TONGUES TODAY

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CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,067
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I think a lot of the cessationists are coming from a wounded spirit, at those operating in the gifts.
Sad that they invest huge energy and time at something they neither want or seek.

It is the equivalent of myself attacking seamstress websites.

It HAS TO BE A SPIRIT. No doubt the pharisees had that exact same dynamic.
Here something I think many should consider. At the very beginning of the Church when they were facing great opposition the Holy Spirit was with them ( Apostles & early church) at the most important of the Church, the beginning. I believe the Holy Spirt is needed even more today at what is the "End" and we need the signs and wonders like never before to testify to the Resurrected Lord

As we read in Acts 4:33
 

Wansvic

Well-known member
Nov 27, 2018
5,254
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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.....

There is absolutely nothing mysterious about Biblical "tongues" – when referring to something spoken, they are nothing more than real, rational language(s); usually unknown to those listening to them, but always known by the speaker(s) – it’s their native language (in some cases, it is a language the speaker has learned).

In contrast, the “tongues” Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians are producing today is an entirely self-created phenomenon. It is non-cognitive non-language utterance; random free vocalization based upon a subset of the existing underlying sounds (called phonemes) of the speaker’s native language, and any other language(s) the speaker may be familiar with or have had contact with.

It is, in part, typically characterized by repetitive syllables, plays on sound patterns, alliteration, assonance, and over-simplification of syllable structure. It is also interesting to note that any disallowed sound combinations, i.e. consonant clusters, in the speaker’s native language are also disallowed in his/her tongues-speech. Further, this subset of phonemes typically contains only those sounds which are easiest to produce physiologically.

There is absolutely nothing that “tongues-speakers” are producing that cannot easily be explained in linguistic terms.

Conversely, when it comes to something spoken, there are absolutely no Biblical references to “tongues” that do not refer to, and cannot be explained in light of, real rational language(s), though it may not be the explanation you want to hear, and it may be one which is radically different from what you believe, or were taught.

“Praying in the Spirit” 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.

The word “tongue(s)” itself is simply a more archaic word for (real) “language(s)”, nothing more. Replace “tongue(s)” with “language(s)” in these various passages and the whole modern Pentecostal/Charismatic concept of “tongues” begins to become difficult to posit – “language(s)” sounds a lot less mysterious, and in many cases, adds more clarity to the text. Again, in Pentecostal/Charismatic parlance however, the word has come to be equated with the modern concept of “tongues-speech”.

Most people who use ‘tongues’ are very keen on describing the ‘experience’. Indeed, for those that use it, it is very psychologically, physically, and spiritually fulfilling. It’s almost like primal screaming. When people practice ‘tongues’, they feel a sense of sweet release and inner peace, in that virtually all stress can be gone after the experience.

People describe the experience, but in examining the “mechanics” behind it…well, not so much. When a person has experienced tongues, s/he is absolutely convinced as to the ‘scripturalness’ of his/her experience, and the correctness of his/her doctrinal beliefs – this, despite the overwhelming scriptural absence of anything remotely akin to what they’re doing.

I'm not doubting or questioning the 'experience'; as mentioned, glossolalia as the spiritual tool that it is, can be very powerful and, for many people, the experience is profound. Both the spiritual and physical benefits of using this tool are also well documented. Again though, it is important to note that this same statement can be made for virtually _any other culture that practices glossolalia_ . Religious and cultural differences aside, the glossolalia an Evenki Shaman in Siberia, a vodoun priestess in Togo and a Christian tongues-speaker in Alabama are producing are in no way different from each other. They’re all producing their glossolalia in the exact same way; they just have different explanations and beliefs as to why they’re doing it and where it comes from.

“Tongues” is to some Christian believers a very real and spiritually meaningful experience but consisting of emotional release via non-linguistic ‘free vocalizations’ at best; non-cognitive non language utterance – the subconscious playing with sounds to create what is perceived and interpreted as actual, meaningful speech. In some cases, I would argue that it is clearly a self/mass delusion prompted by such a strong desire to “experience God” that one creates that experience via “tongues”.

Known by many different names, “tongues”, “glossolalia”, or more accurately “non-cognitive non-language utterance” (NC-NLU), is practiced by many cultures and religious beliefs from literally all over the world; it is relatively new to Christianity and certainly not unique to it.

As a point of note, I’m a Linguist, and let me also add here that I am neither a so-called ‘cessationist’ nor a ‘continuationist’ – I do not identify with either term; in fact, I had never heard the two terms until just late in 2016. As far as I’m concerned, quite frankly, since the Biblical reference of “tongues” is to real, rational languages, obviously “tongues” haven’t “ceased”; people still speak.
I find it odd that someone who has not experienced speaking to God in an unknown tongue (prayer language) or been used to speak a word of edification that is then interpreted for the church body would consider his/herself an authority.

I find it common that those who refuse to accept that speaking in tongues is biblical have either been taught it's not of God or they have sought it and not received it. And rather than continuing to seek the gift of the Holy Ghost they ridicule others.

Ask yourself. Could I possibly be wrong? What if God has more for me and I reject it?
 
S

SophieT

Guest
I find it odd that someone who has not experienced speaking to God in an unknown tongue (prayer language) would consider his/herself an authority.

