Title: Understanding
1Understanding Utilizing our Spiritual Gifts
- PMBC Summer Session Bible Study
- Instructor Dr. Guy A. Williams, Sr.
2The Importance of Spiritual Gifts
- It is central to ones identity as a Christian
- It is essential to fulfilling ones destiny
purpose before God - Their proper use is paramount to the will of God
(individual corporate) - It is a key catalyst to Jesus Churchs growth,
development maturation - It is an effective draw for the unsaved
3The Importance of Spiritual Gifts
- Its appropriate use is extremely profitable (1
Tim. 317) - It clearly depicts the Christians presentation
of themselves to God as a living sacrifice
(Rom. 121-2) - It helps the believer see themselves in proper
perspective before God (123) - Not too highly
- According to ones measure of faith
4New Blessings from a New Covenant Relationship
- Key New Testament Passages
- Romans 126-8
- 1 Corinthians 12-14
- Ephesians 411
- 1 Peter 410-11
- Key Words
- Spiritual things (pneumatikon) 1 Cor. 121
- Gifts (charisma) Rom. 126 1 Cor. 124, 9,
28, 30-31 1 Pet. 410 - Ministries (diakonia) Rom. 127
5What is a Spiritual Gift
- Extraordinary powers, distinguishing certain
Christians and enabling them to serve the church
of Christ, the reception of which is due to the
power of divine grace operating in their souls by
the Holy Spirit. (J.H. Thayer) - An ability given to an individual supernaturally
by God through the Holy Spirit so that the
recipient may utilize that ability to minister to
the needs of the church, the body of Christ.
(T.A. Edgar)
6What is a Spiritual Gift?
- A divinely ordained spiritual ability through
which Christ enables His church to execute its
task on earth. - Extraordinary endowments bestowed by the Holy
Spirit sovereignty and undeservedly on believers
as instruments for Christian service and church
edification. - A divinely bestowed ability given to every
believer in Jesus Christ in order to serve the
church. (T. Evans)
7Who are the Recipients of Spiritual Gifts?
- The born-again believer in Jesus Christ, at the
point of salvation - 1 Corinthians 127, 11
- Ephesians 416
- 1 Peter 410
8What is/are the Purpose of Spiritual Gifts?
- A few examples
- Mk. 1617-20 accompanying the preaching of the
Gospel - Rom. 126-8 ministries to be exercised
- 1 Cor. 1422 sign to unbelievers
- The Answer FOR THE COMMON GOOD . . . of all in
the church (1 Cor. 127) - All three members of the Holy Trinity are united
on the divine purpose of the gifts (1 Cor.
124-6)
9What is/are the Purpose of Spiritual Gifts?
- The Answer FOR THE COMMON GOOD . . . of all in
the church (1 Cor. 127) - To minister to the church to build spiritual
maturity (Eph. 411-12) - To serve one another . . . as good stewards (1
Pet. 410)
10What is/are the Purpose of Spiritual Gifts?
- Critical Priority
- . . . let all things be done for edification (to
build up) 1 Cor. 1426 - love must be the principle motive and guiding
means (1 Cor. 131-13) - Never Self
- In no instance does the NT ever state that gifts
were to be used for personal benefit - (e.g., teaching or helps others oriented)
11The Giver of Spiritual Gifts
- Fundamental premise
- All spiritual gifts are sovereignly given by God
. . . according to His Will . . . according to
His assessment of the recipients capacity and
potential (1 Cor. 1211 Rom. 123-8 cf. Matt.
2514-30)
12Does Spiritual Giftedness Spiritual Maturity
- NO!
- As seen in the Corinthian context, though they
had all the gifts (17), they were spiritually
immature and carnal (31-3) - In almost every chapter, the apostle Paul had to
deal with some manifestation of their spiritual
infantilism - Yet . . .
