Modern Chaos: The Charismatic and Pentecostal Movements (5:35)

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Aidan1

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Many of us Christians believe that doctrine must be based on scripture, that the Bible spells out the doctrines of the church. Spiritual gifts being given to the first generation or so of Christians and gradually fading away is not not in scripture. The idea that the the manifestations of the Spirit are given to every man as He wills--followed by that list of gifts-- that is a Biblical doctrine on the matter.




Jesus said he was a devil. The apostles had the power to do miracles before the outpouring of the Spirit in Acts 2.



So you would base doctrine on church history and not scripture on this issue? If you want to know if some of these spiritual gifts were active in church history, you can find web pages with numerous examples. Burgess wrote a three volume set 'The Spirit and the Church.' Volume III 'Antiquity' contains numerous examples from the antenicene period. Michael Green's _Evangelism in the Early Church_ also makes the case for the role of spiritual gifts in that era as they relates to evangelism.



Your last sentence does not follow logically from the previous statements. Also, if you read my recent posts, I do not believe in the 'tongues as initial evidence' theory.


Are you implying that Pentecostals and Charismatics are not Christians? There are many Christians outside of the movement who acknowledge that God operates through these spiritual gifts.

[quote[
The P/Cs also prove so, by the fact that the vast majority of their prophecies are false (they don't come true in the time specified). Many self-proclaimed prophets don't specify any times, but use "if" and other contingencies to excuse themselves.
There are movements that actively teach that 'missing it' on prophecies is no big deal who seem to do just that quite often, but since so many prophecies are given to local churches and individuals, and not by people on TV or YouTube channels with lots of viewers, you cannot rightly say 'most prophecies' are false. Except for a few instances, 'in real life'' my experience with prophecies have been positive.

Only some prophecies are predictions of the future anyway. We can see that they are not all predictions of the future in the Old Testament also. And Old Testament prophecies often did not have an end date. People with different eschatological systems disagree as to how or when many of these prophecies would be fulfilled.



The passage also says that 'if a revelation cometh to one that sitteth by, let the first hold his peace.' The one prophesying has to have some content to share. If a prophet is prophesying and one sitting by gets a revelation, the speaking prophet is able to be quiet so the Spirit can continue ministering through prophecy to another individual. That's different from the prophet making up what the message is.


In the first list in I Corinthians, the Spirit may give the manifestation of the word of wisdom, to another the word of knowledge. These could be one-offs. But toward the end of the chapter, we read

27 Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular.
28 And God hath set some in the church, first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps, governments, diversities of tongues.

These seem to be regular roles.

My question about this is studying this chapter an academic exercise for you, or do you believe it and expect God to do this in the church?[/QUOTE]

The apostles had Power for to do miracles before Acts 2 only for a certain time for a certain purpose. In the time Jesus sent them two by two. After and before this time they had no power to do miracles!
 

Aidan1

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Mar 17, 2021
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Many of us Christians believe that doctrine must be based on scripture, that the Bible spells out the doctrines of the church. Spiritual gifts being given to the first generation or so of Christians and gradually fading away is not not in scripture. The idea that the the manifestations of the Spirit are given to every man as He wills--followed by that list of gifts-- that is a Biblical doctrine on the matter.




Jesus said he was a devil. The apostles had the power to do miracles before the outpouring of the Spirit in Acts 2.



So you would base doctrine on church history and not scripture on this issue? If you want to know if some of these spiritual gifts were active in church history, you can find web pages with numerous examples. Burgess wrote a three volume set 'The Spirit and the Church.' Volume III 'Antiquity' contains numerous examples from the antenicene period. Michael Green's _Evangelism in the Early Church_ also makes the case for the role of spiritual gifts in that era as they relates to evangelism.



Your last sentence does not follow logically from the previous statements. Also, if you read my recent posts, I do not believe in the 'tongues as initial evidence' theory.


Are you implying that Pentecostals and Charismatics are not Christians? There are many Christians outside of the movement who acknowledge that God operates through these spiritual gifts.

[quote[
The P/Cs also prove so, by the fact that the vast majority of their prophecies are false (they don't come true in the time specified). Many self-proclaimed prophets don't specify any times, but use "if" and other contingencies to excuse themselves.
There are movements that actively teach that 'missing it' on prophecies is no big deal who seem to do just that quite often, but since so many prophecies are given to local churches and individuals, and not by people on TV or YouTube channels with lots of viewers, you cannot rightly say 'most prophecies' are false. Except for a few instances, 'in real life'' my experience with prophecies have been positive.

Only some prophecies are predictions of the future anyway. We can see that they are not all predictions of the future in the Old Testament also. And Old Testament prophecies often did not have an end date. People with different eschatological systems disagree as to how or when many of these prophecies would be fulfilled.



The passage also says that 'if a revelation cometh to one that sitteth by, let the first hold his peace.' The one prophesying has to have some content to share. If a prophet is prophesying and one sitting by gets a revelation, the speaking prophet is able to be quiet so the Spirit can continue ministering through prophecy to another individual. That's different from the prophet making up what the message is.