I find it common that those who refuse to accept that speaking in tongues is biblical have either been taught it's not of God or they have sought it and not received it. And rather than continuing to seek the gift of the Holy Ghost they ridicule others.

Ask yourself. Could I possibly be wrong? What if God has more for me and I reject it?
he is not a believer, so...yeah, he's wrong...his responses taken in that light, explain what is behind it

however, he does have some belief in something but he will not disclose what that might be

oooooo soooo mysterious :rolleyes:
 
Mar 17, 2021
560
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I find it odd that someone who has not experienced speaking to God in an unknown tongue (prayer language) or been used to speak a word of edification that is then interpreted for the church body would consider his/herself an authority.

I find it common that those who refuse to accept that speaking in tongues is biblical have either been taught it's not of God or they have sought it and not received it. And rather than continuing to seek the gift of the Holy Ghost they ridicule others.

Ask yourself. Could I possibly be wrong? What if God has more for me and I reject it?
One of the big problems that I see often comes from the Pentecostals themselves. Many speak in tongues because they see that is the thing to do in their churches. All they have been told is that speaking in tongues sort of edifies oneself, but they are taught little else; hence they are pretty well unclear what the actual purpose of tongues is. Many will say, "Speaking in tongues makes me feel good."

So, outsiders and uninitiated people are unable to see the purpose for tongues, and decide to be involved in areas of worship where they can see a purpose and a future in it.

But those who are taught the real purpose and value of tongues, know why they are speaking and praying in tongues, and no amount of teaching or arguing against it is going to convince them that praying in tongues is not of God.

For me, praying in tongues means that I can pray without ceasing when I don't know what to pray for in English. English is limited in its expression, and we are limited in knowing what is the mind of the Spirit concerning what we need to pray for.

Praying in tongues, conveys the mind of the Spirit to God through praise, thanksgiving, and intercession. It gives us the freedom to ask God to guide our expression to Him and when we start praying in tongues, we start praying a very expressive language to Him, which assures us that the Spirit is flowing through us, conveying His mind concerning the praise, thanksgiving, or intercession that is on our heart, Tongues is the best way of conveying our heart burden and desire to God, when our mind is unable to find the words.

God told me that He values my prayers to Him more than anything I can do for Him. That is why He gave me the gift of tongues.

I guess that those who think that other things they do for God are more important than prayer, won't see much of a purpose in tongues, and treat it as an inferior, optional gift that they don't really need.

As for me, because fellowship with the Lord is the most important component of my Christian life, tongues is the best gift over and above the others for that purpose.
 

Kavik

Senior Member
Mar 25, 2017
795
159
43
I find it odd that someone who has not experienced speaking to God in an unknown tongue (prayer language) or been used to speak a word of edification that is then interpreted for the church body would consider his/herself an authority.

I find it common that those who refuse to accept that speaking in tongues is biblical have either been taught it's not of God or they have sought it and not received it. And rather than continuing to seek the gift of the Holy Ghost they ridicule others.

Ask yourself. Could I possibly be wrong? What if God has more for me and I reject it?
“…speaking to God in an unknown tongue” – if put into something a bit more modern and getting rid of that pesky added ‘unknown’ – “…..speaking to God in a language”.

I generally find that English, or any other real, rational language I may choose, seems to work just fine. Modern tongues-speech (‘prayer language’) is not language, it’s non-cognitive non-language utterance.

That said, there is nothing _to_ ‘interpret’. If it were language, an interpreter could look at the following example of real, transliterated tongues and give his/her interpretation:

Káyntay háychee, háychee kéeho hóro. /kénte héči, héči kího hóro/
Máhcha keetáy lah mócho, /máča kité la móčo/
rána mahcháy nay keetáh lau. /rána mačé ne kitá lau/
Réhnah shay kée nah máhto. /rɛ’na še kí na máto/

As far as the above example goes, essentially you read the above left-hand side as if it were English – the only convention I have used is to put an accent over the syllable in the ‘word’ that receives the main stress. The ‘ay’ here is the ‘ay’ in “day”, and of course, don’t forget to trill your R’s. The punctuation written is an assumption only and is based solely on the speaker’s intonation and phrasing.

This is a bit harsh perhaps, but…..as one writer put it, “You’re improvising the sounds, but there is nothing about what you’re doing that cannot be explained in natural terms. The only reason it sounds like a language is that you want it to sound like a language. But it’s not. As much as you’d like to think you are, you’re not producing a language.”

I find that many speakers seem to fall into this thought model; i.e., it sounds like a real language because speakers have convinced themselves to hear it as such. What Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians are doing today is not to be found in the Bible. Doesn’t make it wrong, as I’ve said, modern tongues-speech, as the spiritual tool that it is, is a powerful one; but it’s just not something found in the Bible.

I’m not ridiculing anyone – just stating what modern tongues-speech is comprised of; looking at the mechanics behind it, so-to-speak. There are many things in the Bible that must be taken on faith; they can neither be proved, nor disproved. The tongues-speech of Pentecostal/Charismatic Christians is not one of these things. It is something very tangible. It can be, and has been, studied and analyzed with all studies yielding the same conclusions. And, no, I am by no means an ‘authority’ on the subject (and have never claimed to be).