- A spiritually mature believer is one who is being
filled, led, guided, in fellowship with,
empowered by, and flowing in their spiritual
giftedness
13OT Examples NT Elevation
- In the OT the Holy Spirit is associated with all
sorts of special endowments He provides and there
is no clear distinction made between secular
and sacred gifts - Craftsman skilled in wood metal (Exod. 313,
6) - Sampsons unusual strength (Judg. 146)
- Political wisdom to Othniel (Judg. 310) and
Daniel (Dan. 16-11, 17) - Spiritual wisdom to Joseph for leadership
management over Egypt (Gen. 4138)
14OT Examples NT Elevation
- But in the NT, the Holy Spirits gifts are
referred to as spiritual (1 Cor. 121 141,
12) - As the gifts are from the same Holy Spirit, the
key difference is context and function of the
gifts - Context the Church, the body of Christ
- Function/goal spiritual maturity of the Church
15OT Examples NT Extension
- Common problem in misunderstanding the
difference - Failure to call all believers to use every talent
and skill with which theyve been endowed to
carry out the revealed purposes of God in the
world - Downgrading these abilities and uplift the
spiritual gifts from the NT as Gods only
ratified blessings - Overemphasis on the nature of the listed gifts
that we have misunderstood ministry - Individual vs. coordinated expression of Spirits
activity
16The Distinction between Gifts and Talents
- Principally we must remember James affirmation
(Ja. 117) - A natural talent is
- Given from God at ones natural birth (saved
unsaved) - Is a special ability to perform a task in a
clearly above average manner for ones personal
benefit and potentially for the benefit of others - It can be used to advance Gods cause and bring
God glory
17The Distinction between Gifts and Talents
- Principally we must remember James affirmation
(Ja. 117) - A spiritual gift is
- A special ability (freely and graciously given)
at ones spiritual birth (by the Holy Spirit) to
perform tasks in a manner that is clearly
supernatural - It is specifically designed by God to bring Him
glory and to build-up His Church (the body of
Christ) and empower and advance His cause on the
earth
18The Diversity of Gifts
- God gives differing gifts to Christians
- Rom. 124-6
- 1 Cor. 124, 8, 10
- Moreover, all Christians cannot have the same
gift (1 Cor. 1217-22) - Every gift God gives to the body is essential and
valuable
19The Difference in Value
- While every gift is indeed essential and valuable
to God, not all gifts have the same value - Gods order is reflected in gift of leadership to
the church (1 Cor. 1228 Eph. 417-8, 11-12) - While every gift is indeed essential and valuable
to God, some gifts are more essential than others - The gift of prophecy vs. the gift of tongues (1
Cor. 145, 19)
20Gods Order of Gods Gifts
- Foundational principles
- God is not the Author of confusion, but of
peace (1 Cor. 1433) - When it comes to the use and operation of gifts .
. . - let all things be done decently and in order
(1 Cor. 1440 NKJV) - While persons may be supernaturally filled with
the Spirit they are NOT truly in the Spirit if
they are out of control and operating out of
order (1 Cor. 1426-35)
21The First Edifying Gift Apostle
- Aside from the Lord Jesus Christ, the most
important person in the NT church was the apostle - Apostle (Apostolos) a sent one
- In the LXX (Septuagint the Greek translation of
the OT) the Heb. Word shalach send is used
(1 Kgs. 146) - The idea here is one who is sent as a
representative thus, sent one
22The Apostle in the Gospels
- The Twelve were apostles of the Lord
- (Matt. 102 Lk. 613 910 175)
23The Apostle in Acts
- The Twelve were the apostles (Acts 1-2)
- The number remained the same even in the
selection of Matthias (Acts 121-26) - Critical Qualification An apostle was a witness
of the resurrection of Jesus Christ (Acts 122
cf. 433) - Proof (Acts 11-14 517-32 1041-42)
24The Apostle in Acts
- Key Ministries of the Apostles
- Taught (242)
- Performed miracles (512)
- Held the authority of the church, as Jesus
representatives (242 435-37 51-11 62-6
927) - Interesting Except for Barnabas Paul, the
apostles were not characterized by missionary
activity - They actually remained at the home-base in
Jerusalem while others were sent forth (Acts 52,
18 62-6 81 927 152 Gal. 117-210)
25The Apostle in the Epistles
- The Epistles use the term apostle to refer to any
of the Twelve and Paul - The Epistles indicate that an apostle was a
direct witness of the resurrection of Jesus - (1 Cor. 91-2 1 Cor. 155-8)
- One must have had to actually see Jesus in one of
His resurrection appearances - The Epistles indicate that an apostle was able to
perform miracles - (2 Cor. 1211-12)
26The Apostle in the Epistles
- The Epistles indicate that the gift of apostle
was given only at the beginning of the church - (Eph. 220)
- The context of Ephesians refers to the universal
church the whole body of Christ - Note so called present day apostles (in the
strict sense) CANNOT be foundational for the
universal church
27The Apostle in the Epistles
- The Epistles indicate that an apostle received
very special and unique responsibilities and
revelation - Over local assemblies (1 Cor. 419-21 5 3-4 2
Cor. 132-3, 10) - They were specifically called and/or appointed by
the Lord (Rom. 15 Gal. 1-2 1 Tim. 27 cf.
