Inner-City Christian
Discernment Ministry
- Here is a file I located on the topic
of the ceasing of the supernatural sign gifts, tongues specifically.
I encourage you to download and print off this article and read
it through. I believe the author makes a very strong case.
- Bibliotheca
Sacra / October-December 1988
- The Cessation of the Sign
Gifts
- --
- Thomas R. Edgar
- Professor of New Testament Literature
and Exegesis
- Capital Bible Seminary, Lanham,
Maryland
-
- Referring to the charismatic movement
Hollenweger states that "in the not too distant future there
- will be more Christians belonging to this
type of Christianity than to the Anglican community. They will
number almost as many as all other Protestants together."
He feels that the numerical and perhaps
- the spiritual center of Christianity will
shift to "Indigenous Non-white" or "Third World
Pentecostal" churches. The validity of such a prevalent
force is an issue that cannot be ignored.
-
- The Essential Question: From God or Not
from God?
-
- As with any other doctrinal issue it is
important to know the truth or the error of the "charismatic"
position. This is not a purely doctrinal matter, since in the
charismatic movement in all its various forms, such as Pentecostalism,
neo-Pentecostalism, "power evangelism," and the "signs
and wonders" movement, emphasis is placed on phenomena and
subjective experiences. These experiences, which transcend doctrinal
considerations and doctrinal boundaries, are the raison
- d'etre of the movement. They are not merely
the daily outworking of one's doctrine as distinct from
- his doctrinal position, but are usually
crisis events that allegedly go beyond normal, traditional Christian
experience.
- These so-called "spiritual"
experiences are either from God or not from God. There can be
no neutral or partially true position. Either they are biblically
true or they are false experiences. If they are biblically false
then the issue is much more serious than merely another view
of the Christian life, since the charismatic movement involves
a spiritual experience that attempts to be in direct contact
with supernatural forces. Whether the charismatics are correct
can only be determined from the Scriptures and other relevant
facts. By the very nature of the issue, the "gifts,"
such as tongues, healings, and signs and wonders, so prevalent
in today's charismatic movement, are either from God or not from
God. There can be no middle ground.
- Evidence Contrary to the Validity of the
Phenomena
-
- Several factors give evidence that the
phenomena of the charismatic movement are not the gifts and activities
of the Holy Spirit in the New Testament. On the other hand charismatic
proponents have given no evidence, other than their assumption,
that these are the same phenomena. That their numbers are growing,
that the followers are enthusiastic, and that there are alleged
miracles are not evidence that the phenomena are from the Holy
Spirit, since all these occur in other religions. To argue that
the New Testament gifts could occur today or that no verse rules
out such a possibility is not enough; it must also be shown that
the modern charismatic "gifts" are the same as in the
New Testament. The proponents of the charismatic movement have
been unsuccessful in proving either the first (the possibility
of the gifts today) or the second (that these are the same phenomena).
Are
- all phenomena automatically from the Holy
Spirit simply because someone makes such an assertion, unless
a verse can be found that directly states they are not? It is
not enough merely to assert
- that charismatic phenomena are New Testament
phenomena. There must be evidence that they are the same.
-
- The Evidence Of History
-
- If the miraculous gifts of the New Testament
age had continued in the church, one would expect an unbroken
line of occurrences from apostolic times to the present. If they
are of God, why should such
- miracles be absent for centuries?
-
- The entire controversy exists because
the miraculous gifts of theNew Testament age did cease and did
not occur for almost 1,900 years of church history and certainly
have not continued in an
- unbroken line. Questions about their presence
today as well as differing opinions, even among charismatics,
regarding the nature of tongues, prophecy, and certain other
gifts are due to the fact that they ceased. Chrysostom, a fourth-century
theologian, testified that they had ceased so long before his
time that no one was certain of their characteristics.
-
- History contradicts the charismatics.
Though some have attempted to prove that tongues and other miraculous
gifts have occurred in the postapostolic history of the church,
- the very paucity and sporadic
nature of alleged occurrences is evidence against this claim. Referring to alleged instances of tongues-speaking,
Hinson, a church historian, sums up the
- situation this way: "The first sixteen
centuries of its history were lean ones indeed. . . if the first
five centuries were lean the next were starvation years for the
practice in Western Christendom
- and doubtful ones in Eastern Christendom."