I have not seen anything that demonstrates tongues-speech to be anything other than non-cognitive non-language utterance. God may indeed have more for me, but I'm pretty sure it's not 'tongues'.
 
Jul 23, 2018
12,199
2,775
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“…speaking to God in an unknown tongue” – if put into something a bit more modern and getting rid of that pesky added ‘unknown’ – “…..speaking to God in a language”.

I generally find that English, or any other real, rational language I may choose, seems to work just fine. Modern tongues-speech (‘prayer language’) is not language, it’s non-cognitive non-language utterance.

That said, there is nothing _to_ ‘interpret’. If it were language, an interpreter could look at the following example of real, transliterated tongues and give his/her interpretation:

Káyntay háychee, háychee kéeho hóro. /kénte héči, héči kího hóro/
Máhcha keetáy lah mócho, /máča kité la móčo/
rána mahcháy nay keetáh lau. /rána mačé ne kitá lau/
Réhnah shay kée nah máhto. /rɛ’na še kí na máto/

As far as the above example goes, essentially you read the above left-hand side as if it were English – the only convention I have used is to put an accent over the syllable in the ‘word’ that receives the main stress. The ‘ay’ here is the ‘ay’ in “day”, and of course, don’t forget to trill your R’s. The punctuation written is an assumption only and is based solely on the speaker’s intonation and phrasing.

This is a bit harsh perhaps, but…..as one writer put it, “You’re improvising the sounds, but there is nothing about what you’re doing that cannot be explained in natural terms. The only reason it sounds like a language is that you want it to sound like a language. But it’s not. As much as you’d like to think you are, you’re not producing a language.”

I find that many speakers seem to fall into this thought model; i.e., it sounds like a real language because speakers have convinced themselves to hear it as such. What Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians are doing today is not to be found in the Bible. Doesn’t make it wrong, as I’ve said, modern tongues-speech, as the spiritual tool that it is, is a powerful one; but it’s just not something found in the Bible.

I’m not ridiculing anyone – just stating what modern tongues-speech is comprised of; looking at the mechanics behind it, so-to-speak. There are many things in the Bible that must be taken on faith; they can neither be proved, nor disproved. The tongues-speech of Pentecostal/Charismatic Christians is not one of these things. It is something very tangible. It can be, and has been, studied and analyzed with all studies yielding the same conclusions. And, no, I am by no means an ‘authority’ on the subject (and have never claimed to be).

I have not seen anything that demonstrates tongues-speech to be anything other than non-cognitive non-language utterance. God may indeed have more for me, but I'm pretty sure it's not 'tongues'.
Ive never seen a cessationist that honestly unpacked the gifts biblically.

Most of your sentences are pure baloney.

You basically tell nfl players football is fake
 

Wansvic

Well-known member
Nov 27, 2018
5,254
1,109
113
“…speaking to God in an unknown tongue” – if put into something a bit more modern and getting rid of that pesky added ‘unknown’ – “…..speaking to God in a language”.

I generally find that English, or any other real, rational language I may choose, seems to work just fine. Modern tongues-speech (‘prayer language’) is not language, it’s non-cognitive non-language utterance.

That said, there is nothing _to_ ‘interpret’. If it were language, an interpreter could look at the following example of real, transliterated tongues and give his/her interpretation:

Káyntay háychee, háychee kéeho hóro. /kénte héči, héči kího hóro/
Máhcha keetáy lah mócho, /máča kité la móčo/
rána mahcháy nay keetáh lau. /rána mačé ne kitá lau/
Réhnah shay kée nah máhto. /rɛ’na še kí na máto/

As far as the above example goes, essentially you read the above left-hand side as if it were English – the only convention I have used is to put an accent over the syllable in the ‘word’ that receives the main stress. The ‘ay’ here is the ‘ay’ in “day”, and of course, don’t forget to trill your R’s. The punctuation written is an assumption only and is based solely on the speaker’s intonation and phrasing.

This is a bit harsh perhaps, but…..as one writer put it, “You’re improvising the sounds, but there is nothing about what you’re doing that cannot be explained in natural terms. The only reason it sounds like a language is that you want it to sound like a language. But it’s not. As much as you’d like to think you are, you’re not producing a language.”

I find that many speakers seem to fall into this thought model; i.e., it sounds like a real language because speakers have convinced themselves to hear it as such. What Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians are doing today is not to be found in the Bible. Doesn’t make it wrong, as I’ve said, modern tongues-speech, as the spiritual tool that it is, is a powerful one; but it’s just not something found in the Bible.

I’m not ridiculing anyone – just stating what modern tongues-speech is comprised of; looking at the mechanics behind it, so-to-speak. There are many things in the Bible that must be taken on faith; they can neither be proved, nor disproved. The tongues-speech of Pentecostal/Charismatic Christians is not one of these things. It is something very tangible. It can be, and has been, studied and analyzed with all studies yielding the same conclusions. And, no, I am by no means an ‘authority’ on the subject (and have never claimed to be).

