James_Newman
New Member
So your saying that you have the supernatural ability to speak languages that you never learned, and other people can understand them? If that is the case, I apologize.
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1 Corinthians 12:4-11 -Originally posted by James_Newman:
So your saying that you have the supernatural ability to speak languages that you never learned, and other people can understand them? If that is the case, I apologize.
Apology accepted.Now there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit. And there are differences of administrations, but the same Lord. And there are diversities of operations, but it is the same God which worketh all in all.
But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal. For to one is given by the Spirit the word of wisdom; to another the word of knowledge by the same Spirit; To another faith by the same Spirit; to another the gifts of healing by the same Spirit; To another the working of miracles; to another prophecy; to another discerning of spirits; to another divers kinds of tongues; to another the interpretation of tongues: But all these worketh that one and the selfsame Spirit, dividing to every man severally as he will.
Let's review:Originally posted by James_Newman:
So why don't you tell me some of the things you have preached to unbelievers in other tongues that got them saved. That would be an awesome testimony.
I insisted you prove that tongues is a made-up gift, or of the devil. You have yet to do so.I was subjected to the pentacostal persuasion as a child and that stuff is of the devil. Making up a gift of the spirit and using it as a spiritual barometer, or worse yet, evidence of salvation. There is nothing biblical about it.
I would prefer those who use this verse to justify their "speaking in tongues" tell me how they do that with this passage (Acts 2).Take that up with the person who posted that passage as a refutation of tongues.
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Originally posted by Bro Tony:
I would be astonded if anyone who speaks in tongues were able to justify it with just that passage. You see, my friend, no one was trying to justify speaking in tongues with that passage. Rather, someone was trying to refute speaking in tongues with that passage. Thus your preference is misdirected.Take that up with the person who posted that passage as a refutation of tongues.
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I would prefer those who use this verse to justify their "speaking in tongues" tell me how they do that with this passage (Acts 2).
Bro Tony
That you would be astounded that someone would try does not negate the fact that many have. As they have tried to justify a prayer language from Romans 8:26. They have been used to reference these practices although neither verse teaches the practices. That someone was trying to refute does not keep me from adding to the discussion my concerns. If you don't want to deal with it or feel inadequate to do so, or hold the view that Acts 2 does not teach speaking in tongues, fine. That fact remains that others have.I would be astonded if anyone who speaks in tongues were able to justify it with just that passage. You see, my friend, no one was trying to justify speaking in tongues with that passage. Rather, someone was trying to refute speaking in tongues with that passage. Thus your preference is misdirected.
That you would be astounded that someone would try does not negate the fact that many have. As they have tried to justify a prayer language from Romans 8:26. They have been used to reference these practices although neither verse teaches the practices. That someone was trying to refute does not keep me from adding to the discussion my concerns. If you don't want to deal with it or feel inadequate to do so, or hold the view that Acts 2 does not teach speaking in tongues, fine. That fact remains that others have.Originally posted by Bro Tony:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />I would be astonded if anyone who speaks in tongues were able to justify it with just that passage. You see, my friend, no one was trying to justify speaking in tongues with that passage. Rather, someone was trying to refute speaking in tongues with that passage. Thus your preference is misdirected.
TP.I have spent this thread reacting to those who think it is Christlike to openly mock, or dismiss out-of-hand, people who (while adhereing to faith in Christ and the oh-so-Baptist insistence on full immersion believer's baptism) practice a different method of worship than do they.
Question! What was noised abroad?Originally posted by tragic_pizza:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by MEE:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by James_Newman:
Acts 2:6 Now when this was noised abroad, the multitude came together, and were confounded, because that every man heard them speak in his own language.
The feast was the passover. What makes you think that the "event" that took place, took place within the confines of the upper room? The Scripture doesn't say that it did.Originally posted by MEE:
What *EVENT* was happening, in the upperroom, that was noised abroad; that caused the multitude to come together?
Any comments?
MEE![]()
The feast was the passover. What makes you think that the "event" that took place, took place within the confines of the upper room? The Scripture doesn't say that it did.Originally posted by DHK:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by MEE:
What *EVENT* was happening, in the upperroom, that was noised abroad; that caused the multitude to come together?
Any comments?
MEE![]()
1 Samuel 10:10 And when they came thither to the hill, behold, a company of prophets met him; and the Spirit of God came upon him, and he prophesied among them.Originally posted by MEE:
Now, back to the point of "The Event" that took place..IT WAS THE FIRST TIME THAT GOD HAD POURED OUT HIS SPIRIT ON MAN...evidenced by speaking in other tongues...under the "Grace Dispensation."
MEE![]()
Pentecostal Man’s Glossolalia Echos NBA Rosters </font>[/QUOTE]Originally posted by Joseph_Botwinick:
Disclaimer: Again, this is a joke. Do not take this seriously.
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Pentecostal Man’s Glossolalia Echos NBA Rosters
MURFREESBORO, TN – When new believer Gentry Tate attended Murfreesboro Assembly of God’s Friday Night Signs and Wonders meeting, he wasn’t expecting to make use of his acute knowledge of professional basketball. However, when traveling preacher Morgan Sheppard gave the altar call for those who wanted to receive the baptism of the Holy Spirit, Tate turned to the NBA for guidance. “He laid hands on me, and I didn’t want to let him down, so I spouted the weirdest gibberish I could come up with: ‘Kirelenko, Mutombo, Potapenko, you name it’. I guess it worked - everyone around me praised Jesus.”
The 21 year old native of Murfreesboro was led to Christ by best friend Cole Smith earlier this year. “Cole said I needed to get baptized and filled with the Holy Ghost, so he dunked me down at Buffalo Creek. I didn’t talk in tongues, so I guess it didn’t take. He suggested I see an anointed preacher like Reverend Sheppard. On the way over, Cole kinda prepped me for the infilling. He said I just needed to do some baby talk and the Holy Ghost would take over from there. Boy am I glad I was watching the Spurs-Jazz game before I went.”
“His prayer language is beautiful,” said long time Assembly attender June Dunton. “When he rattled off that string of ‘Stojakovic Ilgauskis Pau Gasol,’ I was just mesmerized. I never heard anything like it before.” For his part, Tate simply didn’t want to embarrass Reverend Sheppard. “Everybody he slapped on the forehead did a tongue, but I was at a loss for words. Until I remembered Tim Duncan’s slam dunk. Then I went for it with a, ‘Hallelujah Manu Ginobili.’ I heard everybody around me saying ‘yes Lord,’ so I figured I had the Holy Ghost. Then I let loose with a ‘Hallelujah Manu Ginobili Hedo Turkoglu,’ and it was on. Everybody started jumping up and down. I thought ‘Oh yeah? Take this...’ and I fired off a ‘Hallelujah Manu Ginobili Hedo Turkoglu Slava Medvedenko! MEDvedenko! Whoooaaa MedveDENKO!’ It felt like a tongues triple-double.”
Though Tate’s tongues were received by all, the interpretation was difficult to decipher. “I really couldn’t get a read on it,” said Duncan Thiel, 47. “So we called in Brother Metcalf.”
Burl Metcalf, 101, was a toddler during the Azusa Street revival in the early 20th century, and is Murfreesboro Assembly’s chief tongues expert. “Try as I could, all I could come up with was ‘3 ball from downtown!’, and ‘Who’s your Daddy now, sucka!’ I suppose it means the Trinity in the New Jerusalem is still our heavenly Father, or something.