Praying in Tongues

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W

WIbaptist

Guest
yes you did. lol
Yes with a lower case a. I never claimed to be like one of the 12. We are all messengers of God and called to spread His word. That is being an apostle.
 
7

7seasrekeyed

Guest
Yes with a lower case a. I never claimed to be like one of the 12. We are all messengers of God and called to spread His word. That is being an apostle.
like I said, no one uses the word apostle that way

so even us tongues folks are called?

well at last some agreement
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,058
4,341
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Yes with a lower case a. I never claimed to be like one of the 12. We are all messengers of God and called to spread His word. That is being an apostle.
Hey, Guy we already knew that and you are not one of the lower casing either.

Don't flip the script because you thought you could out-think those here.
There are many here who do not see tongues as for today who are more of an apostle than you would ever be. You came here with a perverted video of mockery which as I said way back those types of videos are created by an atheist.
like the ones of south park. YOU posted it here. how could someone who claims to be Spirit-filled allow themselves to be used to mock the Holy Spirit as your cartoon you posted did?


I am I to say you have a devil? no, you were in error and clearly ignorant. But that does not mean you are not saved or have an evil spirit as you suggest we do. Now please have a nice day.
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,058
4,341
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yeah. nobody uses apostle in that way.

suffering from memory lapse, apostle or not

about that nap......
I have needed a nap time or two lol . I think you told me one time i needed one you were right then too.
 
7

7seasrekeyed

Guest
I have needed a nap time or two lol . I think you told me one time i needed one you were right then too.

don't recall that :unsure:

you are getting sleepy.....:sleep: :cool:
 

notuptome

Senior Member
May 17, 2013
15,050
2,538
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I got Jesus I got everything Boom! mic dropped.
Then show it.

Col 4:6 Let your speech be alway with grace, seasoned with salt, that ye may know how ye ought to answer every man.

Evidence of the presence of the Holy Spirit.

For the cause of Christ
Roger
 

wolfwint

Senior Member
Feb 15, 2014
3,759
936
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that doesn't work anymore wolfwint

we have been over that with you and others multiple times so quit yer whinin. :giggle:

you must have a list you go down to offer negative comments and I guess you are back to number one now having exhausted your supply

notice how Baptist person favors the kundalini youtube offering. but if you are at all savvy, you will not use that one!
Thats why this was my last comment about this theme.
The Lord knows at best what is right and wrong.
Suspicion is not discernment. Do you see into the spirit?
No, but i can recognize if a another spirit teach than the Holy Spirit.
Its a gift, i did not ask for. I had it from beginning.
 
7

7seasrekeyed

Guest
Thats why this was my last comment about this theme.
The Lord knows at best what is right and wrong.

No, but i can recognize if a another spirit teach than the Holy Spirit.
Its a gift, i did not ask for. I had it from beginning.
what filter do you use to come up with these repetitive and sometimes unclear posts (such as this one)?

I would like to try it on my vacuum...seems to catch everything
 

Kavik

Senior Member
Mar 25, 2017
795
159
43
A few miscellaneous comments on some of the posts –

Paul says that he is thankful that he speaks languages more than all. As someone whose mission was to spread the gospel, and given that he was, for his time anyway, a ‘world traveler’, it stands to reason that he would have used his knowledge of languages more than the average Joe on the street. I don’t think he’s bragging at all, merrily stating that in his ‘occupation’ (as it were), he uses foreign languages more than anyone he knows. Paul could have gotten just about anywhere in the Mediterranean Basin with just Greek, Latin and Aramaic. He just happened to use them on a daily basis considerably more than others. I don’t see this as an allusion to speaking anything but real, rational language(s).

Mark 16:17 – aside from it being a later addition to the original, the “speak in new tongues” (read speak in new languages) simply means that in order for the message of Christianity to be spread to the world, people were going to need to learn the languages of the people they were preaching to. They would need to learn to speak in "new languages" – new to them, but certainly not to those who already spoke it.

If I say to someone, “Hey, I just started learning a new language last week” – does that mean the language is hitherto unknown or unheard of?? No, of course not. It just means that, for me, it’s a new language.

Yes, I know the old “neos’ / “kainos” thing – kainos has the meaning of ‘new, novel, not previously known’ – and that’s exactly right – new/novel/previously unknown….to me, not to everyone who already speaks the language.


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.

I’ve commented on this one quite a bit. It’s one of the quintessential passages to “proof” tongues.