Ihave not seen anything that demonstrates tongues-speech to be anything other than non-cognitive non-language utterance. God may indeed have more for me, but I'm pretty sure it's not 'tongues'.
Both Peter and Paul specifically address the fact that speaking in tongues is a manifestation of the Spirit of God. I am sure you are familiar with Paul's teaching on the subject in 1 Cor. 14. And your understanding of what he is saying is seen through the prism of your lack of the experience as well as your knowledge regarding languages. The only one that convince you of the truth is God Himself. My suggestion is that you seek the truth through prayer as Jesus instructed in Luke 11:13.

Man is always trying to make sense of principles in the word. It is foolish on many levels. Speaking in tongues is a miraculous experience that is God designed and initiated. Accepting and pursuing something by faith will result in having eyes to see. Trying to understand everything before accepting what God's word says is not an act of faith.

"But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty;" 1 Cor 1:27
 

Kavik

Senior Member
Mar 25, 2017
795
159
43
Ive never seen a cessationist that honestly unpacked the gifts biblically.
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

Well-known member
Nov 27, 2018
5,254
1,109
113
“…speaking to God in an unknown tongue” – if put into something a bit more modern and getting rid of that pesky added ‘unknown’ – “…..speaking to God in a language”.

I generally find that English, or any other real, rational language I may choose, seems to work just fine. Modern tongues-speech (‘prayer language’) is not language, it’s non-cognitive non-language utterance.

That said, there is nothing _to_ ‘interpret’. If it were language, an interpreter could look at the following example of real, transliterated tongues and give his/her interpretation:

Káyntay háychee, háychee kéeho hóro. /kénte héči, héči kího hóro/
Máhcha keetáy lah mócho, /máča kité la móčo/
rána mahcháy nay keetáh lau. /rána mačé ne kitá lau/
Réhnah shay kée nah máhto. /rɛ’na še kí na máto/

As far as the above example goes, essentially you read the above left-hand side as if it were English – the only convention I have used is to put an accent over the syllable in the ‘word’ that receives the main stress. The ‘ay’ here is the ‘ay’ in “day”, and of course, don’t forget to trill your R’s. The punctuation written is an assumption only and is based solely on the speaker’s intonation and phrasing.

This is a bit harsh perhaps, but…..as one writer put it, “You’re improvising the sounds, but there is nothing about what you’re doing that cannot be explained in natural terms. The only reason it sounds like a language is that you want it to sound like a language. But it’s not. As much as you’d like to think you are, you’re not producing a language.”

I find that many speakers seem to fall into this thought model; i.e., it sounds like a real language because speakers have convinced themselves to hear it as such. What Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians are doing today is not to be found in the Bible. Doesn’t make it wrong, as I’ve said, modern tongues-speech, as the spiritual tool that it is, is a powerful one; but it’s just not something found in the Bible.

I’m not ridiculing anyone – just stating what modern tongues-speech is comprised of; looking at the mechanics behind it, so-to-speak. There are many things in the Bible that must be taken on faith; they can neither be proved, nor disproved. The tongues-speech of Pentecostal/Charismatic Christians is not one of these things. It is something very tangible. It can be, and has been, studied and analyzed with all studies yielding the same conclusions. And, no, I am by no means an ‘authority’ on the subject (and have never claimed to be).

I have not seen anything that demonstrates tongues-speech to be anything other than non-cognitive non-language utterance. God may indeed have more for me, but I'm pretty sure it's not 'tongues'.
The following are personal experience of people receiving the Holy Ghost with the evidence of speaking in tongues when they were not pursuing that specifically.
https://christianchat.com/bible-discussion-forum/gods-gracious-gift.189894/

https://christianchat.com/bible-dis...shall-be-given-seek-and-ye-shall-find.189881/
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
9,164
1,794
113
That said, there is nothing _to_ ‘interpret’. If it were language, an interpreter could look at the following example of real, transliterated tongues and give his/her interpretation:

Káyntay háychee, háychee kéeho hóro. /kénte héči, héči kího hóro/
Máhcha keetáy lah mócho, /máča kité la móčo/
rána mahcháy nay keetáh lau. /rána mačé ne kitá lau/
Réhnah shay kée nah máhto. /rɛ’na še kí na máto/

As far as the above example goes, essentially you read the above left-hand side as if it were English – the only convention I have used is to put an accent over the syllable in the ‘word’ that receives the main stress. The ‘ay’ here is the ‘ay’ in “day”, and of course, don’t forget to trill your R’s.
If you talk to people who interpret tongues, many of them will explain that the interpretation comes to them, kind of like if you talk to people who receive prophecies in church. Two people can get the same interpretation, and one gives it first. One of my friends says the exact wording of other people giving the interpretation is not the same, but rather the meaning is the same. I have never heard of an interpreter of tongues being able to break down and understand words and morphemes like a native speaker would.
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,067
4,349
113
If you talk to people who interpret tongues, many of them will explain that the interpretation comes to them, kind of like if you talk to people who receive prophecies in church. Two people can get the same interpretation, and one gives it first. One of my friends says the exact wording of other people giving the interpretation is not the same, but rather the meaning is the same. I have never heard of an interpreter of tongues being able to break down and understand words and morphemes like a native speaker would.
it's an interpretation, not a translation.
 
Mar 17, 2021
560
165
43
“…speaking to God in an unknown tongue” – if put into something a bit more modern and getting rid of that pesky added ‘unknown’ – “…..speaking to God in a language”.

