"He gave some,
apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and
teachers." (Ephesians 4:11)
A prophet was someone
who spoke authoritatively on behalf of God. Their message usually consisted of
present exhortation or warning based on future predictions.
In the Old Testament
prophets were God’s means of communicating to the people. They did not have the
indwelling Holy Spirit, so they needed revelation via a third party. Although
prophets were given to the church, New Testament prophets were different from
the Old Testament prophets. Much of the writings of Old Testament prophets were
canonical (they became scripture). In the New Testament, there is
canonical prophecy, although to a lesser extent than in the Old
Testament, as well as non-canonical prophecy. The book of Revelation is
an example of canonical prophecy. Agabus’
two prophecies (Acts 11:28; 21:10) and those given in the
Corinthian church were non-canonical in that they were not as binding on
believers as scripture. Thus Paul chose not to take heed to one of Agabus’
prophesies (Acts 21: 13, 14). What Paul disobeyed was not the prophecy, but the
plea of the people who heard the prophecy for him not to go to Jerusalem (Acts
21: 12). God most likely gave that prophecy to Paul as a confirmation of what
was already revealed to him personally (Acts 20:23) rather than a directive.
Non-canonical prophesy
is directed to specific groups of people or congregations under certain
circumstances. It does not apply to all believers of all time. Let it be said
though that both, if genuine, are God's words.
The office of the
prophet is not to be confused with the gift of prophecy which is
available to all believers (1 Cor. 14:5). In a sense, they may be loosely
called prophets without holding the office. All genuine prophecy is
authoritative but not necessarily canonical. Once the canon of scripture
has been closed, canonical prophecy has ceased. Eph. 2:20 has in mind
all prophetic and apostolic work that constituted the doctrinal foundation
of the church (Eph. 3:5). This included the Old Testament prophets, New
Testament apostles, and some New Testament prophets. II Pet. 3:2 seems to say
that the apostles were to the early church what the prophets were to ancient
Israel. I believe that there may still be prophets of the caliber of Agabus,
and those who minister with the gift of prophecy (congregational).
The word apostle means
ambassador, someone who was sent on behalf of another for a specific purpose.
The one sent usually carried the full authority of the sender. Those sent by
God with His message were apostles.
The word apostle is
used in different ways in the New Testament. Sometimes it refers to a special
group of people who held the office of the apostle (1 Cor. 12:28; Eph. 4: 11).
An examination of the Bible reveals a clear distinctness with the original 12,
and later, Matthias (Acts 1:26). They are granted special rewards in the New
Jerusalem (Matt. 19:28; Rev. 21:14) that no one else can attain. Clearly, these
12 apostles were unique. But there were also other apostles who were
commissioned by Christ, Paul being the most noteworthy. In 1 Cor. 15:7, 9 Paul
indicates that one of the criteria for being an apostle was to have seen Jesus
and been personally commissioned by Him. This was true of the 12 and also Paul.
I refer to these as the major apostles. More broadly, those who worked with
these major apostles were also called (minor) apostles, e.g. Barnabas (1 Cor.
9:6).
Ephesians 2:20: "Having
been built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself
being the chief cornerstone." The main function of the apostles
was to establish the faith. Jesus Christ died once and for all to become the
chief cornerstone of the Christian faith (Eph. 2:20). The purpose of the
apostles was to establish the faith and build a doctrinal foundation on which
the church would be based. They were specially commissioned by God to do this.
In John 14:26; 16:12-14, Jesus promised the apostles that the Holy Spirit would
come and reveal to them what they needed to know for this very purpose.
In an indirect sense, these verses apply to all of us, in that the Holy Spirit teaches us how to
apply God’s Word (already written) and brings it to our remembrance. But these
words were directly spoken to the apostles who physically heard Jesus. This
promise was fulfilled when the apostles wrote what Jesus said and what was yet
to be said (1 Cor. 7:10, 12). Thus it was important for them to have physically
seen Him. Later Paul was commissioned as an apostle to the Gentiles, in the same way, Peter was an apostle to the Jews (Gal. 2:7).
Every book in the New
Testament was written by an apostle or a close associate of the apostles. Their
primary work was to give us the New Testament writings. Jesus gave us the New
Testament (covenant) through His blood; the apostles gave us the New Testament
doctrine through their writings and teachings. This is the meaning of Eph.
2:20. Once that foundation has already been laid (Jude 3), it is time to build
on it. The foundation does not have to be laid again, any more than Christ has
to die again. Therefore there is no need for apostles today. Now it is time for
pastors, evangelists, and teachers to build. 1 Cor. 3:5-10 illustrates the
difference between an apostle and a teacher. Paul laid the foundation, Apollos
built on it.
Thus in the primary
sense, there are no more apostles. However, people who establish churches, heads
of denominations, etc. may call themselves apostles, they just cannot claim to be
infallibly sent by God to bring new revelation to the body of Christ, as were
the major apostles of the Bible. Paul’s writings were infallible (1 Cor. 2:13;
14:37; 1 Thess. 2:13; IITim. 3:16 cf. II Pet 3:15, 16 where Peter placed Paul’s
writing on the same level as the Old Testament)
There may still be
apostles as church planters and heads of denominations. There may still be
non-canonical prophets like Agabus and those in the Corinthian church. There
are no longer prophets like John the revelator, Moses, or Elijah, neither are
there apostles like Paul and Peter. Their work is finished. The only other kind
of apostles and prophets the bible speaks about are false ones. Their work has
never ceased. Without calling names I believe that there are many of them today,
even in the church (Acts 20:30). What the church needs today is evangelists,
pastors, and teachers as well as laymen to build on the foundation already laid
and to contend for the faith once and for all delivered to the saints (Jude
3).
There are people today
who claim to be apostles and prophets and actually add these titles to their
names. They claim that the fivefold ministry has been restored. Does the Bible
teach that apostles and prophets are to be expected today or were they
specifically for the early church? If they were for the early church only, then
what do we conclude of those that claim these titles?
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