thisnumbersdisconnected
New Member
Think again. :laugh:... (I’m sure we all agree here) ... I doubt it controversial to claim that the Corinthians never thought that Paul was saying “when the canon of Scripture is complete… or when the Temple is destroyed… then we will not need these gifts.”
It's not doctrinally essential, but I believe Paul was speaking of both love being superior to signs, and that "the perfect" to which he referred was the completion of Scripture -- which of course did not depend on men meeting in ancient councils to determine. God knew when he was finished, and I believe but the visions of Paul and John regarding heavenly future things, they knew it too.
It isn't important that men knew when the canon was established. what mattered was that GOd knew when He was done with His verbal revelation, that He had expressed love to man and man was expected to reflect that love to others, through the sharing of the Gospel and good works that were done without expectation of reward. Those are the "greater works" Jesus spoke of, and those are the things making up "the perfect" of which Paul wrote.