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AbbaLove

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Yes, if someone was speaking a foreign language that no one in the congregation understood, then what they said was a mystery. Only God, who understands all languages, knew what was spoken.
You're not giving His Spirit enough credit. It's like you're saying that His Spirit doesn't know what foreign language is needed for every specific situation in which a Spirit-filled Believer is used of the LORD to possibly convict a person of a sin that only they know via his/her own language that no one else in the congregation understands.

Why would the LORD speak through a Spirit-filled Believer in a foreign language if no one in the congregation is familiar with that language? Your logic is ill-logical.
 
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swordsman1

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Speaking in tongues is not limited to foreign languages, you would say people that speak in tongues speak made up words and are crazy thinking they are doing something, do you think people can be that dumb? maybe someone but not all christians that speak in tongues.

What people think is the gift of tongues is actually the natural phenomenon of the flesh known to linguists as free vocalization or glossolalia. It is the technique of letting your vocal organs go into 'autopilot' do it's own thing. Today's 'tongues' has been well researched and proved to be devoid of any linguistic structure - it is just strings of syllables haphazardly put together to give the appearance of language. It is not unique to Christianity. Anyone can discover the technique. It is commonly found in pagan religions and atheists. You can even find ex-Pentecostals who have abandoned the Christian faith and declared themselves to be atheist and yet they can still fluently 'speak in tongues'. This proves that it is not of the Holy Spirit.
 
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swordsman1

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Why would the LORD speak through a Spirit-filled Believer in a foreign language if no one in the congregation is familiar with that language? Your logic is ill-logical.

You can ask exactly the same question about the modern 'tongues'. Why would the LORD speak through a Spirit-filled Believer in a non-human language if no one in the congregation is familiar with that language?
 
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Alithis

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Scripture says that if anyone does not have the Spirit they are not Christians.

Rom 8:9 "But if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him."

Are you suggesting that SkyWriting is not a Christian?
im not discussing him at all and didnt say that - stop goading .
 
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Alithis

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You can ask exactly the same question about the modern 'tongues'. Why would the LORD speak through a Spirit-filled Believer in a non-human language if no one in the congregation is familiar with that language?
perhaps you should go read Suprise Sitholes -testimony ... he speaks english .. but there is something you should know . when he spoke English . he was speaking in tongues because he had never in his life spoken english ..
there are varying kinds of tongues .. not one kind only .
 
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AbbaLove

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I have heard people speaking in tongues - born again, Spirit filled Christians in a prayer meeting. I'm not going to assume that they are making up a nonsense language, or that the devil is fabricating it. Scripture says that people spoke in tongues; clearly they still do today.
Agree with you, but until you can answer the following question cessationists (including JWs) will use 1 Corinthians 13:8 to justify/support their theology. Are you actually unable to provide another interpretation? In other words being you are a continualist Believer you should be able to give an interpretation of verse 8 that supports continualism; while at the same time calling into question their cessationist interpretation.

Question: 1 Corinthians 13:8 seems to be the only scripture that cessationists use to justify their belief. It would be helpful if others like yourself (continualists) would offer what they believe is the correct interpretation of verse 8 that supports their belief ... Thanks​

Likewise a cessationist like swordsman1 should be able to provide convincing reason via scripture with respect to the following question ...

Question: Having read all 17 pages why is it that cessationism can't explain why the nine supernatural Gifts are/were no longer needed after the Apostle John died to justify/support their cessationist theology?
___________________________​
Romans 1:16-17
16 For I am not ashamed of the Good News, since it is God’s powerful means of bringing salvation to everyone who keeps on trusting, to the Jew especially, but equally to the Gentile.
17 For in it is revealed how God makes people righteous in His sight; and from beginning to end it is through trust — as the Tanakh puts it, “But the person who is righteous will live his life by trust.” (Habakkuk 2:4; Proverbs 3:5-6)

 
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AbbaLove

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You can ask exactly the same question about the modern 'tongues'. Why would the LORD speak through a Spirit-filled Believer in a non-human language if no one in the congregation is familiar with that language?

