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Biblical View of Tongues

 

 

A BIBLICAL CRITIQUE OF
THE MODERN TONGUES MOVEMENT

 Dr. Grant C. Richison

 

I. LIMITED TO A FEW

1 Corinthians 12:8-11, 29, 30.

Sovereignly bestowed – 1 Co 12:8.

Select individuals – 1 Co 12:8-11, 29, 30 (Greek)

II. NOT A PERMANENT GIFT

Other temporary gifts:

Miracles

Apostleship

Prophecy

Healing

Tongues

Interpretation of tongues.

I Cor. 13:8 says in Greek that tongues will come to an absolute cessation (PAUO) in and of themselves (middle voice) at one point (aorist tense). Verses 9-13 drop “tongues” and continue “prophecy” and “knowledge” as the two gifts that will continue until the closing of the canon (or the coming of Christ). A look at history substantiates this. There is no allusion or hint of the post-apostolic Fathers practicing the gift of tongues.

III. Purpose of Tongues – sign to Israel of a change of economy in the way God deals with His people.

Tongues were an authentication of God’s message in the interval between the beginning of Christianity and the writing of the New Testament (Acts 2:22; Hebrews 2:3-4). 

(Since the canon of Scripture was closed it is sufficient to simply quote it to authenticate one’s message).

IV. History of doctrine:

-Justin Martyr (A.D. 100-165) mentions seven gifts, he does not include tongues.

-Irenaeus, A.D. 130-195, was influenced by Montanus (A.D. 126-180), who was a heretic & claimed to speak in tongues.

The only clear statement regarding tongues in the post-apostolic church is Eusebius’ description of the activity of Montanus.

-Chrysostom (A.D. 347-407): “…the obscurity is produced by our ignorance of the facts referred to and by their cessation, being such as then used to occur, but now no longer take place.”

-There was no speaking in tongues among evangelicals until approximately 1875. 1901 was when the so-called modern tongues movement began.

-An argument from silence?

Fathers wrote to and from churches where the gift had been practiced.

Ignatius (disciple of the apostle John) said nothing about tongues.

Wide geographical coverage of the Apostolic Fathers made their silence significant.

They covered every major area of Christian doctrine. 

The purpose of post-apostolic writings would have included tongues if they were extant in the post-New Testament period

V. NATURE OF TONGUES

-Nothing more than known languages of that day.

-“Tongue” means “language.”

-No evidence of incoherent, incomprehensible babbling in the Bible.

-Acts 2:4-11: Compare verse 6 dialektos with Rev. 5:9 and 7:9.

They spoke in dialects as well as foreign languages.

-Mark 16:17Kainos= new language to the speaker.

-Acts 10:46 – not different from Acts 2.

-Acts 19:6 – Ibid.

-Acts and First Corinthians usage is the same.

Paul and Luke were constant companions.

-1 Corinthians 12:10, 28genos ~ family, race – families of languages.

-1 Corinthians 13:1 – “Tongues of angels”

“Though I speak” (third class condition) – purely hypothetical.

-“Unknown” – 1 Corinthians 14:2, 4, 13, 14, 19, 27 – “unknown” inserted by translators.

VI. PURPOSE

1 Corinthians 14:21, 22 – 21 quotes Isaiah 28:11.

It is a quotation that refers to the Assyrian invasion of Israel and speaking in Aramaic.

v. 22 is the only statement in the entire Word of God about the purpose of tongues.

Therefore” – hoste – Preposition of ultimate purpose or result.

“For a sign” – idiom for purpose (compare 1 Cor. 1:22).

The purpose was to show Jews that there was a transition from the old economy to the new economy.

“But for them that believe not.”

The second “them” has an article before it (Greek), an article of previous reference (a reference to V. 21), so tongues are for unbelieving Jews in the transition period before the closing of the canon.

Tongues, therefore, are not for believers, but to show unbelieving Jews that there was a change from the Old Testament to the New Testament economy.

Every occurrence of tongues in Acts, Jews are present – cf. Acts 2:4, 10:26, and 19:6.

In the reception of the Holy Spirit in Acts, no two accounts are the same.

               
             

Acts

 

           

2

8

10

19

                   

1.

 Sound of wind

 

x

     

2.

Tongues of fire

 

x

     

3.

Speaking in tongues

x

 

x

x

4.

Laying on of hands

 

x

 

x

5.

Spirit received after salvation

  x x   x
             

6.

Spirit received at the moment of salvation

 

    x  
             

7.

What doing when received:

       
 

a)

Praying or listening to the Word

x      
               
 

b)

Praying

   

x

   
 

c)

Listening to a sermon

 

   

x

 
 

d)

Paul finished explaining

     

x

                           

 

Since no two accounts are the same, no one pattern may be drawn from the hook of Acts. The transitional character of the book of Acts must be recognized. Many things that happened in Acts were never intended to be permanent patterns; e.g., we do not worship God in a Jewish Temple (2:46); are not struck dead instantaneously for lying (Acts 5:1-11); or converted through direct reve1ation (9:1-19). Also, Acts is not didactic; i.e., it is not trying to teach doctrine but simply giving history.

VII. REGULATIONS

Tongues must edify – 1 Cor. 14:23-26; cp, vv. 5, 12

Tongues must have an interpreter – 1 Cor. 14:27, 28

-only one per service.

Number and order:

– No more than three in one service;

One at a time, 1 Co 14:27.

Women not allowed to speak in assembly (1 Co 14:34)

VII. EXPLANATIONS OF THE MODERN MOVEMENT OF TONGUES 

Artificially simulated.

Psychological.

Some of it is Satanic.

VIII. EVALUATION OF THE MODERN TONGUES MOVEMENT

A. Positive

Stresses knowing God experientially.

Desire to go back to the biblical concept of spirituality.

Desire to fully obey the Word of God.

Emphasis on the person and work of the Holy Spirit

B. Negative

-Uses experience as the criterion for truth.

-Too much prominence is given to it over other biblical priorities.

-1 Corinthians 14 de-emphasizes and restrains its use

last in the roster of gifts, 1 Corinthians 12:20-23

-Romans 12 and Ephesians roster omits tongues

    3. Unsound doctrine

Confuses the baptism of the Spirit with the filling of the Spirit

BAPTISM OF THE SPIRIT

-baptized once at the point of salvation

all believers are universally baptized at salvation

-deals with position and standing before God

-non-experiential, but status in God’s eyes

never commanded because it is something God does for the believer at the point of salvation

FILLING OF THE SPIRIT

Continuous (Eph 5:18, present tense)

Commanded (Eph 5:18, imperative mood)

-It is an experience or state of the believer

-Makes Spirit baptism subsequent to salvation.

-Confuses sanctification with a so-called second work of grace.

-Some border on the psychopathic. 

-Use tongues as a sublimation for doctrine. 

-Spiritual pride.

-Substitutes sight for faith.

-Use tongues as a shortcut to maturity.

-Some use tongues as a spiritual toy.

-Some use tongues to divide believers from one another.

-Careless use of tongues invites demon influence.

-Too much focus on the Holy Spirit whereas the Bible puts the focus on Jesus (Jn 15:26; 16:13, 14).

-Some use tongues as a test for salvation.

 

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