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Speaking in tongues

Speaking in tongues, also known as glossolalia (Greek: γλωσσολαλία), is an activity or practice in which people utter words or speech-like sounds, often thought by believers to be languages unknown to the speaker. One definition used by linguists is the fluid vocalizing of speech-like syllables that lack any readily comprehended meaning, in some cases as part of religious practice in which some believe it to be a divine language unknown to the speaker.[2] Glossolalia is practiced in Pentecostal and charismatic Christianity,[3][4] as well as in other religions.[5][6]

Icon depicting the Theotokos together with the apostles filled with the Holy Spirit, indicated by "cloven tongues like as of fire[1]" above their heads.

Sometimes a distinction is made between "glossolalia" and "xenolalia" or "xenoglossy", which specifically relates to the belief that the language being spoken is a natural language previously unknown to the speaker.[7]

Etymology

Glossolalia is a borrowing of the Greek: γλωσσολαλία, translit. glossolalía, which is a compound of the Greek: γλῶσσα, translit. glossa, meaning "tongue" or "language"[8] and Greek: λαλέω, translit. laleō, "to speak, talk, chat, prattle, or to make a sound".[9] The Greek expression (in various forms) appears in the New Testament in the books of Acts and First Corinthians. In Acts 2, the followers of Christ receive the Holy Spirit and speak in the languages of at least fifteen countries or ethnic groups.

The exact phrase speaking in tongues has been used at least since the translation of the New Testament into Middle English in the Wycliffe Bible in the 14th century.[10] Frederic Farrar first used the word glossolalia in 1879.[11]

Linguistics

In 1972, William J. Samarin, a linguist from the University of Toronto, published a thorough assessment of Pentecostal glossolalia that became a classic work on its linguistic characteristics.[12] His assessment was based on a large sample of glossolalia recorded in public and private Christian meetings in Italy, the Netherlands, Jamaica, Canada, and the United States over the course of five years; his wide range of subjects included the Puerto Ricans of the Bronx, the snake handlers of the Appalachians and the spiritual Christians from Russia in Los Angeles (Pryguny, Dukh-i-zhizniki).

Samarin found that glossolalic speech does resemble human language in some respects. The speaker uses accent, rhythm, intonation and pauses to break up the speech into distinct units. Each unit is itself made up of syllables, the syllables being formed from consonants and vowels found in a language known to the speaker:

It is verbal behaviour that consists of using a certain number of consonants and vowels ... in a limited number of syllables that in turn are organized into larger units that are taken apart and rearranged pseudogrammatically ... with variations in pitch, volume, speed and intensity.[13]

[Glossolalia] consists of strings of syllables, made up of sounds taken from all those that the speaker knows, put together more or less haphazardly but emerging nevertheless as word-like and sentence-like units because of realistic, language-like rhythm and melody.[14]

That the sounds are taken from the set of sounds already known to the speaker is confirmed by others. Felicitas Goodman, a psychological anthropologist and linguist, also found that the speech of glossolalists reflected the patterns of speech of the speaker's native language.[15] These findings were confirmed by Kavan (2004).[16]

Samarin found that the resemblance to human language was merely on the surface and so concluded that glossolalia is "only a facade of language".[17] He reached this conclusion because the syllable string did not form words, the stream of speech was not internally organized, and – most importantly of all – there was no systematic relationship between units of speech and concepts. Humans use language to communicate but glossolalia does not. Therefore, he concluded that glossolalia is not "a specimen of human language because it is neither internally organized nor systematically related to the world man perceives".[17] On the basis of his linguistic analysis, Samarin defined Pentecostal glossolalia as "meaningless but phonologically structured human utterance, believed by the speaker to be a real language but bearing no systematic resemblance to any natural language, living or dead".[18]

Felicitas Goodman studied a number of Pentecostal communities in the United States, the Caribbean, and Mexico; these included English-, Spanish- and Mayan-speaking groups. She compared what she found with recordings of non-Christian rituals from Africa, Borneo, Indonesia and Japan. She took into account both the segmental structure (such as sounds, syllables, phrases) and the supra-segmental elements (rhythm, accent, intonation) and concluded that there was no distinction between what was practised by the Pentecostal Protestants and the followers of other religions.[19]

History

Classical antiquity

It was a commonplace idea within the Ancient world that divine beings spoke languages different from human languages, and historians of religion have identified references to esoteric speech in Greco-Roman literature that resemble glossolalia, sometimes explained as angelic or divine language.[citation needed] An example is the account in the Testament of Job, a non-canonical elaboration of the Book of Job, where the daughters of Job are described as being given sashes enabling them to speak and sing in angelic languages.[20]

According to Dale B. Martin, glossolalia was accorded high status in the ancient world due to its association with the divine. Alexander of Abonoteichus may have exhibited glossolalia during his episodes of prophetic ecstasy.[21] Neoplatonist philosopher Iamblichus linked glossolalia to prophecy, writing that prophecy was divine spirit possession that "emits words which are not understood by those that utter them; for they pronounce them, as it is said, with an insane mouth (mainomenό stomati) and are wholly subservient, and entirely yield themselves to the energy of the predominating God".[22]

In his writings on early Christianity, the Greek philosopher Celsus includes an account of Christian glossolalia. Celsus describes prophecies made by several Christians in Palestine and Phoenicia of which he writes, "Having brandished these threats they then go on to add incomprehensible, incoherent, and utterly obscure utterances, the meaning of which no intelligent person could discover: for they are meaningless and nonsensical, and give a chance for any fool or sorcerer to take the words in whatever sense he likes".[21]

References to speaking in tongues by the Church fathers are rare. Except for Irenaeus' 2nd-century reference to many in the church speaking all kinds of languages "through the Spirit", and Tertullian's reference in 207 AD to the spiritual gift of interpretation of tongues being encountered in his day, there are no other known first-hand accounts of glossolalia, and very few second-hand accounts among their writings.[23]

1100 to 1900

  • 12th century – Bernard of Clairvaux explained that speaking tongues be no longer present because there be greater miracles – the transformed lives of believers.[24]
  • 12th century – Hildegard of Bingen is said to have possessed the gift of visions and prophecy and to have been able to speak and write in Latin without having learned the language.[25]
  • 1265 – Thomas Aquinas wrote about the gift of tongues in the New Testament, which he understood to be an ability to speak every language, given for the purposes of missionary work. He explained that Christ did not have this gift because his mission was to the Jews, "nor does each one of the faithful now speak save in one tongue"; for "no one speaks in the tongues of all nations, because the Church herself already speaks the languages of all nations".[26]
  • 15th century – The Moravians are referred to by detractors as having spoken in tongues. John Roche, a contemporary critic, claimed that the Moravians "commonly broke into some disconnected Jargon, which they often passed upon the vulgar, 'as the exuberant and resistless Evacuations of the Spirit'".[27]
  • 17th century – The French Prophets: The Camisards also spoke sometimes in languages that were unknown: "Several persons of both Sexes", James Du Bois of Montpellier recalled, "I have heard in their Extasies pronounce certain words, which seem'd to the Standers-by, to be some Foreign Language". These utterances were sometimes accompanied by the gift of interpretation exercised, in Du Bois' experience, by the same person who had spoken in tongues.[28][29]
  • 17th century – Early Quakers, such as Edward Burrough, make mention of tongues-speaking in their meetings: "We spoke with new tongues, as the Lord gave us utterance, and His Spirit led us".[30]
  • 1817 – In Germany, Gustav von Below, an aristocratic officer of the Prussian Guard, and his brothers, founded a religious movement based on their estates in Pomerania, which may have included speaking in tongues.[31]
  • 19th century – Edward Irving and the Catholic Apostolic Church. Edward Irving, a minister in the Church of Scotland, writes of a woman who would "speak at great length, and with superhuman strength, in an unknown tongue, to the great astonishment of all who heard, and to her own great edification and enjoyment in God".[32] Irving further stated that "tongues are a great instrument for personal edification, however mysterious it may seem to us".[33]
  • 19th century – The history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), contains extensive references to the practice of speaking in tongues by Brigham Young, Joseph Smith and many others.[34][35] Sidney Rigdon had disagreements with Alexander Campbell regarding speaking in tongues, and later joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Speaking in tongues was recorded in contemporary sources, both hostile and sympathetic to Mormonism, by at least 1830.[36] The practice was soon widespread amongst Mormons, with many rank and file church members believing they were speaking the language of Adam; some of the hostility towards Mormons stemmed from those of other faiths regarding speaking in tongues unfavorably, especially when practiced by children.[36] At the 1836 dedication of the Kirtland Temple the dedicatory prayer asked that God grant them the gift of tongues and at the end of the service Brigham Young spoke in tongues, another elder interpreted it and then gave his own exhortation in tongues. Many other worship experiences in the Kirtland Temple prior to and after the dedication included references to people speaking and interpreting tongues. In describing the beliefs of the church in the Wentworth letter (1842), Joseph Smith identified a belief of the "gift of tongues" and "interpretation of tongues". The practice of glossolalia by the Latter-day Saints was widespread but after an initial burst of enthusiastic growth circa 1830–34, seems to have been somewhat more restrained than in many other contemporary religious movements.[36] Young, Smith, and numerous other early leaders frequently cautioned against the public exercise of glossolalia unless there be someone who could exercise the corresponding spiritual gift of interpretation of tongues, so that listeners could be edified by what had been said. Although the Latter-day Saints believe that speaking in tongues and the interpretation of tongues is alive and well in the Church, modern Mormons are much more likely to point to the way in which LDS missionaries are trained and learn foreign languages quickly, and are able to communicate rapidly on their missions, as evidence of the manifestation of this gift. This interpretation stems from a 1900 General Conference sermon by Joseph F. Smith which discouraged glossolalia; subsequent leaders echoed this recommendation for about a decade afterwards and subsequently the practice had largely died out amongst Mormons by the 1930s and '40s.[36]

20th century

 
Headline about the "Weird babel of tongues" and other behavior at Azusa Street, from a 1906 Los Angeles Times newspaper.

During the 20th century, glossolalia primarily became associated with Pentecostalism and the later charismatic movement. Preachers in the Holiness Movement preachers Charles Parham and William Seymour are credited as co-founders of the movement. Parham and Seymour taught that "baptism of the Holy Spirit was not the blessing of sanctification but rather a third work of grace that was accompanied by the experience of tongues".[4] It was Parham who formulated the doctrine of "initial evidence". After studying the Bible, Parham came to the conclusion that speaking in tongues was the Bible evidence that one had received the baptism with the Holy Spirit.

