TONGUES false teaching.

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SophieT

Guest
So in plain English.......You do not know!
No. In plain English I said I would probably be back later and here I am.

I had not had supper yet. I do eat sometimes. Once in a while. :giggle:
 
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SophieT

Guest
they were hiding in the corner They hated the fact Mary the Mother of Jesu was there. ----------- that one out
A person cannot read the story in Acts and say there were no women. I mean they just cannot. Something worse than just wrong going on.

12 Then the apostles returned to Jerusalem from the hill called the Mount of Olives, a Sabbath day’s walk[c] from the city. 13 When they arrived, they went upstairs to the room where they were staying. Those present were Peter, John, James and Andrew; Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew; James son of Alphaeus and Simon the Zealot, and Judas son of James. 14 They all joined together constantly in prayer, along with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brothers.

We have no reason to think the women were not there on the day of Pentecost, since v.14 indicates their habit was to 'join in prayer' CONSTANTLY.

I really am wondering just what church he belongs to.
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
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Here is my problem with all this.
How can I test the speaking of tongues, which is happening today and verify its authenticity?
Answer: I cannot.
If there is a way then please show me.
Otherwise it is not to be trusted just like the many miracles of the Roman and Orthodox Catholic Church.

But in the similar way let us not attack it.
For I claim to have power in the Spirit to now refrain from certain sins. But who of you can verify this?

Let us trust in the Word and in the Spirit.
Let us not trust in what man claims to do or see in the Spirit.
Do you test to see if you are saved ? As a card carrying member of a pentecostal church saved and baptized in the Holy Spirit with evidence of speaking in an unknown tongues. I never sought to speak in tongues. I wanted what Jesus said I would receive in Acts 1:8 I asked Him. I asked Jesus to baptize me in the Holy Spirit to empowerment to be a witnesses as HE Jesus said would happen. IN the Gospel of John you will read were John the Baptist said "He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire."

I ask you did the disciples do miracles before Acts 1:8 and the death of Jesus and HIS resurrection? Please answer .

Yes they did.

Jesus sent them out two by two and they came back rejoicing that even demons were subject to them. Jesus said don't rejoice that demon are subject to you but that your names are written. Read it in Luke.

IF they were able to do so then why did Jesus tell them to wait until you receive power from on high? they all ready displayed the ability to heal before the death and resurrection of Jesus why? answer that please.
 
Nov 15, 2020
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Newcastle, NSW, Australia
How do you keep women in submission? Got one of those big fancy whips from Australia?

I know for a fact this little scenario of yours has been dealt with mulitple times and even got back to you on it myself. Obviously you just want to wave placards and scream louder than others.

I think you could learn alot from women.
what does the big fancy whip look like ?
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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The speakers aren't the translators. Someone speaks in a foreign language and other person who knows that language is the one who translates it. The HS helps them translate more accurately than just someone who knows both languages. This is especially important when the translating is regarding biblical and spiritual matters.
You assert this, but do you have any evidence at all for your interpretation? I Corinthians 12 lists 'interpretation of tongues' among gifts of the Spirit along with healing, miracles, prophecy. There are no mere natural abilities in that list. The ability to speak 'divers tongues' is a supernatural ability. We see this in Acts 2. There is no reason to think that the disciples could speak in those languages before they were empowered by the Spirit to do so. Why would 'interpretation of tongues' be the odd man out and be the only gift that is a minor enhancement of a natural ability?

I get the feeling that you may be choosing an interpretation that is the opposite of your 'opponent's' viewpoint, and not because it is a reasonable interpretation of scripture.

Nor should anyone else yet it is common for this to be heard in some Churches. Paul addresses the faked language here:

1 Corinthians 14:7 And even things without life giving sound, whether pipe or harp, except they give a distinction in the sounds, how shall it be known what is piped or harped?
Poppycock! No verse in this passage hints or indicates that there was a 'fake language.' Read the verses around this. Paul wrote about how a foreigner-- a Barbarian who did not speak the known tongue--would not be understood. Paul is talking about genuine speaking in tongues throughout the passage. If others do not understand the language, to others it is like a pipe or harp playing without a distinctive melody.