In a slightly more modern English and more a literal translation from the Greek: “For one that speaks in a language, speaks not to men, but to God; no one hears with understanding; howbeit in the spirit he speaks mysteries”

The demographic situation in Corinth at that time must also be taken into consideration as it also plays a role in the understanding of these passages.

Historical context seems to be often left out of many interpretations of Biblical texts. In this case, I think that because historical context is rarely given any consideration, one of the main points of the passage is completely missed; for Paul, this appears to be clarity and understanding at a public worship so that all may benefit. This, in a geographic setting where everyday communication presented obstacles.

To take a sort of analogy –

If I attend a worship service in ‘East Haystack’, Alabama a few things are going to be evident: one; there’s only going to be so many people at that service (i.e. there will be a finite given amount of people there) and two; the chances that anyone in East Haystack speaks anything but English is pretty slim to nil.

If I start praying aloud in say Lithuanian, there’s no one at that service that’s going to understand a word I’m saying. Even though I’m speaking a real language, no one there will understand my “tongue”. That does not mean or imply that no one else understands Lithuanian; just no one at that particular service. In this sense, therefore, I am speaking only to God, since he understands all languages. To everyone at the service, even though I’m praying in the Spirit (see that defined below), to those listening to me, I’m speaking “mysteries”, just an idiomatic way of saying “we have no idea what he’s saying”.

The other issue that goes with this is the Pentecostal/Charismatic redefinition of “praying in the spirit” – it does not refer to the words one is saying. Rather, it refers to how one is praying. In the three places it is used (Corinthians, Ephesians, and Jude), there is absolutely zero reference to 'languages' in connection with this phrase. “Praying in the Spirit” should be understood as praying in the power of the Spirit, by the leading of the Spirit, and according to His will. In Pentecostal/Charismatic parlance however, the phase has come to be equated with modern “tongues”, i.e. when one “prays in the Spirit”, one is typically engaged in some form of tongues-speech.

There just isn’t anything in that passage that even remotely suggests the speaker does not understand what he’s saying. It’s just not there, but it’s typically “read into” the narrative to ‘proof’ the modern tongues phenomenon.

Not one of these passages above refers to anything but real, rational langue(s) – perhaps not understood by those hearing it, but always understood by the one speaking it (it’s his/her native language).
 

wolfwint

Senior Member
Feb 15, 2014
3,759
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I do not care if you can see it you clearly are not reading what was written by Paul in 1cor 14 :39 and what Jesus said in Mark 16 and Luke 11:13.
1. Cor. 14.39 is no proof for the teaching that everybody who got baptised with the Holy Spirit has received the gift to speak in tongues as sign that he is baptised with the Holy Spirit.
And wether Mark 16 realy means us today ore believers in the apostolic time is not realy solved. When we read about the Apostles in their time, compare with our time today. I would say it was for the apostolic time. Otherwise the witness would be more obvious. While in the apostolic time these all became true.
And Luke 11.13 has nothing to do with speaking in tongues.
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,058
4,341
113
Then show it.

Col 4:6 Let your speech be alway with grace, seasoned with salt, that ye may know how ye ought to answer every man.

Evidence of the presence of the Holy Spirit.

For the cause of Christ
Roger
hahahaha look in the mirror guy
 

wolfwint

Senior Member
Feb 15, 2014
3,759
936
113
62
what filter do you use to come up with these repetitive and sometimes unclear posts (such as this one)?

I would like to try it on my vacuum...seems to catch everything
Sorry the first part of my post was not finnished.
 
7

7seasrekeyed

Guest
A few miscellaneous comments on some of the posts –

Paul says that he is thankful that he speaks languages more than all. As someone whose mission was to spread the gospel, and given that he was, for his time anyway, a ‘world traveler’, it stands to reason that he would have used his knowledge of languages more than the average Joe on the street. I don’t think he’s bragging at all, merrily stating that in his ‘occupation’ (as it were), he uses foreign languages more than anyone he knows. Paul could have gotten just about anywhere in the Mediterranean Basin with just Greek, Latin and Aramaic. He just happened to use them on a daily basis considerably more than others. I don’t see this as an allusion to speaking anything but real, rational language(s).

Mark 16:17 – aside from it being a later addition to the original, the “speak in new tongues” (read speak in new languages) simply means that in order for the message of Christianity to be spread to the world, people were going to need to learn the languages of the people they were preaching to. They would need to learn to speak in "new languages" – new to them, but certainly not to those who already spoke it.