In the first list in I Corinthians, the Spirit may give the manifestation of the word of wisdom, to another the word of knowledge. These could be one-offs. But toward the end of the chapter, we read

27 Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular.
28 And God hath set some in the church, first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps, governments, diversities of tongues.

These seem to be regular roles.

My question about this is studying this chapter an academic exercise for you, or do you believe it and expect God to do this in the church?[/QUOTE]
Sorry, ignore my last post. There is something in I did not wrote.
 

presidente

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The apostles had Power for to do miracles before Acts 2 only for a certain time for a certain purpose. In the time Jesus sent them two by two. After and before this time they had no power to do miracles!
They also prayed in Acts 4, after the events of Pentecost in Acts 2, for God to stretch forth His hand to heal and to do signs and wonders for the sake of Jesus, so they acknowledged their dependence on God for such things to occur.
 

ResidentAlien

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I have already mentioned this in another thread, so might as well drop it here too.

Look at every Denomination from the past 25 years.

On average, everyone but Pentecostals, have up to 25 on average and as much to 35% of their Leadership coming from people WHO ARE PROFESSING/CONFESSING HOMOSEXUAL IN ONE WAY OR ANOTHER.

You know why the LIGHT IN THE LOAFERS PEOPLE are not Leaders in the Pentecostal/Charismatic realm?

Because Speaking in Tongues convicts them and will cause their DEMONS to leave!

When Robert Jeffress, one of the most well known Baptist preachers teaches, WE CANNOT PREACH AGAINST HOMOSEXUALS, that Denomination is SPIRITUALLY DEAD!
I won't dispute your claim because I don't have the facts.

What I do know is Pentecostals have women pastors and teachers against the clear teaching of scripture. Divorce and remarriage is also rampant. So maybe it all evens out.
 

Aidan1

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They also prayed in Acts 4, after the events of Pentecost in Acts 2, for God to stretch forth His hand to heal and to do signs and wonders for the sake of Jesus, so they acknowledged their dependence on God for such things to occur.
I know, but you wrote that they had Power to do miracles before Acts 2. That they got this powers after Acts 2 to proof the gospel is known.
 

presidente

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I know, but you wrote that they had Power to do miracles before Acts 2. That they got this powers after Acts 2 to proof the gospel is known.
They did have power, at least at times subject to the will of God and somewhat dependent on their faith. Jesus called casting out a demon in His name a miracle. Some of his disciples, maybe 9 of them, were trying to figure out why they could not cast and evil spirit out of a child after Jesus came down off a mountain. In Matthew, this is set much later than the 12 apostles being sent out two by two.

There were other miracle workers besides the apostles-- casting out demons in Jesus' name. Jesus corrected the apostles for forbidding these people from performing the miracle of casting out demons in His name. Matthew does not specifically mention 'two by two', but the apostles are listed in pairs.
 

presidente

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When I lived in Mesa, Arizona, the second largest per capita Mormon established community and second largest Temple within the USA, I coached Pop Warner Youth football and interacted with the Mormons on a daily basis. My Chiropractor was Mormon, good man, and we became good friends, told me [because I asked] he wore his MAGIC UNDERWEAR AND T-SHIRT to work daily because many of his patients were non believers.

I never asked, but, if you think a non believer spirit can creep into your body through where your UNDERWEAR is worn at, you got some serious issues going on!
I went to grad school with a Mormon accountant who was on a 'stakeholder' board. They have a lot of levels of engagement. He said that Mormons met with the bishop to discuss whether they had paid their tithes. Since he was an accountant, I asked him if that was pre-tax or post-tax, and I may have asked him how they handled amortization and the different ways one could count whether a business was profitable. He said the bishop wasn't that detailed into it.

I've heard tithing preached before among evangelicals-- taking verses about the agricultural and animal husbandry tithes that were to be collected from the produce of the land of Israel for the Levitical priesthood and applying it to financial contributions to the local church organization. I'd never heard of clergy meeting with people to question as to whether them on whether they'd tithed.

When Mike Huckaby was running for the nomination against Mitt Romney, they directed a religious question toward Huckaby and he made a comment about how they always gave him those questions. I thought he should have mentioned that Romney had held the title of bishop in the Mormon organization. That could have made him out to be more of a religious figure... in a wonky religious movement also.
 

presidente

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I have already mentioned this in another thread, so might as well drop it here too.

Look at every Denomination from the past 25 years.

On average, everyone but Pentecostals, have up to 25 on average and as much to 35% of their Leadership coming from people WHO ARE PROFESSING/CONFESSING HOMOSEXUAL IN ONE WAY OR ANOTHER.

You know why the LIGHT IN THE LOAFERS PEOPLE are not Leaders in the Pentecostal/Charismatic realm?

Because Speaking in Tongues convicts them and will cause their DEMONS to leave!