It is the same with a musical instrument. What good is playing one if it is randomly played with indistinct sounds? It is the same when you speak "in a tongue".
In genuine tongues....but only without an interpretation. This is part of Paul's argument leading up to the need for interpretation. Paul's argument flows in this passage. He doesn't suddenly jump to the idea of fake tongues without letting his reader in on the hint that he is doing so.

The verses do not just mean what you want them to, or fit with whatever idea just pops into your head. The context does not support what you are saying.

1 Corinthians 14:9 So likewise ye, except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? for ye shall speak into the air.

Do not utter "words" which are not easy to understand. If it is not easily understood by the listener then the speaker has done something wrong.
Speaking in tongues cannot be understood by the congregation, but Paul allows that if followed by interpretation in verses 27-28. Again, Paul is not saying if they have spoken in tongues they have done something wrong. This is part of his explanation of why tongues need to be interpreted to edify the congregation. He is explaining that speaking in tongues edifies the speaker, but does not edify others if they do not understand.

1 Corinthians 14:10 There are, it may be, so many kinds of voices in the world, and none of them is without signification.
1 Corinthians 14:11 Therefore if I know not the meaning of the voice, I shall be unto him that speaketh a barbarian, and he that speaketh shall be a barbarian unto me.

915
915 barbaros {bar'-bar-os}
of uncertain derivation; TDNT - 1:546,94; adj
AV - barbarian 5, barbarous 1; 6

1) one whose speech is rude, rough and harsh
2) one who speaks a foreign or strange language which is not
understood by another
3) used by the Greeks of any foreigner ignorant of the Greek
language, whether mental or moral, with the added notion after
the Persian war, of rudeness and brutality. The word is used
in the N.T. without the idea of reproachfulness.

Take note esepcially of the last two definitions as this is exactly what Paul is addressing.

Do not speak and sound like a barbarian. This means do not speak ignorantly, in a mumbo-jumbo, gibberish, non-sense, false, made up by YOU "tongue".
Your commentary is not consistent with those definitions. One of my professors in college knew Greek and 30 something other languages. He was a Proto-IndoEuropean specialist. He said that the theory on where 'barbarian' comes from is the Greeks described foreigners who did not speak Greek as saying 'bar bar bar.'

I agree that the latter two 'glosses' there you present are better descriptors of what Paul is saying here. Paul writes about a foreigner speaking in a different language. 'Barbarian' languages, like speakers of Sythian or Lyaconian for example, spoke real languages. But your average Greek in Corinth would not have understood these language. Nowhere in the passage does Paul make reference to any kind of fake 'made up by YOU' tongue.

Real languages sound like gibberish to those who do not know the languages.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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That verse is describing this type of situation:

A group of Christians have arrived in Texas from a distant country and do not speak English. If they wish to give testimonies or preach, no more than 3 should be speaking and only if there is an interpreter. Why? One person interpreting what 3 other people are saying is hard! 4 or more would be too much. Paul also says if there is no interpreter these people should not be speaking to the congregation. Why? There is no one to interpret (which means to translation) from their language to English. They should simply speak to God quietly to themselves in their minds etc.

There is no magical or miracle subject here. Tongues simply is a VERY OLD English word for "languages". All Paul is talking about is speaking and translating foreign languages so other people can know what's being said. Most of what Paul talks about in regards to "tongues" is this. The odd sounding "language" found in some churches is simply not something the bible promotes.
smh[/QUOTE]

smh,

There is a problem with your interpretation. I Corinthians 12 lists 'divers tongues' and 'interpretation of tongues' among a list of supernatural gifts, not a list of natural human abilities. There is also Acts 2, where speaking in tongue involved followers of Jesus speaking in a variety of languages that they did not know.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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I am not talking about in the day of the apostles but in our day where people are all about me. Isn’t that what scripture says though? In the last days people will be lovers of self. People trying to influence their own style to show they have something more than others that can be sold. I think it is human nature to want to have something special to themselves. And I think that speaking in tongues or if you say you have visions or dream dreams helps you to stand out among the rest of us Christians..somehow makes you a special Christian. I think that is totally plausible.

