TONGUES is a precious gift from God

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1785
John Fletcher

  • John Fletcher (d. 1785): Among the most esteemed of Wesley's colleagues was John Fletcher (d. 1785), Vicar of Madeley in Shropshire. Fletcher believed that his was the dispensation of the Holy Spirit, in which "every faithful servant of the Lord is enabled to prophesy out of the fulness of his heart; and to speak the wonderful works of God." The "extraordinary gifts" of the Spirit bestowed at Pentecost had been "peculiarly necessary" to the apostles and were entirely "distinct" from the Holy Spirit. Fletcher pointed out that in the Bible speaking in tongues had not always accompanied an outpouring of the Holy Spirit, nor had those in whom the gifts of the Spirit were manifested necessarily displayed more holiness than others. If the "edification of the Church" required it, the Holy Spirit, in taking full possession of an individual, might bestow on him an "extraordinary gift." In general, however, the presence of the fruits of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22, 23) would demonstrate that an individual had become a temple of the Holy Spirit. Fletcher's theology demanded recognition of the need for personal experiences with the Spirit of Pentecost. (John Fletcher, Works.) The kind of piety and devotion which characterized John Fletcher found expression in the diary of his wife Mary. Mrs. Fletcher's attitude was at once desirous and expectant. She prayed for an infilling with the Spirit, "that [her] tongue, being touched with the fire of heavenly love, might be enabled to plead the cause of truth"; she expected that "an outpouring of [God's] Spirit will soon be given, and 'times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord' " (Acts 3:19); she declared: "We must look for the baptism with the Holy Ghost." What one called that baptism was inconsequential: it remained available for all Christians. Mrs. Fletcher's active faith, stimulated by persistent and increasing longing, was characteristic of many of her Methodist contemporaries. "I've tasted," she proclaimed, "but I want the fulness." (Henry Moore, ea., The Life of Mary Fletcher (New York, 1840), pp. 270-324) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 81)
 
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1792-1834
Edward Irving

Edward Irving never himself spoke in tongues! Amazing that the father of modern Pentecostalism never spoke in tongues!
  • Irvingites, England and America. ("Irving and the Catholic Apostolic Churches," ERE, VII, 422-25; "Pentecostal Churches," EB, XIV, 31; "Tongues, Gift of," B IV, 796; "Tongues, Gift of," IV, 3310-11.)
  • The Spirit fell among the London congregation of a prominent Church of Scotland pastor named Edward Irving, beginning with Mary Campbell and James and Margaret MacDonald. Soon after, Irvingites formed the Catholic Apostolic Church, which emphasized the gifts of the Spirit. This revival also gave birth to the Christian Catholic Church and the New Apostolic Church, and there were Irvingites in the traditional denominations. Unfortunately, these groups gradually lost the gifts of the Spirit, degenerated into ritualism, suffered rapid decline, and are almost nonexistent today. Church historian Philip Schaff (1819-1893) wrote of observing speaking in tongues in an Irvingite church in New York: "Several years ago I witnessed this phenomenon in an Irvingite congregation in New York; the words were broken, ejaculatory, and unintelligible, but uttered in abnormal, startling, impressive sounds, in a state of apparent unconsciousness and rapture, and without any control over the tongue, which was seized as it were by a foreign power. A friend and colleague (Dr. Briggs), who witnessed it in 1879 in the principal Irvingite church in London, received the same impression.' (Schaff, I, 115.)
  • Then in the early nineteenth century, Scottish Presbyterian pastor Edward Irving and members of his congregation practiced speaking in tongues and prophesying. Irvingite prophets often contradicted each other, their prophecies failed to come to pass, and their meetings were characterized by wild excesses. The movement was further discredited when some of their prophets admitted to falsifying prophesies and others even attributed their "giftedness" to evil spirits. This group eventually became the Catholic Apostolic Church, which taught many false doctrines, embracing several Roman Catholic doctrines and creating twelve apostolic offices. (Charismatic Chaos, John F. MacArthur, 1991, p. 234)
 
