Tongues Again???

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VCO

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Oct 14, 2013
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Gifts of the Spirit are not chattering and muttering. The Holy Spirit is not the dead.

VCO,
Let's consider your line of argument and the scriptures. Acts 2 shows the apostles speaking in tongues where people present understand it. I Corinthians 14 talks about speaking in tongues where no one present understand, and encourages interpretation of tongues. From this you conclude that if speaking in tongues is genuine, that people present will understand. This is not rightly dividing the word of truth. The gift is 'divers tongues.' The gift is not making people be present who understand the tongue.

You assert that there were Corinthians cursing Christ in church, and try to associate that with speaking in tongues. I Corinthians 12 mentions the Corinthian's idolatrous past, says no one speaking by the Spirit of God curses Christ. Then it says no one says Jesus is Lord but buy the Holy Ghost, and lists several gifts that are manifestations of the Spirit, clearly referring to the Spirit of God. Divers tongues is listed among the manifesations of the Spirit. There is no reference to a counterfeit gift of tongues in the passage. The statement against cursing Christ is in a section about their pagan past. There is no reference to cursing Christ in church.

You assert that generally 'tongue' refers to a false tongue and 'tongues' refer to the plural. The KJV uses the plural and singular of the word 'tongue' consistently with the Greek, as a quick check of a concordance shows. The idea that a singular would mean one thing and a plural would mean another is highly irregular. You would think one would need to actually read some statements from actual Greek experts who show real evidence (not a non-committal assertion by one man with an honorary doctorate) to believe this theory. Why would the singular only mean fake pagan ongues in one verse but not another? Is it just so the reader can make a verse means what he wants it to?

None of the references to 'tongue' back up the idea that the singular of the word is pagan or fake. In fact, in verse 26, a 'tongue' is something Paul says to 'let it be done unto edifying.' Why let it be done if it is fake or pagan? Verse 27 gives instructions about interpreting a tongue. Whe interpret if it is not edifying? Verse 13 encourages the one who prays an unknown tongue to pray that he may interpret. Verse 14 is a hypothetical scenario in which Paul prays in a tongue.

There are only 7 references to tongue in the singular in the chapter. One refers to the phyiscal organ. Where are the fake tongues verses?


Have I misrepresented any of your views?

Your and your wife's experiences regarding speaking in tongues are not a basis for doctrine. They can't change what the scriptures say or mean. Even if her experiences were fake, that wouldn't mean that 'tongue' in I Corinthians 14 conveniently means 'fake pagan tongue' arbitrarily in some verses. You are also using a criteria to interpret speaking in tongues in Acts that doesn't hold up when reading I Corinthians 14. It exposes your criteria as eisegesis. It is clear from I Corinthians 14 that the gift is not people being around that understand the tongue.

Why can you not just agree to disagree, and LET IT GO already. You all are all alike. You KEEP ARGUING AND ARGUING, NEVER presenting ANYTHING NEW, on this MY LEAST FAVORITE SUBJECT OF ALL OF THEM. I am literally sick and tired of hearing what I heard a hundred or more times in the past.

WE DO NOT BELIEVE YOUR CHARISMATIC EXPERIENCE IS OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, PERIOD. GET OVER IT ALREADY. Even your posts are starting to sound like the chattering and muttering you THINK is Tongues.

I am finished, I have way better things to do then waist any more time on this Thread.
 
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DavidA7

Guest
:0 that last response, is not fruitful of the Holy Ghost no matter how biblically correct it may or may not be, just by seeing the lack of self control there. No offense brother. Any how, the Bible says, the letter kills, but the spirit gives life. So if all these people who don't believe in tongues don't have the spirit, then all we are doing is bringing even a greater condemnation on those who have not been given this revelation.
 

wolfwint

Senior Member
Feb 15, 2014
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Why can you not just agree to disagree, and LET IT GO already. You all are all alike. You KEEP ARGUING AND ARGUING, NEVER presenting ANYTHING NEW, on this MY LEAST FAVORITE SUBJECT OF ALL OF THEM. I am literally sick and tired of hearing what I heard a hundred or more times in the past.

WE DO NOT BELIEVE YOUR CHARISMATIC EXPERIENCE IS OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, PERIOD. GET OVER IT ALREADY. Even your posts are starting to sound like the chattering and muttering you THINK is Tongues.

I am finished, I have way better things to do then waist any more time on this Thread.
VCO, you are right its wasting the time. There is an different spirit behind these movements which proclaiming non Biblical doctrines.
 
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DavidA7

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Isaiah 28:11

"Indeed, He will speak to this people Through stammering lips and a foreign tongue"

It was a prophecy even in the days of old.
 
Dec 2, 2016
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A person does not have to speak in a tongue in order to be a Christian, so I do not really see the need for an argument. Those who want to pursue the tongue speaking can do so, and those who do not want to, do not have to. I have known tongue speaking Christians and non tongue speaking Christians, and their power or lack of power with God did not seem to be associated with or without their speaking in tongues.
 
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DavidA7

Guest
Amen I agree with every word you said!
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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Why can you not just agree to disagree, and LET IT GO already. You all are all alike. You KEEP ARGUING AND ARGUING, NEVER presenting ANYTHING NEW, on this MY LEAST FAVORITE SUBJECT OF ALL OF THEM. I am literally sick and tired of hearing what I heard a hundred or more times in the past.

WE DO NOT BELIEVE YOUR CHARISMATIC EXPERIENCE IS OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, PERIOD. GET OVER IT ALREADY. Even your posts are starting to sound like the chattering and muttering you THINK is Tongues.

I am finished, I have way better things to do then waist any more time on this Thread.
If you want to participate, you can. If you don't, you don't have to. No one is making you.

I just pointed out how some of your beliefs don't make sense and don't line up with Bible or plain reason. I really don't get the lack of comprehension, but it may be related to stance that you have taken than you won't change your views. I can understand why you don't respond to specific problems with your views, though. I wouldn't have anything to say to them either if I held to your stance and insisted on believing that way. Dodge the subject. Get angry. Shut down the conversation. Those are the ways you deal with it. It's a discussion forum, though, so people discuss when you post. There is no need to get upset. Either participate or don't.
 