Like I said..I have often thought about the pastors wife. I don’t believe I am gossiping about her..I have not brought up her name or church. Like I said..I have always wondered about her speaking in tongues and when someone brought up they thought it was women who do this more..I thought of her as an example. That’s it.

But don’t you think if say everyone in church speaks or understands english..then there’s really no reason for anyone to speak in tongues?
Paul taught the need for interpreting speaking in tongues in I Corinthians 14:27-28. The Corinthians were likely not following this order, but Paul does not correct them for being attention-seekers, but rather for being childish in their understanding. They misunderstood how these spiritual gifts should operate.

I would like to suggest that you be careful about judging other people's motives. Some people come from church traditions where it feels like it is a sin to make the sound of a pin dropping while the service is going on. Any deviations from hymns-prayer-offering-prayer-sermon-communion-prayer-hymns seems like sacrilege to them. They think 'Let all things be done decently and in order' refers to this type of church meeting they grew up with, rather than the type of meeting Paul describes in the chapter where that quote comes from, I Corinthians 14.

In I Corinthians 14:26, Paul writes, 'How is it then brethren, when ye come together, every one of you hath a psalm, hath a doctrine, hath a tongue, hath a revelation, hath an interpretation. Let all things be done unto edifying." Paul wrote a lot about spiritual gifts. The church meeting is where 'regular believers' can speak, using their gift to edify others. Paul pointed out that 'every one of you' had these things to share in church. His restriction on it was 'let all things be done unto edifying.' Then he specified how members of the congregation could speak in tongues, interpret, and prophesy in an orderly manner.

No where in scripture does it speak of one pastor offering one sermon in the meeting. Paul did, on one occasion before leaving the next day, teach the disciples all night. The word for teach is the word from whence we get the English 'dialogue', and it is possible he taught by means of discussion.

Some Pentecostal and Charismatic churches allow at least some aspect of this type of meeting in allowing for prophecies and tongues and interpretation. In my experience, too many of them are still bound to the pulpit-centered, sermon-centered tradition of church, but there is still room for some forms of mutual edification in these churches beyond the congregational hymn singing, joint scripture reading and confessing of 'amen' of Protestant churches.

One should be careful not to judge the motives of those who seek to use their gifts to edify others as 'attention-seeking'. And Paul's approach to those who misused tongues was to consider them childish in their understanding, not to accuse them of fake tongues or even attention-seeking.
 

CS1

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May 23, 2012
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so are you saying that the different languages didn't occur at the tower of Babel ?
I am saying the Context of the Genesis account of the Tower of Babel has nothing to do with 1 Corinthians chapter 12 through 14.
Are you trying to make a connection with the Gifts of the Holy Spirit for the Body of Christ? Given to edify the church, is synonymous with Gods Judgement to stop evil? Interesting , But wrong exegesis.
 
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SophieT

Guest
smh

There is a problem with your interpretation. I Corinthians 12 lists 'divers tongues' and 'interpretation of tongues' among a list of supernatural gifts, not a list of natural human abilities. There is also Acts 2, where speaking in tongue involved followers of Jesus speaking in a variety of languages that they did not know.[/QUOTE]


You are not quoting my post. I think the quote feature is being messed up. I did not write the post you are responding to.
 
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SophieT

Guest
That verse is describing this type of situation:

A group of Christians have arrived in Texas from a distant country and do not speak English. If they wish to give testimonies or preach, no more than 3 should be speaking and only if there is an interpreter. Why? One person interpreting what 3 other people are saying is hard! 4 or more would be too much. Paul also says if there is no interpreter these people should not be speaking to the congregation. Why? There is no one to interpret (which means to translation) from their language to English. They should simply speak to God quietly to themselves in their minds etc.

