Spiritual Gifts
Origin:
1. Modus operandi of the
Jewish Age was special empowering for special jobs, that is, to perform
miracles — Matthew 10:1
2. When Jesus ascended into heaven
after His resurrection He emptied Paradise — transferred the soul and spirit of
Old Testament saints to the 3rd heaven — Ephesians 4:8, “led captivity”: soul
and spirit (no resurrection body); “captive”: Soul and spirit to heaven, still
no resurrection body.
3. He also “gave gifts unto men” —
Ephesians 4:8, spiritual gifts.
4. Each believer in the Church Age
receives a spiritual gift at the moment of salvation — 1 Corinthians 12:11.
5. You do not seek a spiritual gift.
You do not earn or work for spiritual gifts.
You do not get one on the basis of any human ability.
Whatever gift you have is the sovereign decision of the Holy Spirit.
6. All members of the Godhead are
involved in spiritual gifts.
7. Since God the Father is the
planner, we assume He decided X number for pastors, teachers, helps, etc. 1
Corinthians 12:28, “And God”: God the Father.
8. Jesus Christ provided the basis
for spiritual gifts — Ephesians 4:8-11.
9. The Holy Spirit appoints the gift
to the person — 1 Corinthians 12:11.
10. Spiritual gifts are the Father’s
organised witness (not personal witness) to the plan of
salvation. Hebrews 2:4. Behind any man’s evangelistic campaign are all kinds of
spiritual gifts — a team proposition. All members of the same team, but they
play different positions.
11. Ephesians 4:12, gives the purpose
of spiritual gifts:
a) Equipping: “for the
perfecting of the saints.”
b) Production: “for the
work of the ministry”: Every believer represents Jesus Christ.
c) Supply: “for the
edifying (building up) of the body of Christ.”
You build up the body of Christ by
adding new believers and by helping other believers to grow.
Spiritual
Gifts
1. Scriptures: 1 Corinthians
12; Romans 12; Ephesians 4:11. All spiritual gifts are not listed in scripture,
but merely representative of categorical concepts. Some require preparation,
therefore they are mentioned (teaching type). The purpose of some of the
spiritual gifts are mentioned in Ephesians 4:8-13.
2. Every believer receives at least
one spiritual gift at the moment of salvation — 1 Corinthians 12:11.
3. Each spiritual gift is necessary
for function in the body of Christ. The body of Christ is a team of believers
working together. Your spiritual gift is your position on the team.
4. It is not necessary for you to recognise
your spiritual gift for you to function under it. Function is dependent upon
the filling of the Holy Spirit, and the erection of an edification complex,
rather than your knowledge of your spiritual gift.
5. For divine production from
your spiritual gift, you need the filling of the Holy Spirit and the
transfer of Gnosis (knowledge) in the mind into epignosis (full
knowledge) in the human spirit.
6. Spiritual gifts are the Father’s organised
witness (not personal witness) to the plan of salvation — Hebrews 2:4.
7. The attitude toward spiritual
gifts is given in Romans 12:3. One is not to feel inferior or superior. It
is a gift!
8. Perspective of the spiritual
gifts is given in 1 Corinthians 12. Possession of a spiritual gift does not
indicate merit or spirituality. “Gift” connotes grace. (Paul was the worst
sinner, 1 Timothy 1:12, who ever lived. He had several gifts)
9. There are two categories of
spiritual gifts:
a) Permanent: Which exist throughout the Church Age.
b) Temporary: Those between the day of Pentecost and the
completed canon of scripture — approximately 35-95 AD. Most were spectacular.
10. Temporary gifts were necessary
to get the church started without a complete Bible. 1 Corinthians 13:8-10. They
functioned in place of a completed canon.
11. Temporary gifts were used by God
to focus attention on the message of the Gospel — Hebrews 2:4.
Identification
I. Spiritual gifts are
sovereignly bestowed by God.
a) The Holy Spirit is
the instrument at the moment of salvation who appoints the spiritual gift —
1
Corinthians 12:11.
b) No spiritual gifts
are given until after the ascension — the Lord Jesus Christ provided spiritual
gifts — Ephesians 4:8-11.
c) You do not seek
spiritual gifts. Be satisfied with the one you have.