When Robert Jeffress, one of the most well known Baptist preachers teaches, WE CANNOT PREACH AGAINST HOMOSEXUALS, that Denomination is SPIRITUALLY DEAD!
For the most part, historical Pentecostal denominations take a firm stance on this issue. I have read about homosexuals trying to start a 'Pentecostal' denomination that is friendly toward the LGBT philosophy and a charismatic pastor that 'came out'. I hear the congregation dwindled away. There was an A/G pastor who started on the 'queer affirming' path, trying to make it sound like the Bible was not clear against the issue. When the news broke, the local district was very quick to act.

It seems like Pentecostals used to be rather conservative when it comes to divorce and remarriage. Maybe many of them are, but I've noticed some more liberal ideas about this creeping in as well. Charismatics are often independent or are in fellowships of churches (though originally the term applied to those in mainline denominations), so they can be all over the map. And some of the big names on TV have had divorce scandals over the years.

I think the church lowering the bar on adulterous remarriage maybe what opened the floodgates for this other nasty sexual perversion stuff. I would have guessed children or animals would have been next after the SCOTUS read ideas into the 14th amendment that aren't there and decided it redefined marriage. I did not predict the trans thing.
 

TDidymas

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Oct 27, 2021
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Many of us Christians believe that doctrine must be based on scripture, that the Bible spells out the doctrines of the church. Spiritual gifts being given to the first generation or so of Christians and gradually fading away is not not in scripture. The idea that the the manifestations of the Spirit are given to every man as He wills--followed by that list of gifts-- that is a Biblical doctrine on the matter.
All truth is God's truth. So historical truth is valid, and relates to what has actually happened. There are many truths not in scripture that we accept, based on tradition and history. But there is an implication in scripture that not everyone in the 1st Century had miraculous gifts, as related by the writer of Hebrews in 2:4.

One of the problems with the P/C movement is that they think miraculous gifts (namely tongues) should be normative for every Christian, and this is unbiblical. It points to a major problem with the movement. I'm saying that the ideas of the P/C movement are not scriptural. That is, those ideas that are unique to the movement as distinct from the universal faith.

Jesus said he was a devil. The apostles had the power to do miracles before the outpouring of the Spirit in Acts 2.
So what? I was objecting to your idea that whoever does a miracle is Pentecostal.

So you would base doctrine on church history and not scripture on this issue? If you want to know if some of these spiritual gifts were active in church history, you can find web pages with numerous examples. Burgess wrote a three volume set 'The Spirit and the Church.' Volume III 'Antiquity' contains numerous examples from the antenicene period. Michael Green's _Evangelism in the Early Church_ also makes the case for the role of spiritual gifts in that era as they relates to evangelism.
Like I said, history actually happened, and should not be discounted. But the idea that miraculous gifts continued you are taking from historical documents, are you not? Don't you think your objection is a double standard?

Your last sentence does not follow logically from the previous statements. Also, if you read my recent posts, I do not believe in the 'tongues as initial evidence' theory.
I'm objecting to the P/C movement, as is the OP. What you believe or not believe is incidental, and may not be in accord with the mainstream of the movement, so I'm not concerned with your personal beliefs. And you may not see the logic in what I said because of your bias.

Are you implying that Pentecostals and Charismatics are not Christians? There are many Christians outside of the movement who acknowledge that God operates through these spiritual gifts.
No.

There are movements that actively teach that 'missing it' on prophecies is no big deal who seem to do just that quite often, but since so many prophecies are given to local churches and individuals, and not by people on TV or YouTube channels with lots of viewers, you cannot rightly say 'most prophecies' are false. Except for a few instances, 'in real life'' my experience with prophecies have been positive.
An example of what I was talking about is a major figure in the P/C movement, Mike Bickle of the Kansas City Prophets. He is the one who said that 90% of prophecies fail (but they keep on trying).

Only some prophecies are predictions of the future anyway. We can see that they are not all predictions of the future in the Old Testament also. And Old Testament prophecies often did not have an end date. People with different eschatological systems disagree as to how or when many of these prophecies would be fulfilled.
That doesn't justify prophecies that are coming out of peoples' imaginations. Educated guesses get hits sometimes.

The passage also says that 'if a revelation cometh to one that sitteth by, let the first hold his peace.' The one prophesying has to have some content to share. If a prophet is prophesying and one sitting by gets a revelation, the speaking prophet is able to be quiet so the Spirit can continue ministering through prophecy to another individual. That's different from the prophet making up what the message is.
Yet another misrepresentation of what I said, as is the typical P/C MO. I say according to scripture a prophet can either speak or not speak as he wants, and then you invent the idea that I said they're making it up. Such misrepresentations make me think you just want to argue. Are you clueless, or are you purposely trying to aggravate?

In the first list in I Corinthians, the Spirit may give the manifestation of the word of wisdom, to another the word of knowledge. These could be one-offs. But toward the end of the chapter, we read

27 Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular.
28 And God hath set some in the church, first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps, governments, diversities of tongues.

These seem to be regular roles.

