Dr. Bob said:
Sal holds to a non-cessationist view of inspiration/revelation. God either spoke in His inspired word (that then may/may not be translated into language groups around the world) and then He stopped His supernatural revelation/inspiration in AD90 - this is the historic Baptist position - or He continues to inspire, reveal, breath, speak today -this is the historic pentecostal position.
I cannot imagine a Baptist church holding pentecostal subjective "Gods speaking to me in new revelation" today. But evidently some claim to be Baptisticostal I guess.
Another totally confusing post. Too many "either/if's and or may/maybe's"
God still reveals His word in all the languages we have the Scripture in today. His revelation has not stopped/ His autographa has stopped.
His word is inspired/ it is alive and well.
Anything revealed to the believer or not a believer through the word of God is Supernatural.
An intellectual understanding of Scripture will always leave one at a disadvantage. A spiritual knowledge of the Bible will cause one to adhere to its Author in a way the intellectual could only dream of obtaining through his intelligence.
The question is when did God stop speaking?
God speaks through inspiration/revelation according to His inspired word.
To make the claim of only original inspiration would inadvertantly left the hearer to conclude that the word of God is dead and God died along with it . Or at the least, he would conclude the inability of God to have His inpsired word available to every man in any language.
I, and many others, find this ideal to be heretical.
I am not "bapticostal", although some here would have you think things contrary to the truth about my person.
Slandering the Salamander has become a common practise on the BB.