I generally find that English, or any other real, rational language I may choose, seems to work just fine. Modern tongues-speech (‘prayer language’) is not language, it’s non-cognitive non-language utterance.

That said, there is nothing _to_ ‘interpret’. If it were language, an interpreter could look at the following example of real, transliterated tongues and give his/her interpretation:

Káyntay háychee, háychee kéeho hóro. /kénte héči, héči kího hóro/
Máhcha keetáy lah mócho, /máča kité la móčo/
rána mahcháy nay keetáh lau. /rána mačé ne kitá lau/
Réhnah shay kée nah máhto. /rɛ’na še kí na máto/

As far as the above example goes, essentially you read the above left-hand side as if it were English – the only convention I have used is to put an accent over the syllable in the ‘word’ that receives the main stress. The ‘ay’ here is the ‘ay’ in “day”, and of course, don’t forget to trill your R’s. The punctuation written is an assumption only and is based solely on the speaker’s intonation and phrasing.

This is a bit harsh perhaps, but…..as one writer put it, “You’re improvising the sounds, but there is nothing about what you’re doing that cannot be explained in natural terms. The only reason it sounds like a language is that you want it to sound like a language. But it’s not. As much as you’d like to think you are, you’re not producing a language.”

I find that many speakers seem to fall into this thought model; i.e., it sounds like a real language because speakers have convinced themselves to hear it as such. What Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians are doing today is not to be found in the Bible. Doesn’t make it wrong, as I’ve said, modern tongues-speech, as the spiritual tool that it is, is a powerful one; but it’s just not something found in the Bible.

I’m not ridiculing anyone – just stating what modern tongues-speech is comprised of; looking at the mechanics behind it, so-to-speak. There are many things in the Bible that must be taken on faith; they can neither be proved, nor disproved. The tongues-speech of Pentecostal/Charismatic Christians is not one of these things. It is something very tangible. It can be, and has been, studied and analyzed with all studies yielding the same conclusions. And, no, I am by no means an ‘authority’ on the subject (and have never claimed to be).

I have not seen anything that demonstrates tongues-speech to be anything other than non-cognitive non-language utterance. God may indeed have more for me, but I'm pretty sure it's not 'tongues'.
A nice bit of worldly wisdom there!
 

Kavik

Senior Member
Mar 25, 2017
795
159
43
If you talk to people who interpret tongues, many of them will explain that the interpretation comes to them, kind of like if you talk to people who receive prophecies in church. Two people can get the same interpretation, and one gives it first. One of my friends says the exact wording of other people giving the interpretation is not the same, but rather the meaning is the same. I have never heard of an interpreter of tongues being able to break down and understand words and morphemes like a native speaker would.
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 improv’ of sorts, inspired by one’s deep faith and beliefs, isn't it.

Interpretations are typically characterized by being inordinately longer than the actual glossic utterance, rather generic and non-specific in nature, and perhaps not surprisingly, open to multiple non-related ‘interpretations’. In other words, have ten interpreters listen to a glossic string and you’ll get ten different (typically unrelated) interpretations. In tongues ‘The big brown dog is slow’, can also be ‘The small white cat is quick’. These latter two characteristics (‘generic-ness’ and multiple interpretations) do not suggest anything that is divinely inspired. It fails even the most basic tests and criteria that define ‘communication’ itself.

Given the ‘generic-ness’ and nature of the interpretations, some overlap and similarities are to be expected. As you say, the meaning can be the same or similar; however, the more common occurrence seems to be that the interpretations are completely different from one another. I think it’s easy to say, after one person gives an interpretation, that “That’s about what I was going to say”, or “Something very similar came to me too.”

I had read of an instance in France many years ago of an experiment (if you can call it that) where the ‘tongues-speaker’ (obviously someone planted there) started to recite the Our Father in a very thick, broad Scots – needless to say, someone stood up and offered a lengthy interpretation of his ‘tongues’. The going comment years ago was that you could stand up in a church in say rural Georgia, recite Beowulf, throw in a few "hallelujahs", and someone would offer an interpretation of your tongues.

A common come-back to the multiple interpretation issue is that God/the Holy Spirit gives different interpretations to different people. As one writer put it rather succinctly, “Pentecostal/Charismatic Darwinism does not exist – there’s no mutation or transformation of one message into several for the sake of justifying what is an obvious discrepancy. If this were the case, it would completely eradicate the need for ‘tongues’ in the first place”.

Yes, the only way tongues-speech seems to be able to be interpreted is solely from the spoken word. I’ve often wondered if I were to recite a written transcription aloud using the same intonations as the original speaker if someone could give an interpretation, and if not, why not.

If you utter something and want it to be language, one of the universal features it must contain are morphemes. If tongues-speech were language, it would have definable morphemes. No tongues-speech ever studied seems to have this feature. Modern tongues-speech however would require a separate set of morphemes for each and every speaker since no two tongues will ever be the same. There’s just nothing that remotely suggests or evidences ‘language’ here.
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,067
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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 improv’ of sorts, inspired by one’s deep faith and beliefs, isn't it.