II. Spiritual gifts in order of
merit (all spectacular): 1 Corinthians 12:28-30.
a) Apostles:
Temporary gift, necessary when the canon was incomplete in order to carry the
church through those difficult days. The gift of absolute spiritual
dictatorship was set aside with the completed canon, the canon now being the
absolute authority. No one now has authority over more than one church.
b) Prophets:
Prophet - gift of both: 1. Foretelling - temporary; 2. Forthtelling —
permanent.
c) Teachers: Permanent.
d) Miracles: Temporary (Person’s faith not involved)
e) Healings: Temporary (person’s faith not involved) 1.
Physiological; 2. Mental; 3. Demon induced illness.
f) Helps: Permanent — gift of administration.
g) Governments: Permanent — gift of
administration.
h) Diversities of tongues: Temporary — gift of speaking a foreign
language not previously known (not ecstatics).
Note: This is dealing only with the
1 Corinthians 12:28-30 passage.
III. The use of spiritual gifts does
not means spirituality; however the filling of the Holy Spirit allows you to
use the spiritual gift to the maximum. 1 Corinthians 12:31 introduces chapter
13” “but covet” (as a church) “the best gifts.” Prophecy Vs, tongues, subject
of chapter 14. “more excellent way”: This is love produced through the filling
of the Holy Spirit.
Spiritual Gifts in the Corinthian Church
1. It is obvious from 1
Corinthians 1:7 that the Corinthian church abounded in spiritual gifts, had
spectacular gifts and many of them.
2. It is also obvious from the rest
of the epistle that this was one of the most carnal churches that ever
assembled in the name of the Lord. These Corinthians were noted for their envy,
jealousy, childishness, spiritual bullying, litigation, divorce, drunkenness,
and other carnality activity.
3. Conclusion: The possession
of a spiritual gift does not mean spirituality.
4. Principle: If the Corinthians, with all their carnality
could have more people with spectacular spiritual gifts, then there is
definitely no correlation between possessing a certain type of spiritual gift
and spirituality.
5. It is important to distinguish
between spiritual gifts and spirituality; a spiritual gift, for its proper
function, depends upon spirituality, but they are not the same.
6. False teaching based on legalism
and emotionalism had infiltrated the church at Corinth. Consequently we have
chapters 12,13,14 to refute the legalism and emotionalism there. Also it was
written to deal with some of the false impressions which came out of speaking
in tongues. (What was happening in Corinth is happening today)
7. One of the abuses in the
Corinthians church was that there were many people speaking in tongues and they
felt that they were the spiritual giants in the assembly. They said the rest
were peons and possibly not saved. They were looking down there spiritual noses
at the rest and saying that until they spoke in tongues they were not
spiritual, or possibly not even saved.
8. Brother foot has an inferiority
complex; brother hand has a superiority complex. Both are ignorant of doctrine.
They are both in the same team but play different positions. One is not better
than the other.
9. The spiritual gift you possess is
not the important factor, but the filling of the Holy Spirit, the power on
which the spiritual gift operates — chapter 13.
10. 1 Corinthians chapter 14:
tongues was regulated. In the church worship services certain spiritual gifts
are to function and others are to be minimised or avoided.
Spiritual Gifts: Healings, Miracles, Faith as Temporary Spiritual Gifts
1. The purpose of healing
and miracles was to call attention to the message given by the person. It was
their credit card, establishing the authority of the Word taught by the
individual. The purpose was not just to alleviate human suffering.
2. Healings: The ability to heal at will. The recipient’s
faith was not required either — Acts 19:11,12.
Paul’s gift of healing
was withdrawn once his authority was established among the churches. Example:
Timothy’s illness; Paul’s own illness. Healing was withdrawn from Paul by 57 AD, 2 Corinthians 12:9,10. The issue is not healing but “my grace
is sufficient for thee.” Paul was unable to heal Epaphroditus, who was dying —
2 Timothy 4:20. He had to leave Miletus sick.
3. God still heals today but the gift
is not in operation. It is the sovereign decision of God.
4. Miracles: The ability to perform miracles at will.
Miracles and healing do
occasionally occur in the Church Age (Sovereign division) but this is not the
objective in the Church Age because for the first time we have something
greater than any miracles: the completed canon of scripture. Psalm 138:2;
Hebrews 4:12.
5. One line from the Word of God is
worth all the miracles that have ever been performed. The Word of God in your
life must be more important than anything else.
