Powered by Gottalife
Tags:
Permalink Reply by Tim Blodgett on July 9, 2010 at 9:23pm
Permalink Reply by John Tyler on July 24, 2010 at 7:00am
Permalink Reply by Tim Blodgett on July 24, 2010 at 9:37pm
Permalink Reply by John Tyler on July 25, 2010 at 5:18am
Permalink Reply by Tim Blodgett on July 25, 2010 at 11:56am
Permalink Reply by John Tyler on July 28, 2010 at 2:01pm
Permalink Reply by John Tyler on July 28, 2010 at 5:32pm
Permalink Reply by Stephen H Cornell on February 21, 2011 at 2:23pm hello! Experientially, I am in the exact position you are in! I believe the Holy Spirit is Sovereign God and manifests himself as He chooses which means just as Paul said in Romans, some do one thing and some another by the self-same Spirit!
Then Paul states that we should not use our convictions to seperate from or condemn or even trip up others! I feel strongly that in the future, the Pentecostals and the Cessationists will have to acknowledge each other and work together so we should start doing so now! Many denominations are set up exactly for the reason of seperating from other believers over differences of convictions and Paul said to keep that between yourself and God!
What really humbled me was that I took part in a house church which asked me to be an elder when most everybody else was from pentecostalist backgrounds and they knew I was not!
Brothers, I too was raised in a charismatic church and attempted to speak in tongues on several occasions. It always seemed very forced and fake to me, but I did not question the teaching until I went to college. I went to a cessationist school where I was forced to wrestle with the Scriptures on this issue. I became very frustrated because I found that I agreed with neither camp once I read the Scriptures for myself, however, I did not know what to say about tongues. I kept searching and eventually found an article by Robert Zerhusen about the cultural and linguistic background of Acts 2.
Based upon his study, he made the case that tongues were normal Gentile languages, normally learned, and normally spoken. I know this brings up several questions:
1) Aren’t tongues a miraculous sign (I Corinthians 14:22)? It seems that this is the understanding of most who have written here so far. Let me be clear that I DO believe in miracles and so does Zerhusen. However, if you do a study of the word ‘sign’, you will find that it is not always used miraculously. “And this will be a sign unto you; You will find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.” Luke 2:12 This is a good example of a miracle (virgin birth/incarnation of God’s Son) the ‘sign’ of which is something rather ordinary.
2) Why were the hearers so amazed? Yes, they were amazed, but they also accused them of being drunk, which is a very strange charge if the disciples were exhibiting behavior which would lead the hearers to believe they were far more educated than they appeared. You don’t charge a taxi driver who can quote Shakespeare with intoxication!
So, in a nutshell, here is what Zerhusen thinks happened:
It was Pentecost, a holy day, in Jerusalem. The disciples were gathered somewhere near the Temple (hence the big crowd). The Holy Spirit came with miraculous signs upon them (rushing wind and tongues of fire) and gave the disciples the freedom/boldness/utterance to do something which was culturally unacceptable at that time: to use unholy Gentile languages (which they already knew: Greek and Aramaic would have been considered the native languages of all the people listed) to praise God when the custom was to only use Hebrew for such speaking on a holy day in a holy place. The crowds are amazed at this spectacular display of (seeming) inappropriate speaking coming from Galileans who should have known better than to violate this cultural rule. The only explanation to be found was that they were drunk and therefore more uninhibited by social norms. Peter then goes on to address the whole crowd (without interpretation and everyone understands—another clue that there are not a dozen languages being used) and quotes from Joel which says nothing about strange language abilities, but rather that when the Spirit was poured out, everyone would be able to speak boldly the words of God. We see this again and again throughout Acts: bold speech being coupled with the filling of the Spirit—sometimes this is termed ‘tongues’ because it is Gentile languages and sometimes it is not.
I Corinthians seen in a similar light is astounding in its practicality for how to deal with a multi-lingual church situation—something I deal with daily. I commend to you the website (www.tonguesrevisited.com) where you can look into articles by Zerhusen as well as a very thorough free ebook by Renton MacLacklan which explores all this and gives much more proof and detail than I can here. I have read all of it and am happy to pursue discussing this further. Thank you all for your willingness to wrestle with this topic.
Permalink Reply by Oliver Elphick on March 3, 2011 at 5:23pm I'm afraid I find Zerhusen's interpretation thoroughly unconvincing.
First, a sign is something significant. A baby in a manger is unusual and therefore a sufficient indication of the right baby. Miracles are also very unusual and therefore significant. It is not particularly unusual for someone to use a second language that he knows. Zerhusen's suggestion of why it would be unusual is contrived and without any biblical evidence. But speaking a language you don't know is unusual.