-
- After a few alleged instances in the second
century there is a gap of almost 1,000 years before a few more
occur. Obviously it would not have been difficult to produce
evidence for these gifts during the apostolic age. Why then is
there such a dearth of evidence if the gifts continued throughout
church history?
- The alleged instances are even more rare
if restricted to genuine believers, and if hearsay evidence is
omitted. If instances of the gift of healing rather than supposed
answers to prayer are considered, the alleged instances all but
vanish. That these miraculous workings ceased in the past can
hardly
- be refuted, and this is recognized by
many charismatics. Dayton feels that many charismatics actually
prefer to grant that certain gifts ceased, since they regard
today's phenomena as a latter-day pouring out of the Spirit.
-
- Explanations are unrealistic. It is one
thing for a doctrine such as justification by faith to be emporarily
lost due to man's frailty. It is another thing entirely for miraculous
signs and wonders to be missing. Those at Pentecost were not
expecting to speak as they did.
-
- In Acts no tongues speaker was previously
aware of the existence of the gift; yet they spoke. They could
hardly have had faith in their ability to perform miracles or
to speak in tongues, since they were unaware of such gifts. They
did not obtain or lose the ability because of their belief or
lack of belief in the charismata. If God gave these gifts during
the history of the church, they would have occurred regardless
of man's frailty. To argue that the gifts faded away in the postapostolic
church because of a failure to believe in miracles evades the
facts of history and has no biblical support.
-
- First Corinthians 12-14 implies that the
early church was only too inclined toward such gifts rather than
against them. In almost every religion men have been inclined
toward the miraculous rather than toward rejecting obvious miracles.
And yet some argue that miracles ceased or nearly so in the early
- church--an era when belief in the supernatural
was rampant and when the signs and wonders actually occurred--because
of disbelief in miracles! Yet it is claimed that in the most
rationalistic of ages, when no miracles were occurring, 19- and
20th-century Christians believed to the extent that the gifts
reoccurred, and reoccurred on the scale of today's claims. Since
modern Christians are so receptive to signs and wonders and modern
man is so willing to believe the charismatic claims, on what
basis can one assume that the early Christians would refuse to
do so? Those willing to believe religious miracles are always
plentiful. To claim that this "miraculous infusion"
of the Spirit gives joy, purpose, power for service, and revitalization
of the church, and at the same time claim that such a tremendous
working was ignored, rejected, and allowed to drop out of the
early church which experienced it, is illogical. The only reasonable
explanation for the lack of these gifts in church history is
that God did not give them. If He had given them, they would
have occurred.
-
- Since these gifts and signs did cease,
the burden of proof is entirely on the charismatics to prove
their validity. Too long Christians have assumed that the noncharismatic
must produce incontestable biblical evidence that the miraculous
sign gifts did cease. However, noncharismatics have no burden
to prove this, since it has already been proved by history. It
is an irrefutable fact admitted by many Pentecostals. Therefore
the charismatics must prove biblically that the sign gifts will
start up again during the Church Age and that today's phenomena
are this reoccurrence. In other words they must prove that their
experiences are the reoccurrence of gifts that have not occurred
for almost
- 1,900 years.
-
- "Latter day" explanations are
inadequate. Many Pentecostals hold that the sign gifts did cease
and that they have reoccurred in these "latter days."
This must be demonstrated from Scripture, however. There is no
biblical evidence that there will be a reoccurrence in the church
of the sign gifts or that believers will work miracles near the
end of the Church Age. However, there is ample evidence that
near the end of the age there will be false prophets who perform
miracles, prophesy, and cast out demons in Jesus' name (cf. Matt.
7:22-23; 24:11, 24; 2 Thess. 2:9-12). During the Church Age there
will be false leaders who fashion themselves as ministers of
righteousness (2 Cor. 11:13-15). During the Tribulation period,
there is no indication that believers, other than the two witnesses
of Revelation 11:3-12, will perform miracles. Those performed
by the two witnesses are exceptional, and their actions are comparable
to those of Old Testament prophets rather than to those of the
apostles. The two witnesses are not part of the church, and if
they were, they could hardly be considered typical of the church.