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presidente

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Romans 8:9 But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.

The people, including Simon, believed the "things" concerning the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ, but whoever heard of a saved believer that believes in the "things" about what Philip was preaching as opposed to believers that believes in Him personally? They believed, beholding the miracles and signs which were done.
I have. Your explanation that they weren't saved yet because they just believed the 'things' regarding the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus doesn't hold water. Do you think the purpose of this passage is to show how Philip doing a poor job at evangelism? Why would he be called 'Philip the evangelist' if that were the case? If he were just preaching 'things' and then baptizing people before they believed the Gospel, how would that qualify him as an evangelist? Why would an angel and the Spirit direct him to keep on evangelizing in the next passage if he were doing such a poor job of it?

What I see is you examine a tough passage that doesn't fit well with your belief system and grasping at straws at ways to interpret it so that it fits. Have you ever come across any other commentator who believes the passage means this? Why don't you try bouncing your explanation off your own church elders or pastor and see what they think.

Also, consider that Peter, earlier in the book, says there is no other name under heaven whereby men must be saved. Here in Acts 8, we see the same sort of terminology that chapter 8 uses.

Consider this also.
John 1:12
But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name:

I understand why those followers of Philip had not received the promise of the Holy Spirit yet because they were being fans of Philip,
But the Bible does not state or imply that this was the reason. This is all conjecture on your part.

I point out that these Samaritans did not speak in tongues when they had received the promise of the Holy Ghost, because all that was among them were just Samaritans and so there was no need to speak another language to declare the wonderful works of God to foreigners among them because there were none among them at that time.
Simon could see somehow that these people had received the Holy Ghost. The passage doesn't say if they spoke in tongues or not. They could have. We don't know for sure. Is there any reason to think that the 12 disciples who had been baptized in John's baptism spoke different languages? They 'spoke in tongues and prophesied.'

14 Now when the apostles which were at Jerusalem heard that Samaria had received the word of God, they sent unto them Peter and John:15 Who, when they were come down, prayed for them, that they might receive the Holy Ghost:16 (For as yet he was fallen upon none of them: only they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.)17 Then laid they their hands on them, and they received the Holy Ghost.

Why didn't they receive the Holy Ghost when they were water baptized? Why was it necessary for the laying on of hands by the disciples? Think about it for a moment. Simon was among them; and they have been vexed by that man with unclean spirits. To receive the Holy Spirit the way the Gentiles had done in Acts 10th chapter, would have been disastrous because fear would have arisen that the supernatural event was the unclean spirits coming back & Simon was up to no good, doing his evil again in vexing them. The laying on of the hands by the disciples had to remove any doubt as to what was happening that this was not from Simon.
So I am supposed to believe that the reason the people had not received the Holy Ghost is because a scenario you imagined about Simon? The Bible doesn't say that the reason there were unclean spirits among them were because of Simon. Why should I believe that is the case? It's not in the Bible. You don't claim some sort of extra-biblical revelation to back that up, do you?

Why would the Samaritans think the miracles Philip was doing were from Simon? Why would they think the outpouring was from Simon? That doesn't make sense. The Bible does not say that the reason the laying on of hands by the disciples had to be done was to remove any doubt that what was happening was from Simon. What is your basis for this claim? Why should I believe that is the reason?

Paul says of salvation of Jews and Gentiles 'for there is no difference.' Salvation is supposed to work the same for everyone, right? Doesn't this apply to all believers?

Ephesians 1:13 In whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise,
Wouldn't the Samaritans have received the seal of the Spirit when they believed, not later when the apostles came. You have your explanation of only believing the 'things.' Acts 8 doesn't say the apostles better instructed them in the Gospel, or that they 'got saved' after Philip baptized them. I do not see that as a viable explanation at all given what the text says.

Paul emphasizes the role of the Holy Spirit in relation to salvation. In Luke's writings, the Spirit coming upon people (or people being baptized with the Holy Ghost, or the spirit coming upon them, or people receiving the Spirit) is associated with such things as prophesying, speaking in tongues, fire, wind, the place being shaken. Paul mentions spiritual gifts as 'manifestations of the Spirit' but he doesn't associate these things with receiving salvation.

Even many cessationists will acknowledge that the type of filling with the Spirit we see in Acts is different from being sealed with the Spirit when we believe. It's not just a Pentecostal concept or interpretation.

I point out what Paul said in 1 Corinthians 12:13 and that was in relations to the gifts of the Spirit to dispel all notions that one has to get another drink of the Spirit in order to get any gift from the Holy Spirit.
A verse about praying to function in another gift? In Acts 4, the apostles prayed for God to stretch forth His hand to heal and to do signs and wonders for the sake of Jesus. They were filled with the Holy Spirit, went out and preached boldly, and did more signs and wonders.

Paul, writing to believers in Ephesus, told them to be filled with the Spirit. Didn't they already have the seal of the Spirit (Ephesians 1:13, quoted above)? Even if you disagree with the baptism with the Holy Spirit being associated with empowerment and coming after salvation, you have no basis for accusing brethren of believing a false gospel for seeking to be more full of the Holy Spirit. Jesus said if ye being evil know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give the Holy Ghost to them that ask Him.

So once again... 2 Corinthians 11:1-4 warns believers to beware those that preach another gospel, another Jesus, or another spirit to receive as it reproves what you are preaching for you would separate the baptism with the Holy Spirit as being separate from salvation, and that can never be, for that would be preaching another gospel. Believers are saved when they have received the promise of the Spirit & not before.
Believing in being baptized with the Holy Spirit after salvation is not believing another Gospel. The Samaritans believed first and then the Spirit fell on them later. The twelve disciples who'd received John's baptism heard Paul's message, believed, were baptized. And then AFTER THAT Paul laid hands on them and the Spirit came upon them. (You totally missed the point of my reference to that and focused on the part about John's baptism.) There was some gap in time between their accepting Paul's message and being baptized, and the Spirit coming upon them. That could have been a very brief gap of time, but it was there.
 

presidente

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Enow wrote,
[SUP]4 [/SUP]Then said Paul, John verily baptized with the baptism of repentance, saying unto the people, that they should believe on him which should come after him, that is, on Christ Jesus.