In 1900, Parham opened Bethel Bible College in Topeka, Kansas, America, where he taught initial evidence, a Charismatic belief about how to initiate the practice. During a service on 1 January 1901, a student named Agnes Ozman asked for prayer and the laying on of hands to specifically ask God to fill her with the Holy Spirit. She became the first of many students to experience glossolalia, in the first hours of the 20th century. Parham followed within the next few days. Parham called his new movement the apostolic faith. In 1905, he moved to Houston and opened a Bible school there. One of his students was William Seymour, an African-American preacher. In 1906, Seymour traveled to Los Angeles where his preaching ignited the Azusa Street Revival. This revival is considered the birth of the global Pentecostal movement. According to the first issue of William Seymour's newsletter, The Apostolic Faith, from 1906:

A Mohammedan, a Soudanese by birth, a man who is an interpreter and speaks sixteen languages, came into the meetings at Azusa Street and the Lord gave him messages which none but himself could understand. He identified, interpreted and wrote a number of the languages.[37]

Parham and his early followers believed that speaking in tongues was xenoglossia, and some followers traveled to foreign countries and tried to use the gift to share the Gospel with non-English-speaking people. From the time of the Azusa Street revival and among early participants in the Pentecostal movement, there were many accounts of individuals hearing their own languages spoken 'in tongues'. The majority of Pentecostals and Charismatics consider speaking in tongues to primarily be divine, or the "language of angels", rather than human languages.[38] In the years following the Azusa Street revival Pentecostals who went to the mission field found that they were unable to speak in the language of the local inhabitants at will when they spoke in tongues in strange lands.[39]

The revival at Azusa Street lasted until around 1915. From it grew many new Pentecostal churches as people visited the services in Los Angeles and took their newfound beliefs to communities around the United States and abroad. During the 20th century, glossolalia became an important part of the identity of these religious groups. During the 1960s, the charismatic movement within the mainline Protestant churches and among charismatic Roman Catholics adopted some Pentecostal beliefs, and the practice of glossolalia spread to other Christian denominations. The discussion regarding tongues has permeated many branches of Protestantism, particularly since the widespread charismatic movement in the 1960s. Many books have been published either defending[40] or attacking[41] the practice.

Christianity

Theological explanations

In Christianity, a supernatural explanation for glossolalia is advocated by some and rejected by others. Proponents of each viewpoint use the biblical writings and historical arguments to support their positions.

  • Glossolalists could, apart from those practicing glossolalia, also mean all those Christians who believe that the Pentecostal/charismatic glossolalia practiced today is the "speaking in tongues" described in the New Testament. They believe that it is a miraculous charism or spiritual gift. Glossolalists claim that these tongues can be both real, unlearned languages (i.e., xenoglossia)[42][43] as well as a "language of the spirit", a "heavenly language", or perhaps the language of angels.[44]
  • Cessationists believe that all the miraculous gifts of the Holy Spirit ceased to occur early in Christian history, and therefore that the speaking in tongues as practiced by Charismatic Christians is the learned utterance of non-linguistic syllables. According to this belief, it is neither xenoglossia nor miraculous, but rather taught behavior, possibly self-induced. These believe that what the New Testament described as "speaking in tongues" was xenoglossia, a miraculous spiritual gift through which the speaker could communicate in natural languages not previously studied.
  • A third position claims that glossolalia does exist, but it is a form of prelest, not the "speaking in tongues" described in the New Testament. It believes glossolalia is part of a mediumistic technique where practitioners are manifesting genuine spiritual power, but this power is not necessarily of the Holy Spirit.[5]
  • A fourth position conceivably exists, which believes the practice of "glossolalia" to be a folk practice and different from the legitimate New Testament spiritual gift of speaking/interpreting real languages. It is therefore not out of a belief that "miracles have ceased" (i.e., cessationism) that causes this group to discredit the supernatural origins of particular modern expressions of "glossolalia", but it is rather out of a belief that glossolalists have misunderstood Scripture and wrongly attributed to the Holy Spirit something that may be explained naturalistically.[45]

Biblical practice

There are five places in the New Testament where speaking in tongues is referred to explicitly:

  • Mark 16:17, which records the instructions of Christ to the apostles, including his description that "they will speak with new tongues" as a sign that would follow "them that believe" in him.
  • Acts 2, which describes an occurrence of speaking in tongues in Jerusalem at Pentecost, though with various interpretations. Specifically, "every man heard them speak in his own language" and wondered "how hear we every man in our own tongue, wherein we were born?"
  • Acts 10:46, when the household of Cornelius in Caesarea spoke in tongues, and those present compared it to the speaking in tongues that occurred at Pentecost.
  • Acts 19:6, when a group of approximately a dozen men spoke in tongues in Ephesus as they received the Holy Spirit while the apostle Paul laid his hands upon them.
  • 1 Cor 12, 13, 14, where Paul discusses speaking in "various kinds of tongues" as part of his wider discussion of the gifts of the Spirit; his remarks shed some light on his own speaking in tongues as well as how the gift of speaking in tongues was to be used in the church.

Other verses by inference may be considered to refer to "speaking in tongues", such as Isaiah 28:11, Romans 8:26 and Jude 20.

The biblical account of Pentecost in the second chapter of the book of Acts describes the sound of a mighty rushing wind and "divided tongues like fire" coming to rest on the apostles. The text further describes that "they were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to speak in other languages". It goes on to say in verses 5–11 that when the Apostles spoke, each person in attendance "heard their own language being spoken". Therefore, the gift of speaking in tongues refers to the Apostles' speaking languages that the people listening heard as "them telling in our own tongues the mighty works of God". Glossolalists and cessationists both recognize this as xenoglossia, a miraculous ability that marked their baptism in the Holy Spirit. Something similar (although perhaps not xenoglossia) took place on at least two subsequent occasions, in Caesarea and Ephesus.

Glossolalists and cessationists generally agree that the primary purpose of the gift of speaking in tongues was to mark the Holy Spirit being poured out. At Pentecost the Apostle Peter declared that this gift, which was making some in the audience ridicule the disciples as drunks, be the fulfilment of the prophecy of Joel, which described that God would pour out his Spirit on all flesh (Acts 2:17).[43]

Despite these commonalities, there are significant variations in interpretation.

  • Universal. The traditional Pentecostal view is that every Christian should expect to be baptized in the Holy Spirit, the distinctive mark of which is glossolalia.[46] While most Protestants agree that baptism in the Holy Spirit is integral to being a Christian, others[47] believe that it is not separable from conversion and no longer marked by glossolalia. Pentecostals appeal to the declaration of the Apostle Peter at Pentecost, that "the gift of the Holy Spirit" was "for you and for your children and for all who are far off" (Acts 2:38–39). Cessationists reply that the gift of speaking in tongues was never for all (1 Cor 12:30). In response to those who say that the baptism in the Holy Spirit be not a separate experience from conversion, Pentecostals appeal to the question asked by the Apostle Paul to the Ephesian believers "Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?" (Acts 19:2).
  • One gift. Different aspects of speaking in tongues appear in Acts and 1 Corinthians, such that the Assemblies of God declare that the gift in Acts "is the same in essence as the gift of tongues" in 1 Corinthians "but different in purpose and use".[46] They distinguish between (private) speech in tongues when receiving the gift of the Spirit, and (public) speech in tongues for the benefit of the church. Others assert that the gift in Acts was "not a different phenomenon" but the same gift being displayed under varying circumstances.[48] The same description – "speaking in tongues" – is used in both Acts and 1 Corinthians, and in both cases the speech is in an unlearned language.
  • Direction. The New Testament describes tongues largely as speech addressed to God, but also as something that can potentially be interpreted into human language, thereby "edifying the hearers" (1 Cor 14:5, 13). At Pentecost and Caesarea the speakers were praising God (Acts 2:11; 10:46). Paul referred to praying, singing praise, and giving thanks in tongues (1 Cor 14:14–17), as well as to the interpretation of tongues (1 Cor 14:5), and instructed those speaking in tongues to pray for the ability to interpret their tongues so that others could understand them (1 Cor 14:13). While some people limit speaking in tongues to speech addressed to God – "prayer or praise",[42] others claim that speaking in tongues be the revelation from God to the church, and when interpreted into human language by those embued with the gift of interpretation of tongues for the benefit of others present, may be considered equivalent to prophecy.[49]
  • Music. Musical interludes of glossolalia are sometimes described as singing in the Spirit. Some hold that singing in the Spirit is identified with singing in tongues in 1 Corinthians 14:13–19,[50][51] which they hold to be "spiritual or spirited singing", as opposed to "communicative or impactive singing" which Paul refers to as "singing with the understanding".[52]
  • Sign for unbelievers (1 Cor 14:22). Some assume that tongues are "a sign for unbelievers that they might believe",[53] and so advocate it as a means of evangelism. Others point out that Paul quotes Isaiah to show that "when God speaks to people in language they cannot understand, it is quite evidently a sign of God's judgment"; so if unbelievers are baffled by a church service they cannot understand because tongues are spoken without being interpreted, that is a "sign of God's attitude", "a sign of judgment".[54] Some identify the tongues in Acts 2 as the primary example of tongues as signs for unbelievers.
  • Comprehension. Some say that speaking in tongues was "not understood by the speaker".[42] Others assert that "the tongues-speaker normally understood his own foreign-language message".[55] This last comment seems to have been made by someone confusing the "gift of tongues" with the "gift of the interpretation of tongues" , which is specified as a different gift in the New Testament, but one that can be given to a person who also has the gift of tongues. In that case, a person understands a message in tongues that he has previously spoken in an unknown language.

Pentecostal and charismatic practices

Baptism with the Holy Spirit is regarded by the Holiness Pentecostals (the oldest branch of Pentecostalism) as being the third work of grace, following the new birth (first work of grace) and entire sanctification (second work of grace).[56][4] Holiness Pentecostals teach that this third work of grace is accompanied with glossolalia.[56][4]

Because Pentecostal and charismatic beliefs are not monolithic, there is not complete theological agreement on speaking in tongues.[citation needed] Generally, followers believe that speaking in tongues is a spiritual gift that can be manifested as either a human language or a heavenly supernatural language in three ways:[57]

  • The "sign of tongues" refers to xenoglossia, wherein followers believe someone is speaking a language they have never learned.
  • The "gift of tongues" refers to a glossolalic utterance spoken by an individual and addressed to a congregation of, typically, other believers.
  • "Praying in the spirit" is typically used to refer to glossolalia as part of personal prayer.[58]

Many Pentecostals and charismatics quote Paul's words in 1 Corinthians 14 which established guidelines on the public use of glossolalia in the church at Corinth although the exegesis of this passage and the extent to which these instructions are followed is a matter of academic debate.[59]

The gift of tongues is often referred to as a "message in tongues".[60] Practitioners believe that this use of glossolalia requires an interpretation so that the gathered congregation can understand the message, which is accomplished by the interpretation of tongues.[citation needed] There are two schools of thought concerning the nature of a message in tongues:

  • One school of thought believes it is always directed to God as prayer, praise, or thanksgiving but is spoken in for the hearing and edification of the congregation.[citation needed]
  • The other school of thought believes that a message in tongues can be a prophetic utterance inspired by the Holy Spirit.[61] In this case, the speaker delivers a message to the congregation on behalf of God.[citation needed]