In your previous post you didn't say non-human language. You said a foreign language ...
Yes, if someone was speaking a foreign language that no one in the congregation understood, then what they said was a mystery. Only God, who understands all languages, knew what was spoken.

That is the position you were using in an attempt to justify your cessationist theology. I will post it again as you missed my point that the LORD will only use another 'foreign' language via a Spirit-filled Believer in which the message is to someone in the congregation that understands that same language. Why would the LORD inspire a Spirit-filled Believer to speak a known human language if no one in the congregation understands/speaks that language. So your logic is ill-logical. You need to read my post again ...

"You're not giving His Spirit enough credit. It's like you're saying that His Spirit doesn't know what foreign language is needed for every specific situation in which a Spirit-filled Believer is used of the LORD to possibly convict a person of a sin that only they know via his/her own language that no one else in the congregation understands.

Why would the LORD speak through a Spirit-filled Believer in a foreign language if no one in the congregation is familiar with that language? Your logic is ill-logical."

At least some evangelicals (and possible yourself) believe in the supernatural Gift of speaking in a foreign language even when the Spirit-filled speaker doesn't know/speak the foreign language himself. Such was the case in Acts 2 when the Good News was being proclaimed by followers of Messiah Yeshua in a foreign language they didn't know to their foreign Jewish brethren that had traveled some distance to Jerusalem for the Festival of Shavuot.
 
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Alithis

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Agree with you, but until you can answer the following question cessationists (including JWs) will use 1 Corinthians 13:8 to justify/support their theology. Are you actually unable to provide another interpretation? In other words being you are a continualist Believer you should be able to give an interpretation of verse 8 that supports continualism; while at the same time calling into question their cessationist interpretation.

Question: 1 Corinthians 13:8 seems to be the only scripture that cessationists use to justify their belief. It would be helpful if others like yourself (continualists) would offer what they believe is the correct interpretation of verse 8 that supports their belief ... Thanks​

Likewise a cessationist like swordsman1 should be able to provide convincing reason via scripture with respect to the following question ...

Question: Having read all 17 pages why is it that cessationism can't explain why the nine supernatural Gifts are/were no longer needed after the Apostle John died to justify/support their cessationist theology?
___________________________​
Romans 1:16-17
16 For I am not ashamed of the Good News, since it is God’s powerful means of bringing salvation to everyone who keeps on trusting, to the Jew especially, but equally to the Gentile.
17 For in it is revealed how God makes people righteous in His sight; and from beginning to end it is through trust — as the Tanakh puts it, “But the person who is righteous will live his life by trust.” (Habakkuk 2:4; Proverbs 3:5-6)

Well praise God WE can say why they the spiritual gifts ARE necessary today and have NOT ceased . they are for the work fo the gospel .. and the work of the Gospel is new to every generation.
 
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swordsman1

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Likewise a cessationist like swordsman1 should be able to provide convincing reason via scripture with respect to the following question ...

Question: Having read all 17 pages why is it that cessationism can't explain why the nine supernatural Gifts are/were no longer needed after the Apostle John died to justify/support their cessationist theology?

The miraculous gifts such as tongues and healing were sign gifts to authenticate Christians in the fledgling church as God's people. eg to prove the gentiles were Christians, to prove the apostles were apostles.(There are numerous scriptures that confirm this, let me know if you want the quotes.) Without those gifts Christianity would never have got off the ground. Once that authentication was complete, those gifts were no longer necessary.

The revelatory gifts such as apostleship, prophecy and words of knowledge were no longer necessary as the completed scriptures would now guide people in the faith. Apostles and prophets were spokesmen for God (Luke 10:16, 2 Peter 1:21). Scripture now takes that role (2 Tim 3:16). Apostles and prophets were only for the foundation of the church (Eph 2:20).
 