See that? Paul told them to believe on Christ Jesus. And so they did and that was when they were water baptized in His name.
Sure I see that. You are focusing on something that wasn't my point at all. Notice here that Paul had preached Christ to them. As a responsible minister of the Gospel, do you think he baptized them before or after they believed the Gospel? They believed before they were baptized.

[SUP]5 [/SUP]When they heard this, they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.[SUP]6 [/SUP]And when Paul had laid his hands upon them, the Holy Ghost came on them; and they spake with tongues, and prophesied.[SUP]7[/SUP]And all the men were about twelve.


This is what I want you to focus on. Notice that after they had believed, after Paul baptized them, he laid his hands on them. Then the Spirit came on them and they spoke in tongues and prophesied. Faith and baptism came first, before this outpouring of the Spirit. Weren't they already saved when they believed? Weren't they sealed? If one of them had died before Paul laid hands on him would he have gone to Hell?
 

Enow

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Believing in being baptized with the Holy Spirit after salvation is not believing another Gospel. The Samaritans believed first and then the Spirit fell on them later. The twelve disciples who'd received John's baptism heard Paul's message, believed, were baptized. And then AFTER THAT Paul laid hands on them and the Spirit came upon them. (You totally missed the point of my reference to that and focused on the part about John's baptism.) There was some gap in time between their accepting Paul's message and being baptized, and the Spirit coming upon them. That could have been a very brief gap of time, but it was there.
Again.....

Romans 8:9 But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.

They were not saved yet till they had received the promise.

Jesus said about those that are born again, nobody knows when the wind comes from or where it goes; and so it is how one is born of the Spirit as in saved.

One can pluck scripture out and say they are born at water baptism due to Jews being born again in the Book of Acts and say... hey we are only born of water baptism and by the holy Ghost at the point of our salvation while ignoring Acts 10 in how the Gentiles had received the Holy Spirit before water baptism.

One can pluck Acts 8 out and say that believers are saved but receive the Holy Spirit later on... at the risk of ignoring Acts 2 on when the Jews were saved & Acts 10 on when the Gentiles were saved, and most important of all..... what scripture as a whole says when a believer is saved is when they had received the promise of the Holy Spirit... as in born again.

Romans 8:9 But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.

So you can dance around that all you want to favor your experience as Biblical per that plucked out event in Acts 8, but what you are preaching is not Biblical at all for it does not line up with all of scripture in the N.T., thus proving my lengthy explanation of Acts 8 is rightly applied than how you are applying it which can never be right.

There are others that take what you are preaching on Acts 8 to mean... if you do not speak in tongues, you do not have the Holy Spirit and thereby you are not saved ( and they were not speaking in tongues in Acts 8 )

Some will say that it is a second phenomenon that happens later in the life of a believer as they preach another baptism with the Holy Ghost with evidence of tongues...( which never comes with interpretation & some even wing the interpretation when it is babbling nonsense as it is not of another foreign language at all )

If you preach to receive Jesus Christ or the Holy Spirit again by a sign of tongues or any other sign to believers that are already saved, then you are preaching another gospel, because those "Samaritan believers" were not saved yet till they had received the promise of the Spirit by faith in Jesus Christ.

Ephesians 1:[SUP]11 [/SUP]In whom also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will:[SUP]12 [/SUP]That we should be to the praise of his glory, who first trusted in Christ.[SUP]13 [/SUP]In whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise,[SUP]14 [/SUP]Which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, unto the praise of his glory.[SUP]15 [/SUP]Wherefore I also, after I heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus, and love unto all the saints,
 

presidente

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When Paul speaks in tongue, he is the one that is praying that someone else may interpret what he is saying in tongues as manifested by the Holy Spirit because it is unfruitful to him until someone does. That means tongues is not a stand alone gift in the assembly. That was his point for why he was exhorting believers in verse 1 that if they seek a spiritual gift, they were to seek the gift of prophesy over all spiritual gifts and he began to expound on that by comparing the gift of prophesy against the gift of tongues because tongues is not a stand alone gift that it needs interpretation for the tongue speaker to understand.


The way you guys read it, you make it sound as if Paul failed royally in why prophesy should be sought over tongues as well as over other gifts of the Spirit as well because you are all favoring tongues over prophesy and by seeking to receive the Holy Spirit again on top of it.

The first paragraph is a straw man. I can read. There are many people who believe in speaking in tongues who believe in and many who operate in the gift of interpretation of tongues.
The second paragraph? I don't quite get what you are saying. It seems to lose its train of thought toward the end. Anyone who reads the passage should be able to see that prophesying is more beneficial to the congregation than speaking in tongues without an interpretation. I have come across Charismatics who take a prooftext here or there without getting the message of the whole passage, and treat speaking in tongues in church without interpretation like its the best thing since sliced bread. But if you are arguing against that with me, you are arguing with a straw man. In the Pentecostal churches I was raised in (I don't go to a Pentecostal church now, though I minister in them at times), interpretation was expected after a tongue was spoken out in the assembly.




No. You are not seeing in 1 Corinthians 14 of tongues being used in prayer when Paul said it was his spirit that was praying. And the point of John 16:13 is that the Holy Spirit cannot speak on His own or on His own initiative or authority because He can only speak what He hears. That limits Him from using tongues as a personal prayer language.

Why would that limit the Spirit? Don't you think Jesus and the Holy Spirit communicate with each other.


It is by Christ knowing the mind of the Spirit ( Romans 8:27 ) is how the unspeakable & unutterable intercessions of the Spirit's ( Romans 8:26 ) are made known to God the Father by that only Mediator between God and men ( 1 Timothy 2:5 ).

What does this have to do with speaking in tongues?
 

Enow

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When Paul speaks in tongue, he is the one that is praying that someone else may interpret what he is saying in tongues as manifested by the Holy Spirit because it is unfruitful to him until someone does. That means tongues is not a stand alone gift in the assembly. That was his point for why he was exhorting believers in verse 1 that if they seek a spiritual gift, they were to seek the gift of prophesy over all spiritual gifts and he began to expound on that by comparing the gift of prophesy against the gift of tongues because tongues is not a stand alone gift that it needs interpretation for the tongue speaker to understand.