-
- The "latter rain" arguments
are incorrectly based on verses that actually are referring to
seasonal rainfall in Israel. Hosea 6:3 and Joel 2:23, for example,
refer not to some unusual outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the
last days of the Church Age. They refer instead to spring rains,
in contrast to early rains in the fall.
-
- The arguments based on the expression
"in the last days" in Acts 2:16-21 are also invalid.
If the "last days" referred to in Acts 2:17 includes
the day of Pentecost, the beginning of the Church Age, and "if
this is that" (v. 16) includes Pentecost, then it cannot
mean at the same time the "last days"of this Church
Age. On the other hand if the "last days" do not include
Pentecost, then Pentecost was not a fulfillment of Joel's prophecy,
and Acts 2:16-21 refers specifically to Israel and is still future.
Either way this passage gives no evidence for a reoccurrence
of miraculous gifts during the "last (latter)
- days" of the church. The present
charismatic movement is characterized by phenomena that began
in the church about 100 years ago, which apart from any historical
connection or evidence are claimed to be the same as the miracles
performed in the apostolic age. It is simply naive to accept
this claim without some direct historical link or solid biblical
evidence that these present phenomena are the same as those in
the days of the apostles. The most reliable evidence would be
a direct historical link with the apostolic gifts due to their
continuity in the church. However, as already argued, history
testifies to the contrary. The gifts ceased and there is no reason
to expect their presence or reoccurrence today.
-
- Lack Of Similarity With
The New Testament
-
- For any phenomena to make credible claim
to be the same as the gifts and miracles of the apostolic age
there must be great similarity between the two. Any phenomena
can be intentionally duplicated or copied. Therefore similarity
alone cannot prove the modern phenomena are genuine. Conversely
a lack of similarity is definitely evidence against the claim
that they are the same as the New Testament gifts and miracles.
-
- An examination of the New Testament reveals
that the modern charismatic phenomena are not sufficiently similar
to those of the apostolic age. Where are the tongues of fire
and the rushing of a mighty wind as on the day of Pentecost?
Do missionaries blind their opponents as Paul did? Do church
leaders discern hypocrisy and pronounce the immediate death of
members as in Acts 5:1-11? Do evangelists amaze an entire city
with miracles as did Philip (8:5-8)? Are they then taken to another
place of ministry by the Holy Spirit (vv. 39-40)? Are entire
multitudes healed by merely being in the shadow of the healer
(5:15)? Do prophets give specific prophecies which come to pass
soon after (11:27-28)?
-
- The miracles and signs of the apostolic
age were clearly and overtly miraculous. Even the opponents of
the gospel could not refute the miracles of the apostolic age.
But today's "signs and wonders" cannot be verified
even by those who are neutral or friendly to the movement. A
detailed comparison with specific individual gifts shows an amazing
lack of similarity between the New Testament gifts and the modern
"charismatic" gifts.
-
- The gift of healing. The New Testament
gift of healing is a specific gift to an individual enabling
him to heal. It is not to be confused with healing performed
by God in answer to prayer. New Testament healings include those
with verifiable afflictions and handicaps such as the man who
was crippled from birth (Acts 3:1-10). The healings were instantaneous,
complete, and obvious to all. The man crippled from birth had
never walked, but he was instantly able to walk and jump. The
healings in the apostolic age never failed regardless of the
faith of the recipient. They did not depend on direct
- physical contact (5:15). There were no
preliminaries, healing meetings, or incantations. The healer
merely stated to the individual, even when the individual was
unaware of the intention to heal (3:1-10), something equivalent
to the words, "In Jesus' name, stand up and walk."
The healings were usually in public, performed on unbelievers,
and often enmasse.
-
- The modern charismatic movement made little
impact on the basis of speaking in tongues alone. It was not
until "healing" was added that the movement began to
grow in significant numbers.
