You would be wrong if you really think faking tongues and interpretations is difficult.
My wife was taught to pray in Tongues in the Pentecostal Church she grew up in, when they lived in Loisiana. She said the Pastor told her "Say Jesus, Jesus, Jesus over and over again as fast as you can and GOD will turn it into a heavenly language only He understands."; and it WORKED. Years later before I met her, she came to conclusion that it all was a fake form of tongues that was nothing more than learned behavior, imitating what she heard other doing in the Church.
That sounds like a foolish way to approach speaking in tongues, trying to generate it falsely. Some early Pentecostals complained about it. I don't know about everyone else, but I wouldn't claim that everything that people claim is speaking in tongues really is.
On the other hand, I wouldn't teach an unbiblical level of skepticism toward the gift. We should have the same attitude toward the gift Paul displays in I Corinthians. Paul does not teach Christians to fear that it may be demonic. He does not say their speaking in tongues was akin to pagan practices.
As far as history goes, I wouldn't say that the pagans might not have mumbled some stuff. One of the Roman legends has an early king of Rome, before being crowned king, hearing the oracle of Delphi, and understanding it, though others could not. I am not sure if the oracle of Delphi was supposed to have spoken in riddles or some sort of incomprehensible syllables. There is a theory that there were some volcanic gasses leaking into the shrine that made the people there high.
THEN decades later when I was doing a serious study on Tongues, while I was looking into the PAGAN Mystery Religions use of tongues;
Here is the problem, equating mystery religion practices with 'tongues' which is how we refer to an actual gift in the Bible.
How anyone could read I Corinthians 14 carefully and think Paul is talking about a false manifestation of a pagan gift is something I don't quite get. I understand that there could be spiritual blindness that can keep people from understanding simple things, but this interpretation is truly bizarre. My guess is most atheists would not have this kind of confusion when reading the passage.
You still haven't answered why Paul would think that interpreting pagan utterances would edify the church. Care to explain that one?
I found that in the Worship of Apollo the Pagan Priests taught their followers to speak in tongues some 300 years before Christ, by these instructions, "Say batta, batta, batta, over and over again as fast as you can and the gods will turn it into a language only they can understand."
This looks like a folk etymology approach to the word, drawing a meaning out of the morphemes the words are made of. It's the same thing some people do with the word 'Nicolaitans'. It looks like you've combined it with some story about pagan priests, likely made up in modern times as an anti-tongues polemic. Do you have any evidence from ancient literature of priests actually teaching people to say this?
Back in the early 80s or late 70s, some Students from Dallas Theological Seminary decided to put that so-called gift of Interpretations to the TEST. One of the students memorized the 23rd Psalm in Hebrew. One Sunday they went to the largest Charismatic Church in Dallas. When the tongues speaking began, they waited until the first two speakers had their tongues interpreted by the same gentleman. Then the Dallas Theological Seminary student, who had memorized the 23rd Psalm in Hebrew, stood and quoted that Psalm in Hebrew. Sure enough the same gentleman stood and gave a very Biblical sounding Interpretation, BUT NOT ONE WORD OF IT WAS FROM THE 23rd PSALM.
I heard the story before, but that time it was a different passage of scripture. I'm not saying it couldn't have happened. I'd also want to know if they did this, but what followed as a prophecy that said something along the lines of 'Do not put the LORD your God to the test.' What did they say after? Without that information, you can't really use this as evidence for your line of argument.
Do you have a YouTube video recording to show us of this Psalm 23 incident?
I notice here that your arguments against speaking in tongues
rely on experience. You rely on your wife's experience. You rely on second hand experiences.
The issue here is whether the spiritual gift still exists. Neither example you gave disproves that. I don't think anyone on here would actually argue that there cannot be false manifestations of the gift or people who teach or do foolish things.
If you want to argue experiences, we should discuss the accounts of people who heard speaking in tongues in their own language, and confirmed the interpretation to be genuine, or people who understood tongues and there was no interpretation.
Satan has been in the BUSINESS of imitating GOD's miracles at least as far back as Pharaoh's magicians, and you guys have no way to distinguish the true from the false.
Sure we do. You can't always know from its content right away if a prophecy is true or false. But Jesus said we could know false prophets by their fruits. So, there is a test right there. We also know whether some prophecies, etc. are in accordance with the word and the testimony. And we can treat speaking in tongues like the Bible actually teaches us to in I Corinthians 14, instead of rejecting it like you do, or believing that the spiritual gifts in the very pages of scripture were pagan, like the idea you were promoting several pages back.