6. Faith: Faith to remove mountains, 1 Corinthians
13:2. This is the gift of faith — faith used to perform miracles. Don’t confuse faith as it existed
(temporary gift) and faith as used now in a perceptive way.
It was a companion to the gifts of healings,
miracles. It is Peter healing the lame man — Acts 3:6-8.
7. The gift of faith is not
the faith-rest technique. The faith-rest technique is in operation: claiming
the promises that are written in the Word and thus making them real in your
life.
8. Apostles had these three gifts
for at least as long as it was necessary to establish their authority.
Spiritual Gifts: List
I.
There are two categories of spiritual gifts:
a) Permanent: Those which still operate today in the
post-canon period of the Church Age.
b) Temporary: Those which operated only in the pre-canon
period of the Church Age.
II. Permanent Gifts Include:
a) Pastor-teaching: Gift
with the most authority today.
b) Evangelist.
c) Exhortation (Teaching
type).
d) Teacher.
e) Government —
administration in the church.
f) Helps.
g) Ministering — Service
in the little things.
h) Word of Knowledge:
Ability to categorise doctrine.
i) Word of wisdom: The
ability to apply doctrine to circumstances in life and to give this to others —
counselling.
III. Temporary Gifts are:
a) Apostle.
b) Prophecy.
c) Knowledge.
d) Discerning spirits.
e) Healings.
f) Miracles.
g) Faith (Companion to healings,
miracles)
h) Tongues.
i) Interpretation of
tongues.
IV. Spiritual gifts are listed in
order of merit: 1 Corinthians 12:28-30.
a) Apostles: Temporary —
necessary to carry the early church through those difficult days, before the
canon was complete.
b) Prophets: Temporary —
called gift of prophecy.
c) Teachers: Permanent —
the pastor-teacher.
d) Miracles: Temporary:
Recipient’s faith not required.
e) Healings: Temporary:
Recipient’s faith not required.
f) Helps: Permanent:
Assistance to others.
g) Governments:
Permanent: Gifts of administration.
h) Diversities of
tongues: Temporary gift of speaking in a foreign language which was not known
to the one speaking. Last in order of merit.
Spiritual Gifts: Principle of Temporary Gifts
1. A temporary gift was one which terminated
in the first century (from 70-100 AD — period of termination)
and has never been used since.
2. Gifts and signs which accompanied
the apostles at the beginning of the Church Age (miracles, healings,
apostleship, tongues, etc.) were spiritual gifts (temporary) all sovereignly
bestowed by the Holy Spirit — 1 Corinthians 12:11.
3. Distribution of these temporary
gifts not only involved the sovereignty of the Holy Spirit but the grace of God
the Father. No believer ever earns or deserves any spiritual gift.
4. Due to the completion of the
canon, the temporary gifts are no longer used. (Most were spectacular)
5. The fact that the Holy Spirit has
withdrawn temporary gifts in our day (Post-canon period) is His way of focusing
our attention on the Word of God. (Everything we need is in the Word itself.
The Holy Spirit reminds us that we have something more powerful, more
important: the Word of God itself).
6. The Holy Spirit is sovereign in
His bestowal of spiritual gifts. There are those who imply that you do
something in order to get these gifts: tarry, agonise, etc. This is a false
assumption. They are gifts, get it? Gifts!
7. In the apostolic age there was an
emphasis on supernatural phenomena because the absolute criterion was not
completed. Therefore an apostle (or others) to establish himself and to perform
any kind of divine service in a new town, performed some kind of miracle. This
is why most temporary gifts were spectacular.
8. We live in the age when the Holy
Spirit produces the character of Christ within us and divine good on the
outside; therefore no temporary gifts (such as miracles) are necessary.
9. The miracle of today is the
filling of the Holy Spirit producing in Mr Average Believer the very character
of Christ — Galatians 4:19; 5:22-23.
10. Often the peril of Christians
today is being conspicuous, drawing attention to themselves rather than Jesus
Christ.
11. Any attempt today to imitate
these temporary gifts is fakery, either emotional or ecstatic involvement, or
demon possession or influence.
Spiritual Gifts: Prophecy, Knowledge, Discerning Spirits as Temporary Spiritual Gifts
I. Prophecy:
a) This is foretelling
events not in the canon at that time.
b) This was a temporary
gift — 1 Corinthians 13:8. This gift enabled believers to understand the
Rapture, Tribulation, second advent, Millennium, and eternity before the
canon of scripture was completed.