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swordsman1

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perhaps you should go read Suprise Sitholes -testimony ... he speaks english .. but there is something you should know . when he spoke English . he was speaking in tongues because he had never in his life spoken english ..
there are varying kinds of tongues .. not one kind only .

He speaks English all the time, but it is all tongues? He doesn't understand a word of it?
 
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swordsman1

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I will post it again as you missed my point that the LORD will only use another 'foreign' language via a Spirit-filled Believer in which the message is to someone in the congregation that understands that same language. Why would the LORD inspire a Spirit-filled Believer to speak a known human language if no one in the congregation understands/speaks that language. So your logic is ill-logical. You need to read my post again ...

"You're not giving His Spirit enough credit. It's like you're saying that His Spirit doesn't know what foreign language is needed for every specific situation in which a Spirit-filled Believer is used of the LORD to possibly convict a person of a sin that only they know via his/her own language that no one else in the congregation understands.

Why would the LORD speak through a Spirit-filled Believer in a foreign language if no one in the congregation is familiar with that language? Your logic is ill-logical."

At least some evangelicals (and possible yourself) believe in the supernatural Gift of speaking in a foreign language even when the Spirit-filled speaker doesn't know/speak the foreign language himself. Such was the case in Acts 2 when the Good News was being proclaimed by followers of Messiah Yeshua in a foreign language they didn't know to their foreign Jewish brethren that had traveled some distance to Jerusalem for the Festival of Shavuot.

Well I wouldn't say the Spirit was using the Corinthians when they spoke in tongues. 1 Cor 14 makes it clear they were misusing their gift. Paul rebukes the Corinthians for speaking in a language that nobody understood and commands them to stop unless there is an interpreter.

And my point was if you think that is legitimate criticism of tongues being a foreign language, then the same criticism applies to tongues being a non-human language. Why would God enable people to speak in a non-human language when no one understands it?
 
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Strong in Him

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Yes. “Completeness” is the antithesis of “in part”, so it is obvious these two quantitative expressions are related. Whatever ‘in part’ is referring to, almost certainly applies to ‘completeness’. That which is ‘in part’ is the practice of the gifts of prophecy and words of knowledge (v9), both of which are revelations from God. It follows therefore that ‘completeness’ would also involve revelation. “In part” refers to the fact that the revelation communicated by these gifts was partial or piecemeal. The corresponding “completeness”, as the counterpart to “in part” must then refer to a full or complete revelation from God. This can only be seen as the completed revelation God as preserved in the New Testament. At the time of Paul's writing the early church needed prophecy and words of knowledge to guide them in the faith in the absence of a New Testament. However when a church had a completed canon, it would no longer need the gift of prophecy to guide them. Thus, the completed canon would replace the partial prophecies and words of knowledge.

Really?
Let's see: the early church witnessed to the resurrection in the power of the Spirit, they made disciples, baptised them in the Holy Spirit and the believers spoke in tongues, there was prophecy and other gifts manifested - and they went out performing miracles, raising the dead and standing up to the authorities. The church grew quickly and was a great witness.
You say that after God's written word was produced/compiled, that prophecy, words of knowledge and tongues disappeared - and the church today is hopelessly split, in decline, generally speaking, a bad witness.
With gifts = life and growth; without some of the gifts, lifeless, fractious and dull.
Maybe that's just the problem; too many people believe certain gifts have ceased, or we have no need of them. We're certainly not the united body of Christ today; the church triumphant, driving out the powers of darkness and furthering the kingdom, as Jesus and the apostles did, are we? And yes, I am speaking generally; there may be some denominations, or isolated churches, are doing just that. They certainly seem to be in some other countries.

That scripture says it would cease .

Future - it doesn't say when.

and the overwhelming consensus in the Church from the witness of Church Fathers right up until the start of the pentecostal movement that tongues did indeed cease, I think is sufficient evidence.

The overwhelming evidence from Pentecostal, evangelical and charismatic churches today - and even on these forums - is that Christians speak in tongues and sometimes receive prophecies.
I think that is enough evidence - that, and the fact that Scripture does not give a time or date for these things ceasing.