There is no magical or miracle subject here. Tongues simply is a VERY OLD English word for "languages". All Paul is talking about is speaking and translating foreign languages so other people can know what's being said. Most of what Paul talks about in regards to "tongues" is this. The odd sounding "language" found in some churches is simply not something the bible promotes.

I don't know why this has been attributed to me. I did not write it. !!!

Yet the thread has me listed as the author of it. How does that happen?
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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26What then, brothers? When you come together, each one has a hymn, a lesson, a revelation, a tongue, or an interpretation. Let all things be done for building up. 27If any speak in a tongue, let there be only two or at most three, and each in turn, and let someone interpret. 28But if there is no one to interpret, let each of them keep silent in church and speak to himself and to God.

So you see that even though it says "keep silent in the church" it says "speak to himself and to God" in tongues because that is the subject of verse 27. How can you be silent in the church and speak in tongues to yourself and God at the same time? By not speaking loud enough to make it obvious that you are addressing the church. To speak softly so that it is obvious that you are speaking to yourself and to God. That is the way most Pentecostals and charismatics interpret this.
The A/Gs I went to growing up and the ones I have been to overseas did not, as I recall, have the audience mumbling in tongues or speaking loudly in tongues at the same time, but speaking with A/G folks online, this seems rather common. I had thought this to be a practice of the Pentecostal churches that historically came from Holiness Movement backgrounds primarily in the Southeast rather than the ones with CMA, Baptist and other evangelical backgrounds in the A/G. Some of the churches from those denominations in the Southeast all pray in English at the same time. But I may have overgeneralized.

Be that as it may, if you are mumbling in tongues, how is that keeping silent? If you are silent in the church, and speak to yourself and to God, can't you 'speak to yourself and to God' after the meeting is over...elsewhere? Mumbling isn't silent. And visitors keep you are crazy.

It can also be difficult to hear the one praying and addressing the assembly if everyone is praying out loud at the same time, be that in English or in tongues....and to say 'Amen' to what they are saying (I Corinthians 14:16). It is good to take turns, listen, and agree with what someone else is saying while praying.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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smh

There is a problem with your interpretation. I Corinthians 12 lists 'divers tongues' and 'interpretation of tongues' among a list of supernatural gifts, not a list of natural human abilities. There is also Acts 2, where speaking in tongue involved followers of Jesus speaking in a variety of languages that they did not know.

You are not quoting my post. I think the quote feature is being messed up. I did not write the post you are responding to.[/QUOTE]

I apologize for the misattribution. It was not intentional. Alas, the five minute mark for editing has passed.
 
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SophieT

Guest
You are not quoting my post. I think the quote feature is being messed up. I did not write the post you are responding to.
I apologize for the misattribution. It was not intentional. Alas, the five minute mark for editing has passed.[/QUOTE]


Oh no worries. it looks like I posted that, my name is on it as my post. I'm not messing with the quote feature in the posts so I don't know what gives.

I don't agree with that post at all so really do not want it attributed to me LOL!
 
S

Scribe

Guest
How you can come to that conclusion from reading that verse fills one with trepidation. Unfruitful understanding is not a good thing. Since it is your spirit that prays and not Gods Holy Spirit it seems reasonable to assume that your spirit produces nothing of eternal value. It cannot because it is flawed and not holy nor sanctified.

Again you conclude that things get done but that requires a great deal of speculation and makes assumptions without biblical merit. There remains no biblical foundation for the concept of praying in tongues as you want us to believe. Why would my heavenly Father Who loved me so much that He sent His only begotten Son to die on the cross to atone for my sins be pleased if I come before Him in prayer and do not speak to Him with understanding? We are to come boldly before the throne of grace not cloaked in superstition and fleshly fear.