In addition to praying in the Spirit, many Pentecostal and charismatic churches practice what is known as singing in the Spirit.[62][63][64]

Interpretation of tongues

In Christian theology, the interpretation of tongues is one of the spiritual gifts listed in 1 Corinthians 12. This gift is used in conjunction with that of the gift of tongues – the supernatural ability to speak in a language (tongue) unknown to the speaker. The gift of interpretation is the supernatural enablement to express in an intelligible language an utterance spoken in an unknown tongue. This is not learned but imparted by the Holy Spirit; therefore, it should not be confused with the acquired skill of language interpretation. While cessationist Christians believe that this miraculous charism has ceased, Charismatic and Pentecostal Christians believe that this gift continues to operate within the church.[65] Much of what is known about this gift was recorded by St. Paul in 1 Corinthians 14. In this passage, guidelines for the proper use of the gift of tongues were given. In order for the gift of tongues to be beneficial to the edification of the church, such supernatural utterances were to be interpreted into the language of the gathered Christians. If no one among the gathered Christians possessed the gift of interpretation, then the gift of tongues was not to be publicly exercised. Those possessing the gift of tongues were encouraged to pray for the ability to interpret.[65]

Non-Christian practice

Other religious groups have been observed to practice some form of theopneustic glossolalia. It is perhaps most commonly in Paganism, Shamanism, and other mediumistic religious practices.[5] In Japan, the God Light Association believed that glossolalia could cause adherents to recall past lives.[6]

Glossolalia has been postulated as an explanation for the Voynich manuscript.[66]

In the 19th century, Spiritism was developed by the work of Allan Kardec, and the practice was seen as one of the self-evident manifestations of spirits. Spiritists argued that some cases were actually cases of xenoglossia.

Medical research

Glossolalia is classified as a non-neurogenic language disorder.[67] Most people exhibiting glossolalia do not have a neuropsychiatric disorder.[68]

Neuroimaging of brain activity during glossolalia does not show activity in the language areas of the brain.[68][69] In other words, it may be characterized by a specific brain activity[70][71] and it can be a learned behaviour.[72][70]

A 1973 experimental study highlighted the existence of two basic types of glossolalia: a static form which tends to a somewhat coaction to repetitiveness and a more dynamic one which tends to free association of speech-like elements.[73][70]

A study done by the American Journal of Human Biology found that speaking in tongues is associated with both a reduction in circulatory cortisol, and enhancements in alpha-amylase enzyme activity – two common biomarkers of stress reduction that can be measured in saliva.[74] Several sociological studies report various social benefits of engaging in Pentecostal glossolalia,[75][76] such as an increase in self-confidence.[76]

As of April 2021, further studies are needed to corroborate the 1980s view of glossolaly with more sensitive measures of outcome, by using the more recent techniques of neuroimaging.[70][better source needed]

Criticism

Speakers of glossolalia are capable of speaking in tongues on cue, contrary to the claim that it is a spontaneous event.[77]

