It is the historic position of the evangelical Christians
that tongues and prophecy had a very specific role to play in the early days of
the Christian Church. Not only were they clearly sign gifts that were given to
validate the message of the Apostles, but, in the case of tongues, they served
as a warning to the unbelieving Jews that the destruction of the nation of
Israel was imminent. In Isaiah 28:11-12 we read:
“For with stammering lips and another tongue He will
speak to this people, to whom He said, ‘This is the rest with which you may
cause the weary to rest,’ and, ‘This is the refreshing’; Yet they would not
hear.”
The above words were spoken by the prophet to the people of
Judah as a declaration that they were about to be judged by God for their
rebellion by an Assyrian invasion. The presence of “unknown tongues” was also
mentioned by Moses in his prophecy of the ultimate destruction of national
Israel found in Deuteronomy 28:49:
“The LORD will bring a nation against you from afar,
from the end of the earth, as swift as the eagle flies, a nation whose language
you will not understand.”
The entire New Testament deals with the scene just prior to
the destruction of Jerusalem and the termination of the Jewish economy in A.D.
70. God began His warnings to the rebellious nation of Israel through John the
Baptist, who was sent to declare that the Kingdom of God was at hand. Following
the death of John, Jesus picked up this same theme and began to warn Jerusalem
of impending destruction should the people not repent of their rebellion. Of
course, the Jewish leaders sealed the nation’s doom when they rejected and
crucified their Messiah. It was not until Israel had thus transgressed against
her God that the gift of tongues was introduced among the Apostles and their
associates on the Day of Pentecost (Acts 2); they were then used to call them
to repentance. In this sense, they were, as Paul wrote, “for a sign, not to
those who believe but to unbelievers” (I Corinthians 14:22a); they served
as an indictment against Israel and a public declaration that her “house
[was] left... desolate” (Matthew
23:38), and that the Kingdom of Heaven was about to be taken from the Jews and
given to another people — the Gentiles (Matthew 8:10-12, 21:33-45).
Having established the purpose of biblical tongues, let us
now determine the purpose of prophecy in the early Christian Church. According
to Paul, “[P]rophesying is not for unbelievers but for those who believe” (I Corinthians 14:22b). Since the
New Testament canon was still in the process of being written, via the letters
of Paul, Peter, and the other Apostles, prophecy served the purpose of edifying
and strengthening the infant Church to endure the persecution that God’s
enemies were bringing against her, and to offer hope that God’s enemies were
soon to be destroyed (Revelation 2:8-11). However, with the close of the canon,
this purpose was fulfilled, and prophecy ceased. In Jude 3, we read:
“Beloved, while I was very diligent to write to you
concerning our common salvation, I found it necessary to write to you exhorting
you to contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered to
the saints.”
This verse is very important in dealing with the finality
of revelation and prophecy, for in it Jude clearly anticipated the closing of
the New Testament canon of Scripture. The phrase “once for all” is
noteworthy. Actually, only one Greek word (“hapax”) is used here, which
indicates “what is of perpetual validity, not requiring repetition.”
Hence, the Scriptures themselves preclude any further revelation beyond the
apostolic age.
Another verse that may be cited in this regard is Ephesians
2:20:
“... [The Church has] been built on the
foundation of the Apostles and Prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief
cornerstone.”
These words of Paul tell us that the Apostles are part of
the foundation of the Church. A building can have no more than one foundation,
and the Body of Christ is certainly no exception. John 14:26 tells us that Jesus
had spoken to His apostles while He was still with them, but the Spirit, the
Helper was to teach the Apostles “all things.” And bring them to the
remembrance of all the things that the Lord Jesus had taught them.
In addition, Paul commanded Timothy to “keep” the “good thing which was
committed” in II
Timothy 1:14. Clearly, this “good thing” was identifiable or else Paul’s
exhortation would have been in vain. Since the Apostles were taught all things,
there would be no need for further revelation. Indeed, what can be added to all
things? Furthermore, the Apostles’ doctrine became part of the New Testament
canon, and because this revelation was complete, there can be no further
“scripture” (either verbal or written) added unless proof is given that the
apostolic era has not ended. However, as noted above, the apostolic era served
as the transition period between the old economy of Judaism and the “new
heaven and new earth” (Revelation
21:1) of the New Covenant; once the transition had been made, the apostolic era
with its various apostolic sign gifts ceased.