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  • Edward Irving (1792-1834), lifelong friend of Thomas Carlyle and popular Scottish Presbyterian minister to a fashionable London congregation, became the man around whom the new tongues movement centered. His initial involvement was at least partially the result of his interest in prophecy and millenarianism. His premillennialism brought him into contact with the growing number whose convictions were moving in that direction and led him to accept the invitation of Henry Drummond (d. 1860) (Drummond later became an Irvingite leader. He should not be confused with Henry Drummond (d. 1897), associate of D.L. Moody and author of Ascent of Man (1894).) to a conference at Albury Park south of London in 1826. Through his participation in that and later Albury conferences, Irving was stimulated to seek for and expect a restoration of spiritual gifts to the church. (For a summary of the significance of the Albury conferences in the context of premillennial thought, see Ernest R. Sandeen, The Roots of Fundamentalism (Chicago, 1970).) He made this a matter of diligent personal and congregational concern. A popular—though lengthy—speaker, Irving meanwhile extended his influence and saw his Regent's Square church experience significant growth. Early in 1830, reports of the appearance of the gifts of tongues and healing near Glasgow reached London; Irving investigated and was intrigued by what he discovered. Among those who had been yearning for the restoration of the gifts was the Campbell family of Fermicarry in the vicinity of Glasgow in western Scotland. One Sunday the family gathered for prayer in the room of the invalid daughter, Mary. During their devotions, "the Holy Ghost came with mighty power upon the sick woman as she lay in her weakness, and constrained her to speak at great length and with superhuman strength in an unknown tongue, to the astonishment of all who heard, and to her own great edification and enjoyment in God...." (Edward Irving, quoted in Jean C. Root, Edward Irving (Boston, 1912), p. 71.) Irving, in London, immediately began special prayer meetings with the sole object of receiving the gifts, especially the gift of tongues. The magnitude of the yearning was attested by the crowds in attendance at the 6:30 a.m. services. By July, 1831, tongues and interpretations had begun to occur. At first, Irving restrained them, but the illogical position of admitting that they were utterances inspired by the Holy Spirit and yet trying to restrain them became increasingly untenable. His decision to permit tongues in any service isolated his more sedate parishioners, who objected to the frequent disruptions during the Sunday morning sermon. "All a tumult yonder, oh me!" observed Carlyle, who also admitted: "Sorrow and disgust were naturally my own feeling: 'How are the mighty fallen'; my once high Irving come to this, by paltry popularities, and Cockney admirations, puddling such a head!" (Thomas Carlyle, Reminiscences (London, 1932), p. 298. Irving published his explanation of the charismatic phenomenon in a series of articles in Frasers Magazine in 1832.) The situation for Irving did, indeed, quickly assume tragic dimensions. He himself never spoke in tongues; but his inability to lead those who did cost him significant support and evoked the ridicule of the fashionable classes who had once thronged to hear him and the alienation of those whom at a spiritual distance he actually trusted. Expelled by his Scottish presbytery (Annan) on issues of both Christology and tongues, Irving became a victim of his own spiritual and innovative comprehensiveness. Those who possessed the "gifts" claimed the spiritual authority to reorganize themselves as the Church of the Spirit, separate from the Regent's Park parish. All the more grievous to him, they claimed the authority to direct all aspects of church life and they silenced their leader in the name of the Holy Spirit. He died in 1834, a still young, much worn, and lonely proclaimer of the place of tongues in the context of a premillennial eschatology. His work continued, without due recognition, in the hands of "prophets" and "apostles" under the banner of a sacramental Catholic Apostolic Church, which was Catholic in its use of incense, vestments, and creeds based on Roman Catholic, Orthodox, and Anglican rites, and Apostolic in its endorsement of tongues and in the active roles assigned to deacons, elders, prophets, and apostles in its ministries and polity. (See Andrew L. Drummond, Edward Iruing and His Circle (London, 1937).) The notoriety which inevitably accompanied the rapid transformation and relocation of a fashionable London congregation as a "fanatical" sect did not prevent the extension of Irving's influence beyond the confines of Great Britain. In the United States and continental Europe, convinced Irvingites made contacts with small but interested Christian groups of various affiliations. (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 85-87)
  • Horace Bushnell on Edward Irving: "Reports of speaking in tongues naturally resulted in some attempts at objective discussion of the gift among those who had no firsthand knowledge of it in main-line Protestantism. The widely different conclusions that were reached can be demonstrated by considering what two mid-nineteenth-century Congregationalists argued. Horace Bushnell's "Nature and the Supernatural" included a defense of the credibility of Edward Irving's experiences. Against those who charged that the reported spiritual gifts were "mere hallucinations," he contended that the Scotch families involved were of "unimpeachable character" and that Irving himself was "a man of great calmness" and "well poised in the balance of his understanding." There was nothing in the gift of tongues "that could any how become a temptation to the enthusiast or the pretender." That this gift and that of interpretation should function cooperatively was entirely reasonable: "The gift of tongues seems, at first view, to be an exercise so wide of intelligence, as to create no impression of respect. And for just that reason it has the stronger evidence when it occurs; for, notwithstanding all that is said by the commentators about tongues imparted for the preaching of the gospel, I have found no one of all the reported cases of tongues, in which the tongue was intelligible, either to the speaker or the hearers, except as it was made so by a supernatural interpretation—which accords exactly, also with what is said of tongues in the New Testament. And yet, on second thought, they have all the greater dignity and propriety, for just the reason that they require another gift to make them intelligible.... For so it is with all revelations of the Spirit, they are not only uttered or penned by inspiration, but they want a light of the Spirit in the receiver, to really apprehend their power." (Bushnell, Nature and the Supernatural (New York, 1859), pp. 46-67.) Bushnell recognized, of course, that religious "delusion" existed, but he steadily refused to dismiss the gift of tongues as mere enthusiasm. It meant little to him that educated men argued against the authenticity of such gifts. Their negative approaches signified only "that the human mind, as educated mind, is just now at the point of religious apogee; where it is occupied, or preoccupied by nature, and can not think it rational to suppose that God does any thing longer, which exceeds the causalities of nature." Bushnell probed beyond the superficial in an effort to link speaking in tongues with his theory of language. The gift, he suggested, possibly pointed to the fact that all languages are from "the Eternal Word, in souls; there being' in his intelligent nature as Word, millions doubtless of possible tongues, that are as real to him as the spoken tongues of the world. " Of his New England contemporaries Bushnell remarked: "Nothing is farther off from the Christian expectation of our New England communities, than the gift of tongues." He reported, however, that that gift and the gift of interpretation had appeared at a gathering of New England Christians concerned with their need of sanctification. He also recounted several recent healings in the vicinity. Bushnell remarked that the answers to specific prayers to which Pietists had testified had often been deemed too strange for serious consideration. He knew personally of so many direct and remarkable answers to prayer, however, that he ventured to suggest that they were "even common" among certain classes: "In that humbler stratum of life, where the conventionalities and carnal judgements of the world have less power, there are characters blooming in the holiest type of Christian love and beauty, who talk, and pray, and, as they think, operate apostolically, as if God were all to them that he ever was to the church, in the days of her primitive grace." (Bushnell, pp. 478ff.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 88)
  • David Green on Edward Irving: "In contrast to Bushnell, David Green, Secretary of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, took a much less positive attitude toward the renewed interest in tongues. Green first of all took issue with the teaching that a gift of tongues would enable the recipient to preach in foreign vernaculars. Tongues had not been a permanent endowment of the church, but rather a supernatural sign of confirmation of the "divine authority of Christianity," and attempts to preserve or resuscitate this gift had inevitably led to confusion such as that in the church at Corinth." (David Green, "The Gift of Tongues," Bibliotheca Sacra, XXII (January, 1865), 99-126.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 89)
 