My question about this is studying this chapter an academic exercise for you, or do you believe it and expect God to do this in the church?
God does these things regularly, as I have said before, through Providential authority (secondary means). The P/C error is that they assume these activities are miraculous, and so they look for signs of the supernatural. And since they (by natural ability) can speak glossolalia, they use that to justify their unbiblical doctrines and practices.
 

TDidymas

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When Robert Jeffress, one of the most well known Baptist preachers teaches, WE CANNOT PREACH AGAINST HOMOSEXUALS, that Denomination is SPIRITUALLY DEAD!
This sounds like slander. Can you please give a link to this accusation?
 

presidente

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May 29, 2013
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All truth is God's truth. So historical truth is valid, and relates to what has actually happened. There are many truths not in scripture that we accept, based on tradition and history.
There is also made-up history. There is evidence for ongoing prophecy, miracles, visions, healing, etc. in the church after the first century.

But there is an implication in scripture that not everyone in the 1st Century had miraculous gifts, as related by the writer of Hebrews in 2:4.
Since one of the gifts is called 'working of miracles' 'miraculous gifts' is a confusing title. I Corinthians teaches that manifestations of the Spirit are distributed among the body of Christ 'as he wills.'

One of the problems with the P/C movement is that they think miraculous gifts (namely tongues) should be normative for every Christian, and this is unbiblical.
I do not agree with the 'initial evidence doctrine' either. But not all groups within the larger umbrella of 'Charismatic' believe that.

It points to a major problem with the movement. I'm saying that the ideas of the P/C movement are not scriptural. That is, those ideas that are unique to the movement as distinct from the universal faith.
Rejecting spiritual gifts is not Biblical. Not allowing tongues and interpretation and prophesying in church meetings is not Biblical either.

Like I said, history actually happened, and should not be discounted. But the idea that miraculous gifts continued you are taking from historical documents, are you not? Don't you think your objection is a double standard?
Extra-biblical history is not the basis for doctrine.

An example of what I was talking about is a major figure in the P/C movement, Mike Bickle of the Kansas City Prophets. He is the one who said that 90% of prophecies fail (but they keep on trying).
Do you have a source on that?

Yet another misrepresentation of what I said, as is the typical P/C MO. I say according to scripture a prophet can either speak or not speak as he wants, and then you invent the idea that I said they're making it up. Such misrepresentations make me think you just want to argue. Are you clueless, or are you purposely trying to aggravate?
I did not state that this is what you are saying. You need to be careful not to misrepresent me when you accuse me of misrepresenting you.

God does these things regularly, as I have said before, through Providential authority (secondary means). The P/C error is that they assume these activities are miraculous, and so they look for signs of the supernatural.
I quoted verses about gifts of the Spirit. You responded with this sentence about 'Providential authority (secondary means)'. I know what all those words mean, but I have little idea what you mean when you put them together. The passages I quoted that you responded to were about gifts given by the Spirit. I do not see how that is 'secondary means.' I read an article once that said that Charismatics attributed things to the Spirit that Reformed people often attributed to 'providence.' The thing is, the Biblical terminology and concept attributes certain things to the Spirit. That does not mean God does not 'provide' them, but doesn't it make sense to stick with Biblical thought maps rather than later theological constructs and terminology that serves to obscure the issue for those not as steeped in Reformed terminology?
 

KelbyofGod

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My apologies in that I'm addressing the topic (tongues) without having watched the video. I'm only addressing it from my personal experiences of; being ignorant, being taught, observing, asking for, struggling with, receiving, testing, questioning, and asking God questions about "speaking in tongues".

I don't particularly know what any particular early church group did (except the bible accounts) in regards to tongues because I'm not there and they're not here. I'm a rather practical person in that aspect and I also don't care how early churches handled their money because again, I'm not there to be affected by it, neither are they here to affect me by it.

So when I eventually received the Holy Ghost with speaking in tongues (what some would call the babbly, modern kind) I tested them out against the promises to see if these babbly tongues did what the bible said unknown tongues would do. Did I test everything YOU might think of? Probably not. I tested what seemed important to me. And the first thing on that list was "Does this edify me (build up, strengthen me)?".

So I tested it, speaking in those babbly tongues that I'd just received a LOT... and I mean sometimes for hours at a time.... (probably the kind that some here say "anyone can do" even though I'd once TRIED to make up a new language and Guess what... a person's brain runs out of new syllables MUCH faster than the tongue has ability to speak).

OK... so first, did I run out of new syllables? Nope, there were always syllables and differing syllables available to say no matter how fast I'd speak. But back to the important question "Did it EDIFY me?". Yes. in fact one time I was praying in tongues (for a few hours) just to hear what kinds of sounds would come out (and wondering if that was somehow wrong by way of being disrespectful, using tongues as what I considered perhaps a form of entertainment) But as I was contemplating that and other things, the Lord actually spoke to me and answered a question I had regarding my being at college in relationship to his command to "exhort one another daily, and so much the more as ye see the day approaching". And that answer was something that both surprised me (given I was thinking I was possibly being disrespectful in my use) and was also something that I hadn't even considered, even though it may have seemed obvious to others.

