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#1
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I believe in the gift of prophecy, I do. But in the Biblical sense of a prophet, one who speaks the direct word of God, I do not believe there are any anymore. I believe that the Word of God was concluded through Christ, the last prophet, because he was, literally, the Word of God made flesh, making any further prophecy unnecessary.
John, in his book Revelation, spoke no prophecy, if you recall. He merely conveyed the contents of his revelatory dream. John was no prophet. None of the disciples were, in fact, as far as the Bible tells us. We have no evidence at all that we should expect any prophets after Christ that speak the literal Word of God. We live in an age of anticipation. Those of us who believe in the coming of Christ have to cope with the anticipation of the 2nd coming, the rebirth of humanity. And in that anticipation, we are prone to want a more immediate, more deliberate answer to the future. We turn to strange doctrines and "seers" to alleviate our impatience with God (that's what it is, impatience with God) because we are uncomfortable with the idea of a silent God. What kind of prophecy is there, then, besides speaking the direct Word of God? I believe that modern-day prophets are artists, philosophers, and dreamers, who interpret the word of God as it is already revealed to us. This is exactly what Jesus did in his life, using the scriptures to determine religion and scripture alone. Jesus did not create any new doctrine or any new Word of God. He merely revealed what already was and HAS been! So I would encourage you to reject anything, ANYTHING that describes itself as a new doctrine, as if to say that the words of Jesus and the scriptures were somehow insufficient, to alleviate our impatience with God, to create a new God that suits our palate better, very similar to the old God, but more to our personal preference. What is an idol? It is taking something that was made by God and constructing it into something that it wasn't before, and lauding it as an improvement. |
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#2
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Bump!
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#3
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I respectfully disagree, and will leave it at that.
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#4
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I just heard somebody on Christian radio talk about this briefly this morning. I think a user called and asked if there are modern day prophets or apostles. From what I can recall and I'd have to wait until the audio archive is available for me to verify, that there are no modern day apostles or propehts. No apostles because the church has already been established, and no prophets because we already have the cannon and thus, no need. He backed these up with a few biblical passages but I don't remember what they were.
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#5
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Prophets in the early church had two primary ways of acting. There were the extemporaneous prophets who would speak the words of God to their congregations during worship. And then there were the visionary prophets who, after having had a vision, would interpret that vision for the church either verbally or in writing. Many of these had an itinerant ministry. It appears that John is indeed a prophet, bridging the gap between the prophetic ministry of, say, Ezekiel and an extemporaneous prophet. Quote:
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I disagree that Jesus brought nothing new. If he hadn't, nobody would have felt so threatened by him that they'd seek to get rid of him. Quote:
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Let Scripture be. See what it does. Don’t defend it. Or your theology. Left alone, Scripture may just lead you to think differently. Don’t try to resolve all issues as soon as they are raised. Sit with the discomfort a while and you may find doors opening for you to much better places. |
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#6
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#7
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Does the Popes infallibility make him a prophet of sorts to those who follow him?
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#8
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The Pope's "infallibility" is highly restricted. He is infallible if and only if he speaks ex cathedra -- on behalf of the whole church. And he does so quite rarely. In fact, the only time the pope has used this power has been to affirm a doctrine about Mary. So no, he's not a prophet in the same sense as, for instance, the LDS Church regards their "prophet".
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Let Scripture be. See what it does. Don’t defend it. Or your theology. Left alone, Scripture may just lead you to think differently. Don’t try to resolve all issues as soon as they are raised. Sit with the discomfort a while and you may find doors opening for you to much better places. |
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#9
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Interesting post...
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1. doctrinal prophecy - the establishment of doctrinal truth by one who receives such revelation from God 2. foretelling prophecy - the foretelling of future events by one who receives such through revelation from God In both types is not the word of God (ie revelation from God) involved? Is there a type of prophecy that I'm missing here that does not require revelation from God? Quote:
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#10
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Just a couple of questions:
- Do you consider the Bible alone to be sufficient for dealing with all modern day issues? - How would you approach a problem you did not feel was outlined sufficiently by the Bible? |
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