I beg to differ.
I explained this earlier, but in case you just jumped in at this point, let me point out verse 11 again, which Paul uses to illustrate his point.
11 When I was a child, I used to speak like a child, think like a child, reason like a child; when I became a man, I did away with childish things.
Notice that Paul speaks in the past tense about doing away with childish things. When he became a man he did away with childish things. This clearly places his own experience in the past, not in some glorious future to come. This illustration explains what Paul means by "the perfect" and how the perfect does away with the partial. The Greek word translated "perfect" is "
teleios", which has a range of meaning, not just one meaning:
physically perfect, morally perfect, genuine, mature, fully grown, adult. Thus Paul feels it would help his readers to know which meaning he intends. His illustration of a child growing up to maturity indicates that he is talking about maturing to adulthood and how mature adults act.
You asked about the THEN and the NOW. These adverbs refer back to his illustration and relates to the moment when one goes from being a child (the NOW) to becoming an adult (the THEN), which itself is intended to illustrate how the practice of the gifts with love is like a child who has grown up. The NOW relates to the Corinthian Christian who has not yet matured and adopted the more excellent way. The THEN relates to the Corinthian Christian who, taking Paul's advice, adopts the more excellent way. And the difference between a beginning believer and a mature believer is that beginning believer sees himself as if looking in a distorted mirror; but the mature believer sees himself as others see him, i.e. face-to-face.
Accordingly, then, Paul is not including himself among those who see in a distorted mirror. He has already matured and he already has taken the more excellent road. He already seems himself the way others see him, and this self-knowledge already informs his perspective on his relationship to other human beings, which already motivates him to love others during the use of his spiritual gifts. A man (or woman) doesn't need to wait until Jesus returns to see himself as others see him. He can do that right now if he is willing to accept the truth wherever it leads.
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