So yes, after that experience and many other tests, I had to conclude that speaking in those babbly tongues that no one except for God understood, not even myself... Those babbly tongues indeed EDIFY the speaker.

Now I guess I need to say that people who don't have those babbly tongues would probably discount what I just said (and I probably won't try too hard to fight them). But that's the thing with experiences with God... Until and unless you experience it yourself, you won't know for yourself whether what I said is true or not. It's kind of the same with healings. Unless you receive a miraculous healing, it's really easy to think that miraculous healings don't still occur... or prophecies... or dreams...or interpretation of dreams...or etc.

If you have "speaking in tongues" and you've not experienced the "He that speaketh in an unknown tongue EDIFIETH himself"... then you should put it to the test... a thorough testing... to see if it works.

I'll put it in a real-world example that functions on the same principle (but in bad things)... Perhaps you've heard that drinking alcohol can make you drunk and can lead to abandoning your morals, doing stupid things, organ failure, and death. If you only took a sip of alcohol and watched for those results... then concluded that drinking alcohol does not lead to those those results, I would probably tell you that you didn't test alcohol very thoroughly.

Similarly (but leading towards good rather than bad outcomes) If you've got the ability to pray in unknown (babbly) tongues but only sip it once in a while, you're not likely to see much results. But if you do it abundantly... :) Then you'll be back here to testify how good it is. (and probably of some bumps and bruises as you make mistakes).

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
 

jb

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Feb 27, 2010
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I do know is Pentecostals have women pastors and teachers against the clear teaching of scripture...
Complete Nonsense!

Another incident of your twisting and cherry picking Scripture to suit your own male chauvinism!
 

ResidentAlien

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Complete Nonsense!

Another incident of your twisting and cherry picking Scripture to suit your own male chauvinism!
Let's assume you're right. Can you elaborate on why it's nonsense?
 

ResidentAlien

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Smith Wigglesworth has been getting a lot of attention lately in Charismatic circles. He's held up as a great healer and revivalist. But why Wigglesworth?

He wasn't any different than any of the carnival huckster revivalists. He followed the script to the letter. He was just another religious con artist who Charismatic leaders try to pass off as great "man of God," as they do all the other shysters.

Here are two videos about Wigglesworth. Daniel explores period newspapers that give accounts of his meetings and behavior. I don't expect it will convince anyone who's firmly entrenched in their delusions; but they may be persuasive to someone who's on the fence.


 

Gardenias

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Oct 27, 2020
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These big name men have a god complex or luciifer complex, they want to be worshiped.

It has been seen and proven over the years what manner of men they are. Secret adulterers,fraudulent robbers,who knows the sins they commit.
Most get exposed Swaggart,Baker,Olesteen just to name a few.

God says nothing is done in secret but that it will be revealed.

What I pray for are the willing to be deceived people who feed this type!
 

TDidymas

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There is also made-up history. There is evidence for ongoing prophecy, miracles, visions, healing, etc. in the church after the first century.
There's lots of made-up 'history' among the P/Cs. I call it 'urban legends.' Yet, there are many who cite early church fathers saying those gifts ceased. Yet, the debate rages on...

Since one of the gifts is called 'working of miracles' 'miraculous gifts' is a confusing title. I Corinthians teaches that manifestations of the Spirit are distributed among the body of Christ 'as he wills.'
Are you trying to say that tongues is NOT miraculous? Based on your past responses, I'm sure you're not. So then, it appears this response is somewhat disingenuous, unless you're confessing that you're actually confused.

I do not agree with the 'initial evidence doctrine' either. But not all groups within the larger umbrella of 'Charismatic' believe that.
Major Pentecostal denominations like AOG and Apostolics still declare it as official doctrine. So you must be talking about minorities.

Rejecting spiritual gifts is not Biblical. Not allowing tongues and interpretation and prophesying in church meetings is not Biblical either.
Here again, our paths diverge. You ASSUME that modern tongues is a spiritual gift, I say it's not.

Extra-biblical history is not the basis for doctrine.
You miss the point. History supports it. Since the Bible does not address what happens in that regard after the 1st Century, we have to determine from history what has actually happened. That's the reason for the debate. Therefore, to discount or disregard history is a fool's errand.

Do you have a source on that?
A quote from the below website: "In spite of the fact that Scripture says that a true prophet must be held to the standard of 100% accuracy, modern prophets simply ignore that standard, being content with the fact that their prophecies contain hundreds of mistakes. (Mike Bickle even admits that modern prophecy has about an 80% failure rate.) "
Ok, 80%, but I think it's a conservative estimate, since I heard 80-90%.
https://thecripplegate.com/strange-fire-modern-prophecy/

Another site has this quote: "Mike Bickle is the pastor of the Kansas City Prophets and, you know, the founder of IHOP, The International House of Prayer, the guy who says that in his entire experience, over 40 years, I think he said, in the Charismatic Movement, 80 percent of the phenomenon he’s seen, he knows its faults. And he’s saying that not as a critique of the Movement, but he’s saying that to say to people it’s okay, it’s okay if some of the stuff is false, it’s all right. "
https://www.gty.org/library/sermons-library/70-37/strange-fire-qa-answering-the-critics

I did not state that this is what you are saying. You need to be careful not to misrepresent me when you accuse me of misrepresenting you.
An exaggerative statement in response to what I wrote is the same as attributing it to what I wrote. It indicates that you assumed that I meant that prophets who decided to keep silent or speak as they chose were making it up. Otherwise, why would you say such a thing? I think you're being dishonest here.

