There is nothing about what you offered that would support we walk by sight and seek after a sign. It is saying just the opposite.
Jesus and the apostles did miracles. Doing miracles is not the same as walking by sight. The apostles asked Jesus to tell them a sign and He did. The apostles prayed to God to do signs and wonders for the sake of Jesus. The Bible calls none of these things walking by faith and not by sight.
You like to define terms according to your own human reasoning. But in doing so, you contradict the scriptures. I pointed out that the scriptures that contradict, but you have still repeated your unbiblical views. 'But be ye transformed by the renewing your of your minds.'
That portion of scripture you offered does not make the law of signs (signs are for those rebels who believe not) no longer valid. They destroyed the things God set up to be used in parables that spoke of the suffering of Christ beforehand as the standard for the gospel and installed their own signs as “sign seekers” establishing their own standard (seek after signs before one could believe)
The perfect law of God informs us signs are for those who believe not. Prophecy (the one source of faith) for those who do believe God, who remains without form.
You keep quoting the 'Wherefore tongues are for a sign...' verse as your 'law of signs.' But then you try to squeeze things out of that verse that aren't even there. THe verse does not teach that signs are only for them that believe not.
Saying that 'tongues are for a sign...to them that believe not' is NOT the same thing as saying signs are only for them that do not believe. I really do not know why you do not seem to understand the words on the page and keep repeating these strange ideas.
I could insist that the Bible teaches that eating chocolate is forbidden if I wanted, and then show you the same verse "Wherefore, tongues are for a sign..." Then I could say, "See, it says not to eat chocolate." The difference with that scenario and what you present is that your ideas are a little more related to the passage. But the similarity is the eisegesis, reading something into the passage that the passage does not say at all.
I have already quoted scripture that proves many of your assertions wrong. There are those who believe without seeing signs and wonders. There are those who believe after seeing them.
There are those who will believe without seeing signs and wonders, and there may be those who would only believe after seeing them. The fact that someone sees after seeing signs and wonders doesn't prove he wouldn't have believed without them. But after a nobleman asked for Jesus to heal His Son, Jesus said, "Except ye see signs and wonders, ye will not believe." But He continued on to do signs and wonders, and there were people who believed in him. After the miracle in Cana of Galilee, Jesus' disciples believed on Him. Where is that in your belief system? You read an idea about signs and wonders into certain scriptures that isn't even there-- that signs are only for unbelievers-- and ignore the scriptures that contradict your view. I suspect if you respond to this, you'll respond by stringing some dijointed religious concepts together in a sentence. I will pray for spiritual understanding for you. The root of the problem seems an inability to perceive. Be humble and ask God to help you understand.
When you look to the context of what is being said. The apostate Jews as their own standard according to their flesh sought after signs rather than the written law of God, prophecy. This made the cross a stumbling block as a sign of their unbelief(no faith) .
The unbelief of unbelieving Jews is not god. Their unbelief does not determine or define God's purposes. What they want God to do with signs does not limit what God wants to do with signs. If the Jews required a sign when Paul preached to them, that does not force God to use signs only for unbelieving Jews. In Acts 15, Paul and Barnabas told of the signs they did among the Gentiles. God had a purpose for Gentiles, too, in addition to Israel, with those wonders He did in Egypt, that the Egyptians might know that He is the LORD.
Refresh your memory of us—you bought us a long time ago. Psalm 74 :2
He did not request send a us a sign before we can believe. But rather the Holy Spirit used that Psalm to help us remain walking by faith (the unseen)
David did not say to abstain from fornication in this particular verse, but we should. David did not say to believe that Jesus rose from the dead in this particular verse, but we should. What kind of line of reasoning is this? This particular verse doesn't mention an idea, so that is supposed to be proof of something?
No one is argue that we should refuse to believe God unless He sends us a sign. But there are those who believe the Gospel after seeing it presented with signs and wonders. That is evident in the scriptures. Thomas actually refused to believe in Christ's resurrection unless he experienced certain evidences of it and Christ was merciful to Him and said to 'be not faithless but believing.' Thomas missed out on a blessing, the blessing those have who have not seen and yet have believed.
But there is no reference to the idea in most of those passages in the Gospel or Acts that those who believed after seeing signs and wonders were demanding to see signs before they believed.
Your foes roared in the place where you met with us; they set up their standards as signs. Psalms 74:4
Or in other words they set up their own signs as signs rejecting walking by faith according to prophecy.
Do you use this formula for Bible interpretation a lot? Ignore the plain sense of the text, and then read into it an allegorical interpretation that supports your argument, an argument that contradicts other scripture?
Way back when, armies used standards, for example a wooden frame with their banner or symbol on it.
It was their goal to take away anything that reminded them of the God of scriptures according to His standards. Because they walked by sight the removal of things seen must be made .(out of sight out of mind ) before they could set up their own standard.
Does taking a verse and reading an idea into it that isn't there at all, an idea that contradicts other scripture, qualify for setting up your own standard? I just saw you do that with 'tongues are for a sign.' That verse doesn't say that all signs are only for them that do not believe. There is scripture that contradicts that idea.
it is an evil generation (natural man that does seek after them.
Certain Jews demanded a sign from Jesus. Jesus said a wicked and adulterous generation seeks after a sign, and only gave them the sign of the prophet Jonah. His disciples asked Him for a sign, and He went into great detail. The fact that a wicked and adulterous generation seeks a sign does not mean that all who seek a sign are wicked and adulterous. It doesn't make the apostles wicked or adulterous. Notice that Jesus gave them a sign when they requested it. The attitude of their hearts was different.
A wicked and adulterous generation ate bread. Do you eat bread? Does that make you wicked or adulterous? Do you see the error in your reasoning? The fact that a wicked and adulterous generation sought a sign doesn't mean that all who sought a sign are wicked and adulterous.
the last one was the sign of Jonas. God is no longer bring new revelations as prophecy.
Why aren't you consistent with your own belief system? There is no reason to believe some of your allegorical interpretations if they are not revealed by the Holy Spirit. Do you admit that your allegorical interpretations are not revealed by the Holy Spirit?
Revelation is an ongoing thing. No man can know the Father, except the Son reveal Him. Paul prayed for the saints to have the Spirit of Revelation. The gift of prophecy is a revelatory gift, and we live in the last days when the 'sons and daughters shall prophesy.'