The word charisma, with a single exception (
1Pe 4:10), occurs in the New Testament only in the Pauline Epistles, and in the plural form is employed in a technical sense to denote extraordinary gifts of the Spirit bestowed upon Christians to equip them for the service of the church. Various lists of the charismata are given (
Ro 12:6-8;
1Co 12:4-11,
28-30; compare
Eph 4:7-12), none of which, it is evident, are exhaustive. Some of the gifts enumerated cannot be said to belong in any peculiar sense to the distinctive category. "Faith" (
1Co 12:9), for example, is the essential condition of all Christian life; though there were, no doubt, those who were endowed with faith
beyond their fellows. "Giving" and "mercy" (
Ro 12:8) are among the ordinary graces of the Christian character; though some would possess them more than others. "Ministry" (
Ro 12:7), again, i.e. service, was the function to which every Christian was called and the purpose to which every one of the special gifts was to be devoted (
Eph 4:12). The term is applied to any spiritual benefit, as the confirmation of Christians in the faith by Paul (
Ro 1:11). And as the general function of ministry appears from the first in two great forms as a ministry of word and deed (
Ac 6:1-4;
1Co 1:17), so the peculiar charismatic gifts which Paul mentions fall into two great
classes-those which qualify their possessors for a ministry of the word, and those which prepare them to render services of a practical nature.