Analysis of glossolalics reveals a pseudo-language that lacks consistent syntax, semantic meaning, usually rhythmic or poetic in nature and is similar to the speaker's native tongue. Samples of glossolalia shows a lack of consistency needed for meaningful comparison or translation. It also is not used to communicate between fellow glossolalia speakers, although the meaning is usually translated by the leader involved, in line with and supportive of whatever message or teaching had been given that day, in some way giving divine legitimacy to what is said.[78]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Bible Gateway passage: Acts 2:3 – King James Version". Bible Gateway.
  2. ^ "Glossolalian", A Dictionary of Psychology. Edited by Andrew M. Colman. Oxford University Press 2009. Oxford Reference Online. Retrieved 5 August 2011.
  3. ^ Lum, Kathryn Gin; Harvey, Paul (2018). The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Race in American History. Oxford University Press. p. 801. ISBN 978-0190856892. ... would prove influential on the development of black Pentecostalism in the early twentieth century, as glossolalia, or speaking in tongues, would be understood as a third work of grace following Holiness and receipt of the Holy Spirit.
  4. ^ a b c d The Encyclopedia of Christianity. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. 1999. p. 415. ISBN 978-9004116955. While in Houston, Texas, where he had moved his headquarters, Parham came into contact with William Seymour (1870–1922), an African-American Baptist-Holiness preacher. Seymour took from Parham the teaching that the baptism of the Holy Spirit was not the blessing of sanctification but rather a third work of grace that was accompanied by the experience of tongues
  5. ^ a b c Rose, Seraphim (1997). Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future. St Herman Press. p. 137. ISBN 188790400X. There is scarcely to be found an example of "speaking in tongues" in any even nominally Christian context for over 1,600 years after the time of Paul...and yet this "gift" is possessed by numerous shamans and witch doctors of primitive religions, as well as by modern spritistics mediums and the demonically possessed.
  6. ^ a b Whelan, Christal (2007). "Shifting Paradigms and Mediating Media: Redefining a New Religion as "Rational" in Contemporary Society". Nova Religio. 10 (3): 54–72. doi:10.1525/nr.2007.10.3.54.
  7. ^ Cheryl Bridges Johns and Frank Macchia, "Glossolalia", The Encyclopedia of Christianity (Grand Rapids, MI; Leiden, Netherlands: Wm. B. Eerdmans; Brill, 1999–2003), 413.
  8. ^ γλῶσσα, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek–English Lexicon, on Perseus
  9. ^ λαλέω, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek–English Lexicon, on Perseus
  10. ^ Bible Mark 16:17 in Wycliffe's Bible
  11. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed, 1989
  12. ^ Samarin, William J. (1972). Tongues of Men and Angels: The Religious Language of Pentecostalism. New York: Macmillan. OCLC 308527.[page needed]
  13. ^ Samarin, William J. (1972). Tongues of Men and Angels: The Religious Language of Pentecostalism. New York: Macmillan. p. 120. OCLC 308527.
  14. ^ Samarin, William J. (1972). "Sociolinguistic vs. Neurophysiological Explanations for Glossolalia: Comment on Goodman's Paper". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 11 (3): 293–296. doi:10.2307/1384556. JSTOR 1384556.
  15. ^ Goodman, Felicitas D. (1969). "Phonetic Analysis of Glossolalia in Four Cultural Settings". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 8 (2): 227–35. doi:10.2307/1384336. JSTOR 1384336.
  16. ^ New Zealand Linguistic Society: Heather Kavan Massey University: Heather Kavan "We don't know what we're saying, but it's profound"
  17. ^ a b Samarin, William J. (1972). Tongues of Men and Angels: The Religious Language of Pentecostalism. New York: Macmillan. p. 128. OCLC 308527.
  18. ^ Samarin, William J. (1972). Tongues of Men and Angels: The Religious Language of Pentecostalism. New York: Macmillan. p. 2. OCLC 308527.
  19. ^ Goodman, Felicitas D. (1972). Speaking in Tongues: A Cross-Cultural Study in Glossolalia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226303246. OCLC 393056.[page needed]
  20. ^ Martin 1995, pp. 88–89.
  21. ^ a b Martin 1995, p. 90.
  22. ^ Martin 1995, p. 91.
  23. ^ Warfield, Benjamin B. (1918). Counterfeit Miracles. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 10. ISBN 978-0851511665. OCLC 3977281. The writings of the so-called Apostolic Fathers contain no clear and certain allusions to miracle working or to the exercise of the charismatic gifts, contemporaneously with themselves.
  24. ^ "Premier Serrmon Pour Le Jour de L'Ascension. Sur l'Evangile du jour." 7 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine "3. Il y des signes plus certains et des miracles plus salutaires que ceux-là, ce sont les mérites. Et je ne crois pas qu'il soit difficile de savoir en quel sens on doit entendre les miracles dont il est parlé en cet endroit, pour qu'ils soient des signes certains de foi, et par conséquent de salut. En effet, la première oeuvre de la foi, opérant par la charité, c'est la componction de l'âme, car elle chasse évidemment les démons, en déracinant les péchés de notre coeur. Quant aux langues nouvelles que doivent parler les hommes, qui croient en Jésus-Christ, cela a lieu, lorsque le langage du vieil homme cesse de se trouver sur nos lèvres, et que nous ne parlons plus la langue antique de nos premiers parents, qui cherchaient dans des paroles pleines de malice à s'excuser de leurs péchés".
  25. ^ L. Carlyle, May (February 1956). "A Survey of Glossolalia and Related Phenomena in NonChristian Religions". American Anthropologist. 58 (1): 75. doi:10.1525/aa.1956.58.1.02a00060.
  26. ^ Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, Question 176.
  27. ^ Burgess, Stanley M. (1991). "Medieval and Modern Western Churches". In Gary B. McGee (ed.). Initial evidence: historical and biblical perspectives on the Pentecostal doctrine of spirit baptism. Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson Publishers. p. 32. ISBN 978-0943575414. OCLC 24380326.
  28. ^ Lacy, John (1707). A Cry from the Desert. p. 32. OCLC 81008302.
  29. ^ Hamilton, Michael Pollock (1975). The charismatic movement. Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. p. 75. ISBN 978-0802834539. OCLC 1008209.
  30. ^ Burrough, Edward (1831) [1659]. "Epistle to the Reader" in Fox, George. The great mystery of the great whore unfolded; and Antichrist's kingdom revealed unto destruction. The Works of George Fox. 3. p. 13. OCLC 12877488.
  31. ^ Hogue, Richard (2010). Tongues: A Theological History of Christian Glossolalia. Tate Publishing. p. 211.
  32. ^ Irving, Edward (January 1832). "Facts Connected With Recent Manifestations of Spiritual Gifts". Fraser's Magazine. 4 (24): 754–761. Retrieved 9 June 2009.
  33. ^ Carlyle, Gavin, ed. (1865). "On the Gifts of the Holy Ghost". The Collected Writings of Edward Irving (Volume 5 ed.). Alexander Strahan. p. 548. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  34. ^ . www.frontiernet.net. Archived from the original on 17 August 2000.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original (MediaWiki) on 17 October 2008.
  36. ^ a b c d Copeland, Lee. "Speaking in Tongues in the Restoration Churches" (PDF). Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought. 24 (1).
  37. ^ Square brackets indicate faded parts that are no longer readable.
  38. ^ D. Swincer, Tongues: Genuine Biblical Languages: A Careful Construct of the Nature, Purpose, and Operation of the Gift of Tongues for the Church (2016) pp. 88–90[ISBN missing]
  39. ^ Faupel, D. William. Glossolalia as Foreign Language: An Investigation of the Twentieth-Century Pentecostal Claim. . Archived from the original on 29 April 2005. Retrieved 27 April 2005.
  40. ^ Example: Christenson, Laurence, Speaking in tongues: and its significance for the church, Minneapolis, MN : Dimension Books, 1968.[ISBN missing][page needed]
  41. ^ Example: Gromacki, Robert Glenn, The Modern Tongues Movement, Nutley, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1973, ISBN 0875523048 (Originally published 1967)[page needed]
  42. ^ a b c Grudem, Wayne A. (1994). Systematic theology: an introduction to biblical doctrine. Leicester: Inter-Varsity Press. p. 1070. ISBN 978-0851106526. OCLC 29952151.
  43. ^ a b General Presbytery of the Assemblies of God (11 August 2000). (PDF). General Council of the Assemblies of God of the United States. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 December 2008. Retrieved 9 June 2009.
  44. ^ Grudem, Wayne A. (1994). Systematic theology: an introduction to biblical doctrine. Leicester: Inter-Varsity Press. p. 1072. ISBN 978-0851106526. OCLC 29952151.
  45. ^ Carey, Benedict (7 November 2006). "A Neuroscientific Look at Speaking in Tongues". The New York Times.
  46. ^ a b Assemblies of God (1961). (PDF). General Council of the Assemblies of God of the United States. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 June 2006. Retrieved 9 June 2009.
  47. ^ "Baptism with the Holy Spirit". christians.eu. 22 July 2015.
  48. ^ Grudem, Wayne A. (1994). Systematic theology: an introduction to biblical doctrine. Leicester: Inter-Varsity Press. p. 1073. ISBN 978-0851106526. OCLC 29952151.
  49. ^ Masters, Peter; John C. Whitcomb (1988). The Charismatic Phenomenon. London: Wakeman Trust. p. 49. ISBN 978-1870855013. OCLC 20720229.
  50. ^ Bible 1 Corinthians 14:13–19
  51. ^ Johns, Donald A. (1988). Stanley M. Burgess; Gary B. McGee; Patrick H. Alexander (eds.). Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan. p. 788. ISBN 978-0310441007. OCLC 18496801. Cited by Riss, Richard M. (28 July 1995). "Singing in the Spirit in the Holiness, Pentecostal, Latter Rain, and Charismatic Movements". Retrieved 9 June 2009.
  52. ^ Alford, Delton L. (1988). Stanley M. Burgess; Gary B. McGee; Patrick H. Alexander (eds.). Dictionary of Pentecostal and charismatic movements. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan. p. 690. ISBN 978-0310441007. OCLC 18496801. Cited by Riss, Richard M. (28 July 1995). "Singing in the Spirit in the Holiness, Pentecostal, Latter Rain, and Charismatic Movements". Retrieved 9 June 2009.
  53. ^ . General Council of the Assemblies of God of the United States. 2009. Archived from the original on 13 June 2006. Retrieved 10 June 2009.
  54. ^ Grudem, Wayne A. (1994). Systematic theology: an introduction to biblical doctrine. Leicester: Inter-Varsity Press. p. 1075. ISBN 978-0851106526. OCLC 29952151.
  55. ^ Masters, Peter; John C. Whitcomb (1988). The Charismatic Phenomenon. London: Wakeman Trust. p. 106. ISBN 978-1870855013. OCLC 20720229.
  56. ^ a b The West Tennessee Historical Society Papers – Issue 56. West Tennessee Historical Society. 2002. p. 41. Seymour's holiness background suggests that Pentecostalism had roots in the holiness movement of the late nineteenth century. The holiness movement embraced the Wesleyan doctrine of "sanctification" or the second work of grace, subsequent to conversion. Pentecostalism added a third work of grace, called the baptism of the Holy Ghost, which is often accompanied by glossolalia.
  57. ^ Casanova, Amanda (6 April 2018). "10 Things Christians Should Know about the Pentecostal Church". Christianity.com. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  58. ^ Wright, N. T. (2008). Acts for Everyone, Part One. Louisville: WJK. pp. 210–211.
  59. ^ Richardson, William Edwin (June 1983). "Liturgical Order and Glossolalia. 1 Corinthians 14:26c–33a and its Implications". Andrews University. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  60. ^ Gee, Donald (1993). Pentecostal Experience. Springfield, MO: Gospel Publishing House. p. 154. ISBN 978-0882434544.
  61. ^ Chantry, Walter J. (1973). Signs of the Apostles. Edinburgh, Scotland: Banner of Truth Trust. pp. 22–23. ISBN 978-0851511757.
  62. ^ Mookgo S. Kgatle (2019). "Singing as a therapeutic agent in Pentecostal worship". Verbum et Ecclesia. 40. doi:10.4102/ve.v40i1.1910. S2CID 150696864. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
  63. ^ Harper, Michael. "Releasing the Spirit: the Pentecostals". Christianity Today. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
  64. ^ "Religion – Christianity – Pentecostalism". BBC. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
  65. ^ a b Guy P. Duffield and Nathaniel M. Van Cleave, Foundations of Pentecostal Theology, 1983, (Los Angeles: Foursquare Media, 2008), pp. 342–343.
  66. ^ Gerry Kennedy, Rob Churchill (2004). The Voynich Manuscript. London: Orion. ISBN 978-0752859965.[page needed]
  67. ^ Mendez, Mario F. (1 January 2018). "Non-Neurogenic Language Disorders: A Preliminary Classification". Psychosomatics. 59 (1): 28–35. doi:10.1016/j.psym.2017.08.006. ISSN 0033-3182. PMC 5748000. PMID 28911819.
  68. ^ a b Newberg, Andrew B.; Wintering, Nancy A.; Morgan, Donna; Waldman, Mark R. (22 November 2006). "The measurement of regional cerebral blood flow during glossolalia: A preliminary SPECT study". Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging. 148 (1): 67–71. doi:10.1016/j.pscychresns.2006.07.001. ISSN 0925-4927. PMID 17046214. S2CID 17079826.
  69. ^ "Language Center of the Brain Is Not Under the Control of Subjects Who "Speak in Tongues" – PR News". www.pennmedicine.org. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  70. ^ a b c d Kent, Ray D. (1 November 2015). "Nonspeech Oral Movements and Oral Motor Disorders: A Narrative Review". Am J Speech Lang Pathol. 24 (4): 763–789. doi:10.1044/2015_AJSLP-14-0179. ISSN 1058-0360. OCLC 8146899752. PMC 4698470. PMID 26126128. (at Appendix A)
  71. ^ Cave, David Sachs; Norris, Rebecca (2012). Religion and the Body. Modern Science and the Construction of Religious Meaning. Brill. doi:10.1163/9789004225343. ISBN 9789004225343. OCLC 1238010307. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
  72. ^ Spanos, N. P.; Cross, W. P.; Lepage, M.; Coristine, M (1986). "Glossolalia as learned behavior: An experimental demonstration". Journal of Abnormal Psychology. 95 (1): 21–23. doi:10.1037/0021-843X.95.1.21. ISSN 0021-843X. OCLC 4644067946. PMID 3700843.
  73. ^ H A Osser; P F Ostwald; B Macwhinney; R L Casey (1 March 1973). "Glossolalic speech from a psycholinguistic perspective". J Psycholinguist Res. 2 (1): 9–19. doi:10.1007/BF01067109. ISSN 0090-6905. OCLC 4664154487. PMID 24197793. S2CID 36005466.
  74. ^ Lynn, Christopher Dana; Paris, Jason; Frye, Cheryl Anne; Schell, Lawrence M. (2010). "Salivary Alpha-Amylase and Cortisol Among Pentecostals on a Worship and Nonworship Day". American Journal of Human Biology. 22 (6): 819–822. doi:10.1002/ajhb.21088. ISSN 1042-0533. PMC 3609410. PMID 20878966.
  75. ^ Wood, William W. (1965). Culture and personality aspects of the Pentecostal holiness religion. Mouton (IS). OCLC 797731718.[page needed]
  76. ^ a b Hine, Virginia H. (1969). "Pentecostal Glossolalia toward a Functional Interpretation". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 8 (2): 211–226. doi:10.2307/1384335. ISSN 0021-8294. JSTOR 1384335.
  77. ^ Hanson, Dirk. "Neuroscience & Neurology 41 Speaking in Tongues – A Neural Snapshot". Brain Blogger. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
  78. ^ Semenyna, Scott; Schmaltz, Rodney. "Glossolalia meets glosso-psychology: why speaking in tongues persists in charismatic Christian and Pentecostal gatherings". Gale Academic Onefile. Skeptics Society & Skeptic Magazine. Retrieved 13 September 2021.

Bibliography

  • Martin, Dale B. (1995), The Corinthian Body, New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0300081725

Further reading

  • Cartledge, Mark J., ed. Speaking in Tongues: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives. Paternoster, 2006.
  • Ensley, Eddie. Sounds of wonder : speaking in tongues in the Catholic tradition. New York: Paulist Press, 1977.
  • Goodman, Felicitas D. Speaking in Tongues: A Cross-cultural Study of Glossolalia. Chicago, University of Chicago Press 1972.
  • Gromacki, Robert G.: "The Modern Tongues Movement", Baker Books, 1976, ISBN 978-0801037085.
  • Harris, Ralph W. Spoken by the Spirit: Documented Accounts of 'Other Tongues' from Arabic to Zulu (Springfield, MO: Gospel Publishing House, 1973).
  • Hoekema, Anthony A. What about tongue-speaking? Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans 1966.
  • Johnson, Luke Timothy. Religious Experience in Earliest Christianity: A Missing Dimension in New Testament Studies. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1998. ISBN 0800631293
  • Keener, Craig. Miracles: The Credibility of the New Testament Accounts. 2 vols. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2011.
  • Kelsey, Morton T. Tongue-Speaking: An Experiment in Religious Experience. NYC: Doubleday, 1964.
  • Kostelnik, Joseph, Prayer in the Spirit: The Missing Link. Prophetic Voice Publications, 1981.
  • MacArthur, John F.: "Charismatic Chaos". Zondervan, 1993, 416 pages, ISBN 978-0310575726.
  • Malony, H. Newton, and Lovekin, A. Adams, Glossolalia: Behavioral Science Perspectives on Speaking in Tongues, Oxford University Press, 1985, ISBN 0195035690
  • May, Jordan D. Global Witness to Pentecost: The Testimony of 'Other Tongues,' (Cleveland, TN: CPT Press, 2013).
  • Mills, Watson E. Speaking in Tongues: A Guide to Research on Glossolalia. Grand Rapids, Mich.: W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co., 1986.
  • Roberson, Dave, Vital Role of Praying in Tongues
  • Roybal, Rory, Miracles or Magic?. Xulon Press, 2005.
  • Ruthven, Jon. On the Cessation of the Charismata: The Protestant Polemic on Post-biblical Miracles. 2nd ed. Word & Spirit Press, 2012.
  • Sadler, Paul M.: "The Supernatural Sign Gifts of the Acts Period" <九鼎娱乐送38_九鼎娱乐送38平台_九鼎娱乐送38网址>. Berean Bible Society <Berean Bible Society>, 2001, 63 pages, ISBN 1893874281.
  • Sherrill, John L. They Speak with Other Tongues. New York: McGraw Hill 1964.
  • Stronstad, Roger. The charismatic theology of St. Luke. Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers, 1984.
  • Tarr, Del. The Foolishness of God: A Linguist Looks at the Mystery of Tongues. Springfield, MO: Access Group Publishers, 2010.
  • Yun, Koo D. "Baptism in the Holy Spirit". New York: University Press of America, 2003.