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1792-1875
Charles Grandison Finney

  • Charles Grandison Finney (1792-1875): In the United States, this pre-Civil War revival was largely a lay movement. During the first half of the century, the phenomenal spread of Methodism had introduced into American revivalism a strong emphasis on an experience of sanctification. Wesley's teaching on the availability of a "second" definite work of grace (see I Thess. 5:5-23; Heb. 3:19; 4:1) was modified and popularized through the itinerant ministry and the publications of Walter and Phoebe Palmer. The quest for holiness was not confined to Arminian Methodist ranks. From his position at Oberlin College, Charles Grandison Finney (1792-1875), Presbyterian- turned- Congregationalist, with his colleague Asa Mahan, expounded a related version of perfectionist doctrine. (See the forthcoming doctoral thesis, "The Public Life of Finney," by Garth Roselle, University of Minnesota.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 90)
 
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1801
Cain Ridge and Kentucky Revival


  • Revivals and Camp Meetings, America. It is reported that physical demonstrations occurred in later American revivals, called the Second Awakening, which began with camp meetings in Kentucky and swept across the American frontier. (Clark, pp. 114-17.)
  • In the camp meetings people "shouted, sobbed, leaped in the air, writhed on the ground, fell like dead men and lay insensible for considerable periods, and engaged in unusual bodily contortions," in addition to manifesting the "holy laugh," the "barks," and the "jerks." (Clark, pp. 116-17.)
  • Observers at various American revival meetings reported sobbing, shrieking, shouting, spasms, falling, rolling, running, dancing, barking, whole congregations breathing in distress and weeping, and hundreds under conviction and on the ground repenting. (William Sweet, The Story of Religion in America (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1950), pp. 133, 227-31.)
  • These meetings were conducted by Methodists, Baptists, some Presbyterians, and later the Holiness movement. With such a strong emphasis on repentance and free, demonstrative worship, it is not surprising that many people received the Holy Spirit and spoke in tongues. A great revival swept the University of Georgia in 1800-1801, and the students "shouted and talked in unknown tongues." (Vinson Synan, The Holiness-Pentecostal Movement in the United States (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1971), p. 25, quoting E. Merton Coulter, College Life in the Old South (New York, 1928), pp. 194-95.)
  • In many cases tongues speaking went unreported because observers did not recognize it or its significance and did not distinguish it from other physical phenomena. One historian said, "Throughout the nineteenth century speaking in unknown tongues occurred occasionally in the revivals and camp meetings that dotted the countryside. Perhaps the phenomenon was considered just another of the many evidences that one had been saved or sanctified." (Synan, p. 25 n. 29.)
  • "At Cane Ridge, near Paris, Elder [Barton W.] Stone welcomed them (the Shakers) warmly and invited them to attend his next camp meeting." (The People Called the Shakers, Edward Deming Andrews, p74)
  • Kentucky Revival (1800 ) and Cane Ridge (1801 ): In the United States, the first several years of the nineteenth century were years of revival. In the frontier areas, the Second Great Awakening was accompanied by unusual demonstrations of religious fervor in increasingly informal services of worship. Shouting, singing, and exhorting, interspersed with laughing, jerking, and barking "exercises" became characteristic of camp meetings. Some contemporary observers and chroniclers recognized a depth behind these superficial expressions which later historical analyses often fail to convey. Such "supernatural and extraordinary gifts of the Spirit" accompanied the revival in Kentucky that a restitution of the "apostolic faith" was believed to have occurred. (Richard M'Nemar, The Kentucky Reuioal (Cincinnati, 1808), p. 32.) Writing of the Cane Ridge meeting of 1801 a year later, Aeneas McCallister claimed that "the like wonders have not been seen, except the Kentucky Revival last summer, since the Apostle's (sic) days. I suppose the exercises of our congregation this last winter, surpassed anything ever seen or heard of." (Richard M'Nemar, The Kentucky Reuioal (Cincinnati, 1808), p. 32.) Stimulated by the revival spirit, people appropriated for their own experiences "the full and perfect accomplishment" of Joel's prophecy. (Richard M'Nemar, The Kentucky Reuioal (Cincinnati, 1808), p. 68.) In the summer of 1801, a North Carolina Presbyterian congregation held a series of special meetings, anticipating a revival. Despite their prayers and efforts, nothing remarkable occurred. The pastor rose to conclude the scheduled services a sorely disappointed man, and found himself so moved that he was speechless. As he regained his composure, someone in the audience stood up and quoted solemnly: "Stand still and see the salvation of God." Immediately, "a wave of emotion swept over the congregation like an electric shock." The awaited revival had begun. Physical manifestations and speaking in tongues made it "like the day of Pentecost and none was careless or indifferent.'' (Quoted in Guion G. Johnson, "Revival Movements in Ante-Bellum North Carolina," North Carolina Historical Reuiew, X (January, 1933), 30.) Local revivals continued sporadically throughout the early nineteenth century. Methodist circuit riders like Peter Cartwright kept the revival fires burning in the West. During the 1820's and 1830's Charles Grandison Finney brought revivalism to the cities of the East, and "new measures" were devised to help ensure the frequency of spiritual renewals. (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 84)
 
