Sorry, I posted a thread about this a few weeks ago, but I am still conflicted about this issue, so would like more information.
snip – due to limit of words in a post.
So we’re having trouble balancing this. We both feel bad: me for not feeling comfortable with it and allowing her to be in pain, and her for asking me when I’m not comfortable with it.
May I address this comment from a different perspective –
“So we’re having trouble balancing this. We both feel bad: me for not feeling comfortable with it and allowing her to be in pain, and her for asking me when I’m not comfortable with it.”
Sometimes, with all the emphasis on the Charismatic Movement as this or that, we lose sight of the meaning of praying in Tongues. Sure, we know that it is a personal prayer to God, etc., etc., but do we realize that it is a personal prayer for life? Do we connect our prayers in English, Spanish, Tongues, etc., with our place in the Mystical Body of Christ? St. Paul has an amazing teaching about us in the Mystical Body of Christ, 1 Corinthians 12; 12 - 31 and continued in 1 Corinthians, chapter 13.
I am asking these strange questions simply as a way of shaking off the problem of balancing two people’s feelings about charismatic stuff so that we can go back to square one. Square one is when we love God and want to serve Him. When we are willing to follow in the footsteps of Jesus as He lovingly cared for others. As St. Paul points out, we are not clones of each other. Our prayer life is what we, as individuals, are able to do and in what way we choose to do it.
Praying in Tongues is one of the many gifts of the Holy Spirit. Often it is referred to as the “common gift” meaning that everyone can use it. Does that imply that everyone has to use it? Of course not. Read 1 Corinthians 12: 17 and 1 Corinthians 13: 1-3.
Note to St. Paul. Please excuse me if I add some thoughts to your words. No offense intended.
“Love is patient, love is kind.” 1 Corinthians 13: 4, reminds us that Jesus is patient. Jesus is kind. Jesus seeks the hurting lamb. Washing our feet on Holy Thursday, Jesus, humbly, addresses our needs. In this spirit, we are to serve others in the name of Jesus.
As a suggestion, a way to seek the balance between two different opinions is to focus on one’s place or mission in the Mystical Body of Christ and then bring love, the greatest of gifts, to the person you love with all your heart. That is the theory.
In practice, one may have to use a personal gift that has been set aside for legitimate reasons. I am not about to discuss the pros and cons of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal within the Catholic Church. What I want to do is to remind you that praying in Tongues is one of our personal ways of praying to God. It is independent of agreement with this or that of the Catholic Renewal. Its use does not depend on a commitment to this or that. One is free to use it at any time. It is a permanent gift, used or not.
Touch is also independent. One can view it as a “laying of hands” or simply the communication of love. Your wife could very well see it as a healing gift from God. Never underestimate the power of God to work through us in ways different from what we imagine. We may not consider ourselves as having the gift of healing. But is God really bound to that? Sometimes, we may have to say to God that frankly we do not agree with this or that in the Catholic Renewal. Then, we need to say – but here is my hand and here is my voice, please use them as You wish.
One of the unique things about praying in Tongues is that we have to freely yield our speech mechanism to the Holy Spirit. Here is a thought which may or may not work in your situation. When in a discussion about the current Catholic Charismatic Renewal, go back to the early days and recall committing one’s life to Our Lord. Consider that it is possible to have the same commitment and a similar giving of our voice to the Holy Spirit in English. Too often prayer is lip service. Sometimes we need to pray with our whole body, tears and all, regardless of whether it is in English or Tongues.
I can understand that you may have difficulty with praying in Tongues out loud during this period in your life… You can pray in Tongues with no sound. It is still a matter of letting your speech mechanisms relax. One may feel the tongue or lips barely moving, but there is no vocal breath. In a sense, the sounds are in one’s mind instead of the usual words. This may or may not be the same for everyone. I only speak from my own experience and yes, I did check to make sure that praying “quietly” is possible.
In any case, there is always some kind of compromise. Perhaps, “laying your hands” can be used because in any case touch can be healing in the sense that touch is comforting. Perhaps, you can ask permission to pray out loud in English because prayer is prayer and is not limited to one means.
1 Corinthians 13: 13, but the greatest of these is love.