So you believe everything you hear? How do you know they are not mistaken? Do you believe they received the Spirit subsequent to their salvation because they said so?

I don't believe everything I hear, but I do tend to trust my fellow believers, God's children, until or unless I am given reason to suspect or question them.

Do you believe that the 'baptism of the Spirit' is something subsequent to salvation because they said so? Scripture says otherwise.

No it doesn't.
Some people become/became Christians before they were baptised in the Holy Spirit. The Spirit was present at their conversion, or they would not have been able to be born again, John 3:3. That doesn't mean that they were baptised in the Spirit at the same time.
If I remember correctly, Denis Bennet, author of 9.00 in the morning, was a Christian, and clergyman for several years before being baptised in the Spirit. Some also say that that's what happened to John Wesley; before 1738 he was a clergyman, teaching, baptising, leading people to Christ but doing much of it in his own strength, after 1738 he was filled with the Spirit in a new way, or maybe for the first time, rode all over the country, preaching, led outdoor services and his ministry grew rapidly. Charles had received the Spirit a few days before, was healed of TB and immediately started writing hundreds of hymns. They were saved, and Christians before that however.

Do you believe they spoke in tongues as described in the New Testament? Scripture says otherwise.

No it doesn't.
There are several passages in Acts which talk of believers and Gentiles speaking in tongues; it doesn't say whether or not those tongues were recognisable languages.

How do you know it was New Testament tongues. Did it match the biblical description?

I've no idea - fact is though, neither have you.
I have certainly read testimonies of people who have spoken in tongues in a worship service, and unknown to them an unbeliever from the country whose language they spoke in, was present.

Again, the only description of tongues is Acts 2, where unbelievers heard the apostles speaking in their own language. Other times that tongues is mentioned in Scripture, there is no description of the sounds made or what it was like.

And in the absence of any re-definition, it must be presumed that the other instances of tongues are exactly the same as the first.

Why MUST it be assumed? Dangerous thing, assumption.

Because Paul is portraying an exaggerated scenario to make a point. He is saying even if someone could speak in tongues to the ultimate degree conceivable (speaking the language of angels), but not have love, it would be worthless. We can tell this because he does the same with 3 other gifts in the following verses - having the gift of prophesy to the ultimate degree of knowing ALL mysteries and ALL knowledge (ie. omniscience); having the gift of faith to the ultimate degree of moving mountains; and having the gift of giving to the ultimate degree of giving up ALL you possess to the poor and even giving up your own life. Paul is saying that even if someone had those gifts to such a superlative degree, without love, it would be to no avail.

Agreed - but that doesn't mean that those gifts have ceased or not are unimportant.

He told the church in Corinth that he spoke in tongues more than any of them did, that it was important, but should be used in the right way, and with order.
He said that they should desire the gift of prophecy and that this was more valuable than tongues.


It wasn't private prayer, it was corporate prayer spoken in the congregation. It doesn't say it was a non-human language.

Paul says;
"if I pray in a tongue, my spirit prays but my mind is unfruitful", 1 Corinthians 14:8.
Even if someone prays out loud in a tongue, it is a private prayer between their spirit and God.
It is not a public prayer unless everyone is listening, can understand what is being said and says "amen" to it. In my experience, people who are caught up in worship are focusing on God, praising him and listening to what he is saying to them - not eavesdropping on someone else's tongue to see if they understand it.

Where in scripture does it ever say prophecies come from a feeling?

Where in my post did I ever say that they do?

And if it is a false prophecy, as it would be if it was from a feeling, then clearly they do not have the gift of prophecy.

No, maybe not. That is not proof that the gift of prophecy does not exist though.
You may not be a teacher or evangelist - does that mean that these gifts don't exist? You may have never healed the sick; does that mean that Jesus didn't tell us to do this?

That was written when the gift was still active in the church, and even then there were false prophets around so they had to be tested.