1. John had the gift:
Revelation.
2. Paul had the gift:
Thessalonians.
c) The gift of prophecy
related the plan of God to time.
II. Upon completion of the canon foretelling
was not necessary because all prophecy is in the canon. Revelation was written
in 96 AD.
III. Forthtelling is
necessary at all times and is in operation today. This is simply proclaiming
the whole counsel (canon) of scripture. It has nothing to do with the temporary
gift of prophecy.
IV. The gift of knowledge:
This was the gift of knowing what went into the canon of scripture while the
scripture was being written, before the canon was complete. (Not the same as
the “word of knowledge” in 1 Corinthians 12:8)
V. Positional Truth: The
filling of the Holy Spirit, etc., were taught before all the Epistles were
written.
a) 1 Corinthians was
written in 59 AD.
b) Ephesians was written
in 64 AD.
VI. The gift of discerning
spirits was the gift of detecting heresy in the early church — gift of
distinguishing true from false doctrine and to recognise false teachers.
VII. The temporary gifts were
terminated during the period between 70-96 AD.
Spiritual Gifts: Temporary (Nine)
I. Temporary gifts were
necessary to get the church started without a completed canon of scriptures.
Temporary spiritual gifts functioned in place of the completed canon.
II. Most were spectacular in order
to draw attention to the message given by the person with the gift. All were
removed between 70-100 AD.
III. The nine temporary spiritual
gifts:
a) Apostleship:
Absolute authority over several churches. Apostleship died with the apostle
John, the last one (some time between 96-100 AD).
b) Prophecy: This
related the plan of God to time.
1. Foretelling events not in the canon of
scripture at the time, such as the Rapture, Tribulation, 2nd advent,
Millennium, eternity. Temporary gifts — 1 Corinthians 13:8.
2. Forthtelling is necessary at all
times and is in operation today.
c) Discerning Spirits: The ability to detect heresy in the
pre-canon period. We have discernment today (not the gift) based upon our
growth spiritually.
d) Knowledge: The
gift of knowing doctrine not in the canon at that time. Not necessary since the
canon is complete.
e) Miracles:
Ability to perform a miracle at will. Recipient’s faith is not required.
f) Healings:
ability to heal at will. Recipient’s faith in not required.
g) Tongues:
Ability to give out the Gospel in a foreign language without knowing that
language. 1. Content of tongues: the Gospel; 2. Use of the gift: Warning of the
5th cycle of discipline.
IV. Interpretation of tongues:
Translation of tongues. It was to be used in association with the gift of
tongues.
Spiritual Gifts: Temporary Gifts Discontinued
I. Temporary gifts were discontinued between 70-100 AD.
II. The Corinthians were taking a
spiritual gift, tongues, and magnifying it out of proportion and calling it
spirituality.
III. 1 Corinthians 13 tells us there
is nothing in the Christian life apart from the filling of the Holy Spirit
producing divine love in the life of the believer.
IV. 1 Corinthians 13 — Paul takes
three temporary gifts and sets up the principle of the discontinuance of
temporary gifts. He puts tongues in the middle to maintain the principle in
spite of prejudice.
Exegesis:
A. 13:8
“charity” — the filling of the Holy
Spirit producing divine love in the believer.
“never faileth” — The filling of the
Holy Spirit cannot be hissed off the stage. The thing that really counts is the
Spirit-controlled life, not the gift of tongues.
“But” — speaks of a contrast: The
filling of the Spirit remains the same through the Church Age, but temporary
gifts are removed.
“whether” — literally, “Where,” when
these occur.
“prophecies” — temporary gift of
prophecy.
“they shall fail” — become
inoperative.
“tongues” — temporary gift of
tongues.
“they shall cease” — When Paul was
writing this, it had not occurred.
“knowledge” — temporary gift of
knowledge.
“vanish away” — will be abolished.
B. 13:9
“we know in part” — able to teach
only that in the canon of scripture available then. Gift of prophecy.
“we prophecy in part” — able to teach
only that in the canon of scripture available then. Gift of prophecy.
C. 13:10
“But” — contrast between partial and
full knowledge available in writing. Contrast between pre-canon and post-canon
period.