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1801
Cain Ridge
The 1835 account of Cain Ridge by Barton W. Stone
Disciples of Christ

From: Memorials of Methodism in Virginia: 1772-1829, by William W. Bennett, 1870 p430-435:
We give another and fuller account furnished by Rev. Barton W. Stone, a prominent minister of the Presbyterian Church, and a witness of many of the scenes he describes:
"The bodily agitation's or exercises attending the excitement ill the beginning of this century were
various, and called by various names, as the falling exercise, the jerks, the dancing exercise, the barking . exercise, the laughing and singing exercises, and so on. The falling exercise was very common among all cases, the saints and sinners of every .age and: grade, from the philosopher to the clown. The subjects of this exercise would generally, with a piercing scream, fall like a log on the floor or earth, and appear as dead. Of thousands of similar cases, I will mention one: At a meeting two gay young ladies, sisters, were standing together, attending the exercises and preaching at the same time, when in they both fell with a shriek of distress, and lay for more than an hour apparently in a lifeless state; Their mother, a pious Baptist, was in great distress, fearing they would not survive. At length they began to exhibit signs of life, by crying fervently for mercy, and then relapsed into the same death-like state, with an awful gloom on their countenances after a while the gloom on the face of one was succeeded by a heavenly smile, and she cried out, 'Precious Jesus!' and spoke of the glory of the gospel to the surrounding crowd in language almost super-human and exhorted all to repentance. In a little while after the other sister was similarly exercised. From that time they became remarkably pious members of the Church.
"I have seen very many pious persons fall in the same way, from a sense of the dander of their unconverted children, brothers, or sisters, or: from a sense of the danger of their neighbors in a sinful world. I have heard them agonizing in tears, and strongly crying for mercy to be shown to sinners, speaking like angels all around.
"The jerks cannot be so easily described. Sometimes the subject of the jerks would be affected in some one member of the body, and sometimes in the whole system. When the head alone was affected, it would be jerked backward or forward, or from side to side, so quickly that the features of the face could not be distinguished. When the whole system was affected, I have seen the person stand in one place, and jerk backward and forward in quick succession, the head nearly touching the floor behind and before. All classes, saints and sinners, the strong as well as the weak, were thus affected.. I have inquired of these se thus affected if they could not account for it, but some have told me that those were among the happiest seasons of their lives. I have seen some wicked persons thus affected, and all the time cursing the jerks, while they. were thrown to the earth with violence.
Though so awful to behold, I do not remember that any one of the thousands I have seen thus affected ever sustained any bodily injury. This, was as strange as the exercise itself.
The dancing exercise generally began with the jerks, and was peculiar to professors of religion. The subject, after jerking a while, began to dance, and then the jerks would cease Such dancing was indeed heavenly to the spectators. There was nothing in it like levity, nor calculated to excite levity in the beholders. The smile of heaven shone on the countenance of the subject, and assimilated to angels appeared the whole person. Sometimes the motion was quick, and sometimes slow. Thus they continued to move forward and backward in the same track or alley till nature seemed exhausted, and they would fall prostrate on the floor or earth, unless caught by those standing by. While thus exercised, I have heard their solemn praises and prayers ascend to God.
"The barking exercises, as opposers contemptuously called it, was nothing. but the jerks. A person thus affected, especially in his head, would often make a grunt t or. bark, from the suddenness of the jerk. This name of barking seems to had its origin an old Presbyterian preacher of East Tennessee.: He had gone into the woods for private devotion, and seized with the jerks. Standing ding near a sapling, he caught hold of it to prevent his falling; and, as his head jerked back, he uttered a grunt, or a kind noise similar to a bark, his face being turned upward. .Some wag discovered him in this position, and reported that he had found the old preacher barking up a tree.
"The laughing exercise was frequent, confirmed solely to the religious. It was a loud, hearty laughter, but it excited laughter in none that saw it. The subject appeared rapturously solemn, and his laughter produced solemnity in saints and sinners; it was truly indescribable
The running exercise was nothing more than that persons feeling something of these bodily agitations, through fear, attempted to run away, and thus escape from them, but it commonly happened that they ran not far before they fell, when they became so agitated they could no. proceed any farther.
" I knew a young physician, of a celebrated family, who came some distance to a big meeting to see the strange things he had heard of. He and a young lady had sportively agreed to watch over and take care of each other, if either should fall. At length the physician felt something very uncommon, and started from the congregation to run to the woods. He was discovered running as for life, but did not proceed far until he fell down, and there day until he submitted to the Lord, and afterward became a zealous member of the Church. Such cases were common.
The singing exercise is more unaccountable than anything else I ever saw. The subject, in a very happy state of mind, would sing most melodiously, not from the mouth or nose, but entirely in the breast, the sounds issuing thence. Such noise silenced everything, and attracted the attention of all. It was most heavenly; none could ever tire of hearing it. "Thus have I given," says Hr. Stone, "a brief account of the wonderful things that appeared in the great excitement in the beginning of this century. That there were many eccentricities and much fanaticism in this excitement was acknowledged by its warmest advocates. Indeed, it would have been a wonder if such things had not appeared in the circumstances of that time. Yet the good effects were seen and acknowledged in every neighbourhood and among the different sects. It silenced contention and promoted unity for a while."
 
