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John Whitten said:John for Christ wrote,It seems to me that you might be assuming a bit yourself.
Not really, John. I am suggesting probability not conclusion.
Hi John W.,
You assume that there are no apostles after the Twelve (or you include Paul and/or Matthias). You base this on what you feel to be a "pattern".
That's not probability, that's assumption. The evidence is not strong enough FROM SCRIPTURE to make this a probability.
John Whitten said:People are popping up all the time making themselves out to be apostolic, speaking for God, introducing some new doctrine, theory or practice, including "spiritual gifts" that have no foundation with the real gifts of the spirit. The airwaves are crowded with the religious charlatans, leading souls astray. Neither Dr. Allen nor myself have indicated that we desire or attempt to limit God. "With men this is impossible, but with God, nothing is impossible". God is sovereign, He can and does as He wills, bless His Name!!! What we are saying is that God has demonstrated His will by a pattern of establishment for the operation of His churches. That pattern excludes apostolic ministry that has the weight of the 12 apostles of Christ. He has not, by evidence continued the work of revelation by Holy Spirit inspiration since the death of the Apostle John and it is in the last written work of that apostle, that the Holy Spirit included the admonition for and the curses upon, any who would add to or take away from the words of that prophecy. Granted that such admonition is specifically relating to the Revelation of Jesus Christ, but it is in principle, applicable to the whole Bible. It is an unwritten crime to alter the pronouncements of the Most High God. Such trespass ought not to be taken lightly. There is sufficient demonstration of how the Lord feels about such things (think Korah, Miriam). God can do what He wants, but we need to pay more attention to what He has done.
You have proven my point: Your primary concern is that "people are popping up all the time making themselves out ot be apostolic..." and so forth. If that wasn't your primary concern in this discussion, then you wouldn't spend so much time trying to make that point.
I disagree that the "pattern" you feel you have seen is actually a pattern that apostolic ministry of the weight of that of the Twelve no longer exists. You haven't shown any such evidence at all, and I keep getting back to the question, where's your evidence for that assumption?
Try and make it simple for me. I just haven't seen a single thing that you've said that points to such a pattern or that apostleship of the same level as the first apostles could not or does not exist today. There's no reason why apostleship couldn't be "broken" into time periods where it was needed. It need not be an unbroken succession of apostles.
John Whitten said:He has not, by evidence continued the work of revelation by Holy Spirit inspiration since the death of the Apostle John and it is in the last written work of that apostle...
What? Do you not have the Holy Spirit within you teaching you and inspiring you?
It isn't evidence FOR that you need to look for, it is evidence AGAINST. The simple default is that if something existed in Scripture, then it continues on unless SPECIFICALLY ended. Nothing in Scripture indicates that revelation by inspiration of the Holy Spirit has ceased. If so, where is this evidence?
You view a gap in history between the early apostles and now as being the ending of something. If apostles are only needed when confusion is rife, then why would we expect them all throughout history? Confusion over Scripture is greater today than ever before. At least 100 years ago there was a general agreement. Now there isn't even that.
John Whitten said:...that the Holy Spirit included the admonition for and the curses upon, any who would add to or take away from the words of that prophecy. Granted that such admonition is specifically relating to the Revelation of Jesus Christ, but it is in principle, applicable to the whole Bible.
Utter nonsense, in my opinion. Nothing suggests that they admonition not to change the words of the prophecy of Revelation applies to the whole Bible. You can't leap logically to that conclusion.
You claim a principle, but that principle would have applied to every writer then after Moses. God continued revelation for several THOUSAND years. We have no reason to believe He stopped, unless He says He stopped.
What bugs me the most about all this is that you and K.R. and maybe others are not being rational about Scripture. You are pulling out all sorts of ideas to prove your point, but none of them really do. Most of them are old traditions, and not one of those traditions is written in Scripture.
The Bible itself doesn't end apostleship, doesn't end the canon of Scripture, doesn't end prophecies, miracles, or anything else. If it does, please show me clearly where.
John Whitten said:It is an unwritten crime to alter the pronouncements of the Most High God. Such trespass ought not to be taken lightly.
John, the first mention of adding or taking away from the word of the Lord is found in Deuteronomy 4:2, "You shall not add to the word which I command you, neither shall you diminish anything from it..." Now if that is so in Deuteronomy, then EVERYTHING after the Five Books of Moses would be heresy. None of us believe that, because we know that the rest of Scripture wasn't adding to the word which He commanded them in the sense that He was telling them. God was talking about changing what He had already said, not writing further Scripture.
The same type of statement at the end of the book of Revelation is meant the same way--just to refer to the book of Revelation.
It is a WRITTEN crime to alter the words of the Lord. But translating, or even writing new Scripture that comes from the mouth of God, is not altering the words of the Lord.
I don't know how to convey this in a way that makes sense to you and K.R.:
ALL of God's words, from the beginning to the end are of infinite value and power. Not one is greater than another, because they are His words.
Whether those words originated in the Bible or outside of the Bible doesn't make a bit of difference. IF they came from God, then they hold exactly the same authority as any of God's other words, including Scripture.
This is predicated upon whether the words are truly from God or not. If they are not from God, then the foregoing isn't true. If those words are from God, whether He prophesies to a person individually, or the Church corporately, the words are still 100% the words and authority of God on par with anything in Scripture.
John Whitten said:...There is sufficient demonstration of how the Lord feels about such things (think Korah, Miriam). God can do what He wants, but we need to pay more attention to what He has done.
Okay, let's start over a bit. Please explain in the simplest terms possible, using Scripture, how:
(1) Apostleship ended when the last of the Twelve apostles died.
(2) Paul can be an apostle since he wasn't one of the Twelve.
(3) We can know that there was no other revelation or words of God given besides Scripture.
(4) That the canon of Scripture is closed.
(5) That there were two classes of apostles which were distinguished in Scripture.
(6) That there are no apostles in the world today.
(7) That there can be no apostles in the world today.
That's my challenge. On each item, I will expect some type of Scriptural proof that verifies your point rationally and logically. In fact I will expect that if a logical flaw is pointed out, that you will respond to it and show how it is not a flaw, without making any assumptions.
I want to do this slowly so that everyone can see my point. If there is anything that Christians today need, it is a simple course in basic logic. Too many people base their belief on assumptions and "facts not in evidence". Neither are a good thing to base one's beliefs upon.
John for Christ