-
- Today's healers admittedly often
fail. This is blamed on the lack of faith of the sick rather
than on the healer. The alleged healings are seldom instantaneous
or complete. They usually are not healings of objectively verifiable
illnesses; they often pertain to internal disorders such as "emotional
healing." Rather than being irrefutable, they are unverified
or even denied by those neutral.
They involve healing meetings, preliminaries, incantations, and
usually repeated visits. They are not performed in the streets,
en masse, or at a distance. In a crowd they are usually performed
on only a select few. They are never performed on those who are
not aware of the "healer" or his intention to "heal."
-
- There is little correspondence between
modern-day charismatic "healings" and the healings
recorded in the New Testament. The differences are so vast that
many of today's healers are careful to point out that they do
not have the gift of healing, but are merely those to whom God
often responds with healing. No one heals today in such a way
that it is clearly the New Testament gift of healing.
- Exorcism of demons. The miraculous ability to exorcise demons directly
also needs to be differentiated from answers to prayer (James
5:14). The exorcisms in Acts concerned those clearly recognized
as "possessed," including a girl with a mantic gift
(Acts 16:16-18). They were clearly differentiated from those
who were merely ill (5:16). They were not nebulous cases of emotional
problems such as "personality meltdown," frustration,
tension, the "demon of worry," the "demon
- of drugs or alcoholism," as is often
the case in alleged exorcisms today. Such can hardly be considered
demonism in the New Testament sense.
-
- The New Testament instances of exorcism
never failed, were without preliminaries, were instantaneous,
were usually performed in public, often en masse, usually on
unbelievers, and in the case of the mantic girl (Acts 16:16-18)
apart from any cooperation of the demonized. Today's "exorcisms"
often fail, often require repeated sessions, are usually unverified
as demonism, are never en masse, seldom if ever occur in public,
and are only on the cooperative "faithful." Many cases
are similar to common psychiatric or religious counseling sessions
that are claimed to be "demon exorcism." This is not
to suggest that genuine cases of demon possession may not exist.
The point is that merely claiming to exorcise demons gives no
evidence that one is actually doing
- so.
-
- Raising the dead. Dorcas had been dead for some time when Peter
apart from fanfare instantaneously raised her (Acts 9:40). The
incident regarding Eutychus (20:7-12) concerns a boy who fell
three stories and was dead. Paul with no fanfare pronounced him
alive. In the apostolic age with all the miracles, exorcisms,
healings en masse, and so on, there are only these two low-profile
incidents of raising the dead. This action was apparently rare
even for the apostles. There is no reason to expect this today.
No modern-day "raising of the dead" has been verified.
Wimber refers to a man who fell, hit his head, was apparently
unconscious for three minutes, and "came to" with a
bump on his head. After Wimber and others prayed the bump eventually
went away. This is ncredible, not as a miracle, but that anyone
would consider this as a possible raising of the dead. Would
anyone have been convinced by such a "miracle" that
Jesus was the Son of God or that the apostles represented God?
-
- The gift of tongues. The nature, purpose, and other characteristics
of the gift of tongues, including a complete exegetical discussion
and refutation of the concept of private or devotional tongues
is included elsewhere. The tongues of the apostolic age
were genuine miracles, since they were the ability to speak previously
unlearned foreign languages, rather than the "charismatic
tongues" of today, which can easily be duplicated.
The only passage describing the nature of tongues speaking is
Acts 2:4-11, where they are definitely languages. Peter
stated that the tongues-speaking in Cornelius's house (10:46)
was the same as on the day of Pentecost (11:17). And there is
no reason to assume the instance in Acts 19:6 was different.
Since 1 Corinthians 14 repeatedly states that the tongues-speaking
in Corinth was in an assembly of believers, why then was it mysterious
and why was there lack of understanding? It was because the believers
did not understand the foreign languages of the tongues-speakers.
The mystery was not because the tongues in 1 Corinthians differed
in nature from the tongues in Acts.
-
- New Testament tongues were verifiable
foreign languages. The term glw'ssa means "language"
and is never used for ecstatic speech. By contrast, today's "tongues"
have never been verified as actual languages. All objective studies
by impartial linguists indicate that they do not have the haracteristics
common to languages.
