I CORINTHIANS 12:10-11
And to another the effecting of
miracles, and to another prophecy, and to another the distinguishing of spirits,
to another various kinds of tongues, and to another interpretation of tongues. But
one and the same Spirit works all these things, distributing to each one individually
just as He wills (NASB).
INTRODUCTION
In the Old Testament times the
nation of Israel rejected God and went after false gods, and that resulted in
idolatry. In the New Testament the Israelites rejected Jesus Christ and that
produced empty religion. Today, you and I stand in danger of similar idolatry,
if we reject the person of the Holy Spirit to worship spiritual gifts or deify
humans. We are living in the days of the Spirit, but the Holy Spirit came to
glorify Jesus Christ. Therefore, you are to be careful not to worship any
person other than Jesus Christ, the Savior of the world.
I. DIVERSITY IN UNITY VV.
10-11
To
another the Holy Spirit gives the gift of miracles. The word miracle
used in this context literally means “workings of powers.” A miracle is
an event that is beyond the power of any known physical law to produce. A
miracle is a spiritual occurrence produced by the power of God, marvel and a
wonder. The plural wording suggests that each miracle is a special gift, given
as needs and occasions arise. Neither Jesus nor the apostles exercised this
gift as a spectacle, merely for the purpose of drawing attention to Himself/themselves.
In the New Testament miracles were sometimes used to draw people to a
commitment to Christ (Acts 13:11-12);
and sometimes they were used to meet human needs (Matt. 14:14-21). In His earthly ministry Jesus
performed many miracles. He turned water into wine (John 2). He raised Lazarus
from the dead (John 11:43-44).
He brought Jairus daughter from death to life (Mark 5:41-43). The apostle Peter raised Dorcas or
Tabitha from death to life (Acts 9:40).
The apostle Paul smote Elymas with blindness when he tried to hinder Sergius
Paulus from coming to faith in Christ (Acts 13:11).
There are many
miracles recorded in both the Old and New Testaments. However, in all honesty
and sincerity you and I must confess that instances of water being turned into
wine, persons walking on the water, or physical resurrections from the dead are
not common occurrences in our time. Doubtless God is able to work such miracles
in our time and among us; but it is safe to say that we do not regularly
experience the sort of miracles which occurred in the book of Acts. The
miracles that Jesus and the apostles performed authenticated their claim of
authority and gave credibility to their message. You should realize that people
asked Jesus and the apostles, “How do we know that you are who you say you are,
and that your words are true?” At strategic moments God repeatedly manifested
Himself to people by miracles so they had outward, confirming evidence that the
words they heard from God’s servants were true. One notable example is Elijah
versus the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel (1
Kings 18). The apostle Paul challenged his opponents that they could know he
was an apostle when he said, “The signs of a true apostle were performed
among you with all perseverance, by signs and wonders and miracles” (2 Cor.
12:12).
Why don’t we
witness miracles frequently today? For one thing, we have the tendency to offer
scientific explanations for everything. We have over-reacted against those who
called everything that happened a miracle. Our naturalistic view of reality has
produced a secular mentality. This anti-supernatural bias doubtless hinders God’s
miraculous working in our time. Another reason is that Christians are not to
walk by sight but by faith. The Christian life is not dependent on whether God
works miracles or not. Basically, you and I do not rely upon what God does, but
who He is. God continues to work miracles today, but miracles are not required
to validate the Christian message. John the Baptist was a great prophet of God
but he did not perform any miracles. John 10:41-42 states, “And many came to
Him (Jesus) and were saying, while John performed no sign, yet everything John
said about this man was true. And many believed in Him there.” Though John did not perform any
miracle, he exalted the Lord Jesus Christ whom many then received. Recall that
Jesus said of John, “Truly, I say to you, among those born of women there has
not arisen anyone greater than John the Baptist” (Matt. 11:11). Miracles are not frequent occurrence
today because the church itself has become God’s sign to our age. Transformed
lives remain the greatest demonstrations of God’s miraculous working in our
world.
When
God touches and transforms a sinner, a prostitute, a murderer, an alcoholic, a
drug addict, a homosexual, a lesbian, a witch doctor, a Hindu or a Moslem that
is a miracle. It is a miracle of a transformed life. God continues to work
miracles in the context of an unevangelized mission fields. At the same time,
you and I are not to rely too much on miracles, because in many cases in the
New Testament miracles did not produce faith in Christ. In fact, when Jesus
raised Lazarus from the dead, people conspired to kill Him. Few converts were
won in biblical times through miracles. Moreover, the NT does not urge
Christians to seek miracles or signs and wonders. Remember that Satan also
performs miracles. The prophets of Pharaoh challenged Moses and Aaron for a
while. Paul says that in the latter days some will give heed to the doctrine of
demons (1 Tim. 4:1). Paul says again that the Anti-Christ will work with all
power and signs and false wonders (2 Thess. 2:9). I understand that some
self-appointed prophets from Africa are now going to India to get powers for their
ministries. A transformed life is the greatest of all miracles.
There
is the gift of prophecy. This is the third time we are dealing with prophecy.
Prophecy means basically to speak God’s word with divine anointing. In the
Bible prophecy has more to do with proclamation than predicting the future.
Sometimes telling the future was part of prophecy. However, the relevant
presentation of God’s word to the immediate situation dominates the greater
share of NT prophecy. Effective prophecy communicates God’s word to people in
the midst of their current situation. When Jeremiah was prophesying, he was
speaking to his generation about their need for repentance in view of God’s
impending judgment of the nation. Apostle Paul gives us the guideline for
evaluating prophecy: (1) prophecy will edify or build up the congregation. (2)
Prophecy will encourage and impart life. (3) Prophecy will console believers
and draw them toward God in Christian unity (1 Cor. 14:3).
