Have miraculous spiritual gifts like tongues or prophesy ceased? No, says Carson. This book should be read by those who lean toward cessationism and those who do not. It's difficult to imagine a more helpful, reasonable, and Spirit-filled book on 1 Cor. 12-14. This may be a challenge for some to read. But you will be rewarded.
No serious cessationist can hold to his views without responding—at least internally—to this work that's been around for many years. Read for yourself.
QUOTES:
If Paul does not consider tongues to be the least of the spiritual gifts on some absolute scale, it is highly likely he makes it the last entry in each list in First Corinthians because his readers were far too prone to exalt this one gift.
In verses 14-19, he tells the outsiders that, precisely because of the diversity of gifts God has distributed in the church, the member that seems inferior cannot reasonably say it does not belong, or threaten to leave.
Indeed, a body consisting of a single organ—a giant eyeball, perhaps, or one single, massive toenail or knee—would be grotesque. The body requires the contribution of each member. So it is silly, for instance, for a Christian with the charisma of encouragement or of giving to feel hopelessly threatened by someone with the charisma of tongues.
Paul does not mean that each congregation is a part of the body of Christ, or a body of Christ. Each congregation, each church, is the body of Christ. Each local church, if I may put it this way, is the exemplification of the church. [on 12:27-30]
There is no stronger defense of the private use of tongues, and attempts to avoid this conclusion turn out on inspection to be remarkably flimsy. If Paul speaks in tongues more than all the Corinthians, yet in the church prefers to speak five intelligible words rather than ten thousand words in a tongue (which is a way of saying that under virtually no circumstance will he ever speak in tongues in church, without quite ruling out the possibility), then where does he speak them?
The only possible conclusion is that Paul exercised his remarkable tongues gift in private. (105)
QUOTES ON 1 COR. 13
Paul's point is the love he is about to discuss cannot be classed with the "charismata:" it is not one "charisma" of many, but an entire "way" of life, an overarching, all-embracing style of life that utterly transcends in importance the claims of this or that "charisma."
Paul's point is relatively simple. No matter how exalted my gift of tongues, without love I am nothing more than a resounding gong or a clanging symbol.
The point is that even the gift of prophecy, no matter how much reliable information comes from it, is intrinsically valueless if it operates without love.
In all of this, if there is no love, I gain nothing. In this divine mathematics, five minus one equals zero.
Love hopes for the best, even when disappointed by repeated personal abuse . . and "always ready to give an offender a second chance to forgive him 'seventy times seven.'" (Matthew 18:22)
When a young man reveals his heart with a passionate declaration, "I love you!" at least in part he means that he finds the woman he loves lovely. At least some of his love is elicited by the object of that love. But God loves what is unlovely. If, as John 3:16 tells us, God loves the world, it is not because the world is so lovely God cannot help himself: by John's use of the term "world," God loves the world only because of what _he_ is. And derivatively, that is how Christians learn to love: they learn to love with love that is, like God's, self-originating.
One day all the charismatics who know the Lord and all the non-charismatics who know the Lord will have nothing to fight over; for the so-called charismatic gifts will have forever passed. At that point, both of these groups of believers will look back and thoughtfully contemplate the fact that what connects them with the world they have left behind is not the gift of tongues, nor animosity toward the gift of tongues, but the love they sometimes managed to display toward each other despite the gift of tongues. The greatest evidence that heaven has invaded our sphere, that the spirit has been poured out upon us, that we are citizens of the kingdom not yet consummated, is Christian love.