- Jan 18, 2020
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However, something like the apostles' experience of the Holy Spirit still occurs today. In circumstances where Christ and the Gospel are directly challenged by occult power, I hear of Christians going nose-to-nose with the demonic and God intervening in a supernatural manner, demonstrating to all that He is greater, securing the attention of those looking on, and creating a platform of spiritual authority from which His servants speak and uproot the strongholds of the demonic. In such instances, God has the furtherance of His kingdom, His glorification and the dissolution of occult domination in mind, not just thrilling His children with sensational events as a sort of religious entertainment.
Are you a concentric cessationist by any chance? Your position seems to match their views quite well:
Although the original formulation of cessationism arose in response to claims of healing and miracles in the Catholic Church, cessationists now divide into four viewpoints based on their views about the possibility of miracles among Christians today.[13] These are:
Source: Cessationism versus continuationism - Wikipedia- Full cessationists believe that all miracles have ceased, along with any miraculous gifts.[14]
- Classical cessationists assert that the miraculous gifts such as prophecy, healing, and speaking in tongues ceased with the apostles. However, they do believe that God occasionally works in supernatural ways today.[14]
- Consistent cessationists believe that not only were the miraculous gifts only for the establishment of the first-century church, but the need for apostles and prophets also ceased.[14]
- Concentric cessationists believe that the miraculous gifts have indeed ceased in the mainstream church and evangelized areas, but may appear in unreached areas as an aid to spreading the Gospel. Daniel B. Wallace describes himself as a concentric cessationist and describes the other cessationist viewpoints as "linear".[15]
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