Termination of Miraculous Spiritual Gifts

Exegesis of 1 Corinthians 13:8-13
By Garth Black, Minister of Gods Word

In the Apostle Paul’s first epistle to the church at Corinth he was much concerned with the strife and division that had arisen there over the matter of “miraculous spiritual gifts.” (Chapters12-14) It would seem apparent from the 12th chapter that there were some who were envious or jealous because they did not possesses these spiritual gifts, described by the apostle in the first eleven verses of that chapter. (It is evident from verse 29 that not all possessed these gifts.) On the other hand, there were some who were evidently manifesting a spirit of pride and conceit because they did possess one or more of these spiritual gifts. The result was friction and disunity in the church. (vs. 25)

Paul makes it clear that all members in the congregation were important. Whether or not an individual Christian possessed one of the spiritual gifts, each member had a contribution to make toward the good of the body as a whole. The abilities and talents possessed by each member were to compliment and supplement those talents and abilities of the other members in the congregation, in order that the body of Christ might be edified and able to fulfill its purpose and mission, (12:12-28)

At the conclusion of chapter 12 Paul speaks to the Corinthians saying, “I will show you a more excellent way.” (vs. 31) With this thought he introduces the great passage on the subject of love, recorded in the 13th chapter. It is Paul’s purpose here to show that spiritual gifts were not the superior way. The Corinthians had elevated these “gifts” to a position of priority and importance that was unwarranted. Paul begins by saying that if a man could speak with the tongues of men and of angels but had not love he was as sounding brass or a clanging cymbal. If he had the gift of prophecy and knew all mysteries and had all knowledge and the faith so that he could remove mountains but had not love, he was as nothing. It is obvious from this context that the possession of a spiritual gift was not the criterion for determining one’s spirituality, but rather the attribute of love was to be the distinguishing mark of the Christian. (Note John 13:34-35.)

In a previous letter to the churches of Galatia Paul had made much the same point. In the 5th chapter of that letter, while contrasting the works of the flesh with the fruit of the Spirit he denotes those characteristics or attributes which mark the Christian as one who “walks by the Spirit” –those characteristics being love, joy, peace, kindness, long suffering, goodness, faithfulness, meekness, and self-control. (vs. 22-23) It is interesting to note that in describing this “fruit” Paul mentions first the attribute of love. Those eight attributes that follow are surely an outgrowth of true love. No mention is made here of the “ spiritual gifts,” nor is it implied that their possession meant that one was being “led” by the Spirit or was “walking” by the Spirit. (Galatians 5:16-24)

In 1 Corinthians 13, beginning with verse 4, Paul describes the nature of love and the way love conducts itself. Obviously, it was not the way that many of the Corinthians had been behaving themselves, even though they had received the spiritual gifts. In the last half of this chapter, beginning with verse 8, Paul makes yet another contrast between love and the spiritual gifts. In this verse he says, “Love never fails,” but then he states that these spiritual gifts will cease. He mentions the miraculous spiritual gifts of prophecies, speaking in tongues, and knowledge, and declares that “they shall be done away.” While it is true he only mentions three of the nine spiritual gifts that he had previously mentioned in the first eleven verses of chapter 12, it seems evident that those three are representative of the entire group. (The six gifts that are not mentioned here are very closely related to the three that are. The gifts of healing, miracles and supernatural faith were instrumental in confirming those truths revealed by supernatural knowledge and prophecy. The gifts of wisdom and interpretation of tongues made clear and understandable those truths that were so revealed. The ability to distinguish between spirits made it possible for them to mark the false prophets.) There can be no doubt that Paul here affirms the termination of spiritual gifts.

The important question is when will these gifts be terminated? In verse 10 Paul say they will be done away “when that which is perfect is come.” There are those that interpret “that which is perfect” to mean Christ, or heaven. In this case, the spiritual gifts would last until the end of time, or until the second coming of Christ. Another explanation of this passage is that “that which is perfect” refers to the coming of the completed and perfect revelation of God to man. At that point, these spiritual gifts, having served their revalatory purpose, would then be terminated. Thus, the miraculous spiritual gifts would last only until the New Testament was completed. Regardless of which interpretation one might choose, it is evident that Paul’s main point is that these spiritual gifts were inferior to love, because of the duration of time that each would last.

It is our belief that this passage teaches the termination of miraculous spiritual gifts, at a point in time when the perfect revelation of God to man would have come to be reality. At that time those spiritual gifts would have served their purpose and would no longer be necessary. These purposes were guiding, strengthening, and edifying the infant church until such time that it would have the complete New Testament to supply those needs. Let us now note, in some detail, the text of this passage, to see if we can determine just when it is Paul is saying that these spiritual gifts would cease.

