I’m glad it was pointed out early that Penecost per the bible was a phenomena of hearing.
I agree it is forgotten often.
I had a priest friend once try and ‘teach’ me to speak in tongues. It didn’t seem possible without being forced.
Seeing people ‘turn it on’ like it was something they control was common (including during my lesson).
I don’t see it practiced much anymore.
Take care,
Mike
There are many different kinds of tongues. On Pentecost, those present each heard the Gospel in their own language.
Wha I think you are talking about that the priest was trying to help you develop is a private prayer language. Yes, of course a person “turns it on” because we are in control of when we pray. Does anyone ever burst out in a Rosary against their will? Honestly! If we do not yield our will, Spirit, tongue and lips to God, then of course the Holy Spirit cannot pray through us.
So if I am following things correctly, then the modern practice of speaking in tongues couldn’t properly be classified as language. What I mean is there does not seem to be a grammar or corpus of words or phrases that have specific meaning.
I will concede that there is some babble, but of course tongues are intended to be a discernable language. It may be a language of angels, rather than human.
Given that multiple people can hear the same utterances and get different messages would imply that their is not a definitive way to decode the utterances, but rather requires both speaker and interpreter to receive gifts of the Holy Spirit.
There are some tongues that have been interpreted with cogent messages given in a language unknown to the speaker. I am not sure what you mean about “different messages”. It seems clear that, on Pentecost, all the hearers heard the same message.
But I agree with your conclusion, that both the speaker and the interpreter must receive and exercise the gifts of the Spirit, and we all make mistakes in this regard from time to time.
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Since only 2 people can directly participate in passing the message, I am stuggling to understand why God would give anyone these gifts as expressed in current usage.
The rule that people are to speak one at a time is about keeping order in the service. This does not mean that many others present do not also get the message. In fact, a message that is authentic will be received and understood by the majority present, since it resonantes with one’s spirit as True.
It seems to be very open to abuse.
Yes, anything that involves the supernatural will be very open to abuse.
It also begs the question of why it was rare before 100 years ago, but now large communities have been inundated with these gifts.
Had you considered that God decided we needed a renewal in this area?
Xenoglossia makes sense to allow someone to spread the Gospel, but the repetitive and unintelligible utterances of today seem to be counter productive.
Yes, I agree, especially in cases of loud, raucous, and intense practices that are contrary to the instructions that were given to the Church.
Given the limitations of the modern phenomenon, what is the stated reason or purpose for God gifting people with tongues that are non deterministic?
I am not sure I understand the question. What is “non-deterministic” mean in this context? Since there are many varieties of tonges, there are many different reasons.
To be honest, I’m not even sure that the events of Acts was xenoglossia, since it almost seemed to be something like instant translation into multiple languages (i.e. I speak Aramaic, but person A hears Greek, person B hears Persian, and person C hears Urdu and all 3 hear the same message.) Xenoglossia implies that I think I’m speaking English, but am actually speaking French. That does not mean that someone who speaks Zulu could understand me.
Yes, I think this miracle was on the side of the hearers.