The first paragraph is a straw man. I can read. There are many people who believe in speaking in tongues who believe in and many who operate in the gift of interpretation of tongues.
1 Corinthians 14:1Follow after charity, and desire spiritual gifts, but rather that ye may prophesy.[SUP]2 [/SUP]For he that speaketh in an unknown tongue speaketh not unto men, but unto God: for no man understandeth him; howbeit in the spirit he speaketh mysteries.[SUP]3 [/SUP]But he that prophesieth speaketh unto men to edification, and exhortation, and comfort.

That is Paul starting the topic desiring spiritual gifts that they were to seek the gift of prophesy over all spiritual gift in verse 1. Then he began to show WHY by comparing the gift of tongues against the gift of prophesy, because his message is about tongues is that it is not a stand alone gift because the tongues Paul speaks is not fruitful until it is interpreted to himself by someone else.

1 Corinthians 14:[SUP]12 [/SUP]Even so ye, forasmuch as ye are zealous of spiritual gifts, seek that ye may excel to the edifying of the church.[SUP]13 [/SUP]Wherefore let him that speaketh in an unknown tongue pray that he may interpret.[SUP]14[/SUP]For if I pray in an unknown tongue, my spirit prayeth, but my understanding is unfruitful.[SUP]15 [/SUP]What is it then? I will pray with the spirit, and I will pray with the understanding also: I will sing with the spirit, and I will sing with the understanding also.

Once again, Paul reiterates the topic about seeking spiritual gifts and that those that speak in tongues, pray that another interprets what they are speaking in tongues. It is his spirit that is praying for that interpretation to come in the hopes that he will understand what is being manifested by the Holy Spirit in tongues of other men's lips. Otherwise it is unfruitful to himself unless it is interpreted. That is a zinger for those that take verse 2 out of context as if it edifies the believer only when Paul just admitted that it is unfruitful to himself unless it is interpreted. Hence, leaving no room that tongues were not to be interpreted or any instructions about it being a prayer language of the Holy Spirit when it comes with no interpretation. If that were so, Paul would never say in verse 28 for that person to be silent when no interpretation is forthcoming for who was he to tell the Holy Spirit to be silent? If tongues was a prayer language, why not say that when tongues comes with no interpretation, it is prayer time for the Holy Spirit? But he did not.

The reason why Paul said for that person to be silent in verse 28 is because when you have two or three people speaking in tongues of other men's lips, a foreigner is liable to stand up and speak out of turn in his own language and that is why he can be told to be silent because he understands what he is saying thus speaking unto himself as God understands what he is saying as speaking unto God not that he is speaking to himself or to God, but what he is saying is understood by himself & God which is proof text that God's gift of tongues is supposed to come with interpretation as it will never be a stand alone gift manifested in the assembly.

And just so no one misunderstood him as cited in verse 20, he clarified what tongues were for and that was to speak unto the people in verse 21 .

And yet Paul stated that tongues were never to serve as a sign to the believers but for the unbelievers in verse 22, and yet again, wayward believers are using tongues as a sign when they receive this other baptism with the Holy Ghost. RED FLAG !!!!

The second paragraph? I don't quite get what you are saying. It seems to lose its train of thought toward the end. Anyone who reads the passage should be able to see that prophesying is more beneficial to the congregation than speaking in tongues without an interpretation. I have come across Charismatics who take a prooftext here or there without getting the message of the whole passage, and treat speaking in tongues in church without interpretation like its the best thing since sliced bread. But if you are arguing against that with me, you are arguing with a straw man. In the Pentecostal churches I was raised in (I don't go to a Pentecostal church now, though I minister in them at times), interpretation was expected after a tongue was spoken out in the assembly.
What I argue is the origin of this tongue that never comes with interpretation as I know that some fake it to fit in, but the scripture warns that there is a supernatural tongue in the world that is just babbling nonsense before God's gift of tongues had come at Pentecost. So is God the copycat of Satan? No, and yet in hypocrisy, tongue speakers contend that tongues can come without interpretation because it is a prayer language from the Holy Spirit.

So how can you discern the supernatural tongue that was already in the world before God's gift of tongue had come at Pentecost if we blur the line that God's gift of tongue can be babbling nonsense too? How can you be sure that God had called those sinners away from that tongue and their familiar spirits if we say that it can be babbling nonsense too? How can those called out of the occult and other religions where this supernatural tongue has manifested to be a witness to those still in that world & that tongue to repent when they do not really see any difference in the newly converted?

I believe in God's gift of tongues is of other men's lips to speak unto the people, but I do not believe that his other tongue which is babbling nonsense is of Him nor how they had gained that tongue by another supposedly supernatural experience of what they believe is the Holy Spirit coming over them again, filling them so they can speak in that tongue?

Were we not warned not to believe every spirit but test them? 1 John 4:1-7 and yet verse 4 of greater is He that is in you than he that is in the world seems to go over many tongue speakers' heads and ears that if you feel a spirit coming over you, filling you much later in your life as a believer, bringing tongues with no interpretation, that was not the Holy Spirit, but the spirit of the antichrist BECAUSE the Holy Spirit was already in you when you were first saved.

Why would that limit the Spirit? Don't you think Jesus and the Holy Spirit communicate with each other.
The Holy Spirit can be the Spirit of the Father when Jesus was on earth, and the Spirit of Christ when Jesus has ascended and all powers was given unto Him, but the Holy Spirit cannot be the Spirit of the Spirit; He can only speak what He hears.

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John 16:13&version=KJV;NIV;NASB;ESV;RSV

Do read John16:13 in KJV, NIV , NASB , ESV, & RSV at the link above as to why the Spirit cannot speak for Himself.

What does this have to do with speaking in tongues?
Because the KJV is the only one that was translated rightly in Romans 8:26-27 where the Holy Spirit has His intercessions, but they are unspeakable and unutterable, meaning no sound is being made here in verse 26. That is why verse 27 exists by explaining how the unspeakable intercessions are known to God the Father and that is by the Son knowing the mind of the Spirit. This "he" is the same one that searches our hearts and that he is identified in Hebrews 4:12-15 as Jesus, the Son of God, is the he that knows the mind of the Spirit as Jesus intercedes for the saints in according to the will of God in that there is only One Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus at that throne of grace.