Interpretations are typically characterized by being inordinately longer than the actual glossic utterance, rather generic and non-specific in nature, and perhaps not surprisingly, open to multiple non-related ‘interpretations’. In other words, have ten interpreters listen to a glossic string and you’ll get ten different (typically unrelated) interpretations. In tongues ‘The big brown dog is slow’, can also be ‘The small white cat is quick’. These latter two characteristics (‘generic-ness’ and multiple interpretations) do not suggest anything that is divinely inspired. It fails even the most basic tests and criteria that define ‘communication’ itself.

Given the ‘generic-ness’ and nature of the interpretations, some overlap and similarities are to be expected. As you say, the meaning can be the same or similar; however, the more common occurrence seems to be that the interpretations are completely different from one another. I think it’s easy to say, after one person gives an interpretation, that “That’s about what I was going to say”, or “Something very similar came to me too.”

I had read of an instance in France many years ago of an experiment (if you can call it that) where the ‘tongues-speaker’ (obviously someone planted there) started to recite the Our Father in a very thick, broad Scots – needless to say, someone stood up and offered a lengthy interpretation of his ‘tongues’. The going comment years ago was that you could stand up in a church in say rural Georgia, recite Beowulf, throw in a few "hallelujahs", and someone would offer an interpretation of your tongues.

A common come-back to the multiple interpretation issue is that God/the Holy Spirit gives different interpretations to different people. As one writer put it rather succinctly, “Pentecostal/Charismatic Darwinism does not exist – there’s no mutation or transformation of one message into several for the sake of justifying what is an obvious discrepancy. If this were the case, it would completely eradicate the need for ‘tongues’ in the first place”.

Yes, the only way tongues-speech seems to be able to be interpreted is solely from the spoken word. I’ve often wondered if I were to recite a written transcription aloud using the same intonations as the original speaker if someone could give an interpretation, and if not, why not.

If you utter something and want it to be language, one of the universal features it must contain are morphemes. If tongues-speech were language, it would have definable morphemes. No tongues-speech ever studied seems to have this feature. Modern tongues-speech however would require a separate set of morphemes for each and every speaker since no two tongues will ever be the same. There’s just nothing that remotely suggests or evidences ‘language’ here.
your humanistic explanation of the Gifts of the Holy Spirit is lacking one very important thing. The word of God.


The Church does not need an opinion from the science world to validate the gifts of the Holy Spirit.

There are millions of testimonies certified healings, miracles, and millions of lives changed by the Gospel message.

The Church doesn't need a carnal-minded person(s) to try and explain Spiritual truth.

That is why one does see the connection of those carried along by the Holy Spirit known as Inspiration God-breathed as holy men of old wrote. They did not write of their own but were helped by the Holy Spirit.


The same Holy Spirit does that every day in the believer IF they are seeking God. The inspiration is not to add to the Word of God it is NOW as 1cor chapter 12 through 14 states.

the tongues and interpretation of them = prophecy as 1cor 14 says yet it is not in the context of the authoritative word of God it is for :

Edification, comfort, exhortation, and confirmation. I person who speaks in tongues should pray that they interpret what 1cor 14 says, and speak forth what is given by the inspiration as the Holy Spirit leads.


when in use of this gift I can speak under my breath pray and ask God to give me the interpretation and speak out loud in the language I know and is the language of my home church in CA. I can do this and no one would ever hear me speak in tongues at all.

This is the maturity with the gift and can be developed. After I speak what is a word of encouragement, comfort, or exhortation, it is to BE JUDGED BY THE WORD OF GOD and confirm to someone there what is said.

The Holy Spirit doesn't make me do it, I don't have to interrupt the Pastor of the sermon, and when I visit a church other than my own
and I since the Holy Spirit prompting me to speak I go to the Pastor and tell him what I am sensing from the Holy Spirt.

I have had baptist, COGIC, and many other denominations tell me to go ahead, not yet, and no. I did not get up and leave yell out "you are grieving the Holy Spirit" and make a big sense.


many Pentecostals are in error and unlearned and think they fully know the gifts of the Holy Spirit, just like cessationism they are wrong. The message that is to be given must be a confirmation, meaning in a church the Pastor is and should already know and the person(s) whom the Holy Spirit is trying to help, edify, comfort, and build up. Why?


Well, the Pastor knows His flock and he knows who is sick, who has personal issues most of the time. FYI Pastors do work other days in addition to Sunday.

The Lord showed me a specific issue with someone who was sick, I did not know who that person was but I asked the Pastor if there was a person suffering from this issue. And he knew immediately who it was and I asked if I can pray for them because I believe God wants to heal her. God showed me it was a woman. he told me not yet and he would call me at the right time. I sat down and waited for the pastor to call me.

God did what he does I did what I believe God wanted me to do and the pastor did what he believed was best for his flock.

No issues nothing out of order God got the glory and we moved on.
 

CherieR

Senior Member
May 6, 2017
2,271
1,429
113
Early this morning I was speaking in what sounded like tongues as I was waking up. I used to be in the practice of speaking in tongues for quite some time but have stopped due to not feeling at peace about it for myself. I understand there are different views on tongues today and I have known people who I see as godly who are in the practice of speaking in tongues.
 
Mar 17, 2021
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your humanistic explanation of the Gifts of the Holy Spirit is lacking one very important thing. The word of God.


The Church does not need an opinion from the science world to validate the gifts of the Holy Spirit.