“when that which is perfect” —
Neuter gender in the Greek: The Bible. Cf. with James 1:25, “perfect law of
liberty.” Arndt and Gingricht says: “The full measure of knowledge.”
“is come” — The part moving to the
whole. Completed.
“that which is in part” — the part:
temporary spiritual gifts.
“shall be done away” — removed.
V. Temporary spiritual gift of
tongues is only mentioned in 1 Corinthians and Acts.
The doctrine of spiritual
gifts
1. Definition. Spiritual gifts are
distributed to the royal family of the Church Age both as a recognition of
Christ’s strategic victory in the angelic conflict plus a recognition of the
royalty of every believer in the Church Age. So the distribution of spiritual
gifts in the Church Age recognises that Christ has already won the victory,
therefore distribution of spoils; and that furthermore we are give spiritual
gifts first as recognition as being members of the royal family. For the Church
Age spiritual gifts are the Father’s organised witness and testimony to grace
in salvation — Hebrews 2:4. Spiritual gifts demand the function of royalty
under GAP plus the attainment of the tactical victory of supergrace. So the
challenge of spiritual gifts: GAP it daily and reach supergrace.
2. Distribution. Distribution is
divided into two parts, initial and subsequent.
a) Initial distribution.
At the beginning of the Church Age spiritual gifts were provided immediately by
the Lord Jesus Christ — Ephesians 4:8-11.
b) Subsequent
distribution during the Church Age is handled by the sovereign decision of God
the Holy Spirit who gives every believer of the Church Age at least one
spiritual gift, known or unknown — 1 Corinthians 12:11. These gifts do not
depend upon human ability, morality, talent, achievement, but constitute a
sovereign decision of God the Holy Spirit.
3. Function. At any point in the
Church Age each spiritual gift in every geographical area is necessary for the
function of the body of Christ in that area — 1 Corinthians 12:27-31. All
spiritual gifts function through the ministry of God the Holy Spirit — Acts
2:4; 1 Corinthians 13. The function of spiritual gifts also depends upon Bible
doctrine in the soul as the result of functioning under GAP. Also these Bible
doctrines mould a grace attitude for the spiritual gift — Romans 12:3. The true
perspective regarding spiritual gifts is found in 1 Corinthians chapter 12.
4. There are two categories of
spiritual gifts — temporary and permanent. Temporary gifts are in the pre-canon
period of the Church Age. The post-canon period has permanent gifts. So we have
temporary from 30-96 AD; permanent from 96 AD through the present and to the
Rapture of the Church. Temporary gifts are necessary to take up the slack until
the canon of scripture was completed and circulated. Once the Bible was
completed certain temporary spiritual gifts were withdrawn. These temporary
gifts include apostleship, tongues, healing, and so on. The fact that tongues
was removed earlier is found in the Greek of 1 Corinthians 13:8-10. The fact
that healing was removed, even in Paul’s day half way through his ministry, is
found by comparing Acts 19:11,12 with Philippians 2:27 and 2 Timothy 4:20.
Permanent gifts continue after the completion of the canon and throughout the
Church Age, as per Romans 12:6-8; 1 Corinthians 12:31.
5. The time of distribution. All
spiritual gifts were given after the resurrection, ascension, and session of
Jesus Christ — Ephesians 4:8. Spiritual gifts were given for the first time on
the day of Pentecost when the dispensation of Israel was dramatically
interrupted — Acts chapter two.
6. The abuse of these gifts. Reversionism
and apostasy seek to perpetuate temporary spiritual gifts, like tongues and
healing, beyond the closing of the canon in 96 AD. When anyone claims the gifts
of apostleship, tongues, miracles, healing, they are apostate and reversionistic;
separate yourselves from them.
7. Communication gifts. Surviving
communication gifts are really twofold. The first is pastor-teacher. The
authority of this gift is found in Hebrews 13:7,17; 1 Thessalonians 5. The gift
of evangelism is also a communication gift but limited and without authority in
the local church. The gift of apostle-prophet was designed for the producing of
the New Testament canon and stabilising the Church before the completion of the
Bible. After the completion of the canon of scripture the gift of
pastor-teacher carried authority inside the local church. The authority of the
evangelist is in the response to the Word of God, the Gospel, as he teaches
outside of the local church. Evangelism was not to be conducted in the
classroom but outside of the classroom on the campus of this world, as it were.