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Spiritual Gifts
Spiritual Gifts
The term charisma ("spiritual gift"), except for 1 Pet. 4:10, is used
only by Paul. Charisma signifies redemption or salvation as the gift of
God's grace (Rom. 5:15; 6:23) and a gift enabling the Christian to
perform his service in the church (1 Cor. 7:7), as well as defining a
special gift enabling a Christian to perform a particular ministry in
the church (e.g., 12:28ff.). Paul offers instruction on spiritual gifts in Rom. 12:6 - 8; 1 Cor.
12:4 - 11, 28 - 30; Eph. 4:7 - 12. Spiritual gifts were unusual
manifestations of God's grace (charis) under normal and abnormal forms.
Not every spiritual gift affected the moral life of the one who
exercised it, but its purpose was always the edification of believers.
The exercise of a spiritual gift implied service in the church. This
practical approach is never lost sight of in the NT, these spiritual
gifts often being divided into miraculous and non miraculous; but since
some are synonymous with specific duties, they should be classified
according to their significance for preaching the word, on the one hand,
and exercising practical ministries, on the other. . "Miracles" is the rendering of dynameis (powers). In Acts dynameis
refers to the casting out of evil spirits and the healing of bodily
ailments (8:6 - 7, 13; 19:11 - 12). This may explain "working of
powers," but this gift is not synonymous with "gifts of healing."
Probably the former was much more spectacular than the latter, and may
have signified raising the dead (Acts 9:36ff.; 20:9ff.). Paul himself
exercised this gift of working of powers, and it was for him proof of
his apostleship (2 Cor. 12:12), and authenticated both the good news he
preached and his right to proclaim it (Rom. 15:18ff.). As already suggested, gifts of healing resembled "working of
miracles" (powers). Witness the ministry of our Lord (Matt. 4:23 - 24),
of the Twelve (Matt. 10:1), and of the Seventy (Luke 10:8 - 9). Gifts of
healing were also prominent in the church after Pentecost (Acts 5:15 -
16; cf. also James 5:14 - 15). "Gifts" (plural) indicates the great
variety of both the sicknesses healed and the means used in the
healings. The person who exercised the gift, and the patient who was
healed, had one essential in common, faith in God. The writings of the church fathers prove that "the gifts of healings"
were exercised in the church centuries after the apostolic period. Since
then, this gift has appeared intermittently in the church. For long
gifts of healing have been in abeyance, but today there are recognized
branches of the church which believe that they are beginning to
reappear. Unfortunately the manner in which some act who claim to have
received the gift has brought it into disrepute. The kind of ailments
that were healed in the NT period, the nature and place of faith, the
significance of suffering in God's economy, the importance of the
subconscious and the nature of its influence upon the body, the
relations between gifts of healings and medical science (a doctor was
numbered among Paul's traveling companions!), these have not received
the attention they require today. Gifts of healings are a permanent gift
of the Spirit to the church but are properly exercised only by men of
the Spirit, and of humility and faith. What spiritual gift was signified by "helper" may be gathered from
Acts 20:35, where Paul exhorts the Ephesians elders to labor "to help
the weak" and constantly to remember the Lord's own words, "It is more
blessed to give than to receive." Paul supports this exhortation from
his own example. The early church seems to have had a special concern
for the needy among her members, and those who helped the indigent were
considered to have been endowed by the Spirit for this ministry. It is
not impossible that the office of elder originated in the gift of
government or rule. By the same token, the office or duty of deacon may
have originated in this gift of helpers. The deacon was one who
ministered to the needy (Acts 6:1 - 6). The church's organization was still fluid. Official offices had not
been established, nor were duly appointed officials yet ruling the
churches. It was necessary, therefore, that certain members should
receive and exercise the gift of ruling or governing the local assembly
of believers. This gift would take the form of sound advice and wise
judgment in directing church affairs. Gradually, of course, this gift of guiding and ruling in church
affairs would come to be identified so closely with certain individuals
that they would begin to assume responsibilities of a quasi permanent
nature. They would become recognized officials in the church, fulfilling
well defined duties in the administration of the Christian community. At
the beginning, however, it was acknowledged that some Christians had
received the gift of ruling and had liberty to exercise it. In addition
to administration, practical matters in the conduct of public worship
would require wisdom and foresight, and here again those who had
recognizably received the gift of ruling would be expected to legislate.
