C
Cari
Guest
Ok, one more time into the fray-
It seems to me that the charismatic gifts, healing, prophecy, and speaking/praying in tongues are all ones that, by their very nature, give concrete “proof” of God. And for a good deal of people, they need and want that proof, no matter how deeply buried the desire is.
Now, healing and prophecy are (more or less) easily proven or disproven. Person still sick? Gift of healing disproven. Prophecy not made manifest/at odds with Church teachings? Gift of prophecy disproven.
But the Gift of Tongues…ahhh…now there’s one that isn’t so easily proven or disproven. Someone speaks in an unknown vocabulary, but seems to use real words from known languages- could be real, could be fake (even if not deliberately faked. I’m sure most of us, for example, have heard Christ called “Christi”, or, depending on your geographical location, random words from other languages. Living where I do, I’ve picked up a fair amount of random Spanish). Someone speaks in a completely non-human language? Could be the tongue of angels. Could be random “gibberish”, to use the word from the OP’s title.
Point is, with tongues, it can’t be immediately or obviously disproven like the other charismatic gifts. And I think it is this reason that it is so appealing to so many people. On a deep level, it would satisfy some people’s need for proof of God, in a manner that isn’t easy to discount.
I do know that there are some people who are more easily influenced by their surroundings than others. Take hypnosis, for example. It is easier to induce an altered state in some people than in others. Some people simply cannot be hypnotized. Glossolalia (which I know some will argue is different from speaking in tongues) has been studied by linguists, and has revealed that English-speaking people’s glossolalia sounds different from Russian-speaking, or Japanese-speaking (etc.) glossolalia, that is: they follow the basic speech patterns of their native tongue.
However, it has also been observed that, despite differences in phenomes, all glossolalia, no matter what context it occurs in, follows the same basic patterns, intonation, rhythm, etc. That means that Christians, in the middle of a praise and worship service exibit glossolalia no different in structure than people conducting, say, a voodoo ritual. (meta-religion.com/Linguistics/Glossolalia/contemporary_linguistic_study.htm)
This leads to some immediate questions:
It seems to me that the charismatic gifts, healing, prophecy, and speaking/praying in tongues are all ones that, by their very nature, give concrete “proof” of God. And for a good deal of people, they need and want that proof, no matter how deeply buried the desire is.
Now, healing and prophecy are (more or less) easily proven or disproven. Person still sick? Gift of healing disproven. Prophecy not made manifest/at odds with Church teachings? Gift of prophecy disproven.
But the Gift of Tongues…ahhh…now there’s one that isn’t so easily proven or disproven. Someone speaks in an unknown vocabulary, but seems to use real words from known languages- could be real, could be fake (even if not deliberately faked. I’m sure most of us, for example, have heard Christ called “Christi”, or, depending on your geographical location, random words from other languages. Living where I do, I’ve picked up a fair amount of random Spanish). Someone speaks in a completely non-human language? Could be the tongue of angels. Could be random “gibberish”, to use the word from the OP’s title.
Point is, with tongues, it can’t be immediately or obviously disproven like the other charismatic gifts. And I think it is this reason that it is so appealing to so many people. On a deep level, it would satisfy some people’s need for proof of God, in a manner that isn’t easy to discount.
I do know that there are some people who are more easily influenced by their surroundings than others. Take hypnosis, for example. It is easier to induce an altered state in some people than in others. Some people simply cannot be hypnotized. Glossolalia (which I know some will argue is different from speaking in tongues) has been studied by linguists, and has revealed that English-speaking people’s glossolalia sounds different from Russian-speaking, or Japanese-speaking (etc.) glossolalia, that is: they follow the basic speech patterns of their native tongue.
However, it has also been observed that, despite differences in phenomes, all glossolalia, no matter what context it occurs in, follows the same basic patterns, intonation, rhythm, etc. That means that Christians, in the middle of a praise and worship service exibit glossolalia no different in structure than people conducting, say, a voodoo ritual. (meta-religion.com/Linguistics/Glossolalia/contemporary_linguistic_study.htm)
This leads to some immediate questions:
- Is all human language so similar at its heart that our brain is hardwired to recognize and recreate its patterns and flow on a subconcious level? (could explain why all glossolalia sounds similar- it is the creation of the human brain, which understands language in a particular manner)
- Does the Holy Spirit give its gifts to those worshipping false gods and demons as well as those worshipping the One True God? (could explain why all glossolalia sounds the same, as its from the same source, but would beg the question- why would the Holy Spirit bestow these gifts in a context that doesn’t glorify God?)
- Is some of it genuine manifestations of the Holy Spirit, and others the subconcious result of a yearning on behalf of the speaker? (but why then, no difference in the sound patterns of glossolalia?)