"By his time, the gift of tongues had died out."
Still fallacious. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
A consistent biblical exegesis of this situation would include an explanation of "the perfect" which was to come, what it was, and how it made a big difference in the Church. In the absence of such testimony, the message must be a cautious "We're not seeing that gift presently" rather than a certain "It has died out."
If prophesy was still active, then tongues had likely not ceased either, though they may not have been manifest. Scripture links the two, together with "knowledge" and their juxtaposition suggests that they will cease at the same time.
Still fallacious. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
A consistent biblical exegesis of this situation would include an explanation of "the perfect" which was to come, what it was, and how it made a big difference in the Church. In the absence of such testimony, the message must be a cautious "We're not seeing that gift presently" rather than a certain "It has died out."
If prophesy was still active, then tongues had likely not ceased either, though they may not have been manifest. Scripture links the two, together with "knowledge" and their juxtaposition suggests that they will cease at the same time.
New prophecy or revelations has ceased and right along with it new knowledge that could come with it. The existing prophecy will go on doing its work of prophesying the gospel until the new heavens and earth appear.
Is there something missing from the perfect or is the last chapter revelation with a warning not to add or substract, not the last and we can expect more or different laws so we can hear the word of God more perfectly??
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