You think "hearing" makes a difference....LOL
If someone is "speaking" and no one is "hearing" it is because they are not understanding, because it is a language (not unintelligible speech) that the congregation does not know, a foreign language
LOL.... I can read Braille but I cannot understand Chinese
The problem tongue(s)/languages were not known or understood by most of the Corinthian congregation (14:2,14,16).
The problem tongue/language when interpreted was interpreted into the Greek Language (common knowledge).
The problem tongue/language (even when not interpreted into Greek) built up the tongue/language-speaker (14:4,16-17).
If someone is "speaking" and no one is "hearing" it is because they are not understanding, because it is a language (not unintelligible speech) that the congregation does not know, a foreign language
LOL.... I can read Braille but I cannot understand Chinese
The problem tongue(s)/languages were not known or understood by most of the Corinthian congregation (14:2,14,16).
The problem tongue/language when interpreted was interpreted into the Greek Language (common knowledge).
The problem tongue/language (even when not interpreted into Greek) built up the tongue/language-speaker (14:4,16-17).
Consider 1 Cor 14:19 "However, in the church I desire to speak five words with my mind so that I may instrauct others also, rather than ten thousand words in a tongue". If Paul merely means "foreign language", how is it that he isn't using his mind when he's speaking? Does "foreign" language not require the use of the mind of the speaker? On the contrary; speaking in any learned language requires the use of the mind. It makes sense then that Paul is talking about something other than simply any language not known to that congregation.
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