-
- The New Testament gift of tongues
is specifically said to be a sign for unbelievers (1 Cor. 14:22).
This is how it functioned at Pentecost. All instances were public,
not private. The people
who spoke in tongues in Acts (2:4; 10:46; 19:6) were not previously
aware that the ability or gift existed, and in Acts 10:46 and
19:6 the people were not previously aware of the gospel of Jesus
Christ. They could not have been seeking or in any way exercising
belief in such a gift, and yet they received it. There is no
indication that the New Testament speakers spoke in a trance;
they were in control of the phenomenon. Perhaps the most outstanding
contrast is usage. The gift of tongues in
- the New Testament functioned, as did all
the other gifts, for ministry to others (1 Cor. 12:1-30; 1 Pet.
4:10), rather than primarily for the benefit of the speaker as
in the modern charismatic movement.
-
- There is no similarity between today's
tongues and the New Testament gift. Today's charismatic
proponents are wrong regarding the nature, purpose, use, and
every other aspect of tongues. There is no reason to
assume merely on the basis of their claim that they are correct
in identifying their tongues-speaking--which can easily be duplicated
and is common to man--as the New Testament gift of tongues.
-
- Conclusion. The "charismatic gifts" of today are
not similar to the New Testament phenomena either in general
perspective or in the details. There is no evidence to conclude
that they are the same; there is every reason to conclude that
they are not. The historical fact that the New Testament gifts
ceased long ago and the fact that there is no historical link
whatever between the charismatic phenomena and the New Testament
gifts require the same conclusion. The only remaining possibility
for giving credence to the modern charismatic claims would be
to produce direct statements of
- Scripture that the apostolic phenomena
will always be present in the church, or that they will specifically
be in the modern church despite their cessation through most
of church history. Even if this were produced, there must also
be evidence that the charismatic phenomena are somehow the same
phenomena referred to in the passages. However, there is no specific
biblical evidence such as this. There is no biblical statement
that requires a denial of historical fact or that requires an
equation of such dissimilar entities merely on the assertion
of the proponents. All objective evidence is contrary to the
charismatic claims. It is not sufficient to assert that by faith
their claims must be taken contrary to the evidence. This is
existential naivete, not faith. Faith is trust in biblical
- evidence rather than in experience.
-
- Biblical Evidence For Cessation
-
- Even though there is no evidence for the
continuation or the complete cessation of tongues, this does
not mean that one cannot take a position on this issue. Many
doctrines, such as the Trinity, are not directly stated but are
derived from the study and correlation of passages of Scripture.
There are several indications in the Scriptures that the gifts
of tongues, healing, and miracles (signs and wonders) will not
continue. The charismatic movement in all its forms rests not
on exegetical evidence that the gifts will continue, but on the
assumption contrary to history that since they occurred in the
apostolic age they should also occur today. The foundation for
this assumption is
- nonexistent.
- The New Testament church was
not characterized by power and miracles as the charismatics assume. It was characterized by the problems addressed
in the epistles (including, e.g., the problems that beset the
Corinthian church) and the problems of the churches described
in Revelation 2 and 3. Miracles were performed with very
few exceptions only by the apostles (Acts 2:43; 5:12).
Those who "turned the world upside down" were the apostles,
not the churches as a whole. The charismatics assume that the
church today should be like their imaginary church. They assume
that the entire church today should be able to do all the apostles
did in the New Testament.
-
- If the church as a whole had performed
miracles, it is only an assumption, apart from
- evidence, that this should be
true today. This assumption
is not interpretation. The assumption that the miraculous events
recorded in the Book of Acts should occur today is "a distinct
hermeneutic, a distinctively Pentecostal manner of appropriating
the Scriptures." This development of theology on the basis
of narrative rather than on direct teaching of Scripture is always
a precarious methodology.
