Paul Christensen
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- Mar 2, 2020
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In my experience after 55 years of being associated with Pentecostals, this is not the description of the tongues that I have heard and use myself. The tongues that I know of others and myself is a cold, deliberate speaking of an expressive and articulate unlearned language while in private prayer to God. It is a form of communication in the Spirit. It can produce joy and an assurance of God's presence, but it does not require any heightened emotional state to speak the language. Merely watching Youtube videos of the invasion of the privacy of those worshiping the Lord in tongues during services does not provide a true definition of what speaking in tongues really is.Yes, this is essentially correct. In my opinion, most people confuse the gift of tongues with glossolalia. Both are valid experiences.
Glossolalia, in a Christian context, is the utterance of inarticulate sounds, whereby one wishes to give expression to a highly emotional feeling of joy, exuberance, enthusiasm, elation and things such as these. On the other hand, one might wish to express an extreme emotion of pain, helplessness, weakness, penitence, contrition, supplication, pleading etc. In either case, one might experience the outcry of inarticulate sounds.
This is not tongues at all. Tongues is an articulate language in the Spirit where a person, in their private prayer time, speaks directly to God mysteries in the Spirit. At no time does Paul in his 1 Corinthians 14 teaching describe tongues as inarticulate groaning. The intercession of the Spirit with groanings is a different type of intercessory prayer called travail in the Spirit. Jesus had it when He is described as praying to the father with strong crying and tears. My pastor, in the 1970s, described travail as he experienced it, and it was not the speaking in tongues.Paul mentions this in his letter to the Romans wherein he speaks about the inarticulate sounds one might make during a time of intense prayer. In that context he is talking about the sufferings of the present time and the anxious longings for the restoration of creation. During such intense feelings of helplessness and a longing for the return of Jesus, we may find ourselves, not knowing what to pray, speaking with inarticulate sounds. He encourages the believers to remember that as we pray, the Spirit joins with us, knowing what needs to be said.
In the same way the Spirit also helps our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we should, but the Spirit Himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words; and He who searches the hearts knows what the mind of the Spirit is, because He intercedes for the saints according to the will of God. Romans 8:26-27
In this case, we are the ones doing the groaning. Our groaning is too deep for words, but he who searches the hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, who intercedes on our behalf according to the will of God. We may not know what to pray, but the Spirit does. We take comfort knowing that even during those times when we simply can't find the words to say what we really want to say, the Spirit helps us.
The type of glossolalia spoke in pagan religious practice is ritualised incantation of repeated phrases and not an expressive, articulate language spoken to their gods. It is nothing like the Christian praying in tongues to God.I mentioned earlier that this was in a Christian context. In fact, other religions practice glossolalia, even pagans and polytheists, which is why Paul needed to correct the Corinthian church. They were possibly speaking glossolalia, mistakenly believing it was speaking in tongues.
There is absolutely no New Testament backing for this. In fact, you are illegally adding to God's Word, and this carries a penalty. The miracle of the book of Acts is that the listeners heard the speaking of the wonderful works of God in their own regional dialects. This was not the Gospel being preached to them. Peter got up and preached the Gospel to them in plain Greek, which was the official language that they all would have understood, seeing that Greek was the official language of commerce.The gift of speaking in tongues is NOT the gift of speaking another language. Rather, the gift of speaking in tongues is a miracle performed by the Holy Spirit whereby a preacher's words are heard by foreigners in their native tongue. The first we hear of this miracle is found in the Second Chapter of Acts.
Although this has happened during church history, it is very rare, and not the normal experience of believers praying to God in tongues. When believers speak publicly in tongues, Paul's teaching is that the utterance needs to be interpreted.A modern example of this might involve a preacher, speaking in English, but simultaneously being heard in French, German, Italian, Spanish and other languages. The one speaking is not speaking a language foreign to him; he is speaking his own native tongue. He is being heard in other languages instead. This may explain why some people in the first century thought the men were drunk. It would be like watching a movie translated into another language. The words we hear don't correspond to the movement of the lips.
All I am seeing in your post is just the same nonsense that those who don't know their Bible very well, have never done a serious expository study of 1 Corinthians 14 other than cherry pick random Bible verses to try and prove their point. Anyone who adds to God's Word and either denies or ignores what is actually written in God's Word, cannot be in touch with the Holy Spirit and are still in the flesh and their understanding of spiritual matters come just from that source. The Scriptures says that those who are in the flesh cannot please God.