I quoted verses about gifts of the Spirit. You responded with this sentence about 'Providential authority (secondary means)'. I know what all those words mean, but I have little idea what you mean when you put them together. The passages I quoted that you responded to were about gifts given by the Spirit. I do not see how that is 'secondary means.' I read an article once that said that Charismatics attributed things to the Spirit that Reformed people often attributed to 'providence.' The thing is, the Biblical terminology and concept attributes certain things to the Spirit. That does not mean God does not 'provide' them, but doesn't it make sense to stick with Biblical thought maps rather than later theological constructs and terminology that serves to obscure the issue for those not as steeped in Reformed terminology?
To get specific, then: when the apostles spoke the languages of the people in Acts 2, it was miraculous. When people learn the languages of the world and speak the gospel in those languages, it's secondary means, or providence. Some of the gifts listed in 1 Cor. 12:28 are miraculous, and some are providential. Apostles, teachers, helps, and governments are providential, the others are miraculous. Except today, languages are providential, since they are learned.
 
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This sounds like slander. Can you please give a link to this accusation?
It was a misquote I read between Jeffress and Tim Tebow.

But the real Baptists preachers are:

Bishop Eddie Long
Eddie Long senior pastor of [New Birth Missionary Baptist Church]. Four separate young men have accused Bishop Eddie Long of coercing them into sex. Eddie Long would preach against homosexuality and ministered “homosexual cures” to gays and lesbians while criticizing gay people. The SPLC would label Eddie Long as “one of the most virulently homophobic black leaders in the religiously based anti-gay movement.”

Ted Haggard
Ted Haggard In 2015 became a Free Methodist Church elder, having previously been a [minister in the Southern Baptist Convention].. In 2006, a gay male prostitute claimed that he had regular sex with Haggard and also used with methamphetamines. Haggard would admit to being gay and having a relationship with a male church member.

George Rekers
George Rekers is a [baptist minister] and one of the Christian Right’s most prominent anti-gay activists. Rekers was caught at an airport with a gay prostitute returning from a flight to Bermuda. He had found the prostitute on the site rentboy where the prostitute listed himself as “sensual,” “wild” and “up for anything.”
 

presidente

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Smith Wigglesworth has been getting a lot of attention lately in Charismatic circles. He's held up as a great healer and revivalist. But why Wigglesworth?

He wasn't any different than any of the carnival huckster revivalists. He followed the script to the letter. He was just another religious con artist who Charismatic leaders try to pass off as great "man of God," as they do all the other shysters.

Here are two videos about Wigglesworth. Daniel explores period newspapers that give accounts of his meetings and behavior. I don't expect it will convince anyone who's firmly entrenched in their delusions; but they may be persuasive to someone who's on the fence.


I've seen one of this man's videos before this. He seems to take newspaper columnists, sometimes who are hostile, at their word. I've had a little written about me in a couple of newspapers and I've seen a TV and print news piece on some things I knew something about. It seems like newspaper people might get something about 40 to 80% right, if they are trying. If they report on the results of a science or social science study, usually they express the findings wrongly and do not know what they are talking about. They often lack the background knowledge to understand what someone is saying in a religious context.

I'd also be a bit skeptical of direct quotes from news people, as to whether they got it right. I have a partly autobiographical book or two about Wigglesworth compiled by people who transcribed his sermons. It has been many years, but I did not get the impression that he put himself forth as the source or power for healing.

Also, the YouTuber here reports that there were many people testifying to being healed in the meetings, and he turns it around and insists this was a tactic, to put plants in the audience to claim to have been healed. If an evangelist, or one who lived on a shoestring budget like Wigglesworth who didn't have a modern multi-media direct marketing enterprise, tried to rely on that, he wouldn't be able to last long.

Having testimonies, not just about healing, but answered prayers and other things in old tradition among Pentecostals. It seems to be less in vogue these days, but I saw plenty of it in the '70's and '80's, probably more at Sunday evening and mid-week services. And I can think of a Pentecostal church in Indonesia that has had testimonies in meetings, too. I've seen some Charismatics give testimonies like that in recent years, too.

The vlogger asserts that there is no evidence of any healings, but the reports he mention tell of many witnesses to it, and one of the accounts he reads from the newspaper tells of a girl whose leg was...paralyzed was it... who was able to run. You can also read books about Smith Wigglesworth and look at the testimonies yourself.

