tk111 said:
UTExan said:
tk111 said:
UTExan said:
Quote:
Pentacostal movement is the fastest growing movement within Christianity today, it is a false doctrine.
Really? Better tell that to all those charismatic Catholics and legacy Protestant folks who pray in tongues.
The existing religious establishments have always denigrated Pentecostals because they fear the power of a pentecostal movement within their own churches. It exists outside their control.
Sort of reminds me of a 1st century Roman-governed area called Palestine.
No one here is claiming that people did not miraculously speak in tongues - actual existing languages - in first-century Palestine...or Asia Minor...or Rome. You're conflating Biblical history with the present to set up a bizarre strawman, and not really addressing anything anyone here is saying/asking.
Then why did Paul mention praying in an angelic language in Corinthians? Maybe you're trying to deal with your own background experiences instead of the actual topic (my guess, not intended as a slam or pejorative)? Because there were perceived frauds in Pentecostal/charismatic circles does not invalidate the gift. It means that it may have been abused. Frauds exist along every venue of worship, unfortunately.
He didn't. You're referring to 1 Cor 13:1. In the whole section of ch 12-14, Paul is imploring the members of the church to seek unity and love in the New Covenant. He lists a hierarchy of gifts that all contribute to the growing of the early Church and how they are all important to the body, with the punch line that they are all worthless without love (with what he means by "love" being defined earlier in the epistle). When he mentions tongues in 13:1, he hyperbolizes the gift - you could read it as "even if I could miraculously speak in any language with absolute perfection" it would be worthless without love. He uses the exact same imagery in 2 Corinthians in reference to false teachers that he said were often more eloquent in speech than he was. The very next verses (13:2-3) use the same literary effect - prophecy with all knowledge of all mysteries would be worthless without love, faith that could move mountains would be worthless without love, giving everything would be worthless without love...
Nothing in the passage ever implies that anyone should be praying or worshipping in some incomprehensible "language" that no one can understand and claiming its "of the angels" or "only God can understand." That is pure eisegesis from folks searching for affirmation for an indefensible practice of babbling without interpretation.
I should have been more clear about the people I mentioned - that is a comprehensive (not a sampling - a comprehensive) list of the people that began the Pentecostal movement, each one of them a charlatan in their own right (not "perceived" - objectively frauds - take some time to look each of those folks up). Prior them, no one was claiming this gift for 1800 years. Since then, the definition has changed multiple times to fit the bill.
I am not of a Pentecostal background, have never spoken in tongues, and to be frank, when I have seen/heard someone speak in tongues, my inherent reaction is skepticism, whether it should be or not.
All that said, I also disagree with the interpretation here. I don't read here Paul denigrating or discouraging the gifts of tongues, otherwise 1 Cor 14:39 would be a weird thing to write. I also don't read what he is saying as being hyperbolic.
In the whole discourse in 1 Cor 14, Paul's point is that, in communal worship, speaking in tongues (esp if there is no one to interpret) isn't very useful to the group. It's not spreading Gods word to others. He states that use of tongues is between a single person and God (verse 2) unless it is interpreted (verse 27). It gets disorderly, distracting, and obviously could get out of hand. It prevents others from sharing or using their gifts due to the disruption. It is edifying to an individual but not to the group.
This is why he prefers prophecy when in communal worship. He makes the distinction about interpreting tongues to the group because then Gods message is reaching the group, aka it becomes prophecy.
In other words, 14:39 is the summation of his point.
In my mind, I picture the sort of chaos Paul is discussing in charismatic/Pentecostal services, with lots of people speaking in tongues and no one understanding it. But to be fair, I have never been to a Pentecostal service, and that could simply be my biased assumption of how things are.