You may not take Romans 8:26-27 as proof text of the Holy Spirit taking tongues as a prayer language, but others do.

2 Corinthians 11:1Would to God ye could bear with me a little in my folly: and indeed bear with me.[SUP]2 [/SUP]For I am jealous over you with godly jealousy: for I have espoused you to one husband, that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ.[SUP]3 [/SUP]But I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty, so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.[SUP]4 [/SUP]For if he that cometh preacheth another Jesus, whom we have not preached, or if ye receive another spirit, which ye have not received, or another gospel, which ye have not accepted, ye might well bear with him.

That is a warning that you cannot receive Jesus nor the Holy Spirit again for that would be another gospel when He will never leave you as He is within you even when wayward believers fall away from the faith by that iniquity; and unless they repent, they run the risk of being left behind as castaways to be received as vessels unto dishonor in His House.
 

presidente

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In the first part of your message, you write about I Corinthians 14 where it teaches that speaking in tongues does not edify the assembly unless it is interpreted. We are in agreement on that idea.

1 Corinthians 14:12 Even so ye, forasmuch as ye are zealous of spiritual gifts, seek that ye may excel to the edifying of the church.13 Wherefore let him that speaketh in an unknown tongue pray that he may interpret.14For if I pray in an unknown tongue, my spirit prayeth, but my understanding is unfruitful.15 What is it then? I will pray with the spirit, and I will pray with the understanding also: I will sing with the spirit, and I will sing with the understanding also.

Once again, Paul reiterates the topic about seeking spiritual gifts and that those that speak in tongues, pray that another interprets what they are speaking in tongues. It is his spirit that is praying for that interpretation to come in the hopes that he will understand what is being manifested by the Holy Spirit in tongues of other men's lips. Otherwise it is unfruitful to himself unless it is interpreted. That is a zinger for those that take verse 2 out of context as if it edifies the believer only when Paul just admitted that it is unfruitful to himself unless it is interpreted.
Here, your interpretation gets weird. Paul doesn't say when he speaks in tongues, his spirit is praying about something else... the go the interpretation.

Paul has already established the fact that the one who speaks in tongues edifies himself. You are creating a contradiction.

Here we have two parts of the man that are involved: his spirit and his understanding. When a man speaks in tongues, he edifies himself. So he does receive edification. But when he speaks in tongues, his spirit prays, but his understanding is unfruitful. He is edified... since his spirit is praying. But his understading is unfruitful. His understanding is not edified.

Your interpretation contradicts Paul's teaching that he who speaks in tongues edifies himself.

What you are saying does not fit with Paul's argument either, when he says

18 I thank my God, I speak with tongues more than ye all:
19 Yet in the church I had rather speak five words with my understanding, that by my voice I might teach others also, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue.

Verse 18 mentions speaking in tongues-- an activity that does not edify others. Notice the word 'yet.' Paul spoke in tongues, but in the church he'd rather edify others by using his understanding. Why would Paul speak in tongues if it were unfruitful? And why would he make this argument in verses 18 and 19 if he were talking about interpreting tongues?

Hence, leaving no room that tongues were not to be interpreted or any instructions about it being a prayer language of the Holy Spirit when it comes with no interpretation. If that were so, Paul would never say in verse 28 for that person to be silent when no interpretation is forthcoming for who was he to tell the Holy Spirit to be silent?
Your interpretation contradicts verse 28, since it does make room for uninterpreted tongues to be spoken. Paul says if there is no interpreter, let him speak to himself and to God.

Who was Paul to say this? Paul wrote that he was writing the commandments of the Lord.

Speaking in tongues is done as enabled by the Holy Spirit, but Paul said if he prayed in tongues HIS spirit prayed.

Peter says that we are to minister to one another with spiritual gifts as good stewards of the manifold grace of God. We steward spiritual gifts. Moses struck the rock to perform a miracle. Then God told Moses to speak to the rock. He disobeyed and struck the rock the second time. Water still flowed from the rock. He performed the miracle, but he did not steward it properly. He did not enter the promised land because of this incident.

After the fire came down from heaven at Mt. Carmel, the king sent some soldiers to arrest Elijah. He called down fire from heaven. He kept doing this until a soldier begged for his life and the lives of his men. The LORD told him not to be afraid and to go with them. So he stopped calling down fire from heaven to kill the soldiers.

If you don't get how individuals could to use speaking in tongues in a disorderly way if they are gifts from the Spirit, that doesn't change the fact that the scripture implies that this is indeed the case, that it is possible to use a genuine gift, but in a disorderly way.

Paul also give instructions to prophets on when to be silent and let someone else with a revelation speak.

If tongues was a prayer language, why not say that when tongues comes with no interpretation, it is prayer time for the Holy Spirit? But he did not.
Look at verse 28 again. He says 'let him speak to himself and to God.'

The reason why Paul said for that person to be silent in verse 28 is because when you have two or three people speaking in tongues of other men's lips, a foreigner is liable to stand up and speak out of turn in his own language and that is why he can be told to be silent
Your theory here doesn't have any support from the context. Paul is talking about a supernatural gift here, a gift of the Spirit. He's already explained and described a lot of things about speaking in tongues (e.g. the one who does so edifies himself; if he prays in tongues his spirit prays, but his understanding is unfruitful; he gives thanks well, but the other is not edified; tongues as a sign to them that believe not and their reaction.) Paul's writings about speaking in tongues lead up to this set of instructions about speaking in tongues in I Corinthians 14:26-27. He has led the reader through a set of arguments that prepare him for the instructions in verses 27 and 28.

You have speaking in tongues turning into something else here in verses 27 through 28, something different from what Paul was talking about throughout the chapter.

because he understands what he is saying thus speaking unto himself as God understands what he is saying as speaking unto God not that he is speaking to himself or to God, but what he is saying is understood by himself & God which is proof text that God's gift of tongues is supposed to come with interpretation as it will never be a stand alone gift manifested in the assembly.
I don't see any logical connection between the idea that the person speaking in tongues here is speaking a language naturally with the 'understanding', and your argument that this is a 'proof text' that tongues is supposed to be with interpretation and not be a stand alone gift.