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1817
Gustav von Below

  • Gustav von Below (1817): In 1817, Gustav von Below, a Pomeranian army officer, experienced a profound and life-directing conversion as a result of independent Bible study. Shortly thereafter, his two brothers had similar experiences, and the three young Lutheran aristocrats opened their estates to any who wished to join them in informal study and worship. The rationalism which pervaded much of the contemporary state church in Prussia and elsewhere in the Germanies had made such gatherings unusual and aroused opposition. Worshippers took increasing part in the services and patterned their practices after those of the early Christians. Soon the gifts of the Holy Spirit, including tongues, appeared. Among these people, tongues were sung rather than spoken: people sang "spiritual songs" (Eph. 5:19) in languages unknown ("fremden Sprachen") to the singers and unrecognized by the hearers. An ecclesiastical commission sent to investigate the strange phenomenon declared it to be of God. After a period of extra-ecclesiastical existence, Gustav von Below and his followers returned to active involvement in a newly awakened state church. (Karl Ecke, Durchbruch des Urchristentums (Nurnberg, n.d.), pp. 13ff.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 84)


1820
David Spleiss

  • David Spleiss, Switzerland (1820): During the 1820's, revival came to Buch bei Schaffhausen, and David Spleiss saw remarkable transformations in his Swiss congregation. Children as well as adults were "seized by conviction" and cried out for mercy until they received a personal certainty of forgiveness. The revival continued for several months, until it had penetrated nearly every home in the vicinity. (Karl Ecke, Durchbruch des Urchristentums (Nurnberg, n.d.), pp. 9-12.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 85)


1827
Johann Lutz

  • In southern Germany, a Roman Catholic priest named Johann Lutz had begun to sense a spiritual need among his parishioners in Karlshuld. He consequently preached with exceptional fervor on New Year's Eve, 1827. A few hours later he was awakened by a crowd of penitents desiring to confess, and a revival had begun. For many weeks prayer meetings were held almost continuously until on Ash Wednesday, in an all-night prayer vigil, people suddenly began to speak under inspiration. "Der Herr wird seinen Geist wieder ausgiessen wie im Anfang" (the Lord will again pour out his spirit as in the beginning") became their confident message. The revival lasted several years and was accompanied by operations of the gifts of the Holy Spirit. In 1831 Catholic authorities decided to silence Lutz, but after a brief and disappointing experiment with Protestantism (in which he was repelled by the rampant rationalism) Lutz returned to Catholic obedience. While a priest at Oberroth, he made the acquaintance of the Irvingite, W. R. Caird. Formally excommunicated by his Catholic bishop in 1856 because of his involvement with the Irvingites, Lutz permanently transferred his allegiance to the Catholic Apostolic Church. (Andrew L. Drummond, Edward Iruing and His Circle (London, 1937), pp. 233-34, 286ff.; Ecke, op. cit., pp. 28-33.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 87)
 
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1831
Alexandre Vinet

  • Alexandre Vinet (1831 ): The Erweckungsbewegung (revival) penetrated French-speaking Lausanne as the Reveil, with Prof. Alexandre Vinet (d. 1847) its chief spokesman. While Vinet was much interested in spiritual manifestations, on which he wrote in 1831 and 1842, and in Jansenism, which movement did include the gift of tongues, there is no evidence that Eglise Libre du pays Vaud experienced glossolalia (despite the proximity and memory of the Camisards), but otherwise the movement shared fully in the universal revival. (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 85)


1835
Barton W. Stone
Disciples of Christ

  • Although Stone held these views, neither he, or anyone in the Stone-Campbell movement ever spoke in tongues or claimed to have any of the miraculous gifts of the Holy Spirit.
  • Stone, B.W. "Obj. 4 But Paul says, miracles will cease, ... quotes 1 Cor 13:8-10 ... Ans. I ask, When shall these miracles cease? The Apostle answers, "When that which is perfect is come." When that period shall come, there will be no necessity for them. But we have seen, that time has never yet come; nor can we expect it in this state of mortality." (Barton W. Stone, "The Gift of the Holy Spirit" Christian Messenger, 9/8(August 1835), 179. The Perfect I Cor. xiii 8.)
  • At Cane Ridge, near Paris, Elder [Barton W.] Stone welcomed them (the Shakers) warmly and invited them to attend his next camp meeting. (The People Called the Shakers, Edward Deming Andrews, p74)


1841
The Readers, Lasare

  • Readers (followers of Lasare), 1841-43, Sweden. ("Tongues, Gift of," Smith's Dictionary of the Bible, IV, 3310-11; Schaff, 1,114.)
  • Pietism movement that "emphasized devotional reading of the liturgy, the Bible and Luthers & Arndt's sermons." (Readers, Encyclopedia Britannica, 1979)
  • There is no evidence that the Readers spoke in tongues, in fact, with their solid focus on the word of God, it is highly unlikely that they did, since modern Pentecostals sacrifice the Bible at the alter of their feelings!


1851
Revivals: English, Irish

  • Cornwall, England (1851): At mid-century the waning of the revival moods in the "Atlantic community" was suddenly quickened beyond expectations by a new series of spiritual awakenings, this time first in Cornwall, England (1851), then spreading through the United States, then to Wales, Ireland, and other parts of England beyond Cornwall. Glossolalia was not reported in this renewal, but fervent prayer, spontaneous shouts of praise, exuberant singing, and joyful testimonies were evidences of transforming spiritual experiences. The Holy Spirit came "with wondrous power," one observer of the Irish awakening reported. Cases of prostrations were common, and some of the physical manifestations were "very violent." Healings often accompanied experiences of salvation. (William Gibson, The Year of Grace (Boston, 1860), pp. 203-04.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 89)
  • Revivals, Ireland. ("Tongues, Gift of," Smith's Dictionary of the Bible, IV, 3310-11; Schaff, 1,114.) in the Irish Revivals of 1859
 