The New Testament, of course, is not the only place from
which this conclusion may be drawn. The Old Testament prophets themselves
looked forward to a time when revelation would cease to be given by God through
His prophets. For instance, in Daniel’s prophecy of the “Seventy Weeks” we
read:
“Seventy weeks are determined for your people and for
your holy city, to finish the transgression, to make an end of sins, to make
reconciliation for iniquity, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal
up vision and prophecy, and to anoint the Most Holy.” (Daniel 9:24)
Verses 25-27 make it clear that when the “Seventy Week”
period (490 years) began, it would continue uninterrupted until it was
completed. Since the prophetic “clock” began to tick “from the going forth of
the command to restore and build Jerusalem,” which was given by King Cyrus
(Ezra 1) exactly 483 years prior to the baptism of Jesus by John in the Jordan
River, we can only look for the terminus of this period in the first century.
As prophesied, Christ’s death and resurrection made an end of the sins of His
people (the elect), and therefore He accomplished the reconciliation promised
by God through Daniel (Romans 5:10; Colossians 1:21). Christ’s people have
consequently experienced “everlasting righteousness” because of the fact that
we are clothed in His righteousness, which itself is everlasting (II
Corinthians 5:21; Ephesians 6:14; Philippians 3:9; Revelation 19:8). The
destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 is clearly linked to the “Seventy Week”
time frame. This is proven by verse 26:
“And after the sixty-two weeks Messiah shall be cut off,
but not for Himself and the people of the prince who is to come shall destroy
the city and the sanctuary. The end of it shall be with a flood, and till the
end of the war desolations are determined.”
Finally, we come to the phrase, “to seal up vision and
prophecy,” which is
included within the “Seventy Week” time frame. According to E.J. Young:
“Vision was a technical name for revelation given to the OT
prophets (cf. Isaiah 1:1, Amos 1:1, etc.). The prophet was the one through whom
this vision was revealed to the people. The two words, vision and prophecy,
therefore, served to designate the prophetic revelation of the OT period....
When Christ came there was no further need of prophetic revelation in the OT
sense” (Commentary on Daniel, Banner of Truth Trust, 1988, p. 200).
Since there is no fundamental difference between Old and
New Testament revelation, and the source of inspiration was the same God, there
is no reason to doubt that all giving of new revelation ceased in the first
century.
Another passage that closely ties in with Daniel 9:24 is
Revelation 22:18-19. Though in the New Testament, it is cited here because it
describes in great detail the events which Daniel merely mentioned in passing,
particularly the judgment and subsequent “divorce” of national Israel as God’s
peculiar people. In this passage we read:
“For I testify to everyone who hears the words of the
prophecy of this book: If anyone adds to these things, God will add
to him the plagues that are written in this book; and if anyone takes
away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away
his part from the Book of Life, from the holy city, and from the things
which are written in this book.”
It is
acknowledged that the primary focus of this warning was to prevent additions to
John’s revelation in particular, but it also bears indirect significance to the
entire biblical canon in general. Despite erroneous attempts to place the
writing of Revelation sometime around A.D. 96, there is strong internal
evidence that it was actually written prior to Jerusalem’s destruction in A.D.
70 (i.e. the Temple is said to still be standing in chapter 11). Furthermore,
Revelation 1:3, 22:6, and 22:12 demand a short period of time before the
complete fulfillment of the entire prophecy of this book. Consequently,
Revelation falls within the “Seventy Weeks” of Daniel 9, and since it is thus
the last inspired book written, the prohibition of 22:18-19 applies to the
entire canon of Scripture.
Finally, we come to Zechariah 13:3-5, which, in many ways,
is similar to Revelation 22:18-19:
“It shall come to pass that if anyone still
prophesies, then his father and mother who begot him will say to him, ‘You
shall not live, because you have spoken lies in the Name of the LORD.’
