The Tongues Confusion
        The Meaning of It 
        The Motive Behind It 
        The Method for It 
        The Misunderstanding About It
        by Dr. Curtis Hutson  
         
        "Now, brethren, if I come unto you speaking with tongues, what shall 
        I profit you, except I shall speak to you either by revelation, or by 
        knowledge, or by prophesying, or by doctrine? And even things without 
        life giving sound, whether pipe or harp, except they give a distinction 
        in the sounds, how shall it be known what is piped or harped? For if the 
        trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the 
        battle? So likewise ye, except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be 
        understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? for ye shall speak 
        into the air. " --I Cor. 14:6-9  
         
        The subject of tongues is worth study because it is in the Bible, 
        and we need to learn how it deals with this important subject for two 
        great reasons.  
         
        First, the tongues, or charismatic movement, is experiencing rapid 
        growth. Seeking for a deeper experience, well-meaning and sincere 
        Christians have been led into the movement. Due to a false 
        understanding, thousands of believers seek for the experience of 
        speaking in tongues in stead of for the power and fullness of the Holy 
        Spirit to win souls. 
         
        On the other hand, many more thousands of Christians are so repulsed by 
        what seems to them fanaticism, that they turn entirely away from any 
        study of the fullness of the Holy Spirit. They are so afraid they will 
        get out on a limb that they never bother to climb the tree.  
         
        I want Christians everywhere to be filled with the blessed Holy Spirit 
        of God. There can be no great soul-winning churches, no revival, without 
        the power of the Holy Spirit. Zechariah 4:6 states, "Not by might, 
        nor by power, but by my spirit, saith the Lord of hosts."  
         