In verse 8, after Paul states that love will never fail, he adds that prophecies, tongues and knowledge will be done away. Then, in verse 9 he says that we know in part and we prophesy in part, indicating that the inspired writers knowledge and prophecies were limited and “imperfect”, and that as yet a complete knowledge and understanding of spiritual things and spiritual ways was not available to man. If this situation was to exist until the second coming of Christ, then it is evident that this description found in verse 9 could be an accurate description of the state of the church throughout the Christian age. In other words, our knowledge and understanding of those things that pertain to religious truth would be limited during the entire church age. Yet, in the 16th chapter of John, the Lord told his apostles that the Holy Spirit would come upon them and guide them into all truth (vs.13). Later in the book of II Timothy the apostle Paul was to say that the scriptures were able to furnish man completely unto every good work (3:17). The apostle Peter, in the second epistle of Peter, 1:3, says “that God had granted to us all things pertaining to life and Godliness through the knowledge of him that called us by his own glory and virtue.” If that which is perfect (vs.10) rather refers to the complete and final revelation of God to man as revealed by the Holy Spirit through the inspired writers, then it is obvious and clear that the spiritual gifts of knowledge and prophecy would no longer be needed, for no longer would knowledge and prophecy be imperfect. To make this point even clearer, Paul gives us two illustrations.

The first of these is found in verse 11, where he writes,

“When I was a child I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child, now that I am become a man I have put away childish things.”

In light of this context it is evident that the childish things refer to the spiritual gifts, and that these gifts were the ways of a child and to last only for the duration of childhood. But when one becomes a man, or mature, then childish ways are no longer necessary. In like manner, when one becomes a mature disciple of Christ and is capable of knowing and understanding all things that God wants him to know, then these miraculous spiritual gifts, or the childish things, are no longer needed. If these spiritual gifts were to last until the second coming of Christ, then it is apparent that Paul would be saying that we could not be counted as mature and fully knowledgeable men until that time. Such a thought or concept is contrary to much of what is said elsewhere in the New Testament.

In Ephesians 4, beginning with verse 11, Paul says that

the work of the apostles and the prophets and the evangelists and the pastors and the teachers is in order that we might be perfected unto the work of ministering and the building up of the body of Christ until we all attain the unity of the faith and the knowledge of the Son of God unto a full-grown man, unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ.”

It is obvious from this passage that the apostle Paul thought it would be possible for the Christian to become full-grown or mature within the course of his life. One of the primary works of the apostles and prophets was to reveal God’s will to man. When this will had been revealed, it was then the work of the evangelists, pastors, and teachers to see that God’s word was taught, to both Christians and all mankind. The purposes were that we might

“attain unto the unity of the faith and to a state of maturity whereby we would be no longer as children tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of doctrine by the slight of men, in craftiness, after the wiles of error.” (Ephesians 4:14).

In the book of Hebrews 6:1 the writer of that epistle exhorts us to press on unto perfection or maturity. In Romans 8:29 Paul prays that we might be conformed to the image of his Son. In Ephesians 3:19 the same apostle prays that we might be filled unto all the fullness of God. Certainly such passages as these imply a state of maturity or perfection that might be attained in this life and aptly described by the term “full-grown man,” in contrast to the term “child.” Such a state of maturity could only come about as a result of having available for study and guidance God’s complete revelation to man. (Note Hebrews 6:1-3.)

In verse 12 Paul gives us his second illustration.

“For now we see in a mirror darkly, but then face to face. Now I know in part, but then shall I know fully even as also I was fully known.”

Again the point is much the same as in the preceding verse. As one would look into a mirror of that time, the image was reflected very poorly. It was difficult to make out the details of one’s face or what one saw. But the time would come when it would be like looking at one face to face, when everything would be clear and precise. In like manner, during the time that the spiritual gifts existed, specifically speaking in tongues, supernatural knowledge and prophecies, it was a time when things were not fully understood or grasped. But when that point of time comes that I can know fully and completely, then those things now known only in part will be fully grasped and understood. At that time the miraculous spiritual gifts would be no more.

Two questions are suggested by this verse. First, what is Paul talking about in reference to the subject matter of his knowledge? What is it that he now knows only in part, but will at a future time understand more fully and completely? The second question pertains to the matter of time. When would it be that Paul would “know fully,” even as I was fully known”? In answer to the first question, we look back to verse 9 where Paul says, “We know in part, and we prophesy in part.” Reference here is to God’s revelation to man at the time of Paul’s writing when that revelation was incomplete. At the writing of this epistle probably no more than 4 or 5 other books of the New Testament had been written. Even though it may be logically argued that much of God’s revelation, that was to later be written by the inspired authors of the New Testament, had already been orally revealed by the spiritual gifts of prophecy and knowledge, it is nevertheless obvious that there were still some truths yet unrevealed and others that were not fully understood. Even a superficial study of the later epistles of Paul, Peter, and John, as well as the book of Revelation, makes this point indisputable.