The individual who speaks in tongues does not have to be the one who interprets it. This is shown in verse 28. It says 'let one interpret.' It doesn't say the speaker has to be the interpreter. (He could be, which has been established in a couple of verses earlier in the chapter.) So we have potentially two people in view here, the speaker, and the interpreter. That doesn't fit with your interpretation well. And your interpretation of this verse doesn't fit with the whole context leading up to it.

And just so no one misunderstood him as cited in verse 20, he clarified what tongues were for and that was to speak unto the people in verse 21 .
Paul uses the quote from Isaiah and his prophetic application of it to help the Corinthians better understand the gift, as part of his lead-up to the instruction in verse 27-28. Paul shows them that unbelievers tend to respond to speaking in tongues with unbelief. When Israel was carried away into captivity with their captors speaking Aramaic and possibly other languages, telling them to get back in line, keep their head down, don't drink too long, or whatever it was as they marched them naked into captivity, the people of Israel still did not 'hear' even during this. Isaiah prophesied, 'And yet for all that they will not hear Me.'

If an unbeliever somehow finds his way into a church gathering and hears all speak with tongues, he says 'ye are mad.' If he hears prophesying and hears the secrets of his heart made manifest... as some prophecies do... he falls down on his face and says that God is truly among you.

And yet Paul stated that tongues were never to serve as a sign to the believers but for the unbelievers in verse 22, and yet again, wayward believers are using tongues as a sign when they receive this other baptism with the Holy Ghost. RED FLAG !!!!
Paul's comment about tongues as a sign is in the context of his explanation of Isaiah, how unbelievers' reaction to speaking in tongues fulfills that prophecy that was given to Israel, but has some far reaching implications. In Acts 2, you might argue that Peter and those with him took the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, which was accompanied by speakign in tongues and magnifying God, was a 'sign' of the Spirit's work with the Gentiles. The passage doesn't call it a 'sign' and if it is, it is a different kind of sign than Paul's use of Isaiah. The type of sign in I Corinthians 14 is the fulfillment of a prophecy.

but the scripture warns that there is a supernatural tongue in the world that is just babbling nonsense before God's gift of tongues had come at Pentecost.
Show the scripture you have in mind. The 'in the world' part of your post makes me think you may be talking about the verses about being a 'barbarian' which just describes how it is when one person speaks a foreign language another does not know. Where do you get a reference to supernatural babbling prior to Pentecost? There is a reference to wizards chirping, but it is not described in terms of being a language.

How can you be sure that God had called those sinners away from that tongue and their familiar spirits if we say that it can be babbling nonsense too? How can those called out of the occult and other religions where this supernatural tongue has manifested to be a witness to those still in that world & that tongue to repent when they do not really see any difference in the newly converted?
Now you are trying to use tongues as a sign that someone is an unbeliever? Isn't that the opposite of what Peter did?

Do you think that if someone has accepted the truths of the Gospel, has put his faith in God, confesses that Jesus is Lord and believes that God raised Him from the dead, and is buried with him and baptism, wherein he is also raised with him through faith in the operation of God.... that such an individual, walking with God, and seeking His will, is susceptible to be filled with a demon spirit? Are Christians to walk around in fear that demons may jump into them and possess them?

If you know a particular individual who lives a wicked, sinful life, I understand your concern. There are people who live hypocritical lives who claim to be of all kinds of religious persuasions.

1 John 4:1-7 and yet verse 4 of greater is He that is in you than he that is in the world seems to go over many tongue speakers' heads and ears that if you feel a spirit coming over you, filling you much later in your life as a believer, bringing tongues with no interpretation, that was not the Holy Spirit, but the spirit of the antichrist BECAUSE the Holy Spirit was already in you when you were first saved.
Were we not warned not to believe every spirit but test them?[/quote]

We should certainly test the spirits. But if we are following the 'commandments of the Lord' in I Corinthians 14, we shouldn't assume we are violating 'test the spirits.' These scriptures do not contradict.

Do a word study on 'full', 'filled', 'baptized' and words like 'fall upon' and 'fallen upon.' I'm not talking about a Greek study, though that's useful too, but where the words occur in Acts and other books.

In the Old Testament, the Spirit of God would come upon an individual and he would prophesy. The book of Luke tells us that after Zecharias said "His name is John" he was filled with the Spirit and prophesied. Now look at the book of Acts. The disciples were filled with the Spirit and spoke in tongues. The Spirit came upon those in Cornelius' house and they spoke in tongues, and upon the men who'd previously been baptized with John's baptism in Acts 19 and they spoke in tongues and prophesied.

Peter was full of the Holy Ghost before he preached in Acts 4. Later, in Acts 4, the apostles who had been filled with the Holy Ghost were filled with the Holy Ghost again. Paul was full of the Holy Ghost before telling Elymas he would be blind.

The idea of the Holy Ghost coming among someone who is already a believer, who already has the seal of the Spirit is not contrary to scripture. If someone has an experience where they are filled with the Holy Ghost and then experience some spiritual gift, that is not contrary to scripture.

Consider the words of our Lord Jesus in Luke 11:13.
If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children: how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask him?

Your test of the spirits here is not Biblical. It's contrary to scripture. Paul told the Ephesian believers to be filled with the Spirit.

Why would that limit the Spirit? Don't you think Jesus and the Holy Spirit communicate with each other.
The Holy Spirit can be the Spirit of the Father when Jesus was on earth, and the Spirit of Christ when Jesus has ascended and all powers was given unto Him, but the Holy Spirit cannot be the Spirit of the Spirit; He can only speak what He hears.
Huh? I'm not following you. The Spirit takes of what is Christ's and shews it to the disciples. Jesus said He did what He saw the Father doing. There is unity in the Godhead. I don't see where you get this 'be the Spirit of the Spirit' idea? What does that have to do with anyone else's argument or interpretation?

Because the KJV is the only one that was translated rightly in Romans 8:26-27 where the Holy Spirit has His intercessions, but they are unspeakable and unutterable, meaning no sound is being made here in verse 26.
Other people may not get the point you are making when you refer to a verse if you are reading something into a verse that is unconventional, so you'll have to break it down clearly if you want people to get the meanings you think are there.

