Reactions received by Kavik

  • GRACE_ambassador
    GRACE_ambassador reacted Winner to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    It doesn't bother me at all - just merrily pointing out the mechanics, so to speak, of the modern phenomenon. The bottom line is very...
  • CS1
    CS1 reacted Funny to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    Yes, it's a phenomenon found across the globe and encompasses many different cultures and belief systems. The "mechanics", if you will...
  • awelight
    awelight reacted Like to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    As someone mentioned - here we go again. In answer to the question, I guess it depends on who you ask - here's a Linguist's take...
  • reacted Disagree to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    It doesn't bother me at all - just merrily pointing out the mechanics, so to speak, of the modern phenomenon. The bottom line is very...
  • CS1
    CS1 reacted Dislike to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    Perhaps you would be so kind as to record yourself speaking in tongues for about a minute or so and post it here for analysis. I'll...
  • CS1
    CS1 reacted Disagree to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    You’re still using “understandeth” – that’s not what is written; it’s ‘to hear (in the sense of understanding what you’re hearing...
  • Aidan1
    Aidan1 reacted Like to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    You’re still using “understandeth” – that’s not what is written; it’s ‘to hear (in the sense of understanding what you’re hearing...
  • reacted Old to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    You’re still using “understandeth” – that’s not what is written; it’s ‘to hear (in the sense of understanding what you’re hearing...
  • GRACE_ambassador
    GRACE_ambassador reacted Winner to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    I'm seeing "your sons and daughters shall prophesy"; not "your sons and daughters shall prophesy and speak in tongues". The two are not...
  • GRACE_ambassador
    GRACE_ambassador reacted Winner to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    You’re still using “understandeth” – that’s not what is written; it’s ‘to hear (in the sense of understanding what you’re hearing...
  • Ivy_songstress
    Ivy_songstress reacted Disagree to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    As someone mentioned - here we go again. In answer to the question, I guess it depends on who you ask - here's a Linguist's take...
  • CS1
    CS1 reacted Disagree to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    “…speaking to God in an unknown tongue” – if put into something a bit more modern and getting rid of that pesky added ‘unknown’ –...
  • CS1
    CS1 reacted Disagree to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    I'm not a cessationist (or a continuationist) - I do not identify with either term and had never heard of either until just a few years ago.
  • Wansvic
    Wansvic reacted Sad to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    Yes, interpretation of tongues may also be said to be a sort of self-created phenomenon. When you really look at it, it’s a ‘spiritual...
  • awelight
    awelight reacted Like to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    Yes - most people have no clue as to why the "unknown" got put there in the first place. It has zero to do with religion and 100% to do...
  • awelight
    awelight reacted Agree to Kavik's post in the thread TONGUES TODAY.
    A better translation would be to get rid of the "understands/understanding/understandeth" - the verb used here is "to hear (with the...
  • Aidan1
    Wesley founded what is today the Methodist Church; not Pentecostalism.
  • T
    Holly, Ivy, and Mistletoe - sacred plants of the pre-Christian Celts were given Christian symbolism and completely woven into Christmas...
  • T
    Also your former posts - I have to beg to differ. I never suggested that these plants were borrowed with the same meaning or context -...
  • Magenta
    Yep - VLEE-in NOO-ah HAW-nah KHAYL-chahkh (rough pronunciation in a more northern Irish Gaelic - 'kh' like Scottish 'ch' in "loch", or...