I am not Charismatic.  It is hard for me to describe myself as a traditional cessationist either. I refer to myself as a “de facto” cessationist. What does this mean? Essentially, when it comes to the so-called supernatural sign gifts such as gifts of tongues, prophecy, workers of miracles, etc, spoken of in the Bible, I have never seen enough to convince me that there are modern-day manifestations of these gifts in any substantial way. There certainly could be, I just have not seen them. But let me be clear: For the last 22 years, you have never met anyone who actually wants to be Charismatic as much as I do. Who wouldn’t? Another blog for another day . . . Just know: I am not biased against the notion.

Concerning the gift of prophecy (the idea that one can speak on behalf of God in a “thus-says-the-Lord” type way), I have never seen this either. I would love to have God speak to me or through me in such a way, but he never has. I have never heard the voice of God and have never been his spokesperson other than through my interpretation of Scripture. Although I must admit, I had a strange occurrence twenty years ago. I had a drunk I gave a ride to in downtown Oklahoma City tell me that God told him I was going to be a preacher. At that time in my life, it was a joke to think such. It was not enough for me to think much of it, and the guy was drunk!

I see the arguments for and against modern-day prophecies as nearly equally persuasive. I have simply just never witnessed this myself. However, there is an argument out there that more traditional cessationists make to argue their case.  (Again, a cessationist is one whose theology argues that the supernatural sign gifts ceased in the first century, usually with the death of the last Apostle or the completion of Scripture). This is an argument that seems reasonable at first, but, ultimately, I think is very weak and fails to understand the nature of prophecy and the nature of what constitutes Scripture. It goes like this:

If the gift of prophecy is still being given and there are people out there who speak directly on behalf of God, then the canon is still open.

What this means is that if God is still speaking in any way, whatever is spoken, by virtue of it being God’s words, needs to be added to Scripture. Maybe a new book, letter, Psalm, or just a page added to the end of the Bible, this argument insists that a belief in modern-day prophecy demands an open canon.

I disagree. Yes, disagree. I think it is a bad argument that my position often uses, but should stop using.

Here are the two basic problems I see with such an argument: It misunderstands the nature of prophecy and the nature of the canon.

1. Nature of prophecy: There is no reason to think that prophecy always has corporate or salvific implications. To think that everything that God has ever said is relevant to all people simply cannot be defended. Prophecy can be individualistic. While it is true that the nation of Israel had prophets that spoke concerning the nation as a whole and the future of the nation and the church has had its Apostles and prophets who spoke on behalf of God concerning the Gospel, the nature of the church, and the consummation of all things, this does not mean this is all prophets speak about. In fact, there are plenty of indications that many prophets spoke to individuals about rather mundane things such as the location of lost donkeys (1 Sam 9:6, 20), an adulterous affair (2 Sam 12:7), and corporately about issues with no transcendent purpose at all such as acts of God in nature (Acts 11:28). One could argue that these “non-transcendent” prophecies were setting the stage for the prophet so he could qualify to speak about more transcendent issues, but this does not seem to be the case. What transcendent issue did Nathan speak about? What about Abigail?

In the end, while prophets were given by God to speak about issues of paramount importance, they were also given to speak about rather non-consequential stuff as well.

2. Nature of the canon: This is related to the first, but involves a slightly different assumption. The supposition here is that the canon of Scripture is made up of everything that has ever been inspired. Here inspiration equals canon. If it is inspired, it should be added to the Scripture.

But why would we ever assume such a proposition? Scripture is not made up of everything that has ever been inspired. There is very good reason to believe that there were a lot of inspired words from God that never made the canon cut. A great example of this is the early years of the prophet Saul. While were are given some background to his story on how he was called to be a prophet, we don’t know anything about how he was established among the people as a legitimate spokesperson for God. Yet as we follow the narrative in 1 Samuel, we see that Saul considers himself an already established prophet due to many prophecies that we don’t have recorded in Scripture. Notice what Saul says in 1 Sam 9:6: “Behold now, there is a man of God in this city, and the man is held in honor; all that he says surely comes true. Now let us go there, perhaps he can tell us about our journey on which we have set out” (emphasis mine). We don’t know all that he said that came true since it is not part of the canon. This is a definite occurrence of God speaking through someone that was not recorded in Scripture. Therefore, the principle “if it is inspired, it belongs in Scripture” fails here. We could do the same with many of the Prophets. Look at Nathan. We barely have anything from him. His most famous encounter is when he indicts David for his affair and murder, but are we to suppose that this was his only prophecy? He was already a respected prophet, yet Scripture does not record his prophecies. What about Christ? Everything he said was, by definition, inspired. Yet we obviously don’t have an exhaustive account of all that he said. In fact, even John says that there were many other miraculous signs that Christ performed that were not written down, letting us know that even signs, wonders, and miracles were not always recorded because of their non-transcendent purpose.

John 20:30-31
“Therefore many other signs Jesus also performed in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in this book;
31 but these have been written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you may have life in His name.”

Therefore, I think that it is evident that not everything that God says belongs in Scripture. The canon of Scripture is made up of everything that God has said that is relevant to all people and, normally, pertains to salvation history.