In some sections of the church today - and in the church overseas - prophecy is active.
That some/many people don't recognise it could be why the church has little power today.

Because prophets, along with apostles, were only for the foundation of the church (Eph 2:20).

And yet the word Apostle means "sent", and we are all sent out by Jesus to proclaim the Gospel; some have the gift or prophecy today, but many more forth-tell the word of God - which is what prophecy is, it's not fortune telling - in sermons.
 
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Francis Drake

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Where is Christ's return mentioned here? 'The perfect' or 'completion' (as many versions better translate teleios) is not the return of the Christ. The word teleios in scripture is never associated with the return of Christ or anything eschatological.
What hypocrisy.
All through this thread, you cessationists insist that "that which is perfect" refers to the "completion of the canon of scripture", when there is no mention of it whatsoever in Corinthians, or anywhere else in scripture.

And as for the Greek Teleios here's Strong's description of the word which shows it as a perfect fit for Christ's return, when all things become perfect and complete.
Cognate: 5046 téleios (an adjective, derived from 5056 /télos, "consummated goal") – mature (consummated) from going through the necessary stages to reach the end-goal, i.e. developed into a consummating completion by fulfilling the necessary process (spiritual journey). See 5056 (telos).

[This root (tel-) means "reaching the end (aim)." It is well-illustrated with the old pirate's telescope, unfolding (extending out) one stage at a time to function at full-strength (capacity effectiveness).]
Scripture itself is the judge on whether today's claimed gifts match the descriptions of those in the bible.
Scripture is never the judge, despite what you keep claiming. All you keep doing is ranting on with your deeply flawed opinion of what scripture means, so flawed as to bear no relation to the original.
 
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Deborah D

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Really?
Let's see: the early church witnessed to the resurrection in the power of the Spirit, they made disciples, baptised them in the Holy Spirit and the believers spoke in tongues, there was prophecy and other gifts manifested - and they went out performing miracles, raising the dead and standing up to the authorities. The church grew quickly and was a great witness.
You say that after God's written word was produced/compiled, that prophecy, words of knowledge and tongues disappeared - and the church today is hopelessly split, in decline, generally speaking, a bad witness.
With gifts = life and growth; without some of the gifts, lifeless, fractious and dull.
Maybe that's just the problem; too many people believe certain gifts have ceased, or we have no need of them. We're certainly not the united body of Christ today; the church triumphant, driving out the powers of darkness and furthering the kingdom, as Jesus and the apostles did, are we? And yes, I am speaking generally; there may be some denominations, or isolated churches, are doing just that. They certainly seem to be in some other countries.



Future - it doesn't say when.



The overwhelming evidence from Pentecostal, evangelical and charismatic churches today - and even on these forums - is that Christians speak in tongues and sometimes receive prophecies.
I think that is enough evidence - that, and the fact that Scripture does not give a time or date for these things ceasing.



I don't believe everything I hear, but I do tend to trust my fellow believers, God's children, until or unless I am given reason to suspect or question them.



No it doesn't.
Some people become/became Christians before they were baptised in the Holy Spirit. The Spirit was present at their conversion, or they would not have been able to be born again, John 3:3. That doesn't mean that they were baptised in the Spirit at the same time.
If I remember correctly, Denis Bennet, author of 9.00 in the morning, was a Christian, and clergyman for several years before being baptised in the Spirit. Some also say that that's what happened to John Wesley; before 1738 he was a clergyman, teaching, baptising, leading people to Christ but doing much of it in his own strength, after 1738 he was filled with the Spirit in a new way, or maybe for the first time, rode all over the country, preaching, led outdoor services and his ministry grew rapidly. Charles had received the Spirit a few days before, was healed of TB and immediately started writing hundreds of hymns. They were saved, and Christians before that however.



No it doesn't.
There are several passages in Acts which talk of believers and Gentiles speaking in tongues; it doesn't say whether or not those tongues were recognisable languages.



I've no idea - fact is though, neither have you.
I have certainly read testimonies of people who have spoken in tongues in a worship service, and unknown to them an unbeliever from the country whose language they spoke in, was present.

