I am not sure how you are defining "cessastionist." If by that you mean that there is no furthe revelation of gospel truths, I agree.
If you mean that God will not speak in special revelation (prophecy, speaking, or otherwise) or perform miracles related to other matters until the second coming, then no.
Many of the major Reformers would not have been cessasionists according to the latter definition. Indeed, the possibility of predictive prophecy was built into some Reformation ecclesiastical documents, such as the Church of Scotland's Second Book of Discipline. There is a good paper online which discusses this as well as prophecies of Luther, Knox and others and the approval of them by Gillespie, Rutherford, et al.
A Reformation Discussion of Extraordinary Predictive Prophecy Subsequent to the Closing of the Canon of Scripture
http://www.ecn.ab.ca/prce/books/prophecy/prophecy.htm
Further, where the church has advanced in pagan lands, it has always had miracles accompanying the Word. See, for example Ramsay MacMullen's [i:47c163fdd1]Christianizing the Roman Empire[/i:47c163fdd1] (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1984). You can't read church history about the great expansions of Chistendom into pagan lands without reading of the extraordianry miracles and occurrences that attended them. See Bede's Ecclesiastical History of England as one example. MacMullen cites many primary sources in his book too. It is everywhere in church history.
That is why Puritans like Richard Baxter, George Gillespie, and others accounted for miracles and taught biblical principles for discerning between true and false miracles and prophecies. See Baxter's Christian Directory for one example. We discussed this in a little detail on another thread.
http://www.puritanboard.com/forum/vi...d.php?tid=3026
Even today, where the gospel advances it is accompanied by miracles and converts often testify that the reason of their conversion is at least in part to witnessing mriacles. China is a good example of this and here is one source where this is documented:
David Aikman, [i:47c163fdd1]Jesus in Beijing[/i:47c163fdd1]
This short article on Augustine's view is interesting too:
What Would Augustine Say: Miracles Ended Long Ago or Did They?
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ch/2000/003/17.43.html
Scott
[Edited on 3-30-2004 by Scott]