And his father and mother who begot him shall thrust him through when he
prophesies. “And it shall
be in that day that every prophet will be ashamed of his wisdom when he
prophesies; they will not wear a robe of course hair to deceive. But he will
say, ‘I am no prophet, I am a farmer; for a man taught me to keep cattle from
my youth.’
The context of this passage of Zechariah places “that day”
in the first century (see 12:10, 13:1, and 13:7). There is no denying then that
continuing prophecy or revelation subsequent to the closing of the canon is
viewed by God as worthy of the most severe punishment, and even of death. Why?
Because it is false prophecy in view of the fact that God no longer
speaks with men in a revelatory fashion, whether it be via the vehicle of unknown
tongues, prophetic utterances, or the writing of additional “scripture.”
Indeed, to insist otherwise, is in effect, to say that God’s revelation of
Himself in His Son, Jesus Christ is insufficient. The Scripture says otherwise:
“God, who at various times and in different ways spoke
in times past to the fathers by the Prophets, has in these last days spoken to
us by His Son, whom He has appointed heir of all things, through whom also He
made the worlds” (Hebrews
1:1-2).
In closing, it is very significant to note that, aside from
various cult groups over the ages (i.e. Montanism, Mormonism, etc.), tongues
and prophecy were not recognized by anyone in the history of the orthodox
Christian Church as continuing. It was not until the early part of last century
that they “made a comeback” in mainstream Christendom with the Pentecostal
Movement and gained popularity in the 1960s with the Charismatic Movement. It
is also significant that the vast majority of those who claim to possess these
gifts today are grossly ignorant of the most basic doctrines of Scripture and
are, in many cases, proponents of outright heresy which denies Christ (i.e.
adherents to the Faith Movement, the Manifest Sons of God, etc.)
As a whole, modern Charismatics are guilty of willfully
rejecting the Word of God in favor of “ear-tickling” false prophets. People who
purport to prophesy yet have very little regard for the Word of God are
deceivers. Why do they pick a verse here and a verse there if they are
committed to the whole Bible? Why do they not an exposition of the whole bible,
book-by-book, chapter-by-chapter, verse by verse (Isa. 28:10)? This way they
are able to preach the whole counsel of God (Acts 20:27)? But without this
exposition, then it becomes obvious that they are withdrawing from God’s people
that which is profitable to them – this is the way Apostle Paul looked at this
(Acts 20:27). In this passage, the Apostle shows Himself as an example, because
he says that while he stayed with these Christians at Ephesus, he lived with a
clear conscience before them – he did not covet anyone’s silver or gold or
apparel, but worked with his own hands to minister to his own needs and those
of others (Acts 20:33-34).
Is this what we find with these preachers who claim big
titles for themselves? No! They milk their hearer to the last drop! They demand
one thing after the other, trading it for miracles of one sort or another.
Lastly, most of these people advertise themselves more than they advertise the
gospel and the Lord Jesus Christ. Look at their posters – they have their own
pictures – their names are in bold, large fonts- screaming their names and
parading the previous miracle episodes!
Is it in not incredible to think that men who purport to
share glory with God will be God’s designated prophet? Are you aware that Dr.
Owuor claims to have the Shekinah glory of God descend upon him? I recently saw
it on one of his videos on the billboard at the Haile Selassie – Uhuru Highway
Junction! I would like you to tell me if such claims are founded on any truth?
God has said, “I am the LORD; that is my
name; my glory I give to no other, now my praise to carved idols.” (Isa.42:8,
see also Isa. 48:11)
Does it not seem strange, in light of how God dealt with
the Jews for this very same sin in A.D. 70, that He would choose to “pour out
His Spirit” upon such rebellious people today via tongues and prophecy, while
failing to give such “blessings” to those in the evangelical Christianity who
have remained true to His Word and faithful to His covenant? Food for thought,
indeed.
Find out the history of these preachers – they have a past
scandal of one sort or another. Watch out for those with big titles because the
Lord told us to be aware of the leaven of the Pharisees – they parade
themselves in a manner to draw attention to themselves!
(Some part of this article is adopted from, Greg Loren Durand)
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