Paul said that he would that they all spoke in tongues but not in the church. In the church two or three at the most, so in that sense not all would speak in tongues. But in that case one could speak to himself and to God. So all can speak in tongues in the sense that they can receive that same gift as the 120, the 12, and the household of cornelius where all did speak in tongues,
'They' spoke in tongues. But when activities are attributed to a group, often representatives of the group performed that activity. In Acts one, when they, the apostles, asked Jesus if He would at that time restore the kingdom to Israel, did each individual uttered the words? When they saints were praying for Peter during his imprisonment, when 'they' opened the door would you say that each individual in the prayer meeting had to help unlach or push the door open, or else the scriptures are not true?
When the thieves who were crucified with Jesus derided him, would you insist that the one criminal who said, 'Lord remember me when thou comest into they kingdom' also derided Christ? Matthew says that they asked why the ointment wasn't sold. John tells us that Judas uttered the words. Did Judas, a member of the group, ask the question, or did all the disciples ask it at the same time or in succession.
Peter saw that they had been filled with the Holy Spirit because they spoke in tongues and magnified God. Members of the group may have spoken in tongues and magnified God. All or some may have either spoken in tongues, magnified God, or both. Peter does not say that if someone does not speak in tongues, that he has not received the Spirit or been filled with the Spirit.
But we see elsewhere that Paul said to be filled with the Spirit and speak to yourselves in psalms, hymns and spiritual songs. When Peter quoted Joel, Joel did not say anything about speaking in tongues:
Acts 2
16 But this is that which was spoken by the prophet Joel;
17 And it shall come to pass in the last days, saith God, I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh: and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams:
You are reading something into Peter's statement that he did not say.
[quote
All can speak in tongues which is why he said that he would that they all did,[/quote]
Paul wrote, "I would that ye all spake with tongues but rather that ye prophesied:"
If that means everyone can speak in tongues, that means everyone can prophesy, also. Moses wished that all God's people were prophets. Does that mean that everyone is a prophet or can be?
Paul wishes that they would all speak in tongues. That is not the same is saying that they all do, can, or will. In chapter 12, he listed tongues among manifestations given as the Spirit wills, and asks, 'Not all speak with tongues, do they?'
The verses used in chapter 14 that justify what has become known as a 'prayer language' treat it as the same sort of manifestation as uninterpreted tongues in the assembly. Therefore, saying Paul's question only refers to tongues in the assembly does not fit the argument about speaking in tongues in I Corinthians.
but not all will speak in tongues in the assembly which is what he spent significant amount of time explaining. It is not hard to understand.
It is not hard to understand that Paul teaches that not all believers who operate in manifestations of the Spirit speak in tongues. That is rather explicit without having to stretch what the text says. 'I would that ye all spake with tongues' does not have to be modified to mean 'all can speak with tongues.'
We can't take a phrase of his, isolate it and teach something he did not intend.
Amen.
Also we must reconcile it with the rest of scriptures.
Yes, indeed, and we must also look at the rest of scripture when trying to create a doctrine that if someone has not spoken in tongues that he is not filled with the Spirit. This contradicts Paul's teachings on spiritual gifts and does not fit with his pneumatology.
All 120 spoke in tongues in the upper room. Also when other groups received they all spoke in tongues.
You 'know' the latter sentence is true by reading it into the text. If you believe the initial evidence doctrine
must be true, then you are likely to read that idea into Acts 10-11 for example, when the wording fits a scenario where not every individual was filled with the Spirit just as well.
The problem with this is it is also what I call 'example hermeneutics.'
Compare these two sets of arguments.
Argument for God Always Speaking at Sinai
1. Moses went to Mt. Sinai/Mt. Horeb and heard God speak.
2. The people of Israel went to Mt. Sinai/Mt. Horeb and heard God speak.
3. Elijah went to Mt. Sinai/Mt. Horeb and heard God speak.
4. Therefore if anyone goes to to Mt. Sinai/Mt. Horeb they will hear God speak.
Argument for Tongues Always Accompanying Spirit-Baptism
1. The 120 were baptized with the Spirit and spoke in tongues.
2. The men in Cornelius' household were baptized with the Spirit and spoke in tongues.
3. The followers of John's baptism in Acts 18 were baptized with the Spirit and spoke in tongues.
4. Therefore, if you are baptized with the Spirit you will speak in tongues.
Would you conclude that anyone who goes to Mt. Sinai hears God speak? Does the fact that it happen
The Sinai argument, as illogical as it is, actually is strong since Paul does not outright contradict it in his epistles like he does with the initial evidence doctrine.
We could also make similar arguments about going to Egypt. The children of Israel went to Egypt, and God called them out. Jesus went to Egypt, and God called Him out. If you go to Egypt, will God call you out?
Acts 19
6And when Paul had laid his hands on them, the Holy Spirit came on them, and they began speaking in tongues and prophesying.
7There were about twelve men in all.
The way 'they' with a verbs in the Bible, Acts included, is if a representative of the group say something, it can be worded that 'they' said it. And if two or three prophesied and spoke in tongues, that fits the context. If six prophesied and six spoke in tongues, that fits. Peter also quoted Joel about prophesying when he described what was going on in Acts 2. The Old Testament prophecy was about an outpouring of the Spirit accompanied by prophesying, dreams, and visions.
This makes it clear to most people who read it that Luke is saying that all 12 of these men spoke in tongues and prophesied.
It does not say that. But even if all three passages were worded differently and said, "They all spoke with tongues' in every passage, unless you would be willing to say that anyone who goes to Sinai will hear God's voice, then why would you make the same sort of point about being filled with the Spirit and speaking with tongues? Paul clarifies the issue for us when he indicates that not all speak with tongues.