The gift of faith should probably be included among the gifts closely
related to the practical life and development of the church. These
spiritual gifts would naturally strengthen the believers in their faith,
and convince the unbelievers of the authenticity of the church's
message. The Spirit's gift of faith could effect mighty things (Matt.
17:19 - 20), and keep believers steadfast in persecution. These five
spiritual gifts, then, had special reference to the practical aspects of
the church's life, the physical well being of believers, and orderliness
of their worship and conduct. The remainder of the gifts of the Spirit concern the ministry of the
word of God. To that extent, they were more important than the
foregoing; but the latter were, nevertheless, spiritual gifts. In origin
and nature they were the result of special endowments of the Spirit. Concerning the gifts especially meaningful for the preaching of the
word, Paul gives pride of place to the grace of apostleship: "God hath
set some in the church, first apostles" (1 Cor. 12:28). The designation
"apostle" began to be applied to NT personalities other than the Twelve,
especially to Paul. So highly did he value the gift of apostleship which
the Holy Spirit had conferred upon him that on occasion he was at pains
to prove its validity (cf. I Cor. 9:1ff.; Gal. 1:12). The apostles
conceived that they had received this spiritual gift to enable them to
fulfil the ministry of the word of God; nothing, therefore, should be
allowed to prevent their fulfilling that all important function (Acts
6:2). We also gather from Paul that the gift of apostleship was to be
exercised principally among unbelievers (1 Cor. 1:17), while other
spiritual gifts were more closely related to the needs of believers.
Paul's apostleship was to be fulfilled among Gentiles; Peter's ministry
of the word was to be exercised among Jews (Gal. 2:7 - 8). Obviously the
Spirit's gift of apostleship was not confined to a strictly limited
group of men whose gift of apostleship made them ipso facto special
units of a divine grace or authority. Their function was doubtless conceived to be the most important so
far as the ministry of the word was concerned, but we shall see
presently that theirs was only one of a number of such spiritual gifts.
The church was built upon prophets as well as apostles (Eph. 2:20), the
first ministering in the word to the church, the latter preaching the
word to non Christians. Since, then, the gift of apostleship was
spiritual, so also was the authority of the apostles. It remained the
prerogative of the Holy Spirit and never became official in the sense
that one could communicate it to others of his own volition. The
authority exercised by the apostles was exercised democratically, not
autocratically (Acts 15:6, 22). They were careful to include the elders
and brethren when substantiating the validity of the directives they
were issuing to the church. Even when Paul was asked to legislate for
the churches he had founded, his authority was not his apostleship but a
word from the Lord (1 Cor. 7:10). Prophets stand next in importance to apostles in Paul's enumeration
of the spiritual gifts (1 Cor. 12:2ff.). The gift of prophecy has
already been differentiated from the grace of apostleship on the ground
of the sphere in which each was exercised. In a sense Moses' desire
(Num. 11:29) had been realized in the experience of the church as a
whole (Acts 2:17 - 18; 19:6; 1 Cor. 11:4 - 5), but some individuals seem
to have been specially endowed with this grace (Acts 11:28; 15:32; 21:9
- 10). These prophets in the NT church seem often to have been itinerant
preachers. Moving from church to church, they built up believers in the
faith by teaching the word. Their ministry would probably be
characterized by spontaneity and power, since it seems to have included
speaking by revelation (1 Cor. 14:6, 26, 30 - 31). In these passages,
however, the prophet's utterances were clearly understood compared with
the utterances in tongues. On occasion God would make his will known through the prophet (Acts
13:1ff.), or a future event would be foretold (Acts 11:28; 21:10 - 11);
but the prophet's special gift was the edification, exhortation,
consolation, and instruction of the local churches (1 Cor. 14). In the
sub apostolic period the prophet could still take precedence over the
local minister, but the day was not far off when this gift of prophecy
passed to the local ministers who preached the word to edify the members