Eph. 35 also prophets Paul 2 Cor. 121-17)
28The Uniqueness of the Apostle
- Like the OT prophets they performed mighty
miracles - They shall sit on the 12 thrones judging the 12
tribes of Israel (Matt. 1928) - Their names will be on the foundation of the
heavenly city (Rev. 2114) - They have authority even over NT prophets (1 Cor.
1228 1437) - Church history denotes that not only were they
the originals but that no other duplicates were
accepted
29The Broader Use of the Term
- Beyond the 12, there were others called apostles
- Barnabas (Acts 144, 14
- James (Gal. 119)
- Silas Timothy (1 Thess. 11 26)
- Matthias (Acts 214 62 927 1 Cor. 155, 7)
- Paul (1 Cor. 155, 7 1 Cor. 91-5)
- The last NT reference for their official use was
at the Council at Jerusalem (Acts 152-6, 23
164)
30The Broader Use of the Term
- The word missionary conveys the broader meaning
today w/the following qualifications - Being sent
- missionary (Latin) to send
- apostle (Greek) to send
- Transcultural Ministry
- Church-Planting Ministry (Rom. 1520 1 Cor. 310)
31The Second Edifying Gift Prophecy
- The word prophecy conveys the idea of
- fore-telling to tell those things before
- forth-telling to tell those things already
revealed - The word prophesy means to expound or preach
under the influence of the Holy Spirit - The prophet is one who speaks for God and
interprets His will to the people. - (Heb. nabi) one who speaks by direct command
(revelation) of God (cf. Deut. 1820-22)
32The Second Edifying Gift Prophecy
- The OT prophets message was primarily warning
against judgment (re sin) - The OT prophet expressed the Voice of God,
address contemporary issues future events - The biblical prophet was viewed as a national
leader reformer
33The Second Edifying Gift Prophecy
- The word prophecy was used in the culture of
the day for the oracular gift sometimes the
prophet (cf. 2 Chron. 3232 158 Ezra 51) - The word prophesy occurs 28x in the NT
- Most instances referring to the OT prophets
- The prophetic ministry is seen as supernatural
(cf. Matt. 722-23 Matt. 2667-68 Mk. 1465)
34The Second Edifying Gift Prophecy
- The Prophet in the Gospels
- Point out the similarity in the OT NT usages of
the term (Lk. 739 Jn. 419 614 740) - The Prophet in the book of Acts
- Some refer to NT prophets, but most OT prophets
(230-31 318-25 752 1043 1127-28 131
1532 2110 2622-23) - Their ministry primarily involved foretelling
- Specific examples Acts 1127-28 2110
Agabus 1532 Judas Silas
35The Second Edifying Gift Prophecy
- The Prophet in Romans
- Each of the usages refer to OT prophets
- The Prophet according to Paul in other
Epistles - 1 Cor. 1228-29 1429-32
- Eph. 220 35 41
- Titus 112
- 1 Pet. 110
36The Second Edifying Gift Prophecy
- The Prophet in Revelations
- They will be present during the end of the great
tribulation and are tied to foretelling (226
cf. 229)
37The Second Edifying Gift Prophecy
- This gift is clearly differentiated from
edification or exhortation (Acts 217-18 196
219 1 Cor. 114-5 139 141-39) - Three important essentials of a prophet
- Must receive his/her message from God in the form
of special revelation - Must have divine guidance in the declaration of
the prophetic message tied to the Word of God - The message must be correct w/out error
38Summary of the Gift of Prophecy
- Not all have the gift
- They are recipients of divine revelation
- Their ministry particularly involved foretelling
or prediction very specific not vague
general - When they spoke via revelation, their ministry
exhorts causes hearers to learn - They were given at the inception of the Church
- Their ministry was both in the local church
itinerant
39Summary of the Gift of Prophecy
- The gift of prophet is a high priority gift,
often linked with that of apostle - This gift (in its strictest sense) is not
operational in the church today - Their predictions must
- Come from special revelation
- Be specific
- Be verifiable
