3-3 “These signs shall follow them that believe”
(Mk 16:17)
It has been argued from this, that anyone who truly believes will receive
the miraculous gifts. However, this proves too much - “they shall
take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt
them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover”
(Mk. 16:18). This is no promise of things which might theoretically happen
if the believer had enough faith; these were sure promises of what would
definitely be done by believers. Unless miracles of this magnitude are
clearly performed, the promise of this verse cannot apply to us at the
present time. You may recall how Paul was able to hold a poisonous snake
without being bitten (Acts 28:3-7), resulting in the confirmation of his
preaching as being from God.
Of all the charismatic Christians who have claimed to possess the gifts
during the past one hundred years, there has been no realistic evidence
of such powers being exercised . Unless every believer can and does perform
signs of such magnitude, this promise cannot apply today. This leaves
us with the conclusion which we have already drawn from our survey of
Bible teaching about the spirit: these miraculous gifts were possessed
by the early Christian believers in the first century, but they ceased
to be possessed after the New Testament Scriptures were completed.
The final verse of Mk. 16 suggests that the miracles “following”
those who believed were for the specific purpose of confirming the spoken
word of the Gospel: “These signs shall follow them that believe...they
went forth, and preached every where, the Lord working with them, and
confirming the word with signs following” (Mk. 16:17,20). Once that
spoken word was written down in completeness, as we now have it in the
New Testament, there was no more need for the miraculous signs to follow
those who believed.
|