuming that 'to teleion' has to agree grammatically with some word in New Testament Greek that matches with it grammatically? If so, that seems to me to be a rather naive way of thinking about the Greek language.
Let us indeed look at the context. the passage continues on.
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.
So before the perfect comes, Paul's understanding is like that of a child. After it comes, it is like that of an adults. The cessationist with your particular argument would have us believe that the perfect comes after Paul is dead. If that is the case, Paul experiences the perfect at the resurrection anyway, which undercuts this cessationist argument.
By the way, many cessationists see through the error of your interpretation of I Corinthians 13. John MacArthur is one of the most famous for speaking out against spiritual gifts in our day and age, and he does not accept your interpretation because of it's obvious flaws and considers the perfect to refer to 'the eternal state.' John Calvin was probably not exactly a cessationist, but he calls the idea that the perfect comes during the 'intervening time' before the resurrection or death 'stupid' or 'foolish' depending on your translation. But be that as it may, let us consider verse 11 if we take it to refer to you and other Christians having the perfect now.
What that means is that Paul, when he wrote the New Testament, wrote his childish understandings down. He, and the other apostles with their childish understanding, wrote a book which causes you to have complete understanding and to be an adult in understanding in comparison with the apostles. Do you think your understanding is complete now so that the apostles understanding was like that of children's understanding?
If that is the case, then you should never have the experience of reading some passage by Paul and learning something knew, something Paul knew, but you did not know until that moment you read it, since you would have perfect knowledge, superior to his. You would never have that experience of reading, studying, even memorizing a chapter of scripture, then going back and finding something knew there... to you... something Paul clearly understood.
No sermon, no commentary, and no web page could ever give you insight into any of Paul's passages, telling you something he knows but you do not, since you have complete understanding.
is that 1 Corinthians 13:10 is referring to the completed canon of Scripture of the first century A.D. Of course that means that there are no spiritual SIGN gifts operating today because we have the completed 66-book Holy Bible.
You have disproven your own theory here, because this passage does not mention supernatural healing gifts or gifts of miracles... which I am assuming you would include in the extrabiblical 'sign gifts' category. There is no scripture that indicates that the Spirit will not give gifts of healing or the working of miracles to the saints.
If we are to people of faith, we must throw away our doctrinally-deficient hymns, we must discard our faulty theological systems, and we must break away from our pre-conceived ideas. We are to embrace the simple truths of the English Bible. In the end, God’s Word—not theological systems, not Bible commentaries, not preachers or teachers—not what we ant to believe, but only the Bible alone will matter.
You are clearly drawing from some source, some men's opinions, besides scripture, to come up with your interpretation.
We should interpret chapter 13 in line with the rest of the book. In 1:7 Paul writes, 'So that ye come behind in no spiritual gift, waiting for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. The epistle refers to themes he would address later. He was preparing to write an epistle that addressed tongues, prophecy, and various other gifts, mentioned 'utterance and knowledge' and then wrote those words in verse 7. Now why would he write those words if there were a doctrine that gifts would cease between the writing of this epistle and the Lord's return?
And if we look at what he mentions in chapter 13 compared to the last two chapters, we see he refers to:
Ch 13: a) tongues b) prophecy and c) the coming of the perfect.
Ch 14-15: a) tongues b) prophecy and c) the state of the believer in the resurrection at the return of Christ.