40The Gift of Evangelism
- The gift of evangelism is taken from the word
evangelize (euanggellion) to proclaim Gods
message of salvation the gospel or good news - The evangelist is the one called of God to
proclaim His message of salvation - The word applies to both an office a ministry
- Phillip (Acts 218)
- The early believers after persecution (Acts 84,
40)
41The Gift of Evangelism
- The evangelist did not have the authority of an
apostle, nor the gift of prophecy, nor the
responsibility of pastoral supervision over a
portion of the flock - The evangelist were itinerant preachers, having
it as their special function to carry the gospel
to places where it was previously unknown - The writers of the four Gospels are known as the
Evangelists
42The Gift of Evangelism
- The evangelists effectiveness was measured (in
part) by those who got saved as a result of the
proclamation (Acts 237 141) - At times b/c of a hard-heart persons simply
rejected the message (Acts 199 2425) - While there are those with this spiritual gift,
all Christians are responsible for being a
faithful witness of Jesus gospel (Acts 18 cf.
Matt. 2819-20)
43The Gift of Shepherding
- The word shepherd (poimen) comes from the root
meaning to protect - The word has an OT origin commonly referencing
adverse behavior of these chosen by God (Jer.
28 315 1021 1210 231-4) - This gives the reverse of Gods expectations of
them - The word shepherd appears only 1x in the NT (Eph.
411) - Referring to the office the gift
44The Gift of Shepherding
- The word shepherd (poimen) referring to an office
is used interchangeably with - bishop or overseer (episcopos) referring
to one who functions as an overseer of ministries
or ministers (cf. 1 Tim. 31) - elder (presbuteros) referring to an older
mature male who with authority serves in a
position of authority (Num. 227 Exod. 316
241 Num. 1116-17)
45The Gift of Shepherding
- The word shepherd (poimen) referring to an office
is used interchangeably with - elder is the keystone of the social and
political fabric wherever the patriarchal system
exists - At the present day this is the case among the
Arabs, where the sheik (i.e., "the old man") is
the highest authority in the tribe - The body of the "elders" of Israel were the
representatives of the people from the very
first, and were recognized as such by Moses
46The Gift of Shepherding
- The word shepherd (poimen) referring to an office
is used interchangeably with - All down through the history of the Jews we find
mention made of the elders as exercising
authority among the people - They appear as
- Governors (Deut. 3128) and Local magistrates
(Deut 1618) - Administering justice (Deut. 1912)
- They were men of extensive influence (1Sam.
3026-31)
47The Gift of Shepherding
- In New Testament times they also appear taking an
active part in public affairs Mt 1621 2123
2659 - The Jewish eldership was transferred from the old
dispensation to the new - The creation of the office of elder is nowhere
recorded in the NT (as in the case of deacons and
apostles) which were created to meet new and
special emergencies - Elders were transmitted from OT times and their
office was the only permanent essential office of
the church
48The Gift of Shepherding
- The "elders" of the NT church were the "pastors"
(Eph 411), serving as the "leaders" and "rulers"
of the flock (Heb 137 1Th 512) - Everywhere in the NT bishop and presbyter are
titles given to one and the same officer of the
Christian church - He who is called presbyter or elder on account of
his age or gravity is also called bishop or
overseer with reference to the duty that lay upon
him (Ti 15-7 Acts 2017-28 Phil. 11)
49The Gift of Shepherding
- Jesus is referred to as
- The Good Shepherd (Jn. 1011, 14 Heb. 1320)
- The Chief Shepherd (1 Pet. 225 54)
- The fundamental ministry of shepherding is
- To guide (cf. Psa. 23)
- At times discipline (2 Tim. 42b)
- To graze (i.e., feed) the sheep (Jer. 315 Isa.