- General biblical evidence. Moses performed a series of miracles. However,
they did not continue throughout the Old Testament nor were other
believers expected to do the same. The Old Testament prophets
occasionally performed miracles, but Israel in general was not
expected to do so, nor did the miracles continue throughout Israel's
history. The fact that some individuals on special occasions
in biblical history performed miracles did not result in others
doing the same or in a continuity of those miracles. So there
is no reason to assume that since the apostles and a few members
of the early church performed miracles, they are to be expected
today.
-
- Specific biblical evidence. In addition to evidence from history there is
also specific biblical evidence that certain gifts were temporary.
The term "apostle," commonly used in ancient times
in the sense of "representative," in a few passages
describes representatives of a local church. This is not the
New Testament gift of apostleship. Nor can this term, contrary
to its normal meaning and contrary to the New Testament descriptions,
be equated with the modern missionary merely on the basis of
etymology.
- The only individuals in the New Testament
who clearly possessed the miraculous gift of apostle of the Lord
Jesus Christ and could perform miracles as required of an apostle
(2 Cor. 12:12) were the Twelve and Paul. Perhaps Barnabas and
James can be included. Almost every branch of the church, including
most Pentecostals, has held that apostles in this sense have
not continued in the church. The charismatic reliance on the
narrative of Acts is often avoided when defining "apostles"
or "prophets," as too restrictive. These gifts can
be precisely delineated, however. Imprecise use of Scripture
is a common failing among charismatics. No matter how one tries
to broaden the term "apostle," there is little doubt
that apostles such as the Twelve and Paul did not continue. If
they did not, then all things are not as they were in the New
Testament church, all miraculous gifts did not continue as in
the beginning church, and at least one gift in the New Testament
did not continue.
-
- In addition the New Testament sets standards
for an apostle that preclude the continuance of this gift. Not
only must an apostle be able to perform miracles (2 Cor. 12:12),
not only was the early church very careful about granting anyone,
even Paul, the title of "apostle" (Gal. 2:1-10), but
also an apostle must have seen the resurrected Lord (1 Cor. 9:1-2;
Acts 1:22-26). Paul explicitly stated that he was the last one
to see the resurrected Lord (1 Cor. 15:8), and he specifically
connected this fact with his
- apostleship. This requirement for apostleship
refers to genuine appearances of the resurrected Christ and not
to "visions." There have been no resurrection appearances
since the apostolic age. Paul clearly stated that the last appearance
was to him. (Revelation 1:12-18 refers to a vision, and is not
an appearance of the resurrected Lord in bodily form on earth.)
Therefore apostles in the sense of the Twelve and Paul cannot
occur today.
- When Paul wrote that all gifts
were given to the church (1 Cor. 1:7) and benefited the church,
he did not mean that all believers were apostles or performed
miracles, but that the apostolic, miraculous ministry was experienced
by and benefited the Corinthian church. Paul wrote in Ephesians
2:20 that the apostles and prophets are the foundation for the
universal church. This at least implies that they were only for
the beginning, and this accords with the other specifics mentioned
above. Since "apostle" in the full sense of the gift
was only a temporary gift and did not continue in the church,
the biblical precedent is
- established that some gifts given
in the apostolic age did not continue and were only temporary.
It is contrary to Scripture to assume that all gifts and all
happenings of the apostolic church are to continue and to be
expected in today's church.
-
- Since the ones who performed the
miracles were only in the beginning church, it is logical that
the miracles themselves were only for the apostolic age. Since
the ability to perform such miracles was evidence of apostleship
(2 Cor. 12:12), then with rare exceptions others could not have
performed such signs and wonders, and they would not continue
when the apostles ceased.
In addition to this implication the temporary nature of miracles
is directly supported by Scripture. Mark wrote that the apostles
went forth in accord with the Lord's instructions and preached
(aorist tense) everywhere and the Lord confirmed their word with
signs. This is all placed in the past at the time of Mark's writing
(Mark 16:20; the time of the present participle is relative to
the past tense of the main verb). The same is true in Hebrews
2:3-4, which says miracles were performed by eyewitnesses of
the Lord (apostles), and were performed by God to confirm the
word of the eyewitnesses. All this was past at the time Hebrews
was written (the main verb is past tense and the participle is
relative in time to the main verb "was confirmed").