If I say to someone, “Hey, I just started learning a new language last week” – does that mean the language is hitherto unknown or unheard of?? No, of course not. It just means that, for me, it’s a new language.

Yes, I know the old “neos’ / “kainos” thing – kainos has the meaning of ‘new, novel, not previously known’ – and that’s exactly right – new/novel/previously unknown….to me, not to everyone who already speaks the language.


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.

I’ve commented on this one quite a bit. It’s one of the quintessential passages to “proof” tongues.

In a slightly more modern English and more a literal translation from the Greek: “For one that speaks in a language, speaks not to men, but to God; no one hears with understanding; howbeit in the spirit he speaks mysteries”

The demographic situation in Corinth at that time must also be taken into consideration as it also plays a role in the understanding of these passages.

Historical context seems to be often left out of many interpretations of Biblical texts. In this case, I think that because historical context is rarely given any consideration, one of the main points of the passage is completely missed; for Paul, this appears to be clarity and understanding at a public worship so that all may benefit. This, in a geographic setting where everyday communication presented obstacles.

To take a sort of analogy –

If I attend a worship service in ‘East Haystack’, Alabama a few things are going to be evident: one; there’s only going to be so many people at that service (i.e. there will be a finite given amount of people there) and two; the chances that anyone in East Haystack speaks anything but English is pretty slim to nil.

If I start praying aloud in say Lithuanian, there’s no one at that service that’s going to understand a word I’m saying. Even though I’m speaking a real language, no one there will understand my “tongue”. That does not mean or imply that no one else understands Lithuanian; just no one at that particular service. In this sense, therefore, I am speaking only to God, since he understands all languages. To everyone at the service, even though I’m praying in the Spirit (see that defined below), to those listening to me, I’m speaking “mysteries”, just an idiomatic way of saying “we have no idea what he’s saying”.

The other issue that goes with this is the Pentecostal/Charismatic redefinition of “praying in the spirit” – it does not refer to the words one is saying. Rather, it refers to how one is praying. In the three places it is used (Corinthians, Ephesians, and Jude), there is absolutely zero reference to 'languages' in connection with this phrase. “Praying in the Spirit” should be understood as praying in the power of the Spirit, by the leading of the Spirit, and according to His will. In Pentecostal/Charismatic parlance however, the phase has come to be equated with modern “tongues”, i.e. when one “prays in the Spirit”, one is typically engaged in some form of tongues-speech.

There just isn’t anything in that passage that even remotely suggests the speaker does not understand what he’s saying. It’s just not there, but it’s typically “read into” the narrative to ‘proof’ the modern tongues phenomenon.

Not one of these passages above refers to anything but real, rational langue(s) – perhaps not understood by those hearing it, but always understood by the one speaking it (it’s his/her native language).

well how else would a non-believer address the subject?

why don't you open up the conversation by telling us what you actually believe?

there just isn't anything in your current spiritual state that would allow you to do anything other than negate tongues

I don't know why anyone here should continue to address your posts as you come here with anything but an honest desire to actually have a conversation

what do YOU believe?
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,058
4,341
113
1. Cor. 14.39 is no proof for the teaching that everybody who got baptised with the Holy Spirit has received the gift to speak in tongues as sign that he is baptised with the Holy Spirit.
And wether Mark 16 realy means us today ore believers in the apostolic time is not realy solved. When we read about the Apostles in their time, compare with our time today. I would say it was for the apostolic time. Otherwise the witness would be more obvious. While in the apostolic time these all became true.
And Luke 11.13 has nothing to do with speaking in tongues.
I never said it was. I am saying that when those who received the Holy in the book of ACTS DID SO BY THE WAY THE BOOK OF ACTS tell they did. Just practicing free vacillation as you by saying " that is not Proof" or "CS1 did not show any proof " is not even a valid claim. Can you please show me in scripture what else happens to those who had hands laid on them and they spoke in tongues or prophesied recorded in the Book of Acts? And while you're at it, why did they lay hands on them anyway and when they did, what was it they say to them?
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,058
4,341
113
Yes because we must know of an evil spirit for it to influence us.
FYI guy, people can and are influenced by evil spirits, yet they too are influenced by people. If you had as much faith in God as you give power to evil spirits you would be Pentecostal lol.