The second question is most important – when “spiritual gifts” would cease. Paul is saying that he (or all men, as he speaks in this passage of himself as a representative of all men) could know fully and completely. Do we today have God’s complete revelation to man? Again we refer to John 16:13 where Jesus promised his apostles that they would be guided into all truth. (Note also II Timothy 3:16-17; II Peter 1:3; Jude 3.) If the New Testament is God’s complete and final revelation to man, then man is capable of “knowing” fully and completely all that God wants him to know with respect to his relationship to God, his needs, and the way to spiritual maturity and life eternal. It might also be noted that if God’s revelation to man is complete and has been complete since the writing of the New Testament, then there is no longer a need for the miraculous spiritual gifts mentioned in verses 8 and 9. If we are to interpret Paul to be saying here the he (we) cannot know fully until Christ’s second coming, then how can we explain the Lord’s promise that his apostles would be guided into “all truth”?

Still, with regard to verse 12, the question may be asked, “What does Paul mean by the phrase – “as also I was fully known?” God knew Paul, as he does all men, fully and completely. God knew his weaknesses, his failures, his talents, his desires and his needs. Today as we look into the “mirror of the perfect law of liberty” (James 1:24, 25), it reflects to us our weaknesses, our failures, our strengths and our needs. The New Testament makes it possible for man to “know” himself in relationship to his God just assuredly as if God were speaking to him “face to face”. There is no weakness possessed by man that the New Testament does not reveal. There is no need that man has that God does not provide. The way that God provides and meets those needs are revealed in His complete revelation to man, the New Testament. When we come to the end of time and stand before the judgment seat of Christ, there is no indication that we will suddenly come into some new knowledge of ourselves or of God’s nature and will that was not already revealed to us in His Word. “All truth” has already been revealed, and by it we shall be judged (John 12:48).

In verse 13 Paul mentions three graces, all of which are greater and more important than the spiritual gifts mentioned previously. Those three attributes mentioned are faith, hope and love. Since Paul states in Romans 8:24 that “hope that is seen is not hope, for who hopeth for that which he seeth,” it is evident that hope will terminate at the end of time. Faith by its very definition is the assurance of things hoped for, a conviction of things that are not seen (Hebrews 11:1). When time is no more and our Lord has come again, then faith will become a reality. It will no longer be faith. We will then walk by sight, not by faith. While it is true that love will last throughout eternity, since it is used here in connection with faith and hope, it would seem more consistent to understand the apostle as saying that these three graces should abide while the earth stands, in contrast to the miraculous gifts that would terminate prior to the end of the world. If the spiritual gifts mentioned in verse 8 are to last as long as faith, hope and love, then there is no point to Paul’s contrast. He is showing the superiority of faith, hope and love over the spiritual gifts, from the standpoint of their duration. Faith, hope, love, these three, abide – in contrast to the spiritual gifts, which will cease. If this point is valid, then the spiritual gifts would not last until the end of time and the phrase “that which is perfect is come” could not refer to the second coming of Christ. While faith, hope and love were to last throughout the Christian age, the spiritual gifts would last only until God’s complete revelation to man was finished.

What is evident in all this is that a certain point in time is being alluded to by the apostle. There seems nothing here to indicate that he is speaking about the end of time. In fact, if such an interpretation is given to this passage it would mean that throughout the Christian age our knowledge of God’s will would ever be in a state of evolution, rather than being the complete and total revelation taught in the New Testament. It would mean that we would have to resign ourselves to a permanent state of spiritual immaturity. We could not anticipate reaching a state of maturity or Christ – likeness in this life. It would mean that we could never have a full grasp or understanding of our own imperfections and needs. It would make meaningless the contrast drawn between spiritual gifts and faith, hope and love, if all were to last for the same period of time.

It is much more logical to interpret Paul here as saying that these miraculous spiritual gifts were to last until such time as God’s complete revelation is made known to man – a revelation that would enable man to develop to a state of spiritual maturity and to be able to know right from wrong, so that he might not be tossed to and fro by every wind of doctrine.

Miraculous spiritual gifts had a very distinct purpose. They were invaluable and needed during the time the church was in its infancy. But to affirm that these spiritual gifts are still with us today and are present in the church would be evidence of immaturity and weakness rather than of fully developed power and seasoned strength. If we are concerned about marks of spirituality, then let us note that these spiritual gifts were never such a criterion. Rather let us emphasize the fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23) as describing those characteristics which should be noted in the individual who is both full of the Spirit and a mature child of God who has now been “transformed into the image of His Son.”


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