External links

  • Gerlach, Joel C., (from a Confessional Lutheran perspective)
  • Video recorded during a Sunday Prayer Meeting; 10 February 2008; Cochin, India, Kerala; this prayer group functions under the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in India.
  • "Gift of Tongues". T. Reilly. The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 14. 1912.
  • "Tongues". by John Salza, bible verses and the Catholic Church fathers on speaking in tongues
  • . bible411.com. (Cessationist perspective)
  • "Glossolalia as Foreign Language". D. William Faupel. Wesleyan Theological Journal Vol. 31 No. 1 (Spring 1996): pp. 95–109. (Historical study of Pentecostal beliefs)
  • . Assemblies of God USA. (Pentecostal perspective)
  • "The Function of Tongue-Speaking for the Individual: A Psycho-Theological Model". Daniel A. Tappeiner. Journal of American Scientific Affiliation. Vol. 26. March 1974. pp. 29–32.
  • Andrei Bely's Glossalolia {sic} with an English translation
  • (in Italian) Esperimenti di Glossolalia. A case of glossolalia in theatre.
  • "Lalia". Extreme episode of glossolalia captured in modern music.

speaking, tongues, other, uses, speaking, tongues, disambiguation, glossolalia, redirects, here, steve, walsh, album, glossolalia, album, also, known, glossolalia, greek, γλωσσολαλία, activity, practice, which, people, utter, words, speech, like, sounds, often. For other uses see Speaking in Tongues disambiguation Glossolalia redirects here For the Steve Walsh album see Glossolalia album Speaking in tongues also known as glossolalia Greek glwssolalia is an activity or practice in which people utter words or speech like sounds often thought by believers to be languages unknown to the speaker One definition used by linguists is the fluid vocalizing of speech like syllables that lack any readily comprehended meaning in some cases as part of religious practice in which some believe it to be a divine language unknown to the speaker 2 Glossolalia is practiced in Pentecostal and charismatic Christianity 3 4 as well as in other religions 5 6 Icon depicting the Theotokos together with the apostles filled with the Holy Spirit indicated by cloven tongues like as of fire 1 above their heads Sometimes a distinction is made between glossolalia and xenolalia or xenoglossy which specifically relates to the belief that the language being spoken is a natural language previously unknown to the speaker 7 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Linguistics 3 History 3 1 Classical antiquity 3 2 1100 to 1900 3 3 20th century 4 Christianity 4 1 Theological explanations 4 2 Biblical practice 4 3 Pentecostal and charismatic practices 4 4 Interpretation of tongues 5 Non Christian practice 6 Medical research 7 Criticism 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksEtymology EditGlossolalia is a borrowing of the Greek glwssolalia translit glossolalia which is a compound of the Greek glῶssa translit glossa meaning tongue or language 8 and Greek lalew translit laleō to speak talk chat prattle or to make a sound 9 The Greek expression in various forms appears in the New Testament in the books of Acts and First Corinthians In Acts 2 the followers of Christ receive the Holy Spirit and speak in the languages of at least fifteen countries or ethnic groups The exact phrase speaking in tongues has been used at least since the translation of the New Testament into Middle English in the Wycliffe Bible in the 14th century 10 Frederic Farrar first used the word glossolalia in 1879 11 Linguistics EditIn 1972 William J Samarin a linguist from the University of Toronto published a thorough assessment of Pentecostal glossolalia that became a classic work on its linguistic characteristics 12 His assessment was based on a large sample of glossolalia recorded in public and private Christian meetings in Italy the Netherlands Jamaica Canada and the United States over the course of five years his wide range of subjects included the Puerto Ricans of the Bronx the snake handlers of the Appalachians and the spiritual Christians from Russia in Los Angeles Pryguny Dukh i zhizniki Samarin found that glossolalic speech does resemble human language in some respects The speaker uses accent rhythm intonation and pauses to break up the speech into distinct units Each unit is itself made up of syllables the syllables being formed from consonants and vowels found in a language known to the speaker It is verbal behaviour that consists of using a certain number of consonants and vowels in a limited number of syllables that in turn are organized into larger units that are taken apart and rearranged pseudogrammatically with variations in pitch volume speed and intensity 13 Glossolalia consists of strings of syllables made up of sounds taken from all those that the speaker knows put together more or less haphazardly but emerging nevertheless as word like and sentence like units because of realistic language like rhythm and melody 14 That the sounds are taken from the set of sounds already known to the speaker is confirmed by others Felicitas Goodman a psychological anthropologist and linguist also found that the speech of glossolalists reflected the patterns of speech of the speaker s native language 15 These findings were confirmed by Kavan 2004 16 Samarin found that the resemblance to human language was merely on the surface and so concluded that glossolalia is only a facade of language 17 He reached this conclusion because the syllable string did not form words the stream of speech was not internally organized and most importantly of all there was no systematic relationship between units of speech and concepts Humans use language to communicate but glossolalia does not Therefore he concluded that glossolalia is not a specimen of human language because it is neither internally organized nor systematically related to the world man perceives 17 On the basis of his linguistic analysis Samarin defined Pentecostal glossolalia as meaningless but phonologically structured human utterance believed by the speaker to be a real language but bearing no systematic resemblance to any natural language living or dead 18 Felicitas Goodman studied a number of Pentecostal communities in the United States the Caribbean and Mexico these included English Spanish and Mayan speaking groups She compared what she found with recordings of non Christian rituals from Africa Borneo Indonesia and Japan She took into account both the segmental structure such as sounds syllables phrases and the supra segmental elements rhythm accent intonation and concluded that there was no distinction between what was practised by the Pentecostal Protestants and the followers of other religions 19 History EditClassical antiquity Edit It was a commonplace idea within the Ancient world that divine beings spoke languages different from human languages and historians of religion have identified references to esoteric speech in Greco Roman literature that resemble glossolalia sometimes explained as angelic or divine language citation needed An example is the account in the Testament of Job a non canonical elaboration of the Book of Job where the daughters of Job are described as being given sashes enabling them to speak and sing in angelic languages 20 According to Dale B Martin glossolalia was accorded high status in the ancient world due to its association with the divine Alexander of Abonoteichus may have exhibited glossolalia during his episodes of prophetic ecstasy 21 Neoplatonist philosopher Iamblichus linked glossolalia to prophecy writing that prophecy was divine spirit possession that emits words which are not understood by those that utter them for they pronounce them as it is said with an insane mouth mainomeno stomati and are wholly subservient and entirely yield themselves to the energy of the predominating God 22 In his writings on early Christianity the Greek philosopher Celsus includes an account of Christian glossolalia Celsus describes prophecies made by several Christians in Palestine and Phoenicia of which he writes Having brandished these threats they then go on to add incomprehensible incoherent and utterly obscure utterances the meaning of which no intelligent person could discover for they are meaningless and nonsensical and give a chance for any fool or sorcerer to take the words in whatever sense he likes 21 References to speaking in tongues by the Church fathers are rare Except for Irenaeus 2nd century reference to many in the church speaking all kinds of languages through the Spirit and Tertullian s reference in 207 AD to the spiritual gift of interpretation of tongues being encountered in his day there are no other known first hand accounts of glossolalia and very few second hand accounts among their writings 23 1100 to 1900 Edit 12th century Bernard of Clairvaux explained that speaking tongues be no longer present because there be greater miracles the transformed lives of believers 24 12th century Hildegard of Bingen is said to have possessed the gift of visions and prophecy and to have been able to speak and write in Latin without having learned the language 25 1265 Thomas Aquinas wrote about the gift of tongues in the New Testament which he understood to be an ability to speak every language given for the purposes of missionary work He explained that Christ did not have this gift because his mission was to the Jews nor does each one of the faithful now speak save in one tongue for no one speaks in the tongues of all nations because the Church herself already speaks the languages of all nations 26 15th century The Moravians are referred to by detractors as having spoken in tongues John Roche a contemporary critic claimed that the Moravians commonly broke into some disconnected Jargon which they often passed upon the vulgar as the exuberant and resistless Evacuations of the Spirit 27 17th century The French Prophets The Camisards also spoke sometimes in languages that were unknown Several persons of both Sexes James Du Bois of Montpellier recalled I have heard in their Extasies pronounce certain words which seem d to the Standers by to be some Foreign Language These utterances were sometimes accompanied by the gift of interpretation exercised in Du Bois experience by the same person who had spoken in tongues 28 29 17th century Early Quakers such as Edward Burrough make mention of tongues speaking in their meetings We spoke with new tongues as the Lord gave us utterance and His Spirit led us 30 1817 In Germany Gustav von Below an aristocratic officer of the Prussian Guard and his brothers founded a religious movement based on their estates in Pomerania which may have included speaking in tongues 31 19th century Edward Irving and the Catholic Apostolic Church Edward Irving a minister in the Church of Scotland writes of a woman who would speak at great length and with superhuman strength in an unknown tongue to the great astonishment of all who heard and to her own great edification and enjoyment in God 32 Irving further stated that tongues are a great instrument for personal edification however mysterious it may seem to us 33 19th century The history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church contains extensive references to the practice of speaking in tongues by Brigham Young Joseph Smith and many others 34 35 Sidney Rigdon had disagreements with Alexander Campbell regarding speaking in tongues and later joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Speaking in tongues was recorded in contemporary sources both hostile and sympathetic to Mormonism by at least 1830 36 The practice was soon widespread amongst Mormons with many rank and file church members believing they were speaking the language of Adam some of the hostility towards Mormons stemmed from those of other faiths regarding speaking in tongues unfavorably especially when practiced by children 36 At the 1836 dedication of the Kirtland Temple the dedicatory prayer asked that God grant them the gift of tongues and at the end of the service Brigham Young spoke in tongues another elder interpreted it and then gave his own exhortation in tongues Many other worship experiences in the Kirtland Temple prior to and after the dedication included references to people speaking and interpreting tongues In describing the beliefs of the church in the Wentworth letter 1842 Joseph Smith identified a belief of the gift of tongues and interpretation of