Andrew Rappaport's Rapp Report

Biblical Interpretation: Are We Quenching the Spirit with Cessationism?

Jul 9, 2025
Ryan Denton, a Presbyterian minister and church planter from Texas, shares his nuanced views on cessationism and continuationism. He discusses the dangers of a rigid cessationist perspective, emphasizing God's ongoing work in the world. The conversation explores historical interpretations of spiritual gifts, particularly prophecy and tongues, and encourages a thoughtful approach to scripture. They also highlight the importance of discernment in identifying genuine spiritual experiences while advocating for open dialogues among believers.
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INSIGHT

Nuanced Cessationism of Reformers

  • The 16th and 17th century Reformers affirmed cessation of extraordinary offices but acknowledged God's occasional extraordinary operation later on. - This nuanced cessationism allows God to raise apostles, prophets, or evangelists selectively but not to duplicate the original apostolic role.
INSIGHT

Risks of Hyper-Cessationism

  • Hyper-cessationism is a rigid form of cessationism that neglects God's supernatural work beyond apostolic age. - It risks quenching the Spirit and leads to a deistic or anti-supernatural worldview by denying modern extraordinary workings of God.
INSIGHT

'Teleos' Means Scripture Completion

  • The "teleos" (perfection) in 1 Corinthians 13:10 is best understood as the completion of Scripture, not Christ's return. - Illustrations about knowing fully and seeing face to face explain partial to complete, not new personal encounters or revelation.
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