In both cases the signs, wonders, and miracles are referred to
as being in the past at the time of writing; they were not referred
to as occurring at that time. In both passages miracles were
performed by the apostles eyewitnesses) and are described as
intended by God as evidence to authenticate the apostles' preaching.
-
- James 5:14 does not instruct the sick
to look for a healer or for someone with the ability to heal.
Rather it instructs the sick to call for the elders and they
are to pray for him. This is basically in accord with the procedure
in noncharismatic churches, but is in direct contrast to what
would be expected if the gift of healing were available for believers.
Either the gift was not to be used to heal believers, or the
only other option is that it had ceased.
-
- Conclusion. There is ample biblical evidence that the miraculous
gifts ceased with the apostolic age. To assume that such gifts
are permanent is contrary to the Scriptures in general and to
the biblical precedent that some gifts such as full apostles
of the Lord definitely ceased. History is against the charismatic
claims. The dissimilarity between the New Testament gifts and
the alleged gifts of the charismatics also contradicts their
claims. The assumption that because these gifts existed in the
apostolic age they should also exist today is a gratuitous assumption
contrary to objective evidence. It is also an assumption contrary
to scriptural principles and specific biblical evidence. There
is no teaching in Scripture that the church should look for such
miraculous gifts, nor are they referred to in the passages discussing
the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22-23), spiritual
- warfare (Eph. 6:10-18), the life of faith
(Eph. 5:18; Col. 3:12-17), and requirements for church
- leaders (1 Tim. 3:1-13; Titus 1:5-9) as
necessary for the believer to lead a spiritual life.
-
- Characteristics That Refute
Charismatic Claims
-
- Various present-day forms of the charismatic
movement are offshoots of Pentecostalism. All have the same basic
ideology and all have arisen because of the modern Pentecostal
movement. The primary focus for the individual, no matter how
their theologians may describe it, is experiential. Many people
in the charismatic movement emphasize the miraculous nature of
this experience seemingly for personal benefit more than service
to others.
-
- Theological Associations
-
- In Pentecostalism the doctrine
of Christian perfectionism assumed a specific form in the inaccurate
concept of a postconversion crisis experience, a "second
blessing." This teaching with its concept of an effusion
of power from the Holy Spirit resulted in the expectancy of and
search to obtain overt "power" as described in Acts.
-
- The movement crosses all theological boundaries.
Speaking in tongues is present in non-Christian religions
such as Buddhism and Hinduism, and in cults such as Mormonism.
Healing, miracles, and exorcisms are also common in non-Christian
religions. In conventional Christian circles the charismatic
movement includes Protestants and Roman Catholics, liberals and
conservatives, and individuals in many denominations. Those who
believe in the inspiration of the Bible, justification by faith,
and many other doctrines--as well as those who do not--are also
involved.
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- Questionable Theology
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- The concept of the "second blessing"
or "baptism or fullness of the Spirit" presupposes
that while Jesus' death on the cross paid for sin, it is insufficient
to empower for service, to enable one to be spiritual, or to
give effectiveness in prayer. This differs drastically from the
teaching of the New Testament. The view that only those who speak
in tongues have real communication with God is contrary to the
biblical teaching that all believers have full access to God.
Romans 8:26 states that all believers are helped in prayer by
the Spirit with inaudible, nonuttered, internal groanings.
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- The tongues movement presupposes that
communication with the spiritual realm is more direct when it
is apart from the mind. Such a concept, though found in various
religions, is contrary to biblical Christianity. This emphasis
on a level of communication that bypasses the mind and is not
direct communication from the believer to God is a dangerous
teaching. This interest in "supernatural" events, to
primarily as convincing signs but as the daily experience of
believers that supposedly places them in contact with the supernatural,
is dangerous. This middle-level, spirit realm, called the "excluded
middle," is an area of charismatic emphasis.
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- The emphasis on experience, particularly
in this level above the rational, often results in emphasizing
"experience" over Scripture. In a recent nationally
televised program on the subject of televangelism several charismatically
oriented evangelists appealed to the "call" as the
license for a sinning preacher to continue his ministry. They
made no appeal to the Scriptures.