of the Christian fellowship. The nature of this gift of prophecy was such that the danger of false
prophets must always have been present. The Spirit, therefore,
communicated a gift that enabled some among those who listened to the
prophets to recognize the truth or falsity of their utterances. This was
not natural insight or shrewd judgment but a supernatural gift. Paul
describes this spiritual gift as a "discerning of the spirits." The fact
that the prophet spoke by revelation made the appearance of false
prophets almost inevitable; while, therefore, Paul urged his converts
not to despise prophesyings, they were, nevertheless, to prove all
things (1 Thess. 5:20 - 21). Believers had to be able to discriminate between the false and the
true spirits, when an itinerant prophet claimed to be inspired to speak
by revelation (1 Cor. 14:29). Clearly related to, but carefully distinguished from, the gift of
prophecy is the gift of teaching (1 Cor. 12:28 - 29; Rom. 12:7). The
prophet was a preacher of the word; the teacher explained what the
prophet proclaimed, reduced it to statements of doctrine, and applied it
to the situation in which the church lived and witnessed. The teacher
would offer systematic instruction (2 Tim. 2:2) to the local churches.
In Eph. 4:11 Paul adds the idea of pastor to that of teacher, because no
one is able to communicate effectively (teach) without loving those who
are being instructed (pastor). Likewise, to be an effective pastor, one
must also be a teacher. The possessor of the gift of exhortation would fulfil a ministry
closely allied with that of the Christian prophet and teacher. The
difference between then would be found in the more personal approach of
the former. If his exhortations were to succeed, they would have to be
given in the persuasive power of love, understanding, and sympathy. His
aim would be to win Christians to a higher way of life and to a deeper
self dedication to Christ. The Spirit, therefore, who bestowed the gift
of exhortation would with the gift communicate spiritual persuasiveness
and winsomeness. An important part of the Spirit's endowment so far as the Christian
community was concerned was wisdom. This gift would communicate ability
to receive and explain "the deep things of God." In God's dealings with
men much is mysterious, and the ordinary Christian is often in need of a
word that will throw light upon his situation; and the person fitted by
the Spirit to fulfil this ministry is through the Spirit given the word
of wisdom. Because of the strong sense of revelation or insight implied
in the phrase, perhaps this gift was akin to a revelational utterance by
the Christian prophet. Speaking the word of knowledge suggests a word spoken only after long
and careful consideration. This would be a word that the Christian
teacher would ordinarily speak. Of course, this mental activity would
not be entirely unaided; a point being reached when the Spirit would
give knowledge, understanding, insight, that might be described as
intuition. But since Paul points out that both the word of wisdom and
the word of knowledge are given through or according to the Spirit, the
emphasis is on the reception of the word, not on its interpretation. Yet another spiritual gift is mentioned by Paul. The Spirit gives
"kinds of tongues" (1 Cor. 12:10, 28). The nature of this gift is
explained in 1 Cor. 14. (1) The tongue in which the person spoke was
unintelligible, and therefore unedifying to the Christian assembly (vss.
2 - 4); (2) the tongue (glossa) was not a foreign language (vss.10 -
12); (3) The tongue speaker addressed himself to God to whom he probably
offered prayer and praise (vss. 14 - 17); (4) The tongue edified the
speaker (vs. 4); (5) The tongue speaker lost the control of intellectual
faculties (vss. 14 - 15), the tongue being probably a disjointed, highly
pitched, ecstatic series of ejaculations, similar to the tongues spoken
in times of spiritual awakening experienced intermittently by the
church. A necessary corollary to speaking in tongues was the interpretation
of tongues. The tongue speaker might also exercise the gift of
interpreting, but usually others exercised it (vss. 26 - 28; 12:10);
though Paul's advice in 1 Cor. 14:13 is interesting. This would imply
giving meaning to unmeaning ecstatic ejaculations as an art critic
interprets a play, a symphony, or a canvas to the uninitiated; though
the tongue interpreter did not depend on natural knowledge. Another gift to the church is the evangelist. Timothy is called an
evangelist in 2 Tim. 4:5, as is Philip, one of the seven, in Acts 21:8.