I don't see any Biblical reason to be concerned with sacred music rising to a crescendo of emotion. We are to love God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength. Seeing others healed might help build faith. Seeing miracles can help the crowd pay better attention as in the case of Philip in Acts. After Paul declared Elymas blind, Sergius Paulus believed, being astonished at the teaching of the Lord. Being healed in response to faith certainly shows up all throughout the Gospels. Jesus said such things as 'according to your faith, be it unto you.' There is the story of the woman with the issue of blood who touched Jesus' garment and believed that she would be healed. He felt power go out of Himself and said, "Who touched me?" In Acts 14, Paul is preaching and he sees that a crippled man has faith to be healed, and tells him to walk.

Is there anything similar to shaking, grabbing, hitting or seizing people in the Bible? Jesus spit and put mud on someone's eye. And what about Peter. A crippled man was sitting by a gate in the temple and asks Peter for a donation. Peter says, "Silver and gold have I none, but such as I have, give I unto thee. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, rise and walk. Peter grabbed a crippled man by the right hand whose legs did not work (prior) and yanked him up. Should they have called the police and arrested him for assault?

I don't necessarily agree with everything Wigglesworth did or thought. Especially if you get further back closer to around 1900 or before it, doctors back then were a bit more like quacks today. Go back into the 1800's and the killed pregnant women by not washing their hands. Doctors used to give out elixirs containing cocaine and opium. Giving some elixir to a whiny baby would help him sleep. Imagine drug dealers in white coats. I wonder if they gave the first dose for free. In the 1800's, Britain fought a war to keep the addictive drug trade flowing. Coca-Cola was developed by a pharmacist and it contained cocaine until 1929, so these quotes could be deemed within the historical era of medical quackery.

Where does the Bible say Luke was practicing medicine in Biblical times? That seems to be an assumption on the vlogger's part. There are not many references to physicians in scripture. The woman with the issue of blood had spent her money on physicians and she was still sick.

II Chronicles 16
12 And Asa in the thirty and ninth year of his reign was diseased in his feet, until his disease was exceeding great: yet in his disease he sought not to the Lord, but to the physicians.
13 And Asa slept with his fathers, and died in the one and fortieth year of his reign.

I'm not saying medicine is wrong, but I understand the opposition of some preachers during that era to the dirty-handed the drug dealers of their age.

I don't agree if Wigglesworth thought all sickness was caused by demons. I do not know if he really thought that, and I do not trust either a hostile vlogger who makes up some of his facts and makes big theological points out of theological non-issues, or one-time visiting reporter to accurately report that aspect of his demonology. But if he did and I don't, that does not mean that God did not use Wigglesworth to heal.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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There's lots of made-up 'history' among the P/Cs. I call it 'urban legends.' Yet, there are many who cite early church fathers saying those gifts ceased. Yet, the debate rages on...
Can you give me some actual examples? I know there is a quote from a theologian who had not researched the issue in the 1800s who said there was no reliable evidence for miracles after the apostles or the first century or something along those lines. Some authors will repeat this, as if it proves something, instead of examining church history for themselves. Some of them will also quote Warfield, apparently without having finished his book, because they do not even mention the fact that Warfield had to grasp at straws to try to figure out how to make Ireneaus, champion of historical orthodoxy, still be sincere while reporting miracles. Warfield had his own doctrine not taught in scripture related to the cessation of certain charismata. There are numerous websites you can go to for lists of examples of spiritual gifts.

I know of two late men who get labeled with the grandous title 'church fathers' who either reported not experiencing speaking in tongues or came up with reasons while it was for the past-- Augustine and Chrysostom, both kind of late to be given the title. As far as any of them saying 'those gifts ceased', including miracles, prophecy, etc., please produce a source for any respected church leader during the era who made the argument. It is easy to use church history to prove your case when you make up what church history says or just repeat authors who have done the same.

I've poked around this online book from the 1800's that does a bit of a historical study of the topic: <https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Suppressed_Evidence.html?id=JkopAAAAYAAJ>. Most of it is in English. You may need to be a bit of a polyglott to read all the quotes. I've already mentioned Burgess _The Spirit and the Church: Volume I-- Antiquity_ which deals with the era. I saw this one back in high school so it has been a while. An account of Athanasius prophesying comes to mind.

I am not an expert in this stuff, but The Shepherd of Hermas, whether you like the theology or not, mentions the fact that prophets prophesied in the church, and this was probably mid-second century. I have mentioned Irenaeus testified to brethren operating in spiritual gifts: prophecy, foreknowledge, healing, tongues, etc.

In subsequent centuries there are the miracles of St. Martin of Tours. St. Partrick is also another one to look at. Numerous healings, even resurrections of the dead, are attributed to him. Within the two works that historians recognize as his own share his testimony of being directed to escape to freedom from Ireland by a vision and being instructed to return to Ireland, his field of ministry, by a supernatural voice. There many other examples.

