M
Mysty101
Guest
First of all there is a difference between speaking in tongues & praying in tongues
ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ34.HTM
He is not preaching against tongues here; rather, he is stressing and extolling the other gifts which edify the Church and not just the utterer (see, e.g., 1 Cor 14:2-3,12-19; many others). One might contend that Paul was rebuking excess and corruption with regard to the gifts (especially tongues) - just as the Catholic Church and people like myself (in my apologist role) have been doing. I was criticizing the “name-it-claim-it” charismatic heresy way back in 1982 (as a Protestant evangelical charismatic, attending the Assemblies of God myself). So we charismatics well understand that there are excesses in our movement, and police it ourselves.
Paul was speaking to the Corinthians. You cannot apply this specific statement to Charismatics today.
Romans is describing a prayer form–Corinthians is instructing a particular group
Footnotes from the NAB
8 [23-25] Paul projects the possible missionary effect of two hypothetical liturgical experiences, one consisting wholly of tongues, the other entirely of prophecy. Uninstructed (idiotai): the term may simply mean people who do not speak or understand tongues, as in 1 Cor 14:16, where it seems to designate Christians. But coupled with the term “unbelievers” it may be another way of designating those who have not been initiated into the community of faith; some believe it denotes a special class of non-Christians who are close to the community, such as catechumens. Unbelievers (apistoi): he has shifted from the inner-community perspective of 1 Cor 14:22; the term here designates non-Christians (cf 1 Cor 6:6; 7:15; 10:27).
ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ34.HTM
Obviously, St. Paul is a “charismatic.” Note that the gift of tongues is specifically defined as not a known language. What happened in Acts 2 at Pentecost (other known languages) may also be included in Paul’s “various kinds of tongues,”
tongues (i.e., an unknown prayer language) altogether. That this is not the case is seen clearly from several verses above - especially 1 Cor 14:5, and also in 1 Cor 14:18 (see below).Again, Paul defines tongues as an unknown language, not simply a language unknown to the particular hearer. Unfortunately, this passage and similar ones have been wrested from context to “prove” that somehow Paul is against
He is not preaching against tongues here; rather, he is stressing and extolling the other gifts which edify the Church and not just the utterer (see, e.g., 1 Cor 14:2-3,12-19; many others). One might contend that Paul was rebuking excess and corruption with regard to the gifts (especially tongues) - just as the Catholic Church and people like myself (in my apologist role) have been doing. I was criticizing the “name-it-claim-it” charismatic heresy way back in 1982 (as a Protestant evangelical charismatic, attending the Assemblies of God myself). So we charismatics well understand that there are excesses in our movement, and police it ourselves.
Paul was speaking to the Corinthians. You cannot apply this specific statement to Charismatics today.
Romans is describing a prayer form–Corinthians is instructing a particular group
Footnotes from the NAB
). Paul compresses Isaiah’s text and makes God address his people directly. Equating tongues with foreign languages (cf 1 Cor 14:10-11), Paul concludes from Isaiah that tongues are a sign not for those who believe, i.e., not a mark of God’s pleasure for those who listen to him but a mark of his displeasure with those in the community who are faithless, who have not heeded the message that he has sent through the prophets.[20-22] The Corinthians pride themselves on tongues as a sign of God’s favor, a means of direct communication with him (2.28). To challenge them to a more mature appraisal, Paul draws from scripture a less flattering explanation of what speaking in tongues may signify. Isaiah threatened the people that if they failed to listen to their prophets, the Lord would speak to them (in punishment) through the lips of Assyrian conquerors (Isaiah 28:11-12
8 [23-25] Paul projects the possible missionary effect of two hypothetical liturgical experiences, one consisting wholly of tongues, the other entirely of prophecy. Uninstructed (idiotai): the term may simply mean people who do not speak or understand tongues, as in 1 Cor 14:16, where it seems to designate Christians. But coupled with the term “unbelievers” it may be another way of designating those who have not been initiated into the community of faith; some believe it denotes a special class of non-Christians who are close to the community, such as catechumens. Unbelievers (apistoi): he has shifted from the inner-community perspective of 1 Cor 14:22; the term here designates non-Christians (cf 1 Cor 6:6; 7:15; 10:27).
I was asked a lot of questions by Protestants who suddenly were very interested in everything Catholic. One lady saw the sprinkling of the body with holy water, and having heard that it had not been embalmed, concluded that the cardinals were sprinkling it to keep it fresh, like a grocer sprinkles supermarket vegetables!!!