Again, I am not charismatic. I have never heard the voice of God. Nor have I seen what I believe to be modern-day prophets. However, I don’t think that it is wise to attempt to argue for a theology that demands the cessation of God speaking today, especially if the argument’s main thrust is that if God is still speaking, then the canon is still open. This argument simply does not work and is contrary to biblical evidence.


C Michael Patton
C Michael Patton

C. Michael Patton is the primary contributor to the Parchment and Pen/Credo Blog. He has been in ministry for nearly twenty years as a pastor, author, speaker, and blogger. Find him on Patreon Th.M. Dallas Theological Seminary (2001), president of Credo House Ministries and Credo Courses, author of Now that I'm a Christian (Crossway, 2014) Increase My Faith (Credo House, 2011), and The Theology Program (Reclaiming the Mind Ministries, 2001-2006), host of Theology Unplugged, and primary blogger here at Parchment and Pen. But, most importantly, husband to a beautiful wife and father to four awesome children. Michael is available for speaking engagements. Join his Patreon and support his ministry

    11 replies to "If God still speaks directly to people today, doesn’t that mean that the Bible should be added to?"

      • C Michael Patton

        I would say no. Just because it is inspired or written does not mean it belongs in the canon. Geisler said that if it’s inspired it’s automatically canon. I disagree as expressed in the article.

        • Pastor Henry Sun

          Fair enough. To be clear, I don’t expect an authentic letter to the Laodiceans to show up any time soon. But that question was raised in my NT Introduction class at Wheaton decades ago, and I still believe that the question is worth posing regardless of how one might answer it.

        • C Michael Patton

          I don’t expect it to be found either. But I, like you, know that this is THE question that will be asked. I can’t count the number of times people have asked me that! Good question tho.

        • Pastor Henry Sun

          In case you haven’t read it, Sid Leiman published a book on the canon of the Hebrew Bible in which he made the claim that some book are both inspired and non-canonical (if my memory is right, he spent a lot of time on the Wisdom on Ben Sira, but it’s been decades since I read it so take that with a grain of salt). Given the originally Jewish nature of all of the NT documents (save Luke-Acts), I don’t think Leiman’s conclusion is irrelevant to the larger conversation.

          The book is: The Canonization of Hebrew Scripture, in case you are interested in that Jewish background.

    • Dave Walker

      One of the greatest blind spots and examples of the pitfalls of biblical interpretation is the uncritical assumptions that we bring to the nature of scripture. I happen to agree with your observations, distinctions and conclusions that you have expressed. Based on that same logic what evangelicals need to think more seriously about is the phrase “word of God.” It seems to me that most equate that phrase to mean “the Bible” or “the canon.” Bad form.

    • Josh

      The Holy Scriptures is the Light
      The Holy Spirit our Teacher

      John 14:26
      But the Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in My name, HE WILL TEACH YOU ALL THINGS, and bring to your REMEMBRANCE all that I said to you (in the scriptures).

      Nehemiah 9:20
      “You gave Your good Spirit to instruct them,
      Your manna You did not withhold from their mouth,
      And You gave them water for their thirst.

      1 John 2:27
      As for you, the anointing which you received from Him ABIDES IN YOU, and you have NO NEED FOR ANYONE to teach you; but as His anointing teaches you ABOUT ALL THINGS, and is true and is not a lie, and just as it has taught you, YOU ABIDE IN HIM.

      Hebrews 10:25
      Not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.

    • Eleonore Dennis

      For today, I don’t believe there is a reason to start canonizing prophecies because prophecies can change through repentance, acceptance, disobedience, and/or prayer. In my opinion God has said all that needs to be said for the New Testament believer. Since we have the Holy Spirit inside us that directs us, He speaks to us directly unlike in the Old Testament. Prophecy in the New Testament times is more of confirmation/affirmation of what God has already told the believer during their time with God….not the other way around. Yes there are some futuristic words and the words should point in that direction. But if we are taught right, IF there’s doubt…it stays on the back burner. In the Old Testament, prophetic words were needed since there was no Redeemer. Yes it’s still God speaking through man today.
      If we consider a man like Naaman, it took “reason” for him to jump in the water to get healed not the prophetic words. I believe God would have rather told Naaman himself. If a prophecy came to me that said go jump in the river and you will be healed….then I would start to since a tug in my heart to do that or even knew before it was even spoken to do so.
      The Holy Spirit bears witness with our spirit. We are the family of God. We just need that know that God still speaks to us today if we will listen and spend time with him. Some of us aren’t taught how to hear God. If this isn’t the case, then we can go back and live like the Jewish people did in the Old Testament. We wouldn’t need to rely on God anymore in our daily lives to provide wisdom, understanding, and knowledge. We can just go to some prophet. You might already can tell I am a Pentecostal with Methodist/Baptist roots. God wants us to keep your eyes solely on Him and not on man’s prophetic gifting and sayings.

    • Gordon

      “There is no reason to think that prophecy always has corporate or salvific implications.”
      No, but it might have geopolitical implications like Isaiah and Jeremiah did, and some of those ended up in the canon despite having no salvific value in a historical-grammatical reading.
      If God still spoke today, you’d be able to quote some speech from him.

    • Michael Carey

      Hi,

      May I please use your image of the prophet writing for an evangelistic outreach?

      pastor Mike

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