There are millions of testimonies certified healings, miracles, and millions of lives changed by the Gospel message.

The Church doesn't need a carnal-minded person(s) to try and explain Spiritual truth.

That is why one does see the connection of those carried along by the Holy Spirit known as Inspiration God-breathed as holy men of old wrote. They did not write of their own but were helped by the Holy Spirit.


The same Holy Spirit does that every day in the believer IF they are seeking God. The inspiration is not to add to the Word of God it is NOW as 1cor chapter 12 through 14 states.

the tongues and interpretation of them = prophecy as 1cor 14 says yet it is not in the context of the authoritative word of God it is for :

Edification, comfort, exhortation, and confirmation. I person who speaks in tongues should pray that they interpret what 1cor 14 says, and speak forth what is given by the inspiration as the Holy Spirit leads.


when in use of this gift I can speak under my breath pray and ask God to give me the interpretation and speak out loud in the language I know and is the language of my home church in CA. I can do this and no one would ever hear me speak in tongues at all.

This is the maturity with the gift and can be developed. After I speak what is a word of encouragement, comfort, or exhortation, it is to BE JUDGED BY THE WORD OF GOD and confirm to someone there what is said.

The Holy Spirit doesn't make me do it, I don't have to interrupt the Pastor of the sermon, and when I visit a church other than my own
and I since the Holy Spirit prompting me to speak I go to the Pastor and tell him what I am sensing from the Holy Spirt.

I have had baptist, COGIC, and many other denominations tell me to go ahead, not yet, and no. I did not get up and leave yell out "you are grieving the Holy Spirit" and make a big sense.


many Pentecostals are in error and unlearned and think they fully know the gifts of the Holy Spirit, just like cessationism they are wrong. The message that is to be given must be a confirmation, meaning in a church the Pastor is and should already know and the person(s) whom the Holy Spirit is trying to help, edify, comfort, and build up. Why?


Well, the Pastor knows His flock and he knows who is sick, who has personal issues most of the time. FYI Pastors do work other days in addition to Sunday.

The Lord showed me a specific issue with someone who was sick, I did not know who that person was but I asked the Pastor if there was a person suffering from this issue. And he knew immediately who it was and I asked if I can pray for them because I believe God wants to heal her. God showed me it was a woman. he told me not yet and he would call me at the right time. I sat down and waited for the pastor to call me.

God did what he does I did what I believe God wanted me to do and the pastor did what he believed was best for his flock.

No issues nothing out of order God got the glory and we moved on.
Man's wisdom tries to explain the function of the Holy Spirit but comes very sadly short and very unconvincing.
 
Jul 23, 2018
12,199
2,775
113
Early this morning I was speaking in what sounded like tongues as I was waking up. I used to be in the practice of speaking in tongues for quite some time but have stopped due to not feeling at peace about it for myself. I understand there are different views on tongues today and I have known people who I see as godly who are in the practice of speaking in tongues.
Baptism in the Holy Spirit comes first with tongues following.

It is tied into the anointing.
What came on samson, david, and even saul at the first was prophesying.
The anointing in personal prayer and in corporate meetings is the river that contains tongues, gifts, anointings, healing, deliverance, guidance and others.

Get in the river...then tongues.

It is an adventure
 

Evmur

Well-known member
Feb 28, 2021
5,219
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London
christianchat.com
A nice bit of worldly wisdom there!
In my very early days attending a well known Pentecostal church in London, I was leafing through the Redemptor hymn book and found the hymn "Give me a sight My Saviour" [of course written by a woman, Mrs Morris I think]

I wondered to myself if these hymns mean as much to the Lord as they do to us? how do they compare with the psalms?

Suddenly there was quite an ecstatic burst of tongues and everybody waited reverently for the interpretation ... it was a few minutes coming but finally a dear sister gave forth.

"Give me a sight O Saviour
of thy wonderous love for me
of the love that brought Thee down to earth to die on Calvary
Oh make me understand it help me to take it in
What it meant for Thee the Holy One
to bear away my sin."

After the meeting I spoke to the sister and told her of my blessing, she said she had never had an interpretation like that before and had not been sure whether to give it or not, hence the delay.

So we both had a blessing together. Isn't God so sweet?
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
9,164
1,794
113
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 improv’ of sorts, inspired by one’s deep faith and beliefs, isn't it.

Interpretations are typically characterized by being inordinately longer than the actual glossic utterance, rather generic and non-specific in nature, and perhaps not surprisingly, open to multiple non-related ‘interpretations’.
I haven't noticed unusual length of interpretation compared to utterances in tongues in church meetings, not when one considers that natural translations do not match up in terms of length. Spanish translations have many more syllables. I am just thinking of a year in Indonesian that would have 14 syllables in Indonesian, and 5 in English. Bible translators I have talked with also face issues like how to translate palm tree into languages where the speakers of that language have never seen palm trees. One option is a longer explanation. Interpretations of tongues may not be the same as 'translations' of tongues.