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1859
William Edwin Boardman

  • William Edwin Boardman: 1859: William Edwin Boardman, a Presbyterian, published The Higher Christian Life in 1859. This quickly became a classic expression of the teachings of many who aspired to an experiential understanding of the Wesleyan dictum: "Go on unto perfection." During the second half of the nineteenth century, this pre-Civil War interest in a religious-crisis experience subsequent to conversion was channeled into a structured Holiness movement. Originating at Vineland, New Jersey, in 1867, the National Camp Meeting Association for the Promotion of Holiness was initially a Methodist organization. The association attracted some of that denomination's most illustrious leaders and soon expanded its activities beyond the con fines of camp meetings. Local Holiness revivals and special publications devoted to holiness teaching drew the attention of non-Methodists and gave the movement a broad evangelical base. The Holiness revival renewed emphasis on a normative Christian experience, variously termed entire sanctification, second blessing, perfection, perfect love and baptism with the Holy Spirit, and it popularized the terminology which was subsequently adopted by organized Pentecostalism. (In an unpublished paper, "From 'Christian Perfection' to the 'Baptism of the Holy Ghost'," Donald Dayton (graduate student at the University of Chicago Divinity School) has noted the shift of terminology among advocates of Christian perfection which helped introduce the vocabulary of later Pentecostalism.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 90)


1864
Salvation Army

  • "the founders of the Salvation Army are reported to have spoken in tongues"
  • William and Catherine Booth: There is no evidence that any of the founders of the Salvation Army movement also experienced speaking in tongues as commonly rumored. From its beginning to the present day, tongues is not manifested in the Salvation Army.


1870
McGarvey, Pendlton
McGarvey never spoke in tongues
  • "All Christians who mistakenly yearn for a renewal of these spiritual gifts, should note the clear import of these words of the apostle, which show that their presence in the church would be an evidence of immaturity and weakness, rather than of fully developed power and seasoned strength. But if the gifts have passed from the church as transient and ephemeral, shall not that which they have produced abide? Assuredly they shall, until that which is perfect is come; i. c., until the coming of Christ. ... It therefore seems more consistent to understand the apostle as asserting that the three graces shall abide while the earth stands; in contrast with miraculous gifts, which, according to his own prophetic statement, have ceased." (McGarvey, Pendlton, commentary on 1 Corinthians 13:8-13, p132,133)


1870
David Lipscomb

Lipscomb never spoke in tongues
  • David Lipscomb: "these gifts were to continue in the church to guide and instruct it until the complete will of God was made known" (Lipscomb, commentary on the new testament epistles, p200)
 
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1875
Dwight Moody, Baptist


  • a friend of Dwight Moody described some of Moody's followers speaking in tongues. (Brumback, pp. 92-94, quoting Souer [or Sauer], History of the Christian Church, III, 406 and R. Boyd, Trials and Triumphs of Faith (1875), p. 402.) However, it is unclear whether either source definitely meant speaking in tongues as we know it. The Wesof Presbyterian Calvinism adopted by English Puritans in 1648, specifically required that prayer be made in a known tongue. (Justo Gonzalez, A History of Christian Thought (Nashville: Abingdon, 1975), III, 271.)
  • R. Boyd, D.D., an intimate friend of Moody, wrote: "When I got to the rooms of the Young Men's Christian Association, I found the meeting "on fire". The young men were speaking with tongues, prophesying. What on earth did it mean? Only that Moody had been addressing them that afternoon!". Since early this century, an unprecedented Holy Ghost revival has been occurring such that today many millions of people world-wide speak in tongues.
  • Dwight L. Moody (d. 1899): The vocabulary of the Holiness movement pervaded much of American Evangelicalism in the last three decades of the century. The revivalist Dwight L. Moody (d. 1899) had a remarkable Spirit baptism and often urged upon participants in his Northfield Conferences their need for a similar outpouring. (Torrey, Why God Used D.L. Moody (New York, 1923).) He frequently requested his associate and successor, Reuben A. Torrey, to preach his sermon on the baptism with the Holy Ghost which claimed that spiritual baptism resulted in power for service. (Torrey's views were most fully expressed in his book, The Baptism with the Holy Spirit (Chicago, 1895).) Torrey was a prominent participant in the annual British Keswick Conventions in the Lake District, which had resulted primarily from the efforts of the American Quaker couple R. Pearsall and Hannah Whitall Smith. Leading Keswick speakers like the Dutch-Reformed South African, Andrew Murray, (Andrew Murray, The Full Blessing of Pentecost (London, 1908).) and the German-born British Baptist, Frederick Brotherton Meyer, frequently visited Northfield and contributed an international perspective to American Evangelical holiness teaching. (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 91)
 
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1878
A. R. Fausset

  • A. R. Fausset: yes (1878 and revisers 1921): "A primary fulfilment took place when the Church attained its maturity; then 'tongues ceased,' and 'prophesyings' and 'knowledge,' as _supernatural_ gifts were superseded, as no longer required, when the Scriptures of the New Testament had been collected together."(1 Corinthians: A Commentary, ed R. Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown (1878 ed.), III, p. 322)




1880
Albert Benjamin Simpson, (Christian and Missionary Alliance founder)

  • Albert Benjamin Simpson, (Christian and Missionary Alliance) 1880: Considerable concern with a "deeper," "higher," or "happy" Christian life was also demonstrated outside of the auspices of the Holiness associations. Albert Benjamin Simpson, Presbyterian founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance, preached a fourfold Gospel of Christ the Saviour, Healer, Sanctifier, and Coming King. (see A.E. Thompson, A.B. Simpson (New York, 1920), for a brief historical account.) His premillennial and divine healing emphases formed an accepted part of the common holiness message of "Jesus Christ the same, yesterday, and today, and forever" (Heb. 13:8). Simpson was among the most creative of Holiness contributors to the Pentecostal movement in process of separate denominational organization. (The Presbyterian polity of Simpson's Christian and Missionary Alliance has been adopted by the largest Pentecostal body, the Assemblies of God.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 90)