Again, the only description of tongues is Acts 2, where unbelievers heard the apostles speaking in their own language. Other times that tongues is mentioned in Scripture, there is no description of the sounds made or what it was like.



Why MUST it be assumed? Dangerous thing, assumption.



Agreed - but that doesn't mean that those gifts have ceased or not are unimportant.

He told the church in Corinth that he spoke in tongues more than any of them did, that it was important, but should be used in the right way, and with order.
He said that they should desire the gift of prophecy and that this was more valuable than tongues.




Paul says;
"if I pray in a tongue, my spirit prays but my mind is unfruitful", 1 Corinthians 14:8.
Even if someone prays out loud in a tongue, it is a private prayer between their spirit and God.
It is not a public prayer unless everyone is listening, can understand what is being said and says "amen" to it. In my experience, people who are caught up in worship are focusing on God, praising him and listening to what he is saying to them - not eavesdropping on someone else's tongue to see if they understand it.



Where in my post did I ever say that they do?



No, maybe not. That is not proof that the gift of prophecy does not exist though.
You may not be a teacher or evangelist - does that mean that these gifts don't exist? You may have never healed the sick; does that mean that Jesus didn't tell us to do this?



In some sections of the church today - and in the church overseas - prophecy is active.
That some/many people don't recognise it could be why the church has little power today.



And yet the word Apostle means "sent", and we are all sent out by Jesus to proclaim the Gospel; some have the gift or prophecy today, but many more forth-tell the word of God - which is what prophecy is, it's not fortune telling - in sermons.

Good job refuting unbiblical beliefs. One thing to consider is that the gift of prophecy is not always used in an open church setting. I have this gift and the Holy Spirit usually leads me to use it one-on-one. It's an amazing gift and is generally very uplifting to the recipient of a prophetic word. I can tell you one thing for sure. The Holy Spirit is always right on the money with what He leads me to say. I've prophesied to strangers at church who looked at me funny and asked if we knew each other because everything I was saying about their lives was completely accurate. I can't imagine trying to go through this life not hearing God's voice and not speaking what He gives me to say. It's such a blessing!
 
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Francis Drake

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If you read, it says the gifts are to convert others and not for believers.
No it doesn't say that, quite the opposite in fact.
I've never heard that prophesy or tongues have converted anyone lately
Your understanding of scripture is wrong in both your comments.

1Cor14v1Follow after charity, and desire spiritual gifts, but rather that ye may prophesy. 2For he that speaketh in an unknown tongue speaketh not unto men, but unto God: for no man understandeth him; howbeit in the spirit he speaketh mysteries.
Speaking in tongues is Spirit led prayer directed towards God. It's not meant for addressing unbelievers.

3But he that prophesieth speaketh unto men to edification, and exhortation, and comfort. 4He that speaketh in an unknown tongue edifieth himself; but he that prophesieth edifieth the church.
Again, prophecy is primarily for building the church, not the unbelievers.

5I would that ye all spake with tongues, but rather that ye prophesied: for greater is he that prophesieth than he that speaketh with tongues, except he interpret, that the church may receive edifying.
Once a tongue is interpreted, it then it has the same value as a prophecy.

Of course, prophecy and other gifts may also be used in evangelism etc. but their primary use is stated as to build the church.

And yes, I and man many others have used prophecy and words of knowledge to bring people to the Lord.-

This man had come to do some decorating jobs at my work, so I had only just met him and had no prior knowledge of him whatsoever.
As we started talking, he became quite terrified with his eyes nearly popping out of his head. I didn't understand what the problem was, but he was clearly shocked and kept saying to me, "Who sent you, who sent you....?

I led him and his girl friend to the Lord the next day, and they were both filled with the Holy Spirit and tears of gratitude.

I am deeply saddened that you are so antagonistic to the gifts and operation of the Holy Spirit. You really are missing out on some wonderful God given gifts.
 