Romans 8 tells us about the Spirit interceeding with groanings that cannot be uttered. It does NOT teach that ALL intercessions that come from the Holy Spirit cannot be uttered. Jude said to pray in the Holy Ghost. He did not say that it was impossible to do so.
 
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VCO

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If you want to participate, you can. If you don't, you don't have to. No one is making you.

I just pointed out how some of your beliefs don't make sense and don't line up with Bible or plain reason. I really don't get the lack of comprehension, but it may be related to stance that you have taken than you won't change your views. I can understand why you don't respond to specific problems with your views, though. I wouldn't have anything to say to them either if I held to your stance and insisted on believing that way. Dodge the subject. Get angry. Shut down the conversation. Those are the ways you deal with it. It's a discussion forum, though, so people discuss when you post. There is no need to get upset. Either participate or don't.
ANGRY? I am bored with you asking me the same questions, I already answered for you, and you only instantly rejected my answer the first time, or times. So what makes you think I want to be bothered to answer it a second or third time?

And that comment about singular Greek Word for Tongues and Plural Greek Word for Tongues, was a comment on how Paul used it in 1 Corinthians, especially chapter 14, NOT the entire New Testament.


Although it is not indicated consistently in some translations, the distinction between the singular tongue and the plural tongues is foundational to the proper interpretation of this chapter. Paul seems to use the singular to distinguish the counterfeit gift of pagan gibberish and the plural to indicate the genuine gift of a foreign language (see note on v. 2). It was perhaps in recognition of that, that the King James Version (KJV) translators added consistently the word “unknown” before every singular form (see vv. 2, 4, 13, 14, 19, 27). The implications of that distinction will be noted as appropriate. Against the backdrop of carnality and counterfeit ecstatic speech learned from the experience of the pagans, Paul covers three basic issues with regard to speaking in languages by the gift of the Holy Spirit: (1) its position, inferior to prophecy (vv. 1-19); (2) its purpose, a sign to unbelievers, not believers (vv.20-25); and (3) its procedure, systematic, limited, and orderly (vv. 26-40).

The MacArthur Bible Commentary.


Bye, I found a much more interesting thread.
 

presidente

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ANGRY? I am bored with you asking me the same questions, I already answered for you, and you only instantly rejected my answer the first time, or times. So what makes you think I want to be bothered to answer it a second or third time?

And that comment about singular Greek Word for Tongues and Plural Greek Word for Tongues, was a comment on how Paul used it in 1 Corinthians, especially chapter 14, NOT the entire New Testament.
I was asking how any of the singulars (there aren't many) could fit with the idea that Paul was talking about fake tongues. It doesn't make sense that a word would change back in forth in meaning like that just to suit an individual's prefered interpretation. When I questioned you about that, you dodged or expressed your disinterest in the past.

It's up to you if you want to participate, but it's odd that you pretend you like dealt with that issue when you kept dodging it. It's been a long thread. I suspect you probably have something in mind that you think consistuted a response to my question.
 

VCO

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Isaiah 28:11

"Indeed, He will speak to this people Through stammering lips and a foreign tongue"

It was a prophecy even in the days of old.
Speak to WHO?

Gee that is just one thing the Charismatic Movement is not doing.
 

VCO

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I was asking how any of the singulars (there aren't many) could fit with the idea that Paul was talking about fake tongues. It doesn't make sense that a word would change back in forth in meaning like that just to suit an individual's prefered interpretation. When I questioned you about that, you dodged or expressed your disinterest in the past.

It's up to you if you want to participate, but it's odd that you pretend you like dealt with that issue when you kept dodging it. It's been a long thread. I suspect you probably have something in mind that you think consistuted a response to my question.

I never dodged anything, you just would not accept my answers to why we believe what we believe.

For the third or fourth time at least on this THREAD. AND I DO NOT CARE IF YOU DISAGREE WITH THE INTERPRETATION, it is what the Holy Spirit is leading us Non-Charismatics to absolutely believe:


1 Corinthians 10:23-24 (NASB)
[SUP]23 [/SUP] All things are lawful, but not all things are profitable. All things are lawful, but not all things edify.
[SUP]24 [/SUP] Let no one seek his own {AND the following word is NOT in the original language manuscripts the translators used to translate from.} good, but that of his neighbor.

1 Corinthians 14:4 (NASB)
[SUP]4 [/SUP] One who speaks in a tongue {Greek - singular} edifies himself; {already forbidden} but one who prophesies {Proclaiming the word of God without error to others.} edifies the church. {Therefore Paul is contrasting what should not be done, with what should be done.}

1 Corinthians 14:4 (KJV)
[SUP]4 [/SUP] He that speaketh in an unknown tongue edifieth himself; but he that prophesieth edifieth the church. {The KJV inserts the word unknown to designate it is something DIFFERENT than the TONGUES the Apostles did.}

We know that you believe something else between your ears, or maybe from some other spirit even. I do not pretend to know where your apposing interpretations come from. HOWEVER,
THAT IS WHAT WE BELIEVE the Holy Spirit had LED us to Believe.

1 Corinthians 12:2-3 (NASB)
[SUP]2 [/SUP] You know that when you were pagans, you were led astray to the mute idols, however you were led.
[SUP]3 [/SUP] Therefore {Because they were , caught up in their emotions, babbling to the idol Apollo.} I make known to you that no one speaking by the Spirit of God says, "Jesus is accursed"; {That is evidence that it did happen, making it an absolute necessity that Paul chastened them for it.} and no one can say, "Jesus is Lord," except by the Holy Spirit.

AGAIN, we know that you believe something else between your ears, or maybe from some other spirit even. I do not pretend to know where your apposing interpretations come from. HOWEVER, THAT IS WHAT WE BELIEVE the Holy Spirit had LED us to Believe.


Only because of the following verse did I BOTHER to answer you this question for the third or fourth time.


1 Peter 3:15 (HCSB)
[SUP]15 [/SUP] but honor the Messiah as Lord in your hearts. Always be ready to give a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you.


I am finished here.




 
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Isaiah 28:11

"Indeed, He will speak to this people Through stammering lips and a foreign tongue"

It was a prophecy even in the days of old.
There is no prophecy of God speaking through the people back to God Himself.