The NT consistently teaches that
Christian prophecy will be orderly, positive in orientation and edifying to the
church. True prophets are not arrogant. Every prophecy must be examined in the
light of the Bible (A prophet who took a church member’s wife). Our criterion
for judging the validity of prophecy is the Bible. Current prophecy will not
result in a new revelation because the Bible remains normative for the church’s
doctrine. This is what some of the Charismatics have not learned.
Misunderstanding and abuse of prophecy and tongues are what brought a split
among the Pentecostals (Assemblies of God and other extreme Pentecostals).
Distinguishing of spirits or discernment is another
gift of the Spirit. The gift of discernment is the spiritual ability to
distinguish between spirits, whether they are divine, human, or demonic (1
Thess. 5:20-21). This gift
does not enable you to determine who is a Christian and who is not. That
determination belongs exclusively to God. However, this gift equips you to
discern a Christian spirit or a non-Christian spirit in order to prevent
confusion and false teachings from infiltrating the church. Satan often appears
as the counterfeit agent of truth (2 Cor. 11:14-15). Today thousands of astrologers are plying their
trade, many newspapers carry horoscopes, and some people in the church are
tempted to dabble in the occult practices, in séances, and the New Age movement
teachings. There are some who commune with other spirits including the spirits
of the dead. God commanded the Israelites to kill people who practiced such
things. Those of you who want to see visions and revelations are vulnerable to
those evil forces. For some Christians, walking by faith is not enough. The
problem is that if walking by faith is not enough for you, then you cannot be a
follower of Jesus Christ (Matt. 24:24). The fact of the matter is that
supernatural activity does not necessarily originate with God. Satan too can
perform great wonders through those who are under his influence.
Dr.
Billy Graham writes, “I am convinced that hundreds of religious leaders
throughout the world today are servants not of God, but of the Anti-Christ.
They are wolves in sheep’s clothing; they are tares instead of wheat.” He wrote
this book in 1978, so you can imagine that the number of these false prophets
have increased tremendously. The question is, “How can we know the false from
the true? This is why we need the spirit of discernment. Without a gift of
discernment in the church, Christians are open to all sorts of odd teachings
and false doctrines. Today there are some who are teaching that Christians can
be possessed by demons. This is false teaching. Even when a Christian falls
into a sin, this by no means suggests that he/she is demon possessed. We must
make a clear distinction between being tempted or oppressed by demons, and
being possessed by a demon. There is a vast difference. Don’t make a blanket
statement that all mental illnesses are the work of demons. The fact that a
Christian is depressed does not mean that he/she is demon possessed. A great
deal of harm has been done to sincere Christians who have been told that the
problems in their lives stem from their being possessed with demons. Thank God
for Christians who have the gift of discernment. The gift of discernment
enables you not only to discern evil but also to discern good (John 1:47). Jesus discerned good in
Nathanael. Barnabas discerned good in John Mark (Acts 15:36-39). However, Peter discerned evil intent
in Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5:3-5).
There
are also the gift of tongues and interpretation of tongues. The gift of tongues
is the problem child; it is the controversial gift then and now. It has divided
churches and denominations more than any other gift. The Corinthians were
infatuated with the gift of tongues. It was the favorite gift of the
Corinthians that had created a whole lot of controversy in the church. There
are two improper attitudes applied to the gift of tongues. They are
charisphobia and charismania. I have been to a church where one of the leaders
was going around looking for those who were praying in tongues and those who
were not. That was an unbiblical practice and I pointed it out to the pastor
and the leaders and they have changed that. Some Christians fear speaking in
tongues and oppose any form of it. Others elevate speaking in tongues to a
place of undue prominence. They regard the gift of tongues as the sign of one’s
having the Holy Spirit. This is farther from the truth. In the book of Acts
there are several accounts of people being filled with the Holy Spirit. In some
instances they spoke in tongues as the evidence of having received the Holy
Spirit. In some instances they were filled with the Holy Spirit but did not
speak in tongues. However, you and I have no biblical basis for rejecting the
gift of tongues. Tongues are a biblical charisma. There are four kinds of
speaking in tongues today: (1) Speaking in a language unknown to the speaker
but known to those who speak the language (Acts 2). (2) Speaking in an unknown
language, unless God gives the gift of interpretation (1 Cor. 14). (3) Speaking
under demonic influence. (4) Speaking in a non-rational verbiage; that is
psychological and human response to a religious emotion (testimony of a former
member of our church). Some speaking in tongues are of God and are valid. Some
are not of God and not valid. In fact, some are demonic. Witch doctors and
pagan priests often speak in tongues in their ritual frenzy. I believe many of
the tongues that are spoken today are psychological. Some speak in tongues so
that they may be accepted in the group. It is like peer pressure. During the
Wesleyan revival some who attended the meetings of John Wesley jerked and fell
down claiming that they were slain in the Spirit. John Wesley declared that
anyone who would do that would be expelled from the meetings and the slaying
stopped. In the NT nobody was slain in the Spirit. Those who were slain by the
Spirit died (Ananias, Sapphira, and Herod Agrippa I). The apostle Paul gives
the instruction for the use of tongues in a worship setting in 1 Corinthians chapter
14; that is when the interpretation of tongues comes in. The gift of
discernment is given to test prophecy, teaching, tongues and interpretation of
tongues. One clear test of the validity of these gifts is the lifestyle of a
person who exercises them. If the lifestyle is inconsistent with the fruit of the
Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23) and the character of Christ, the person has failed the
test of validity.