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- Similarities To Non-Christian
Religions
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- The modern-day charismatic movement is
disturbingly similar to practices common in paganism, while at
the same time it lacks correspondence to biblical miracles. Trancelike
states and communications on a level apart from the mind are
common in paganism. An emphasis on physical healing and exorcism
for the benefit of adherents is common. The experience of a power
or force "overcoming" the participants is similar to
pagan practice. The bizarre and often wild practices of early
Pentecostalism seem similar to pagan religion.
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- The idea of contact and interest in the
spirit world, the "excluded middle" between God and
man, is also common to pagan religions.
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- The Effects Of The Movement
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- All groups and doctrinal persuasions of
Christendom have experienced theological and moral problems with
both their leaders and laymen. As other Christians have experienced,
so a number of charismatic leaders have led lives that are morally
or ethically contrary to Scripture. If not more common, this
is at least as common as among noncharismatics. Therefore it
may be safely concluded that all the alleged miracles and so-called
tongues-speaking have not produced any genuine spiritual advance
over noncharismatics. It has produced enthusiasm for the miraculous,
but this is not to be equated with spirituality.
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- All these supposedly miraculous events
have produced no advance in biblical knowledge or spiritual living.
The basic doctrines common to the movement are not original with
charismatics. Their main claim to biblical knowledge is the assumption
that the current church should be like the early church. Since
the movement has not produced more spiritual believers or any
advance in biblical or theological knowledge, what has it accomplished?
Is it not amazing that a movement that claims to have restored
power for service, ability to communicate with God more than
others have, ability for self-edification, power to heal and
perform other miracles, and ability to prophesy and receive direct
revelation, has produced no significant advance in spirituality
or in biblical or theological knowledge? Is it not inconsistent
that a movement which claims to be in direct contact with the
Holy Spirit, to have all gifts such as prophecy, apostleship,
and the word of knowledge, to communicate directly with God by
tongues-speaking and other means, can at the same time include
Roman Catholics, conservative and liberal Protestants, amillennialists,
- premillennialists, Calvinists,
Arminians, those who deny the verbal inspiration of the Bible,
and those who reject Christ's vicarious atonement on the cross?
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- Apparently the Holy Spirit is
not concerned with communicating any information to correct all
these differences, many of which are crucial and some of which
are incorrect. All this direct communication with the Spirit
has apparently done nothing to correct even basic errors. It
has not even produced unity among charismatics regarding the
nature and purpose of many of the gifts. This movement has solved
no theological issue, produced no advance in biblical knowledge,
and has not produced more spiritual Christians. Would such an
effusion of the genuine Spirit of God produce so little? Other than enthusiasm there
- seems to be no spiritual advantage to
this movement and the noncharismatics are not missing out on
any genuine spiritual benefit. On the negative side the movement
has split churches, and through its televangelists the movement
has had one of the most significant negative impacts on the testimony
of the church in recent history. These characteristics are evidence
that the charismatic phenomena are not the New Testament phenomena,
that the genuine gifts are not present.
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- Conclusion
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- In every attempt to prove that the New
Testament gifts exist today, the charismatic movement fails.
The objective evidence of history and lack of correspondence
with the New Testament indicate that the genuine miraculous gifts
ceased and have not reoccurred. Biblical evidence indicates that
these gifts ceased with the apostolic age. The theological associations
and results of today's so-called miraculous gifts are contrary
to gifts given by God. The movement has not produced
Christians who are more spiritually mature, as would be expected
of a genuine occurrence of the New Testament gifts. Apparently
a Christian experiences no spiritual loss by not becoming involved
in the charismatic movement.
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- On the other hand there is a dangerous
similarity to non-Christian practices, there is a dangerous interest
in supernatural phenomena that give no evidence of being from
God, and there is a disturbing interest in the spiritual world
somewhere between God and man. Since evidence points to the cessation
of the miraculous gifts in the apostolic age, no one can be confident
that the charismatic phenomena are from God. Since believers are warned to avoid contact with
the intermediate spiritual world and since they should do only
what they are confident God approves, no one should experiment
in the realm of the charismatic phenomena.
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