For the cause of Christ
Roger
You seem to be finding fault with God's method of giving Paul the gift of tongues that when he prayed he did not understand but his spirit prayed. If you find this to be wrong for Paul you must take it up with God.
You assert this, but do you have any evidence at all for your interpretation? I Corinthians 12 lists 'interpretation of tongues' among gifts of the Spirit along with healing, miracles, prophecy. There are no mere natural abilities in that list. The ability to speak 'divers tongues' is a supernatural ability. We see this in Acts 2. There is no reason to think that the disciples could speak in those languages before they were empowered by the Spirit to do so. Why would 'interpretation of tongues' be the odd man out and be the only gift that is a minor enhancement of a natural ability?

I get the feeling that you may be choosing an interpretation that is the opposite of your 'opponent's' viewpoint, and not because it is a reasonable interpretation of scripture.



Poppycock! No verse in this passage hints or indicates that there was a 'fake language.' Read the verses around this. Paul wrote about how a foreigner-- a Barbarian who did not speak the known tongue--would not be understood. Paul is talking about genuine speaking in tongues throughout the passage. If others do not understand the language, to others it is like a pipe or harp playing without a distinctive melody.



In genuine tongues....but only without an interpretation. This is part of Paul's argument leading up to the need for interpretation. Paul's argument flows in this passage. He doesn't suddenly jump to the idea of fake tongues without letting his reader in on the hint that he is doing so.

The verses do not just mean what you want them to, or fit with whatever idea just pops into your head. The context does not support what you are saying.



Speaking in tongues cannot be understood by the congregation, but Paul allows that if followed by interpretation in verses 27-28. Again, Paul is not saying if they have spoken in tongues they have done something wrong. This is part of his explanation of why tongues need to be interpreted to edify the congregation. He is explaining that speaking in tongues edifies the speaker, but does not edify others if they do not understand.



Your commentary is not consistent with those definitions. One of my professors in college knew Greek and 30 something other languages. He was a Proto-IndoEuropean specialist. He said that the theory on where 'barbarian' comes from is the Greeks described foreigners who did not speak Greek as saying 'bar bar bar.'

I agree that the latter two 'glosses' there you present are better descriptors of what Paul is saying here. Paul writes about a foreigner speaking in a different language. 'Barbarian' languages, like speakers of Sythian or Lyaconian for example, spoke real languages. But your average Greek in Corinth would not have understood these language. Nowhere in the passage does Paul make reference to any kind of fake 'made up by YOU' tongue.

Real languages sound like gibberish to those who do not know the languages.
The A/Gs I went to growing up and the ones I have been to overseas did not, as I recall, have the audience mumbling in tongues or speaking loudly in tongues at the same time, but speaking with A/G folks online, this seems rather common. I had thought this to be a practice of the Pentecostal churches that historically came from Holiness Movement backgrounds primarily in the Southeast rather than the ones with CMA, Baptist and other evangelical backgrounds in the A/G. Some of the churches from those denominations in the Southeast all pray in English at the same time. But I may have overgeneralized.

Be that as it may, if you are mumbling in tongues, how is that keeping silent? If you are silent in the church, and speak to yourself and to God, can't you 'speak to yourself and to God' after the meeting is over...elsewhere? Mumbling isn't silent. And visitors keep you are crazy.

It can also be difficult to hear the one praying and addressing the assembly if everyone is praying out loud at the same time, be that in English or in tongues....and to say 'Amen' to what they are saying (I Corinthians 14:16). It is good to take turns, listen, and agree with what someone else is saying while praying.
When lead by the Holy Spirit there can be times that people are praying and no one is leading in a prayer. There is a sort of "flow" in the prayer meetings where these things are obvious to those that are involved. These kinds of prayer meetings are not visited by the uninitiated by manned by those who know what it is all about.