Are you trying to say that tongues is NOT miraculous? Based on your past responses, I'm sure you're not.
It's supernatural, but it's confusing terminology if there is a list of spiritual gifts, one of them is called 'working of miracles' and you call them all 'miraculous gifts.'

So then, it appears this response is somewhat disingenuous, unless you're confessing that you're actually confused.
I think you are confused and you have a hair trigger on the character attack button.

Major Pentecostal denominations like AOG and Apostolics still declare it as official doctrine. So you must be talking about minorities.
They don't usually call themselves Charismatics, though, not in the US at least. 'Apostolics' have different soteriology, considering tongues as a sign of salvation.

Here again, our paths diverge. You ASSUME that modern tongues is a spiritual gift, I say it's not.
The Bible says divers tongues is among the manifestations of the Spirit given as the Spirit wills. Do you agree with that? Do you have any reason to decree that the Spirit does not will to give this now? Do you have any reason to think that those in the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements are not recipients of the grace of God?

You miss the point. History supports it. Since the Bible does not address what happens in that regard after the 1st Century, we have to determine from history what has actually happened. That's the reason for the debate. Therefore, to discount or disregard history is a fool's errand.
You are the one disregarding history. Numerous accounts, small percentage-wise perhaps, of individuals healing, performing miracles, prophesying, seeing visions, etc. is evidence for continuation. But Biblically, there is no reason to believe doctrines or the way scripture reveals God acts in the church expired after the first century.

Is okay to murder? It's after the first century. The most recent teachings against murder we have in the Bible were in the first century? What about fornication? First century again. Can drunkard bishops/overseers be appointed? Well, that restriction on bishops/overseers was in the first century. Does God still save through faith in Jesus' Christ? Those verses you read about that are from the first century. Does that make them not valid?

I can't find an expiration date at the end of any of these books of the Bible.

A quote from the below website: "In spite of the fact that Scripture says that a true prophet must be held to the standard of 100% accuracy, modern prophets simply ignore that standard, being content with the fact that their prophecies contain hundreds of mistakes. (Mike Bickle even admits that modern prophecy has about an 80% failure rate.) "
Ok, 80%, but I think it's a conservative estimate, since I heard 80-90%.
https://thecripplegate.com/strange-fire-modern-prophecy/
Skimming that, it looks like he is talking about a couple of movements. The Bickle quote I saw does not say that 80% is normative. He may believe it is, or he may not. I don't know. I also did not see an actual source for the Bickle. Some of the quotes about prophets making 'mistakes.' The context of the quote needs to be clear. One might say that Moses or Elijah made mistakes. Moses was slow to circumcise Gershom. Elijah may have allowed himself to be overtaken by despair. That's not the same as false prophecy. I know for a fact that not all people who claim to be prophets and not all Pentecostals think that less than 100% prophecies are acceptable.

Another site has this quote: "Mike Bickle is the pastor of the Kansas City Prophets and, you know, the founder of IHOP, The International House of Prayer, the guy who says that in his entire experience, over 40 years, I think he said, in the Charismatic Movement, 80 percent of the phenomenon he’s seen, he knows its faults. And he’s saying that not as a critique of the Movement, but he’s saying that to say to people it’s okay, it’s okay if some of the stuff is false, it’s all right. "
https://www.gty.org/library/sermons-library/70-37/strange-fire-qa-answering-the-critics
I've heard and read some stuff from John MacArthur. He may be accurate or inaccurate in his explanation. But I wouldn't trust him to rightly convey the understanding or intention of someone explaining spiritual gifts, certainly not the apostle Paul's. The last I checked, he still has a sermon up on his website suggesting that Paul was addressing the issue of the Corinthians speaking in 'pagan' tongues. He promoted the linguistic nonsense theory that the singular Greek word rendered 'tongue' referred to pagan tongues while the plural referred to the real thing in I Corinthians 14. That would have Paul instructing the Corinthians in verses 27-28 to allow an interpreter to interpret a pagan tongue for the congregation. I've seen some of the arguments he made about quotes from other preachers in his books, too.

If 80% of prophecy in the Charismatic is true prophecy, then that's something to consider.

An exaggerative statement in response to what I wrote is the same as attributing it to what I wrote. It indicates that you assumed that I meant that prophets who decided to keep silent or speak as they chose were making it up. Otherwise, why would you say such a thing? I think you're being dishonest here.
I considered that might be a possibility. But I don't know your mind. Try not to be too sensitive. In context, why would you make the comment you did unless you wanted your reader to suspect that is what you meant?

To get specific, then: when the apostles spoke the languages of the people in Acts 2, it was miraculous. When people learn the languages of the world and speak the gospel in those languages, it's secondary means, or providence. Some of the gifts listed in 1 Cor. 12:28 are miraculous, and some are providential. Apostles, teachers, helps, and governments are providential, the others are miraculous. Except today, languages are providential, since they are learned.
Paul doesn't break them down into these categories. I do not see why supernatural, non-mundane gifts would be excluded from the category of 'providence', so I do not see how the categories are that helpful.