Indeed, God speaks against this another baptism of the Holy Spirit that comes with evidence of tongues which is not being used to speak unto the people but a vain and profane babbling to be used a prayer language supposedly from the "Spirit".

Isaiah 28:[SUP]6 [/SUP]And for a spirit of judgment to him that sitteth in judgment, and for strength to them that turn the battle to the gate.[SUP]7[/SUP]But they also have erred through wine, and through strong drink are out of the way; the priest and the prophet have erred through strong drink, they are swallowed up of wine, they are out of the way through strong drink; they err in vision, they stumble in judgment.[SUP]8 [/SUP]For all tables are full of vomit and filthiness, so that there is no place clean.[SUP]9 [/SUP]Whom shall he teach knowledge? and whom shall he make to understand doctrine? them that are weaned from the milk, and drawn from the breasts.[SUP]10 [/SUP]For precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little:[SUP]11 [/SUP]For with stammering lips and another tongue will he speak to this people.[SUP]12 [/SUP]To whom he said, This is the rest wherewith ye may cause the weary to rest; and this is the refreshing: yet they would not hear. [SUP]13 [/SUP]But the word of the Lord was unto them precept upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little; that they might go, and fall backward, and be broken, and snared, and taken.

It is because they do not hear Him is why they go and fall backward in these movements of the "spirit" in seeking to receive what they believe is the Holy Spirit "again" after a sign of tongues or other signs too.


Wayward believers need to repent by returning to their first love, and chase no more after those seducing spirits to be filled again after a sign and by shunning vain & profane babbling by praying normally is how they need His help to depart from this other gospel & other tongue.
 

presidente

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AGAIN, we know that you believe something else between your ears, or maybe from some other spirit even. I do not pretend to know where your apposing interpretations come from. HOWEVER, THAT IS WHAT WE BELIEVE the Holy Spirit had LED us to Believe.
In summary,

The real issue is you are reading ideas into the verses you cite that aren't there. And basically that last line shows an appeal to extra-biblical revelation and leadings that go beyond what is written in these scriptures. I don't believe you are getting genuine revelation in the way you interpret the singular 'tongue' differently in different verses, and many of the other assertions you make. When someone shows me verses that don't support their assertions at all, sometimes I don't percieve that as presenting verses to support their assertion. I can't read what is not there.

The idea that 'tongue' in the singular refers to fake tongues in the singular... but only this one time in the passage, and not those other four or five times... doesn't seem to be a good hermeneutical methodology.

And I asked for some evidence about your assertions about 'fake tongues' among Apollo priests. Plutarch, an Apollo priest in the first century, defended the oracle at Delphi (also in the Apollo cult) for speaking in more straightforward prose rather than poetry. Horoscopes and highly stylistic poetry can be hard to understand, but some authors in the past couple of centuries have interpreted statements about how difficult the oracle at Delphi was to understand to be evidence for less comprehensible speech.
 
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presidente

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There is no prophecy of God speaking through the people back to God Himself.
Hold on a second here with your pronouncements. Did you even bother to read through the Bible to determine that there were not such prophecies in the Bible before you made your pronouncement? If not, that's irresponsible. You shouldn't decree such things if you have no reason to believe they are true. It's reckless.

Peter called David a prophet in Acts 2. But David did not go around saying, "Thus saith the Lord" like the other prophets. He wrote Psalms. Don't you believe David was prophetically inspired to write the Psalms that predicted the Christ?

David wrote a Psalm that told about the crucifixion. It started off, "My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken Me"-- words which Christ spoke on the cross. Don't you believe that is prophetic?

And consider Peter's own words about David in Acts 2, where he quotes David's prayer and calls David a prophet.

25 For David speaketh concerning him, I foresaw the Lord always before my face, for he is on my right hand, that I should not be moved:
26 Therefore did my heart rejoice, and my tongue was glad; moreover also my flesh shall rest in hope:
27 Because thou wilt not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption.
28 Thou hast made known to me the ways of life; thou shalt make me full of joy with thy countenance.
29 Men and brethren, let me freely speak unto you of the patriarch David, that he is both dead and buried, and his sepulchre is with us unto this day.
30 Therefore being a prophet, and knowing that God had sworn with an oath to him, that of the fruit of his loins, according to the flesh, he would raise up Christ to sit on his throne;

You wrote:
Indeed, God speaks against this another baptism of the Holy Spirit that comes with evidence of tongues which is not being used to speak unto the people but a vain and profane babbling to be used a prayer language supposedly from the "Spirit".

Isaiah 28:[SUP]6 [/SUP]And for a spirit of judgment to him that sitteth in judgment, and for strength to them that turn the battle to the gate.[SUP]7[/SUP]But they also have erred through wine, and through strong drink are out of the way; the priest and the prophet have erred through strong drink, they are swallowed up of wine, they are out of the way through strong drink; they err in vision, they stumble in judgment.[SUP]8 [/SUP]For all tables are full of vomit and filthiness, so that there is no place clean.[SUP]9 [/SUP]Whom shall he teach knowledge? and whom shall he make to understand doctrine? them that are weaned from the milk, and drawn from the breasts.[SUP]10 [/SUP]For precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little:[SUP]11 [/SUP]For with stammering lips and another tongue will he speak to this people.[SUP]12 [/SUP]To whom he said, This is the rest wherewith ye may cause the weary to rest; and this is the refreshing: yet they would not hear. [SUP]13 [/SUP]But the word of the Lord was unto them precept upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little; that they might go, and fall backward, and be broken, and snared, and taken.

It is because they do not hear Him is why they go and fall backward in these movements of the "spirit" in seeking to receive what they believe is the Holy Spirit "again" after a sign of tongues or other signs too.
You majorly contradict yourself, because you take a passage about tongues being from God, then you condemn those who believe them as being from God. Your interpretation is not consistent with the New Testament, because God was not opposing those who spoke in tongues in the first century. The unbelief was in the hearts of those who rejected speaking in tongues, among many other works of God.

The Bible commands believers to be filled with the Holy Ghost.

Luke 11
11 If a son shall ask bread of any of you that is a father, will he give him a stone? or if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent?
12 Or if he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion?
13 If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children: how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask him?
 
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