Second, it is highly unlikely that Galileans (Acts 2:7), who to our knowledge had never left Israel, should have any acquaintance with the tongues of "Parthians and Medes and Elamites and residents of Meopatamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and Arabians", still less that they should be sufficiently fluent to be able to "tell in their own tongues the mighty works of God" (2:9-11). How could they have learned them? and if they could, why would they? The disciples were not merely using Greek or Aramaic (as Zerhusen's book suggests); the obvious implication of the passage is that a minimum of 15 different languages were being heard.
The fact that Greek was the lingua franca of the whole Mediterranean made it unnecessary to learn other languages; it had been spread throughout Alexander's empire and was the international language of the time. If you went to another country, you spoke Greek. (Thus we see Paul in Lystra obviously using Greek and expecting to be understood, while the crowd spoke among themselves in Lycaonian, which Paul did not understand.)
There is no explanation, in Zerhusen's account, of how these Galileans at Pentecost might have come to learn such a variety of languages (and bear in mind that in times of limited travel, local languages could vary from one valley to the next, but 2:11 suggests that someone of the 120 was speaking each visitor's own language ). Nor is there any support in the bible for the idea that these Galileans were violating a cultural rule. The remarks some made about them were not that they were rude but that they were drunk.
Peter spoke in plain language to preach, most likely in Aramaic, possibly in Greek. The norm in such circumstances is for people in the crowd to translate for those who don't understand; that would not be thought worthy of mention. In explaining what his audience had been hearing, he speaks of the miraculous events prophesied by Joel, so the natural conclusion is that he was referring to miraculous events that the audience had witnessed, including the tongues.
There is no dispute that tongues means languages. But the point is that the language used in the gift is one not known to anyone, not even to the speaker. That is the whole point of it. "...one who speaks in a tongue speaks not to men but to God; for no one understands him, but he utters mysteries in the Spirit." (1 Cor 14:2) and "...if I pray in a tongue, my spirit prays but my mind is unfruitful" (14:14) If the speaker understands the language, it is not the gift of tongues. Hearers may occasionally understand, if the language given to the speaker is one they know. That was the case for many at Pentecost. Paul's testimony (1 Cor 14:18) is that he spoke in tongues more than anyone, but that it was not intelligible and so he did not use it in the assembly. (I looked at Zerhusen's book and find his answers to these objections unconvincing.)
The scripture shows that the content of speech in tongues is addressed to God and therefore it is praise, thanksgiving (possibly) or prayer. (Acts 2:11; 1 Cor 14:2) (So an interpretation that is not addressed to God is suspect; or maybe it is a prophecy being given at the wrong time.) It is a gift that is potentially available to everyone and desirable for everyone (1 Cor 14:5), and that would not be said of learning foreign languages in the normal way.
The fact that tongues will be praise or prayer addressed to God is the reason that their use should apparently come first, before prophecy (1 Cor 14:27-29) The use of tongues, in which the Spirit himself is producing praise to God, sets the spiritual atmosphere of the meeting (which should be being led by the Holy Spirit throughout). This is therefore a example of the activity of the Spirit in believers that definitely builds up the church, when it is accompanied by interpretation.
Multi-lingual church is a different problem, which is not related to the Corinthian problem. Corinth is in Greece and we can take it for granted that everyone there apart from the occasional visitor could speak Greek fluently, and most visitors could speak it well enough to get by. I have direct experience of the multi-lingual problem here in France, where neither the French nor the English can speak the others' language well (or at all, in some cases). This necessitates translation for teaching. We use alternate speech in each language; another fellowship I know does simultaneous translation via headphones for English-speaking visitors. For prayers, we don't normally attempt to translate, but prayer subjects have usually been mentioned in both languages beforehand. The difficulty of handling this means that we don't attempt to integrate the different groups, but come together less frequently than weekly or even monthly for fellowship. This is still an area that needs work.
Jim London posted a video
Jo Lynne Deaver left a comment for Richard Kozlowski
Jo Lynne Deaver left a comment for Loretta Rodrigues
Jonathon Baer replied to Jo Lynne Deaver's discussion Don't Limit Opportunities
Loretta Rodrigues left a comment for Jo Lynne Deaver
Maegan Verrett left a comment for Jo Lynne Deaver
Jo Lynne Deaver left a comment for Loretta Rodrigues
Jo Lynne Deaver left a comment for Maegan Verrett
Jo Lynne Deaver replied to Jo Lynne Deaver's discussion Don't Limit Opportunities
Jonathon Baer replied to Jo Lynne Deaver's discussion Don't Limit Opportunities© 2012 Created by Gottalife.