1885
Charles Price Jones

  • Charles Price Jones 1885: The dramatic inroads of holiness doctrines and the concomitant revival spirit, alas, fostered division as well as cohesion. In the South, a black preacher of holiness, Charles Price Jones, was not only locked out of his church—an attempt was made on his life. (Charles Price Jones, "Autobiographical Sketch," History of Church of Christ (Holiness) U.S.A., ed. Otho B. Cobbins (New York, 1966), pp. 27-30, 410-11.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 91)


1890
Church of God (Cleveland)

  • Church of God (Cleveland) 1890: In Tennessee the struggling group which later emerged as the influential Church of God (Cleveland) found their church building demolished one Sunday morning. Their homes were frequently stoned, and they were harassed. (The early struggles of the Church of God are ably recounted in Charles Conn, Like a Mighty Army (Cleveland, Tenn., 1955). The Diary of A.J. Tomlinson, edited by Homer A. Tomlinson, contains personal reminiscences.) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 91)


1894
Methodist Episcopal Church (South)
  • Methodist Episcopal Church (South) 1894: By 1894, the Methodist Episcopal Church (South) had second thoughts and issued a statement deploring the independent nature and activities of the Holiness Associations. The opposition of the last decade of the century proved decisive: a number of groups emerged as independent Holiness denominations. (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton, p 91)
 
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1901
Charles Parham


  • The modern Pentecostal movement began on January 1, 1901, in Bethel Bible College in Topeka, Kansas, operated by Charles Parham, a minister with a background in the Holiness movement. The students began to seek the baptism of the Spirit with tongues, and Agnes Ozman was the first student to experience speaking in tongues. She claimed she spoke in several languages immediately. This spawned numerous copy-cat Holy Spirit baptisms among her fellow students and all of them were accompanied with this alleged ability to speak several foreign languages instantly. The revival soon spread to many denominations and around the world. Since then speaking in tongues has been verified and documented many times.


1923
Johannes Greber
X-Catholic



Jehovah's Witness connection with the NWT

Johannes Greber did a translation of the New Testament. Greber is one of the most common references Jehovah's Witnesses once used to support "a god" in John 1:1 in their New World Translation, since it is based upon Greber's translation. There is irrefutable proof that Greber was known to the Watchtower as an occult spiritist in 1953, but they did not stop using Greber until 1976. Then in 1983, the Watchtower deceptively claims "new light" and condemns Greber altogether, leading the blind followers to believe they only found out in the 1980's.
Greber was a Catholic priest in Germany in the 1920's. In 1923, he was invited by one of his parishioners to a prayer meeting. Greber describes what he encountered there:
  • "Scarcely was the prayer ended when the boy fell over forward with a slump and an exhalation of breath so suddenly that I was startled...After a few seconds he was pushed upright in a series of jerks as though by an invisible hand, and remained sitting with his eyes closed." (Johannes Greber, "Communication with the Spirit World of God--Its Laws and Purpose.)
The spirit later then invited Greber to further investigate this world of spirit communication. Greber responded to this invitation:
  • "What captivated me most of all, and I might say, irresistibly, was the clear-cut reasoning and convincing logic of that to which I had listened for the first time in my life. Only the truth could exert so great an influence upon me, an influence from which I had not the power to withdraw, even had I been so inclined. ... In the end, I resolved to follow the directions I had received [from the spirit] , even though it meant the greatest personal sacrifice, the loss of my position and my means of support." (Johannes Greber, "Communication with the Spirit World of God--Its Laws and Purpose.)
Click here to see the whole story!


1933
Worldwide Church of God
Herbert W. Armstrong


  • The Worldwide Church of God is another group that teaches salvation by works and new revelation from God beyond Scripture. It was founded by Herbert W. Armstrong, who also began Ambassador College, The Plain Truth magazine, and the radio and television programs "The World Tomorrow." And how did Armstrong get his start? Through new revelation from Mrs. Armstrong, who had a vision in which an angel laid out the entire system for her. She told her husband and a new cult was born. (Charismatic Chaos, John F. MacArthur, 1991, p. 81)


1939
Vine's Dictionary

  • Commenting on 1 Cor 13:8-13: Vine's Expository Dictionary (1939) "teleios (5049): signifies having reached its end (telos), finished, complete, perfect. It is used ... of things, complete, perfect, Rom. 12:2; 1 Cor. 13:10 (referring to the complete revelation of God's will and ways, whether in the completed Scriptures or in the hereafter)"


1954
Sun Myung Moon


  • Sun Myung Moon, self-styled messiah from Korea, claims he is a divine messenger from God. Moon says he has the ultimate truth— not from Scripture, not from literature, and not from any person's brain. According to Moon, if his "truth" contradicts the Bible (and it does), then the Bible is wrong. (Charismatic Chaos, John F. MacArthur, 1991, p. 81)


1950
revival of tongues


  • In the late 1950's a revival of tongues speaking, known as the charismatic or neo-Pentecostal movement, began among non-Pentecostal churches and has spread throughout the Protestant, Roman Catholic, and Orthodox world. (Don Basham, Face Up with a Miracle (Springdale, Pa.: Whitaker House, 1967); Hamilton, passim; John Sherrill, They Speak with Other Tongues (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964). ) Some charismatics have joined Pentecostal churches, others have formed their own churches, and many have remained in their traditional denominations.
 