tongues The practice of glossolalia by the Latter day Saints was widespread but after an initial burst of enthusiastic growth circa 1830 34 seems to have been somewhat more restrained than in many other contemporary religious movements 36 Young Smith and numerous other early leaders frequently cautioned against the public exercise of glossolalia unless there be someone who could exercise the corresponding spiritual gift of interpretation of tongues so that listeners could be edified by what had been said Although the Latter day Saints believe that speaking in tongues and the interpretation of tongues is alive and well in the Church modern Mormons are much more likely to point to the way in which LDS missionaries are trained and learn foreign languages quickly and are able to communicate rapidly on their missions as evidence of the manifestation of this gift This interpretation stems from a 1900 General Conference sermon by Joseph F Smith which discouraged glossolalia subsequent leaders echoed this recommendation for about a decade afterwards and subsequently the practice had largely died out amongst Mormons by the 1930s and 40s 36 20th century Edit Main article Azusa Street Revival Headline about the Weird babel of tongues and other behavior at Azusa Street from a 1906 Los Angeles Times newspaper During the 20th century glossolalia primarily became associated with Pentecostalism and the later charismatic movement Preachers in the Holiness Movement preachers Charles Parham and William Seymour are credited as co founders of the movement Parham and Seymour taught that baptism of the Holy Spirit was not the blessing of sanctification but rather a third work of grace that was accompanied by the experience of tongues 4 It was Parham who formulated the doctrine of initial evidence After studying the Bible Parham came to the conclusion that speaking in tongues was the Bible evidence that one had received the baptism with the Holy Spirit In 1900 Parham opened Bethel Bible College in Topeka Kansas America where he taught initial evidence a Charismatic belief about how to initiate the practice During a service on 1 January 1901 a student named Agnes Ozman asked for prayer and the laying on of hands to specifically ask God to fill her with the Holy Spirit She became the first of many students to experience glossolalia in the first hours of the 20th century Parham followed within the next few days Parham called his new movement the apostolic faith In 1905 he moved to Houston and opened a Bible school there One of his students was William Seymour an African American preacher In 1906 Seymour traveled to Los Angeles where his preaching ignited the Azusa Street Revival This revival is considered the birth of the global Pentecostal movement According to the first issue of William Seymour s newsletter The Apostolic Faith from 1906 A Mohammedan a Soudanese by birth a man who is an interpreter and speaks sixteen languages came into the meetings at Azusa Street and the Lord gave him messages which none but himself could understand He identified interpreted and wrote a number of the languages 37 Parham and his early followers believed that speaking in tongues was xenoglossia and some followers traveled to foreign countries and tried to use the gift to share the Gospel with non English speaking people From the time of the Azusa Street revival and among early participants in the Pentecostal movement there were many accounts of individuals hearing their own languages spoken in tongues The majority of Pentecostals and Charismatics consider speaking in tongues to primarily be divine or the language of angels rather than human languages 38 In the years following the Azusa Street revival Pentecostals who went to the mission field found that they were unable to speak in the language of the local inhabitants at will when they spoke in tongues in strange lands 39 The revival at Azusa Street lasted until around 1915 From it grew many new Pentecostal churches as people visited the services in Los Angeles and took their newfound beliefs to communities around the United States and abroad During the 20th century glossolalia became an important part of the identity of these religious groups During the 1960s the charismatic movement within the mainline Protestant churches and among charismatic Roman Catholics adopted some Pentecostal beliefs and the practice of glossolalia spread to other Christian denominations The discussion regarding tongues has permeated many branches of Protestantism particularly since the widespread charismatic movement in the 1960s Many books have been published either defending 40 or attacking 41 the practice Christianity EditTheological explanations Edit In Christianity a supernatural explanation for glossolalia is advocated by some and rejected by others Proponents of each viewpoint use the biblical writings and historical arguments to support their positions Glossolalists could apart from those practicing glossolalia also mean all those Christians who believe that the Pentecostal charismatic glossolalia practiced today is the speaking in tongues described in the New Testament They believe that it is a miraculous charism or spiritual gift Glossolalists claim that these tongues can be both real unlearned languages i e xenoglossia 42 43 as well as a language of the spirit a heavenly language or perhaps the language of angels 44 Cessationists believe that all the miraculous gifts of the Holy Spirit ceased to occur early in Christian history and therefore that the speaking in tongues as practiced by Charismatic Christians is the learned utterance of non linguistic syllables According to this belief it is neither xenoglossia nor miraculous but rather taught behavior possibly self induced These believe that what the New Testament described as speaking in tongues was xenoglossia a miraculous spiritual gift through which the speaker could communicate in natural languages not previously studied A third position claims that glossolalia does exist but it is a form of prelest not the speaking in tongues described in the New Testament It believes glossolalia is part of a mediumistic technique where practitioners are manifesting genuine spiritual power but this power is not necessarily of the Holy Spirit 5 A fourth position conceivably exists which believes the practice of glossolalia to be a folk practice and different from the legitimate New Testament spiritual gift of speaking interpreting real languages It is therefore not out of a belief that miracles have ceased i e cessationism that causes this group to discredit the supernatural origins of particular modern expressions of glossolalia but it is rather out of a belief that glossolalists have misunderstood Scripture and wrongly attributed to the Holy Spirit something that may be explained naturalistically 45 Biblical practice Edit There are five places in the New Testament where speaking in tongues is referred to explicitly Mark 16 17 which records the instructions of Christ to the apostles including his description that they will speak with new tongues as a sign that would follow them that believe in him Acts 2 which describes an occurrence of speaking in tongues in Jerusalem at Pentecost though with various interpretations Specifically every man heard them speak in his own language and wondered how hear we every man in our own tongue wherein we were born Acts 10 46 when the household of Cornelius in Caesarea spoke in tongues and those present compared it to the speaking in tongues that occurred at Pentecost Acts 19 6 when a group of approximately a dozen men spoke in tongues in Ephesus as they received the Holy Spirit while the apostle Paul laid his hands upon them 1 Cor 12 13 14 where Paul discusses speaking in various kinds of tongues as part of his wider discussion of the gifts of the Spirit his remarks shed some light on his own speaking in tongues as well as how the gift of speaking in tongues was to be used in the church Other verses by inference may be considered to refer to speaking in tongues such as Isaiah 28 11 Romans 8 26 and Jude 20 The biblical account of Pentecost in the second chapter of the book of Acts describes the sound of a mighty rushing wind and divided tongues like fire coming to rest on the apostles The text further describes that they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages It goes on to say in verses 5 11 that when the Apostles spoke each person in attendance heard their own language being spoken Therefore the gift of speaking in tongues refers to the Apostles speaking languages that the people listening heard as them telling in our own tongues the mighty works of God Glossolalists and cessationists both recognize this as xenoglossia a miraculous ability that marked their baptism in the Holy Spirit Something similar although perhaps not xenoglossia took place on at least two subsequent occasions in Caesarea and Ephesus Glossolalists and cessationists generally agree that the primary purpose of the gift of speaking in tongues was to mark the Holy Spirit being poured out At Pentecost the Apostle Peter declared that this gift which was making some in the audience ridicule the disciples as drunks be the fulfilment of the prophecy of Joel which described that God would pour out his Spirit on all flesh Acts 2 17 43 Despite these commonalities there are significant variations in interpretation Universal The traditional Pentecostal view is that every Christian should expect to be baptized in the Holy Spirit the distinctive mark of which is glossolalia 46 While most Protestants agree that baptism in the Holy Spirit is integral to being a Christian others 47 believe that it is not separable from conversion and no longer marked by glossolalia Pentecostals appeal to the declaration of the Apostle Peter at Pentecost that the gift of the Holy Spirit was for you and for your children and for all who are far off Acts 2 38 39 Cessationists reply that the gift of speaking in tongues was never for all 1 Cor 12 30 In response to those who say that the baptism in the Holy Spirit be not a separate experience from conversion Pentecostals appeal to the question asked by the Apostle Paul to the Ephesian believers Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed Acts 19 2 One gift Different aspects of speaking in tongues appear in Acts and 1 Corinthians such that the Assemblies of God declare that the gift in Acts is the same in essence as the gift of tongues in 1 Corinthians but different in purpose and use 46 They distinguish between private speech in tongues when receiving the gift of the Spirit and public speech in tongues for the benefit of the church Others assert that the gift in Acts was not a different phenomenon but the same gift being displayed under varying circumstances 48 The same description speaking in tongues is used in both Acts and 1 Corinthians and in both cases the speech is in an unlearned language Direction The New Testament describes tongues largely as speech addressed to God but also as something that can potentially be interpreted into human language thereby edifying the hearers 1 Cor 14 5 13 At Pentecost and Caesarea the speakers were praising God Acts 2 11 10 46 Paul referred to praying singing praise and giving thanks in tongues 1 Cor 14 14 17 as well as to the interpretation of tongues 1 Cor 14 5 and instructed those speaking in tongues to pray for the ability to interpret their tongues so that others could understand them 1 Cor 14 13 While some people limit speaking in tongues to speech addressed to God prayer or praise 42 others claim that speaking in tongues be the revelation from God to the church and when interpreted into human language by those embued with the gift of interpretation of tongues for the benefit of others present may be considered equivalent to prophecy 49 Music Musical interludes of glossolalia are sometimes described as singing in the Spirit Some hold that singing in the Spirit is identified with singing in tongues in 1 Corinthians 14 13 19 50 51 which they hold to be spiritual or spirited singing as opposed to communicative or impactive singing which Paul refers to as singing with the understanding 52 Sign for unbelievers 1 Cor 14 22 Some assume that tongues are a sign for unbelievers that they might believe 53 and so advocate it as a means of evangelism Others point out that Paul quotes Isaiah to show that when God speaks to people in language they cannot