It is not that everyone is mumbling in tongues but that someone here and there are and some here and there are mumbling in English and people are scattered in different places around the room, some walking around and praying some on their face praying, it is all very "in order" when the Spirit is leading it. It is not for visitors, they can come to the service when no one is speaking in tongues, but to judge these meetings as out of order because every slight utterance of tongues is not followed by an interpreter when it was not even being addressed to the assembly is a legalistic application of what Paul was intending to say instead of grasping the point.
 

notuptome

Senior Member
May 17, 2013
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You seem to be finding fault with God's method of giving Paul the gift of tongues that when he prayed he did not understand but his spirit prayed. If you find this to be wrong for Paul you must take it up with God.
Paul did not pray in tongues. You are reading into the passage something that is not there. Without knowledge there is no edification. Jesus did not make bread from the rocks when tempted by satan. It would have been for His own benefit and not a benefit for the body of believers.
When lead by the Holy Spirit there can be times that people are praying and no one is leading in a prayer. There is a sort of "flow" in the prayer meetings where these things are obvious to those that are involved. These kinds of prayer meetings are not visited by the uninitiated by manned by those who know what it is all about.

It is not that everyone is mumbling in tongues but that someone here and there are and some here and there are mumbling in English and people are scattered in different places around the room, some walking around and praying some on their face praying, it is all very "in order" when the Spirit is leading it. It is not for visitors, they can come to the service when no one is speaking in tongues, but to judge these meetings as out of order because every slight utterance of tongues is not followed by an interpreter when it was not even being addressed to the assembly is a legalistic application of what Paul was intending to say instead of grasping the point.
Meaningless attempt to justify an activity that does not support your contentions.

For the cause of Christ
Roger
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
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dont see why you really need to translate praising God in another tongue.

If someone doesnt understand that you are praising God in another language and wants to accuse you of speaking gibberish well then its their loss!
 

Lanolin

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by the way hallelujah means 'Praise the Lord' for those who dont understand gibberish.
 
Mar 23, 2016
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You are not quoting my post. I think the quote feature is being messed up. I did not write the post you are responding to.
Yes ... I think the problem began at SophieT Post #325


Here is what was submitted by ewq1938 in Post #290

On the gift of tongues, those who claim it continues in it's modern form have misinterpreted 1 Corinthians 12:10:
"and to another the effecting of miracles, and to another prophecy, and to another the distinguishing of spirits, to another various kinds of tongues,"
Many translations insert the words: various, or divers (diverse), or different, etc. But this isn't found in the Greek text: it simply says gene glosson, "kinds of tongues." Gene is from genos, meaning family, race, people, nation or offspring. Paul is talking about language families (human languages), not all kinds of spiritual languages.
In 1 Corinthians 14:10 Paul again uses gene. This time referring to human languages:
"There are, perhaps, a great many kinds (gene) of languages in the world, and no kind is without meaning."
My problem isn't so much with the gift of tongues but with the sloppy interpretation used to justify it and the way it's put into practice.
Example:
1 Corinthians 14:27 If anyone speaks in a tongue, let there be two or at the most three, each in turn, and let one interpret. 28 But if there is no interpreter, let him keep silent in church, and let him speak to himself and to God.
That verse is describing this type of situation:
A group of Christians have arrived in Texas from a distant country and do not speak English. If they wish to give testimonies or preach, no more than 3 should be speaking and only if there is an interpreter. Why? One person interpreting what 3 other people are saying is hard! 4 or more would be too much. Paul also says if there is no interpreter these people should not be speaking to the congregation. Why? There is no one to interpret (which means to translation) from their language to English. They should simply speak to God quietly to themselves in their minds etc.
There is no magical or miracle subject here. Tongues simply is a VERY OLD English word for "languages". All Paul is talking about is speaking and translating foreign languages so other people can know what's being said. Most of what Paul talks about in regards to "tongues" is this. The odd sounding "language" found in some churches is simply not something the bible promotes.


If anyone wants to reply to what ewq1938 submitted, go back to Post #290 to reply ...