4011 cf. Jn. 2116 Acts 2028 1 Pet. 52) - To guard (1 Sam. 1734-37 Acts 2028-31)
50The Gift of Shepherding
- The gift of shepherding is to believers other
those who hold the office - Church leaders (e.g., staff, counselor, minister,
deacon, deaconess, Sunday School or Bible Study
teacher) who mentor - Older women (cf. Titus 23-5)
- Seminary or Bible College professors
51The Gift of Teaching
- What proceeds the operation of the gift of
teaching is the supernatural Teacher of Teachers - Who teaches the teacher
- Before Moses ever taught, God taught Him (Exod.
412, 15) - Before the tribal family leaders could teach,
God first taught them (Deut. 41) - Gods expectation is for the continuation of this
critical ministry to the next generations (Deut.
49,-10 61, 7) - Critical after the return from captivity (Ez.
710, 25)
52The Gift of Teaching
- The gift of teaching is the supernatural ability
to clearly explain the intended meaning of the
truth of Gods Word - Remember, this is a spiritual gift. Thus, just
b/c a person has a talent to teach does not mean
they have the spiritual gift of teaching - The possession of the gift does not mean the gift
does not need to be honed and perfected (Ecc.
1010)
53The Gift of Teaching
- Teaching was dominant in the ministry of the Lord
Jesus (Matt. 423 728 935 2123, 55) - Jesus was a profound Teacher (Lk. 431-32)
- This ministry of Jesus set the stage for other
miraculous ministry (cf. Lk. 517-20 1310-13) - This ministry was the primary methodology He
established in the process of making disciples
for the birth development of His Church (Matt.
2820) - There was a clear connection with the gift of
teaching and that of prophecy (Acts 542 311
1535 2830-31)
54The Gift of Teaching
- The ministry of teaching was central to the
qualifications of those who serve as
pastors/overseers of Gods Church (1 Tim. 32 2
Tim. 224-25) - It is through the ministry of teaching that
enables the believer to walk as a Christian and
have proper fellowship with God and others (Rom.
122)
55The Gift of Teaching
- The ministry of teaching was critical in
equipping faithful ministers/servants of God
(Acts 1824-28 cf. 1 Cor. 46) - This gifted ministry is essential for the whole
body - Those who minister through song (Col. 316)
- Older women to younger women (Titus 23)
- Limitation of authority (1 Tim. 212)
56The Gift of Teaching
- The ministry of teaching was expected to be a
primary ministry for the church as a measure of
its maturity (Heb. 512) - Those who participate in the ministry of teaching
are particularly accountable to God (Ja. 31) - If one has this gift, they should be completely
dedicated to flow effectively in it (Rom. 127)
57The Gift of Exhortation
- The word exhort in its noun form is the same word
used for the Holy Spirit (Paraclete Jn. 416)
the one called alongside to help - It is also the same word of Jesus (Advocate 1
Jn. 21) - The word exhort (parakaleo) means to call to or
to call for or to exhort or to encourage - The word conveys the idea of comforting,
consoling, appealing, and counseling
58The Gift of Exhortation
- The gift of exhortation then is the supernatural
ability of the Holy Spirit to call to,
encourage, appeal to, and comfort - Someone who needs challenging, lifting,
strengthening, consoling, and comforting
59The Gift of Exhortation
- NT characters with the gift of exhortation were
- Paul
- Shown to the believers in the churches at Lystra,
Iconium, and Antioch (Acts 1421-22) - Shown to those who were persecuted for the faith
(Acts 1640) - Shown to the Ephesian Christians (Acts 201,
17-35) - Judas (the other) and Silas
- Prophets of God who also flowed in this gift
(Acts 1531-32)
60The Gift of Exhortation
- NT characters with the gift of exhortation were
- Peter
- In ministering to other elders (1 Pet. 51-2)
- Certainly fulfilling his ministry assignment from
the Lord (Lk. 2232) - The operation of the gift of exhortation was
encouraged in the church in general - Among the Corinthians (10x in 5 verses 2 Cor.
13-7) - Church member attendance (Heb. 1025)
61The Gift of Exhortation
- The most notable NT figure whos dominant gift
was exhortation was the apostle Barnabas, the son
of encouragement (Acts 436)