understand it is quite evidently a sign of God s judgment so if unbelievers are baffled by a church service they cannot understand because tongues are spoken without being interpreted that is a sign of God s attitude a sign of judgment 54 Some identify the tongues in Acts 2 as the primary example of tongues as signs for unbelievers Comprehension Some say that speaking in tongues was not understood by the speaker 42 Others assert that the tongues speaker normally understood his own foreign language message 55 This last comment seems to have been made by someone confusing the gift of tongues with the gift of the interpretation of tongues which is specified as a different gift in the New Testament but one that can be given to a person who also has the gift of tongues In that case a person understands a message in tongues that he has previously spoken in an unknown language Pentecostal and charismatic practices Edit Baptism with the Holy Spirit is regarded by the Holiness Pentecostals the oldest branch of Pentecostalism as being the third work of grace following the new birth first work of grace and entire sanctification second work of grace 56 4 Holiness Pentecostals teach that this third work of grace is accompanied with glossolalia 56 4 Because Pentecostal and charismatic beliefs are not monolithic there is not complete theological agreement on speaking in tongues citation needed Generally followers believe that speaking in tongues is a spiritual gift that can be manifested as either a human language or a heavenly supernatural language in three ways 57 The sign of tongues refers to xenoglossia wherein followers believe someone is speaking a language they have never learned The gift of tongues refers to a glossolalic utterance spoken by an individual and addressed to a congregation of typically other believers Praying in the spirit is typically used to refer to glossolalia as part of personal prayer 58 Many Pentecostals and charismatics quote Paul s words in 1 Corinthians 14 which established guidelines on the public use of glossolalia in the church at Corinth although the exegesis of this passage and the extent to which these instructions are followed is a matter of academic debate 59 The gift of tongues is often referred to as a message in tongues 60 Practitioners believe that this use of glossolalia requires an interpretation so that the gathered congregation can understand the message which is accomplished by the interpretation of tongues citation needed There are two schools of thought concerning the nature of a message in tongues One school of thought believes it is always directed to God as prayer praise or thanksgiving but is spoken in for the hearing and edification of the congregation citation needed The other school of thought believes that a message in tongues can be a prophetic utterance inspired by the Holy Spirit 61 In this case the speaker delivers a message to the congregation on behalf of God citation needed In addition to praying in the Spirit many Pentecostal and charismatic churches practice what is known as singing in the Spirit 62 63 64 Interpretation of tongues Edit In Christian theology the interpretation of tongues is one of the spiritual gifts listed in 1 Corinthians 12 This gift is used in conjunction with that of the gift of tongues the supernatural ability to speak in a language tongue unknown to the speaker The gift of interpretation is the supernatural enablement to express in an intelligible language an utterance spoken in an unknown tongue This is not learned but imparted by the Holy Spirit therefore it should not be confused with the acquired skill of language interpretation While cessationist Christians believe that this miraculous charism has ceased Charismatic and Pentecostal Christians believe that this gift continues to operate within the church 65 Much of what is known about this gift was recorded by St Paul in 1 Corinthians 14 In this passage guidelines for the proper use of the gift of tongues were given In order for the gift of tongues to be beneficial to the edification of the church such supernatural utterances were to be interpreted into the language of the gathered Christians If no one among the gathered Christians possessed the gift of interpretation then the gift of tongues was not to be publicly exercised Those possessing the gift of tongues were encouraged to pray for the ability to interpret 65 Non Christian practice EditOther religious groups have been observed to practice some form of theopneustic glossolalia It is perhaps most commonly in Paganism Shamanism and other mediumistic religious practices 5 In Japan the God Light Association believed that glossolalia could cause adherents to recall past lives 6 Glossolalia has been postulated as an explanation for the Voynich manuscript 66 In the 19th century Spiritism was developed by the work of Allan Kardec and the practice was seen as one of the self evident manifestations of spirits Spiritists argued that some cases were actually cases of xenoglossia Medical research EditGlossolalia is classified as a non neurogenic language disorder 67 Most people exhibiting glossolalia do not have a neuropsychiatric disorder 68 Neuroimaging of brain activity during glossolalia does not show activity in the language areas of the brain 68 69 In other words it may be characterized by a specific brain activity 70 71 and it can be a learned behaviour 72 70 A 1973 experimental study highlighted the existence of two basic types of glossolalia a static form which tends to a somewhat coaction to repetitiveness and a more dynamic one which tends to free association of speech like elements 73 70 A study done by the American Journal of Human Biology found that speaking in tongues is associated with both a reduction in circulatory cortisol and enhancements in alpha amylase enzyme activity two common biomarkers of stress reduction that can be measured in saliva 74 Several sociological studies report various social benefits of engaging in Pentecostal glossolalia 75 76 such as an increase in self confidence 76 As of April 2021 further studies are needed to corroborate the 1980s view of glossolaly with more sensitive measures of outcome by using the more recent techniques of neuroimaging 70 better source needed Criticism EditSpeakers of glossolalia are capable of speaking in tongues on cue contrary to the claim that it is a spontaneous event 77 Analysis of glossolalics reveals a pseudo language that lacks consistent syntax semantic meaning usually rhythmic or poetic in nature and is similar to the speaker s native tongue Samples of glossolalia shows a lack of consistency needed for meaningful comparison or translation It also is not used to communicate between fellow glossolalia speakers although the meaning is usually translated by the leader involved in line with and supportive of whatever message or teaching had been given that day in some way giving divine legitimacy to what is said 78 See also EditAphasia Inability to comprehend or formulate language Asemic writing Wordless open semantic form of writing Biblical hermeneutics Study of the principles of interpretation concerning the Bible Covenant theology Protestant biblical interpretive framework Direct revelation Communication from God to a person Dispensationalism Biblical interpretation Dream speech Words in the mind during sleep Gibberish Nonsensical language Historical grammatical method Christian hermeneutical method Idioglossia Idiosyncratic language Logorrhoea Communication disorder that causes excessive wordiness and repetitiveness Scat singing Vocal improvisation with wordless vocables nonsense syllables or without words at all Vonlenska Icelandic bandPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targetsReferences Edit Bible Gateway passage Acts 2 3 King James Version Bible Gateway Glossolalian A Dictionary of Psychology Edited by Andrew M Colman Oxford University Press 2009 Oxford Reference Online Retrieved 5 August 2011 Lum Kathryn Gin Harvey Paul 2018 The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Race in American History Oxford University Press p 801 ISBN 978 0190856892 would prove influential on the development of black Pentecostalism in the early twentieth century as glossolalia or speaking in tongues would be understood as a third work of grace following Holiness and receipt of the Holy Spirit a b c d The Encyclopedia of Christianity Wm B Eerdmans Publishing 1999 p 415 ISBN 978 9004116955 While in Houston Texas where he had moved his headquarters Parham came into contact with William Seymour 1870 1922 an African American Baptist Holiness preacher Seymour took from Parham the teaching that the baptism of the Holy Spirit was not the blessing of sanctification but rather a third work of grace that was accompanied by the experience of tongues a b c Rose Seraphim 1997 Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future St Herman Press p 137 ISBN 188790400X There is scarcely to be found an example of speaking in tongues in any even nominally Christian context for over 1 600 years after the time of Paul and yet this gift is possessed by numerous shamans and witch doctors of primitive religions as well as by modern spritistics mediums and the demonically possessed a b Whelan Christal 2007 Shifting Paradigms and Mediating Media Redefining a New Religion as Rational in Contemporary Society Nova Religio 10 3 54 72 doi 10 1525 nr 2007 10 3 54 Cheryl Bridges Johns and Frank Macchia Glossolalia The Encyclopedia of Christianity Grand Rapids MI Leiden Netherlands Wm B Eerdmans Brill 1999 2003 413 glῶssa Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus lalew Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus Bible Mark 16 17 in Wycliffe s Bible Oxford English Dictionary 2nd ed 1989 Samarin William J 1972 Tongues of Men and Angels The Religious Language of Pentecostalism New York Macmillan OCLC 308527 page needed Samarin William J 1972 Tongues of Men and Angels The Religious Language of Pentecostalism New York Macmillan p 120 OCLC 308527 Samarin William J 1972 Sociolinguistic vs Neurophysiological Explanations for Glossolalia Comment on Goodman s Paper Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 11 3 293 296 doi 10 2307 1384556 JSTOR 1384556 Goodman Felicitas D 1969 Phonetic Analysis of Glossolalia in Four Cultural Settings Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 8 2 227 35 doi 10 2307 1384336 JSTOR 1384336 New Zealand Linguistic Society Heather Kavan Massey University Heather Kavan We don t know what we re saying but it s profound a b Samarin William J 1972 Tongues of Men and Angels The Religious Language of Pentecostalism New York Macmillan p 128 OCLC 308527 Samarin William J 1972 Tongues of Men and Angels The Religious Language of Pentecostalism New York Macmillan p 2 OCLC 308527 Goodman Felicitas D 1972 Speaking in Tongues A Cross Cultural Study in Glossolalia Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226303246 OCLC 393056 page needed Martin 1995 pp 88 89 a b Martin 1995 p 90 Martin 1995 p 91 Warfield Benjamin B 1918 Counterfeit Miracles New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 10 ISBN 978 0851511665 OCLC 3977281 The writings of the so called Apostolic Fathers contain no clear and certain allusions to miracle working or to the exercise of the charismatic gifts contemporaneously with themselves Premier Serrmon Pour Le Jour de L Ascension Sur l Evangile du jour Archived 7 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine 3 Il y des signes plus certains et des miracles plus salutaires que ceux la ce sont les merites Et je ne crois pas qu il soit difficile de savoir en quel sens on doit entendre les miracles dont il est parle en cet endroit pour qu ils soient des signes certains de foi et par consequent de salut En effet la premiere oeuvre de la foi operant par la charite c est la componction de l ame car elle chasse evidemment les demons en deracinant les peches de notre coeur Quant aux langues nouvelles que doivent parler les hommes qui croient en Jesus Christ cela a lieu lorsque le langage du vieil homme cesse de se trouver sur nos levres et que nous ne parlons plus la langue antique de nos premiers parents qui cherchaient dans des paroles pleines de malice a s excuser de leurs peches L Carlyle May February 1956 A Survey of Glossolalia and Related Phenomena in NonChristian Religions American Anthropologist 58 1 75 doi 10 1525 aa 1956 58 1 02a00060 Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologica Question 176 Burgess Stanley M 1991 Medieval and Modern Western Churches In Gary B McGee ed Initial evidence historical and biblical perspectives on the Pentecostal doctrine of spirit baptism Peabody Massachusetts Hendrickson Publishers p 32 ISBN 978 0943575414 OCLC 24380326 Lacy John 1707 A Cry from the Desert p 32 OCLC 81008302 Hamilton Michael Pollock 1975 The charismatic movement Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdmans Publishing Company p 75 ISBN 978 0802834539 OCLC 1008209 Burrough Edward 1831 1659 Epistle to the Reader in Fox George The great mystery of the great whore unfolded and Antichrist s kingdom revealed unto destruction The Works of George Fox 3 p 13 OCLC 12877488 Hogue Richard 2010 Tongues A Theological History of Christian Glossolalia Tate Publishing p 211 Irving Edward January 1832 Facts Connected With Recent Manifestations of Spiritual Gifts Fraser s Magazine 4 24 754 761 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Carlyle Gavin ed 1865 On the Gifts of the Holy Ghost The Collected Writings of Edward Irving Volume 5 ed Alexander Strahan p 548 Retrieved 12 January 2017 Speaking in Tongues and the Mormon Church www frontiernet net Archived from the original on 17 August 2000 Speaking in Tongues Archived from the original MediaWiki on 17 October 2008 a b c d Copeland Lee Speaking in Tongues in the Restoration Churches PDF Dialogue A Journal of Mormon Thought 24 1 Square brackets indicate faded parts that are no longer readable D Swincer Tongues Genuine Biblical Languages A Careful Construct of the Nature Purpose and Operation of the Gift of Tongues for the Church 2016 pp 88 90 ISBN missing Faupel D William Glossolalia as Foreign Language An Investigation of the Twentieth Century Pentecostal Claim 31 1 05 Archived from the original on 29 April 2005 Retrieved 27 April 2005 Example Christenson Laurence Speaking in tongues and its significance for the church Minneapolis MN Dimension Books 1968 ISBN missing page needed Example Gromacki Robert Glenn The Modern Tongues Movement Nutley NJ Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co 1973 ISBN 0875523048 Originally published 1967 page needed a b c Grudem Wayne A 1994 Systematic theology an introduction to biblical doctrine Leicester Inter Varsity Press p 1070 ISBN 978 0851106526 OCLC 29952151 a b General Presbytery of the Assemblies of God 11 August 2000 The Baptism in the Holy Spirit The Initial Experience and Continuing Evidences of the Spirit Filled Life PDF General Council of the Assemblies of God of the United States Archived from the original PDF on 17 December 2008 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Grudem Wayne A 1994 Systematic theology an introduction to biblical doctrine Leicester Inter Varsity Press p 1072 ISBN 978 0851106526 OCLC 29952151 Carey Benedict 7 November 2006 A Neuroscientific Look at Speaking in Tongues The New York Times a b Assemblies of God 1961 Statement of Fundamental Truths PDF General Council of the Assemblies of God of the United States Archived from the original PDF on 19 June 2006 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Baptism with the Holy Spirit christians eu 22 July 2015 Grudem Wayne A 1994 Systematic theology an introduction to biblical doctrine Leicester Inter Varsity Press p 1073 ISBN 978 0851106526 OCLC 29952151 Masters Peter John C Whitcomb 1988 The Charismatic Phenomenon London Wakeman Trust p 49 ISBN 978 1870855013 OCLC 20720229 Bible 1 Corinthians 14 13 19 Johns Donald A 1988 Stanley M Burgess Gary B McGee Patrick H Alexander eds Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements Grand Rapids Michigan Zondervan p 788 ISBN 978 0310441007 OCLC 18496801 Cited by Riss Richard M 28 July 1995 Singing in the Spirit in the Holiness Pentecostal Latter Rain and Charismatic Movements Retrieved 9 June 2009 Alford Delton L 1988 Stanley M Burgess Gary B McGee Patrick H Alexander eds Dictionary of Pentecostal and charismatic movements Grand Rapids Michigan Zondervan p 690 ISBN 978 0310441007 OCLC 18496801 Cited by Riss Richard M 28 July 1995 Singing in the Spirit in the Holiness Pentecostal Latter Rain and Charismatic Movements Retrieved 9 June 2009 Questions about Tongues General Council of the Assemblies of God of the United States 2009 Archived from the original on 13 June 2006 Retrieved 10 June 2009 Grudem Wayne A 1994 Systematic theology an introduction to biblical doctrine Leicester Inter Varsity Press p 1075 ISBN 978 0851106526 OCLC 29952151 Masters Peter John C Whitcomb 1988 The Charismatic Phenomenon London Wakeman Trust p 106 ISBN 978 1870855013 OCLC 20720229 a b The West Tennessee Historical Society Papers Issue 56 West Tennessee Historical Society 2002 p 41 Seymour s holiness background suggests that Pentecostalism had roots in the holiness movement of the late nineteenth century The holiness movement embraced the Wesleyan doctrine of sanctification or the second work of grace subsequent to conversion Pentecostalism added a third work of grace called the baptism of the Holy Ghost which is often accompanied by glossolalia Casanova Amanda 6 April 2018 10 Things Christians Should Know about the Pentecostal Church Christianity com Retrieved 2 December 2019 Wright N T 2008 Acts for Everyone Part One Louisville WJK pp 210 211 Richardson William Edwin June 1983 Liturgical Order and Glossolalia 1 Corinthians 14 26c 33a and its Implications Andrews University Retrieved 2 December 2019 Gee Donald 1993 Pentecostal Experience Springfield MO Gospel Publishing House p 154 ISBN 978 0882434544 Chantry Walter J 1973 Signs of the Apostles Edinburgh Scotland Banner of Truth Trust pp 22 23 ISBN 978 0851511757 Mookgo S Kgatle 2019 Singing as a therapeutic agent in Pentecostal worship Verbum et Ecclesia 40 doi 10 4102 ve v40i1 1910 S2CID 150696864 Retrieved 31 August 2021 Harper Michael Releasing the Spirit the Pentecostals Christianity Today Retrieved 31 August 2021 Religion Christianity Pentecostalism BBC Retrieved 31 August 2021 a b Guy P Duffield and Nathaniel M Van Cleave Foundations of Pentecostal Theology 1983 Los Angeles Foursquare Media 2008 pp 342 343 Gerry Kennedy Rob Churchill 2004 The Voynich Manuscript London Orion ISBN 978 0752859965 page needed Mendez Mario F 1 January 2018 Non Neurogenic Language Disorders A Preliminary Classification Psychosomatics 59 1 28 35 doi 10 1016 j psym 2017 08 006 ISSN 0033 3182 PMC 5748000 PMID 28911819 a b Newberg Andrew B Wintering Nancy A Morgan Donna Waldman Mark R 22 November 2006 The measurement of regional cerebral blood flow during glossolalia A preliminary SPECT study Psychiatry Research Neuroimaging 148 1 67 71 doi 10 1016 j pscychresns 2006 07 001 ISSN 0925 4927 PMID 17046214 S2CID 17079826 Language Center of the Brain Is Not Under the Control of Subjects Who Speak in Tongues PR News www pennmedicine org Retrieved 15 January 2019 a b c d Kent Ray D 1 November 2015 Nonspeech Oral Movements and Oral Motor Disorders A Narrative Review Am J Speech Lang Pathol 24 4 763 789 doi 10 1044 2015 AJSLP 14 0179 ISSN 1058 0360 OCLC 8146899752 PMC 4698470 PMID 26126128 at Appendix A Cave David Sachs Norris Rebecca 2012 Religion and the Body Modern Science and the Construction of Religious Meaning Brill doi 10 1163 9789004225343 ISBN 9789004225343 OCLC 1238010307 Retrieved 16 April 2021 Spanos N P Cross W P Lepage M Coristine M 1986 Glossolalia as learned behavior An experimental demonstration Journal of Abnormal Psychology 95 1 21 23 doi 10 1037 0021 843X 95 1 21 ISSN 0021 843X OCLC 4644067946 PMID 3700843 H A Osser P F Ostwald B Macwhinney R L Casey 1 March 1973 Glossolalic speech from a psycholinguistic perspective J Psycholinguist Res 2 1 9 19 doi 10 1007 BF01067109 ISSN 0090 6905 OCLC 4664154487 PMID 24197793 S2CID 36005466 Lynn Christopher Dana Paris Jason Frye Cheryl Anne Schell Lawrence M 2010 Salivary Alpha Amylase and Cortisol Among Pentecostals on a Worship and Nonworship Day American Journal of Human Biology 22 6 819 822 doi 10 1002 ajhb 21088 ISSN 1042 0533 PMC 3609410 PMID 20878966 Wood William W 1965 Culture and personality aspects of the Pentecostal holiness religion Mouton IS OCLC 797731718 page needed a b Hine Virginia H 1969 Pentecostal Glossolalia toward a Functional Interpretation Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 8 2 211 226 doi 10 2307 1384335 ISSN 0021 8294 JSTOR 1384335 Hanson Dirk Neuroscience amp Neurology 41 Speaking in Tongues A Neural Snapshot Brain Blogger Retrieved 13 September 2021 Semenyna Scott Schmaltz Rodney Glossolalia meets glosso psychology why speaking in tongues persists in charismatic Christian and Pentecostal gatherings Gale Academic Onefile Skeptics Society amp Skeptic Magazine Retrieved 13 September 2021 Bibliography Edit Martin Dale B 1995 The Corinthian Body New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300081725Further reading EditCartledge Mark J ed Speaking in Tongues Multi Disciplinary Perspectives Paternoster 2006 Ensley Eddie Sounds of wonder speaking in tongues in the Catholic tradition New York Paulist Press 1977 Goodman Felicitas D Speaking in Tongues A Cross cultural Study of Glossolalia Chicago University of Chicago Press 1972 Gromacki Robert G The Modern Tongues Movement Baker Books 1976 ISBN 978 0801037085 Harris Ralph W Spoken by the Spirit Documented Accounts of Other Tongues from Arabic to Zulu Springfield MO Gospel Publishing House 1973 Hoekema Anthony A What about tongue speaking Grand Rapids Mich Eerdmans 1966 Johnson Luke Timothy Religious Experience in Earliest Christianity A Missing Dimension in New Testament Studies Minneapolis Fortress Press 1998 ISBN 0800631293 Keener Craig Miracles The Credibility of the New Testament Accounts 2 vols Grand Rapids Baker Academic 2011 Kelsey Morton T Tongue Speaking An Experiment in Religious Experience NYC Doubleday 1964 Kostelnik Joseph Prayer in the Spirit The Missing Link Prophetic Voice Publications 1981 MacArthur John F Charismatic Chaos Zondervan 1993 416 pages ISBN 978 0310575726 Malony H Newton and Lovekin A Adams Glossolalia Behavioral Science Perspectives on Speaking in Tongues Oxford University Press 1985 ISBN 0195035690 May Jordan D Global Witness to Pentecost The Testimony of Other Tongues Cleveland TN CPT Press 2013 Mills Watson E Speaking in Tongues A Guide to Research on Glossolalia Grand Rapids Mich W B Eerdmans Pub Co 1986 Roberson Dave Vital Role of Praying in Tongues Roybal Rory Miracles or Magic Xulon Press 2005 Ruthven Jon On the Cessation of the Charismata The Protestant Polemic on Post biblical Miracles 2nd ed Word amp Spirit Press 2012 Sadler Paul M The Supernatural Sign Gifts of the Acts Period lt 九鼎娱乐送38 九鼎娱乐送38平台 九鼎娱乐送38网址 gt Berean Bible Society lt Berean Bible Society gt 2001 63 pages ISBN 1893874281 Sherrill John L They Speak with Other Tongues New York McGraw Hill 1964 Stronstad Roger The charismatic theology of St Luke Peabody Mass Hendrickson Publishers 1984 Tarr Del The Foolishness of God A Linguist Looks at the Mystery of Tongues Springfield MO Access Group Publishers 2010 Yun Koo D Baptism in the Holy Spirit New York University Press of America 2003 External links Edit Look up glossolalia in Wiktionary the free dictionary Gerlach Joel C Glossolalia from a Confessional Lutheran perspective Video recorded during a Sunday Prayer Meeting 10 February 2008 Cochin India Kerala this prayer group functions under the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in India Gift of Tongues T Reilly The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 14 1912 Tongues by John Salza bible verses and the Catholic Church fathers on speaking in tongues Glossolalia bible411 com Cessationist perspective Glossolalia as Foreign Language D William Faupel Wesleyan Theological Journal Vol 31 No 1 Spring 1996 pp 95 109 Historical study of Pentecostal beliefs Questions about Tongues Assemblies of God USA Pentecostal perspective The Function of Tongue Speaking for the Individual A Psycho Theological Model Daniel A Tappeiner Journal of American Scientific Affiliation Vol 26 March 1974 pp 29 32 Andrei Bely s Glossalolia sic with an English translation in Italian Esperimenti di Glossolalia A case of glossolalia in theatre Lalia Extreme episode of glossolalia captured in modern music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Speaking in tongues amp oldid 1150831664, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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