The task of preaching the gospel, although theoretically everyone's
responsibility, is entrusted specifically to certain individuals by the
Holy Spirit. They are to exercise their ministry in the full realization
that the power comes from God, making faddish and manipulative
techniques not only unnecessary but wrong. When such are present, it is
a clear indication that the Spirit is absent. Converts from the
evangelist's ministry are to be funneled into the church where they are
to be built up by those exercising the other gifts. Service is called a gift in Rom. 12:7. This term is used in a number
of ways in the NT, from a generalized idea of ministry (2 Cor. 5:18,
where Paul's preaching is called a ministry of reconciliation) to a
specific office or task (1 Tim. 1:12). It is difficult to know exactly
how Paul means it here. It is perhaps a generalized gift of power to
anyone exercising a specific function in the church. Paul speaks of contributing as a gift (Rom. 12:8). All are to give to
the needs of the church, its ministry, and the poor, but a special gift
enables some to make joyous sacrifice in this area. Paul adds that this
gift should be exercised "without grudging" or "in liberality." Merciful acts are to be performed with cheerfulness under the
guidance of the Spirit. It might be wondered why such a noble act would
require charismatic endowment, but the circumstances of the time explain
it. To render aid was dangerous. Such identification with other
Christians in need branded one as a Christian as well, opening up the
possibility of persecution for oneself. Giving aid, also mentioned as a gift, is to be exercised with zeal.
It is possible that this gift is another form of administrative gift. If
so, this is not new. If not, it more closely parallels acts of mercy.
In instructing Christians on the exercise of these gifts, Paul is
concerned to stress their practical nature. The Spirit bestows his
charismata for the edification of the church, the formation of Christian
character, and the service of the community. The reception of a
spiritual gift, therefore, brought serious responsibility, since it was
essentially an opportunity for self-giving in sacrificial service for
others. The more spectacular gifts (tongues, healings, miracles) necessitated
some degree of order that would prevent their indiscriminate use (1 Cor.
14:40). The spirits of the prophets must be subjected to the prophets
(vs. 32). Paul clearly insists that spectacular gifts were inferior to
those that instructed believers in faith and morals and evangelized non
Christians. Tongue speaking was not forbidden (vs. 39), but intelligent
exposition of the word, instruction in faith and morals, and preaching
the gospel were infinitely superior. The criteria used to judge the
relative values of spiritual gifts were doctrinal (1 Cor. 12:3), moral
(1 Cor. 13), and practical (1 Cor. 14). The problem was where to strike the balance. The greatest peril lay
in overemphasizing the gifts, which tended to exalt the offices that
grew out of them. That led inevitably to institutional ecclesiasticism
and the inevitable corresponding loss of the church's awareness of the
Spirit's presence and experience of the Spirit's power. J G S S Thomson and W A Elwell Bibliography. L Morris, Spirit of the Living God; H W. Robinson, The
Christian Experience of the Holy Spirit; J R W Stott, The Baptism and
Fullness of the Holy Spirit; C Williams, The Descent of the Dove; M
Griffiths, Grace - Gifts; K Stendahl, Paul Among Jews and Gentiles; J R
Williams, The Gift of the Holy Spirit Today; A A Hoekema, Tongues and
Spirit Baptism; F D Bruner, A Theology of the Holy Spirit; E E Ellis,
Prophecy and Hermeneutics. Augustine's Prayer to the Holy Spirit
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Updated Monday, 02 November 2009 |
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