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swordsman1

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You say that after God's written word was produced/compiled, that prophecy, words of knowledge and tongues disappeared - and the church today is hopelessly split, in decline, generally speaking, a bad witness.

Well the church wasn't split on the issue of gifts until the Pentecostal/charismatic movement started.

With gifts = life and growth; without some of the gifts, lifeless, fractious and dull.

There has been plenty of life and growth in the Church since the apostolic age. I wouldn't say my Christian life or that of my church is lifeless and dull!


Future - it doesn't say when.

Future from the time of Paul's writing. It does say when - when completeness comes.

The overwhelming evidence from Pentecostal, evangelical and charismatic churches today - and even on these forums - is that Christians speak in tongues and sometimes receive prophecies.
I think that is enough evidence - that, and the fact that Scripture does not give a time or date for these things ceasing.

Sure charismatics and pentecostals claim to speak in tongues, but that doesn't make it true. Especially when you examine their tongues compared to the tongues of scripture.

I don't believe everything I hear, but I do tend to trust my fellow believers,

How do you know they are not mistaken?

Some people become/became Christians before they were baptised in the Holy Spirit. The Spirit was present at their conversion, or they would not have been able to be born again, John 3:3. That doesn't mean that they were baptised in the Spirit at the same time.
If I remember correctly, Denis Bennet, author of 9.00 in the morning, was a Christian, and clergyman for several years before being baptised in the Spirit. Some also say that that's what happened to John Wesley; before 1738 he was a clergyman, teaching, baptising, leading people to Christ but doing much of it in his own strength, after 1738 he was filled with the Spirit in a new way, or maybe for the first time, rode all over the country, preaching, led outdoor services and his ministry grew rapidly. Charles had received the Spirit a few days before, was healed of TB and immediately started writing hundreds of hymns. They were saved, and Christians before that however.

Scripture says all beleivers are baptized in the Spirit:

1 Cor 12:13 "For in one Spirit we were all baptized into one body—Jews or Greeks, slaves or free—and all were made to drink of one Spirit."

If you are not baptized in the Spirit you are not part of the body of Christ.

There are several passages in Acts which talk of believers and Gentiles speaking in tongues; it doesn't say whether or not those tongues were recognisable languages.

There is only one description of tongues in scripture, Act 2:4-11 - it was miraculously speaking a foreign human language you have never learned. There are no other scriptures giving us an alternative description. In the absence of any re-definition it must be presumed that all the other tongues are the same. Otherwise you are reading something into scripture that isn't there - the fallacy of eisegesis.

Why MUST it be assumed? Dangerous thing, assumption.

Because in the absence of a redefinition that is sound hermeneutics. It is a warranted assumption. What is dangerous is an unwarranted assumption where you claim it is something else but there is no evidence of it being so.

Even if someone prays out loud in a tongue, it is a private prayer between their spirit and God.
It is not a public prayer unless everyone is listening, can understand what is being said and says "amen" to it. In my experience, people who are caught up in worship are focusing on God, praising him and listening to what he is saying to them - not eavesdropping on someone else's tongue to see if they understand it.

But Paul rebuked that kind of prayer where people prayed aloud but nobody understood. He says "Otherwise, if you give thanks with your spirit, how can anyone in the position of an outsider say “Amen” to your thanksgiving when he does not know what you are saying?". It should have been a prayer that everyone could understand, a corporate prayer.

Where in my post did I ever say that they do?

I said "Today's prophecies are feelings that are verbalized and presumptuously declared to be 'a word from the Lord';"

You replied "I think it rather presumptuous to declare that they are NOT a word from the Lord."

So I said "Where in scripture does it ever say prophecies come from a feeling?"


No, maybe not. That is not proof that the gift of prophecy does not exist though.
You may not be a teacher or evangelist - does that mean that these gifts don't exist? You may have never healed the sick; does that mean that Jesus didn't tell us to do this?

No, but it rules out 99% of claimed prophecies today.