In other words, have ten interpreters listen to a glossic string and you’ll get ten different (typically unrelated) interpretations. In tongues ‘The big brown dog is slow’, can also be ‘The small white cat is quick’. These latter two characteristics (‘generic-ness’ and multiple interpretations) do not suggest anything that is divinely inspired. It fails even the most basic tests and criteria that define ‘communication’ itself.
It seems pretty obvious to me you just made up those interpretations. I haven't heard any interpretations of tongues about brown dogs and small cats. I remember in middle school, a Christian middle school, a classmate talking about how when he was in church, he heard a message in tongues, then these words came to him, and someone stood up and said the same thing in English. My college roommate would get the same interpretation of tongues someone else got, but the other person would give it first. Another friend of mine, who has worked as a missionary and professor teaching Hebrew, has had a similar experience.

I seem to recall hearing that one researcher, maybe Samarin, found that people gave different interpretations of recordings. I cannot say all speaking in tongues or interpretation of tongues is genuine. It does seem like some Charismatic groups go to great lengths to 'extract' tongues out of people, teaching rather creative doctrines like 'baby tongues'-- trying to get people to say some syllables and telling them it will improve with time. There may be some 'tongues' that are just learned behavior that aren't genuine gifts, and there are likely people who pretend...or are self-deceived thinking that whatever words pop into their heads are prophecies or interpretations.

But the Bible also teaches that prophecy and interpretation of tongues are gifts of the Spirit, distributed to members of the body of Christ, as the Spirit wills. And there are believers who interpret tongues and others who hear the same interpretation that they would have given... though others beat them to the punch.

Similar things happen with prophecies, where one person gives it, and someone else had the same prophecy. I have experienced getting what I consider a 'word of knowledge' or a fact or two about someone, and someone else shares that same thing as a part of a prophecy either within a few seconds or several minutes later. For example, I get a sense of knowing that a brother is called to be an evangelist, then someone prophesies over him that he is gifted as an evangelist,

On the receiving end, I have also gone to one place and someone prophesied something over me, and I went to another church 40 miles away, and someone prophesied the same thing about me. My brother had a similar experience. I was there on one occasion. He played me a tape for another.

Sometimes prophecies and words of knowledge are very specific. The person prophesying may not know the other person and may address specific details of their lives. For example, one man got a message about a college students work at an upcoming summer camp, and a word of knowledge about a teenager's friend name Toby who drove recklessly. I have seen some very specific things like this. There are also prophecies that come to pass.

Given the ‘generic-ness’ and nature of the interpretations, some overlap and similarities are to be expected. As you say, the meaning can be the same or similar; however, the more common occurrence seems to be that the interpretations are completely different from one another. I think it’s easy to say, after one person gives an interpretation, that “That’s about what I was going to say”, or “Something very similar came to me too.”
Many interpretations of tongues are along Biblical themes, encouragement that aligns with the teaching of scripture, but there are thousands of topics in scripture.

I had read of an instance in France many years ago of an experiment (if you can call it that) where the ‘tongues-speaker’ (obviously someone planted there) started to recite the Our Father in a very thick, broad Scots – needless to say, someone stood up and offered a lengthy interpretation of his ‘tongues’. The going comment years ago was that you could stand up in a church in say rural Georgia, recite Beowulf, throw in a few "hallelujahs", and someone would offer an interpretation of your tongues.
You aren't considering all the variables in your hypothetical test. Since Pentecostals also offer prophecies in church, it could be that a faker in broad Scots or Beowulf reciter is just ignored and someone goes on to offer a prophecy.

A common come-back to the multiple interpretation issue is that God/the Holy Spirit gives different interpretations to different people. As one writer put it rather succinctly, “Pentecostal/Charismatic Darwinism does not exist – there’s no mutation or transformation of one message into several for the sake of justifying what is an obvious discrepancy. If this were the case, it would completely eradicate the need for ‘tongues’ in the first place”.
I have never heard such a comeback or justification. Those who prophesy or interpret tongues might comment that the words might be a little different that align with the dialect or manner of speaking of the individual, but the message is the same. The KJV, NIV or even The Living Bible will tell the same story or give the same message, generally, but the wording is different.

Yes, the only way tongues-speech seems to be able to be interpreted is solely from the spoken word. I’ve often wondered if I were to recite a written transcription aloud using the same intonations as the original speaker if someone could give an interpretation, and if not, why not.
Are you saying this under the assumption that speaking in tongues is a genuine gift of the Spirit? My impression among Pentecostals is that those who give messages in tongues generally believe they are somehow 'moved' to do so, or at least that the grace is available at that time (my terminology) to do so, and the same with interpretations.

If you utter something and want it to be language, one of the universal features it must contain are morphemes. If tongues-speech were language, it would have definable morphemes. No tongues-speech ever studied seems to have this feature. Modern tongues-speech however would require a separate set of morphemes for each and every speaker since no two tongues will ever be the same. There’s just nothing that remotely suggests or evidences ‘language’ here.
I have heard speaking in tongues that seemed, to my ears, like some of the sounds could be morphemes.


I am not arguing that all Pentecostals or Charismatics who claim to speak in tongues or interpret necessarily have the genuine gifts that they proport to have. I do believe the teaching of scripture (I Corinthians 12) that prophecy, tongues, and interpretation, along with other gifts, are distributed to members of the body of Christ as the Spirit wills. And there are those who have experienced genuine manifestations of these gifts. Some experiences are clearly supernatural.