maxwel,
I read the article last night, and don't want to re-read it. Did he actually write that the purpose of his article was to disprove that there was the pagan equivalent of pagan 'glossalalia' in ancient Greek?
Many of the people promoting this theory tie it to the oracle at Delphi. John MacArthur did in one of his sermons. VCO argued that battalogeo, which the KJV renders as 'vain repititions' is related to a kind of fake pagan glossolalia. He said the Apollo priests used to say 'say batta batta.' I challenged him on it and asked for a primary source that showed this, and he would not answer.
The article is useful in that it demonstrates that both in ancient times in the time of Herodotus and in the first century in the time of Plutarch, the oracle of Delphi was known for speaking in actual sentences and that there was an expectation that she speak in poetry. If the 'Apollo tongues' people have evidence for their theory, they should present it.
As for his not being trained as a historian, so what? Maybe a historian could show evidence that he did not. That's possible. I've got a PhD, and I would not discount evidence based on whether the person who presents it has a PhD. Doctoral programs teach people to examine and evaluate evidence, not the credentials of the person, the opposite of the ad hominem argument.
In fact, I found the link to this site was posted on a forum by a man with a doctorate, in theology I think, and he must have thought it was good. I am pretty sure he has an academic degree and not a D. Min., too.
One point I think the author of the article should make is that the way he uses 'glossalalia' is the way certain types of scholars do, and not the way the Bible does.
Presidente,
I agree that the article is "useful."
1. My point was NOT that it isn't "useful", but that we have no way to know if it's comprehensive, properly derived, or unbiased.
2. If we don't know that it's comprehensive or unbiased, then we shouldn't yet view it as if it is.
3. The only way for the layman to properly assess how comprehensive, properly derived, or unbiased it is, is to find corroborative research from other modern historians.
4. The whole issue of it being "comprehensive" is especially critical if, as I originally posted, he's actually trying to prove a negative, which he is. Proving a negative is logically impossible. However, we'd probably all be willing to stand on "reasonable evidence" if we felt that the evidence was comprehensive. If you're trying to prove a negative, and you expect people to go along with that, you should at least be able to show your research was comprehensive. We really shouldn't accept anyone's research as comprehensive (in a field where we're not experts) until we AT LEAST see corroborating research from other researchers.
I can show you, tomorrow, 10,000 passages in ancient Greek texts that do NOT mention glossolalia.
And it would all be meaningless.
It wouldn't prove anything.
I can also find 10,000 passages in ancient Greek texts that do not mention horses... but the Greeks DEFINITELY DID have horses.
We can't deal with negative propositions unless we have a reasonable assurance of comprehensive research.
So, we need comprehensive research to feel a negative is reasonably acceptable, and we can't have comprehensive research unless the research is corroborated by other researchers.
This is pretty simple stuff.
If you want to prove something is absent, you need to at least have comprehensive evidence, which pretty much includes some corroboration by definition.
5. The author definitely, unequivocally, is not a trained historian, and he has zero credentials as a historian.
Does this mean he cannot do historical research?
Not at all.
But it does mean that if he is admittedly biased on the topic, and he's also doing research which appears to be out of his field of study, we should AT LEAST just simply CORROBORATE his research with other modern historians.
The Bible DOES tell us to "test" and "prove" the things people tell us.
1Thessalonians 5:21 Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.
We also see the principles of reasonable skepticism and testing with the Bereans, and also in other areas of scripture.
I am ONLY suggesting we withhold our final verdicts on this subject until we see corroboration from other historians.
Conclusions:
A. I was just pointing out that we have many reasons to question the conclusions of the article until his research is corroborated.
B. REGARDLESS of the veracity of the article, it has LITTLE effect, either way, on the overall size and scope of the tongues debate.
C. I think you're a nice guy, and I really don't want to argue with you endlessly about this article. Again, it really has very minute weight in the whole tongues debate anyway.