1.Tongues and prophecy have ceased ~
1 Corinthians 13:8-13. Verse 8 says, “...whether there be prophecies, they shall fail;” and verse 8 says, “whether there be tongues, they shall cease;” The question is when do tongues and prophecies cease? Verse 10 says “ when that which is perfect is come”; And verse 11 says, “when I became a man, I put away childish things.” Are we going to be children (and not men) upon this Earth until Christ takes us home?.... By 96 AD
the childish gifts of prophecy, tongues and knowledge had ceased, and church manhood had been reached.
Heresy. Prophethood is the definitive ministry of
THE Prophet (Christ). Insinuating that we ourselves have the mature/complete revelation today compared to His childish knowledge and understanding is pure heresy. Period.
There is no hint of cessation in the passage - only maturation - as I've demonstrated here
at 534 and
also 597.
Furthermore if the NT cannon provides mature revelation, it automatically invalidates the OT as childish revelation.
Next in point #2 you proceed with a lot of rambling, indiscriminately intermixing disparate biblical contexts and concepts. As there is no clear/cohesive argument discernible there, I am ignoring it.
3. Tongues were for a sign that the Jews looked for.
1 Corinthians 1:22 says, “For the Jews require a sign, and the Greeks seek after wisdom:” But Jesus says, “ An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign;” (
Matthew 12:39). Wherefore tongues are for a sign, not to them that believe, but to them that believe not: but prophesying serveth not for them that believe not, but for them which believe. (
1 Corinthians 14:22). "In the law it is written, with men of other tongues and other lips will I speak unto this people (Jews); and yet for all that (all the tongues) will they (Jews) not hear me (warning ignored), saith the Lord".
1 Corinthians 14:21. Tongues here clearly are a warning to the Jews that they ignore.
1 Corinthians 14:21 is quoting from
Deuteronomy 28:49 where God warns of judgment coming from "a nation whose tongue thou shalt not understand."
To begin with, 1Cor 14:21 is a rather obscure passage - and thus an extremely questionable foundation for a major doctrine. In any case, Paul's conclusion here is the superiority of prophecy over tongues during public proclamations, which is hardly a foundation for cessationism.
4. The three greatest prophets and miracle workers in the Bible are Moses, Elijah, and Jesus. We see that the miracles that they performed were a way to authenticate them as a messenger from GOD and the Word of God that they provided (that would be immortalized into Scripture). We notice that after each of these prophets, there was a time of silence where no miracles were done. Just like with the prophets Moses, Elijah, and Jesus, miracles authenticated the apostles' message as from God. "And they (apostles) went forth, and preached everywhere, the Lord working with them, and confirming the Word with signs (tongues, prophecies, healing, etc.) following. Amen."
Mark 16:20.
Today the need for tongues and miracles has ceased. God has authenticated the apostles and the New Testament that they penned. This proves the temporary nature of tongues and miracles.
Poor reasoning, for example the tired old argument that the gifts are no longer 'strictly necessary'. Tell me, what is strictly necessary? Absolutely nothing. An omnipotent God is perfectly capable of building a church without Bibles, pastors, electronic media, and human evangelists. Why then does He use miracles, for example, if not 'strictly necessary'? Personal preference (
see here) - and since His preferences
do not change, cessationism cannot be true.
Miracles authenticated the apostles' message as from God.
Correct. The Inward Witness can do it without miracles, but Yahweh prefers to glorify Himself via miracles. Thus any lack of miracles in the church indicates our failure to walk in the fullness of His favor.
The message hasn't changed - it still needs authentication today. So if your claim is that miracles were NEEDED to authenticate the message back then, it would only prove too much, it would prove that we still need them today.
5. We can see that after the book of Acts, the gifts no longer operated in Paul’s life like they once had....He could heal all the sick on the island in Acts 28:9, but he couldn’t heal any of his closest co-workers—Timothy, Epaphroditus, Trophimus—after the close of the Book of Acts (See this article
here for the full explanation).
Luke wrote 25% of the NT and ends with a major history book, at the close of which, Paul is still healing an entire island of people. That flies in the face of a decline. Paul couldn't even heal the thorn in his own flesh. That's probably because Paul and his coworkers, being on the front lines, were targeted for a higher degree of suffering than most of us. The devil has limited jurisdiction from God and will likely capitalize on it, therefore, to attack the front-line laborers.
Your point #6 again insinuates that prophethood is childish. Moving on.
7. While God can heal people directly Himself today, the gift of miracles is not given to any one believer that we know today. No Charismatic can always heal. Yet, the Bible says that they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover. This means 100% recovery all the time.
You're alluding to Mark 16.
(1) Jesus did not heal 100% of the time.
(2) Arguably the passage DOES stipulate 100% recovery all of the time. After all, Jesus taught that if you believe (in perfedct undoubting faith), you always get what you asked for. In my understanding such faith comes only by divine fiat. Meaning God might choose to withhold it for reasons such as:
(A) Insufficient prayer and fasting
(B) Divine judgment upon a community, city, or nation
(3) R.C. Sproul claimed that there is insufficient manuscript support for this passage. He discouraged building any major doctrines on it.
8. New revelation (prophecy) or new words from God are not to be added (
Revelation 22:18-19). If a person were to add to God’s Word, the plagues that are within the book known as the Bible (not the plagues in Revelation) would be added to them. We have occurrences of this actually happening. See these two links here:
Bible Correctors lose Voice Bible Corrector Loses Voice on Ankerberg Sho
For one thing, the context is referring to the Book of Revelation. Have we added to it? Absolutely. We added to it the other 65 books of the Bible, as to form a complete canon. Continuationists at large are certainly not voting for adding new paragraphs to the Book of Revelation, under the false pretense that John wrote them.
9. The Apostles and Prophets were merely the foundation built upon the foundation of Jesus.
Unclear. Ignored.
Paul called himself the “last prophet.” (
1 Corinthians 15:8-9).
No he most certainly did not. He was chronologically last in the list of apostles mentioned in that particular context.
10. The context of I Corinthians is rebuking 13 errors, such as tongues, and it is not recommending tongues.
Paul most certainly does prize tongues in that chapter, albeit not corporately.