In some sections of the church today - and in the church overseas - prophecy is active.

False prophecy is.

And yet the word Apostle means "sent", and we are all sent out by Jesus to proclaim the Gospel; some have the gift or prophecy today, but many more forth-tell the word of God - which is what prophecy is, it's not fortune telling - in sermons.

That's not the meaning Eph 2:20. The apostles spoken of here are the foundation of the church, the 1st century apostles of Christ. And the NT prophets were also part of that same foundation. Is the foundation still being laid today?

Prophecy in scripture is not preaching or teaching. It's God speaking actual words to a prophet who then relays that message to others in the form "Thus says the Lord....<insert words here>".
 
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swordsman1

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All through this thread, you cessationists insist that "that which is perfect" refers to the "completion of the canon of scripture", when there is no mention of it whatsoever in Corinthians, or anywhere else in scripture.

Well "the perfect" or "completion" must either mean the return of Christ or the completion of the canon. The evidence from the context, seeing that Christ or his returned is never mentioned in the passage, is it is more likely to be the latter.

And as for the Greek Teleios here's Strong's description of the word which shows it as a perfect fit for Christ's return, when all things become perfect and complete.
Cognate: 5046 téleios (an adjective, derived from 5056 /télos, "consummated goal") – mature (consummated) from going through the necessary stages to reach the end-goal, i.e. developed into a consummating completion by fulfilling the necessary process (spiritual journey). See 5056 (telos).

[This root (tel-) means "reaching the end (aim)." It is well-illustrated with the old pirate's telescope, unfolding (extending out) one stage at a time to function at full-strength (capacity effectiveness).]

"going through the necessary stages to reach the end-goal" and "fulfilling the necessary process (spiritual journey)" are hardly apt descriptions of the instantaneous and glorious return of the Lord. In the passage Paul describes the completion process using the metaphor of a child maturing into a adult (1 Cor 13:11). Again, hardly an apt metaphor for the sudden and awesome Day of the Lord.

Scripture is never the judge, despite what you keep claiming. All you keep doing is ranting on with your deeply flawed opinion of what scripture means, so flawed as to bear no relation to the original.

Then go ahead and refute my interpretation of scripture. You haven't done so yet. You've only poured out vitriol.
 
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swordsman1

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Speaking in tongues is Spirit led prayer directed towards God. It's not meant for addressing unbelievers.

It was for unbelievers in Acts 2, and in 1 Cor 14:22.

Once a tongue is interpreted, it then it has the same value as a prophecy.

No it doesn't. Read the verse again.

In 1 Cor 12:28 Paul lists the gifts in order of importance. Prophecy was 2nd only to apostles. Tongues is right at the end of the list.
 
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Alithis

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He speaks English all the time, but it is all tongues? He doesn't understand a word of it?
actually this has happened to him instantaneously with many languages ..he was preaching the gospel and the sound changed and he found himself speaking in another language . done deal he now speaks that language . there are varying kinds of tongues.
devils also exist inside of people and i have both experienced them come out and in Jesus name cast them out .. with that person falling to the floor and the demon crying out and leaving the person .
and i have seen many people (including myself ) instantaneously healed etc ... . you see the problem for the cessation is "unbelief " because all these signs follow "those that believe "
not those who do not believe .

im not going to debate it with you . the simple fact is when it comes to these aspects of faith in the lord Jesus - a cessationist is nothing more then an unbeliever in some of the things written in the bible -its a selective and ineffectual faith in carnal reasoning .
that doesn't mean you dont identify as a Christian because i know you will attempt to silence us by falsly accusing people of saying your not Christian but no one is saying that . because we accept that you identify as christian . so be it . but as a self identifying Christian you do not believe all the scriptures .
if you did .. these signs would follow you too .. OR ... the lord Jesus would be a liar
and these signs are not isolated random cases . we see them weekly sometimes daily . but then we are full time gospel workers having believed the words of Jesus we gave up jobs and home to go out and preach the gospel where ever we can full time .
 
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