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1960
Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship


  • Tongue speaking blossomed again in the early 1960's. Largely responsible for it was an organization named "Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship." Many of their members were not only famous, they were very "charismatic" to boot. Pat Boone, the famous entertainer, became heavily involved in the movement. His book, "A New Song," describes his experiences in detail.
 
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And what do you believe this


label signifies - assuming you didn't edit the chronology yourself?
I tried to copy/paste but kept getting the 100000 words limit and then had to copy/paste half more and repost. No editing, and I have seen this site before so I just copied/pasted.
 
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On the site itself, it is flashing like this:




1901
Charles Parham


  • The modern Pentecostal movement began on January 1, 1901, in Bethel Bible College in Topeka, Kansas, operated by Charles Parham, a minister with a background in the Holiness movement. The students began to seek the baptism of the Spirit with tongues, and Agnes Ozman was the first student to experience speaking in tongues. She claimed she spoke in several languages immediately. This spawned numerous copy-cat Holy Spirit baptisms among her fellow students and all of them were accompanied with this alleged ability to speak several foreign languages instantly. The revival soon spread to many denominations and around the world. Since then speaking in tongues has been verified and documented many times.


1923
Johannes Greber
X-Catholic



Jehovah's Witness connection with the NWT

Johannes Greber did a translation of the New Testament. Greber is one of the most common references Jehovah's Witnesses once used to support "a god" in John 1:1 in their New World Translation, since it is based upon Greber's translation. There is irrefutable proof that Greber was known to the Watchtower as an occult spiritist in 1953, but they did not stop using Greber until 1976. Then in 1983, the Watchtower deceptively claims "new light" and condemns Greber altogether, leading the blind followers to believe they only found out in the 1980's.
Greber was a Catholic priest in Germany in the 1920's. In 1923, he was invited by one of his parishioners to a prayer meeting. Greber describes what he encountered there:
  • "Scarcely was the prayer ended when the boy fell over forward with a slump and an exhalation of breath so suddenly that I was startled...After a few seconds he was pushed upright in a series of jerks as though by an invisible hand, and remained sitting with his eyes closed." (Johannes Greber, "Communication with the Spirit World of God--Its Laws and Purpose.)
The spirit later then invited Greber to further investigate this world of spirit communication. Greber responded to this invitation:
  • "What captivated me most of all, and I might say, irresistibly, was the clear-cut reasoning and convincing logic of that to which I had listened for the first time in my life. Only the truth could exert so great an influence upon me, an influence from which I had not the power to withdraw, even had I been so inclined. ... In the end, I resolved to follow the directions I had received [from the spirit] , even though it meant the greatest personal sacrifice, the loss of my position and my means of support." (Johannes Greber, "Communication with the Spirit World of God--Its Laws and Purpose.)
Click here to see the whole story!


1933
Worldwide Church of God
Herbert W. Armstrong


  • The Worldwide Church of God is another group that teaches salvation by works and new revelation from God beyond Scripture. It was founded by Herbert W. Armstrong, who also began Ambassador College, The Plain Truth magazine, and the radio and television programs "The World Tomorrow." And how did Armstrong get his start? Through new revelation from Mrs. Armstrong, who had a vision in which an angel laid out the entire system for her. She told her husband and a new cult was born. (Charismatic Chaos, John F. MacArthur, 1991, p. 81)


1939
Vine's Dictionary

  • Commenting on 1 Cor 13:8-13: Vine's Expository Dictionary (1939) "teleios (5049): signifies having reached its end (telos), finished, complete, perfect. It is used ... of things, complete, perfect, Rom. 12:2; 1 Cor. 13:10 (referring to the complete revelation of God's will and ways, whether in the completed Scriptures or in the hereafter)"


1954
Sun Myung Moon


  • Sun Myung Moon, self-styled messiah from Korea, claims he is a divine messenger from God. Moon says he has the ultimate truth— not from Scripture, not from literature, and not from any person's brain. According to Moon, if his "truth" contradicts the Bible (and it does), then the Bible is wrong. (Charismatic Chaos, John F. MacArthur, 1991, p. 81)


1950
revival of tongues


  • In the late 1950's a revival of tongues speaking, known as the charismatic or neo-Pentecostal movement, began among non-Pentecostal churches and has spread throughout the Protestant, Roman Catholic, and Orthodox world. (Don Basham, Face Up with a Miracle (Springdale, Pa.: Whitaker House, 1967); Hamilton, passim; John Sherrill, They Speak with Other Tongues (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964). ) Some charismatics have joined Pentecostal churches, others have formed their own churches, and many have remained in their traditional denominations.


1960
Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship


  • Tongue speaking blossomed again in the early 1960's. Largely responsible for it was an organization named "Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship." Many of their members were not only famous, they were very "charismatic" to boot. Pat Boone, the famous entertainer, became heavily involved in the movement. His book, "A New Song," describes his experiences in detail.
 
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314
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1939
Vine's Dictionary

  • Commenting on 1 Cor 13:8-13: Vine's Expository Dictionary (1939) "teleios (5049): signifies having reached its end (telos), finished, complete, perfect. It is used ... of things, complete, perfect, Rom. 12:2; 1 Cor. 13:10 (referring to the complete revelation of God's will and ways, whether in the completed Scriptures or in the hereafter)"
This one doesn't have it
 
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But all throughout the list it has it on some and not on others.
 
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And what do you believe this

I believe portions of it because I have mentioned them myself like Polycarp, Ignatius, Iraneaus, Turtullian, John Wesley. The others I need to study more in depth.