   
      Now there is a second great reason for 
      studying the question of speaking in tongues. There is such widespread 
      difference of opinion among sincere believers that the truth of the matter 
      should be known. Every honest Christian should approach the study of 
      tongues with an open mind and without prejudice. Surely God must be 
      grieved when those who love Him and believe the Bible think so harshly of 
      one another and differ so radically on such an important subject as being 
      filled with the Holy Spirit. 
      In this study I will not talk about 
      experience; we will only see what the Bible says. If one's experience does 
      not agree with the Bible, the experience is wrong, not the Bible. 
      Experience is not the principle; the Bible is. And doctrine is not settled 
      by one's experience but by what the Bible has to say. 
      Several years ago a popular weekly television 
      program featured a detective. If I recall correctly, his name was Sergeant 
      Friday. In every story a situation developed in which Sergeant Friday said 
      to a witness whom he questioned, "Just the facts, Mister. Just state the 
      facts." With God's help, I shall do just that. We will see what the Bible 
      says concerning the meaning of it, the motive behind it, the method for 
      it, and the misunderstanding about it. 
      THE MEANING OF IT
      The word translated "tongues" in Acts 2:4 is 
      the Greek word glossa. I have just counted 50 times in my Strong's 
      Concordance where the word appears in the New Testament. Sixteen times it 
      refers to a literal, human tongue--the physical organ in the mouth; once, 
      in Acts "cloven tongues like as of fire," and 33 times the word means 
      "language." But not one time in all the Bible does "tongues" mean a 
      heavenly language that only God understands. It never means something 
      mysterious nor unknown to mankind. In Acts 2 it was not a jabber but 
      normal, human languages known and spoken by people present on the day of 
      Pentecost; and the nationalities of those in whose language they were 
      allowed to speak are given: 
      "And they were all amazed and marveled, 
      saying one to another, Behold, are not all these which speak Galileans? 
      And how hear we every man in our own tongue, wherein we were born? 
      Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites, and the dwellers in Mesopotamia, and 
      in Judaea, and Cappadocia, in Pontus, and Asia, Phrygia, and Pamphylia, in 
      Egypt, and in the parts of Libya about Cyrene, and strangers of Rome, Jews 
      and proselytes, Cretes and Arabians, we do hear them speak in our tongues 
      the wonderful works of God. " -- Acts 2:7-11. 
      Notice the language of Acts 2. Verse 4 
      states, "They were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and began to speak 
      with other tongues .... " It does not say they spoke with the unknown 
      tongue; they simply spoke with other languages Verses 7 and 8 say, "And 
      they were all amazed and marveled, saying one to another, Behold, are not 
      all these which speak Galileans? And how hear we every man in our own 
      tongue, wherein we were born?" Again the Bible does not say they spoke 
      with some heavenly language and every man understood them because he was 
      filled with the Holy Spirit. It simply says, "And how hear we every man 
      in our own tongue, wherein we were born?" Then verses 9 through 11 
      list the nationalities of people whose languages were being spoken. 
      There are only three places in the book of 
      Acts whet people spoke in tongues. Namely, at Pentecost -- Acts 2:1 11; in 
      Caesarea -- Acts 10:44-46; and in Ephesus -- Act 19:1-6. 
      In Acts 10:46 we are told how Cornelius and 
      hi household were heard to "speak with tongues, and magnify God." 
      And Peter responded by saying, "Can any man forbid water, that these 
      should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we?" 
      These were ne converts, and Peter suggested baptism. The tongues spoken by 
      Cornelius and his household were not miraculous tongues. It simply says 
      that they spake with tongues and magnified God. Cornelius and his 
      household were members of the Italian band from Rome, and their natural 
      language was Latin. It is possible that in the centurion's household were 
      soldiers, slaves, servants and government officials from many of the 
      nations of the Roman world. Could it have been that in their heavenly 
      ecstasy they reverted each to his mother tongue in praising God? 
      It is a psychological truth that in moments 
      of extreme delight or peril a foreigner will exclaim in his native tongue 
      rather than in the language he has more recently acquired. But be that as 
      it may, the tongues referred to in Acts 10:46 were known languages, not an 
      ecstatic utterance. 
      The third historical record of people 
      speaking in tongues in the book of Acts is found in chapter 19:1-6. When 
      Paul met these twelve men in Ephesus, he asked, "Have ye received the 
      Holy Ghost since ye believed?" Their reply was that they had never 
      heard of the Holy Spirit. Now how could followers of John the Baptist be 
      ignorant of the Holy Spirit, when he preached the Holy Spirit (Matt. 
      3:11)? Evidently the true message of John the Baptist had been lost as it 
      was passed from one disciple to another; then when these misled men heard 
      a clear presentation of the Gospel, they were baptized (vs. 5). Verse 6 
      states, "And when Paul had laid his hands upon them, the Holy Ghost 
      came on them; and they spake with tongues, and prophesied." 
      Here again the Bible does not say they spoke 
      with heavenly languages or in some ecstatic utterance, but that they spoke 
      with tongues, or languages. Ephesus, a great cosmopolitan city, was made 
      up of people from different parts of the Roman world. The Bible does not 
      indicate what languages were spoken. But it clearly indicates that more 
      than one language was used: "...they spake with tongues" (plural). 
      And verse 7 states, "And all the men were about twelve." It is 
      possible that a dozen different languages were spoken, as these new 
      Christians, filled with joy, prophesied. 
      Aside from these three instances in the book 
      of Acts, tongues are mentioned in Paul's discussion of the gifts of the 
      Spirit (I Cor. 12:1-14) and in I Corinthians 14. A study of I Corinthians 
      14 will reveal that the tongues mentioned are not so-called spiritual or 
      heavenly languages. The languages used were normal, human languages. It 
      was no jabber, no babble of sound unfamiliar to any human ear. 
      In that chapter it is referred to as "an 
      unknown tongue"; but "unknown" is in italics, which means it is a 
      supplied word, placed there by Bible translators for the sake of 
      understanding. The languages mentioned here are simply foreign languages 
      unknown to those present. Verses 23 and 24 make this especially clear: 
      "If therefore the whole church be come 
      together into one place, and all speak with tongues, and there come in 
      those that are unlearned, or unbelievers, will they not say that ye are 
      mad? But if all prophesy, and there come in one that believeth not, or one 
      unlearned, he is convinced of all, he is judged of all." 
      Now, visualize the scene. A church service is 
      in progress and people are speaking in numerous foreign languages. Some 
      uneducated or unlearned person, as the Scripture calls him, happens to 
      walk into the service. He hears a number of people, all speaking with 
      various languages; it is mass confusion, so he concludes all are mad! But 
      if the church members would speak words easy to understand, instead of 
      speaking in foreign languages that the unlearned do not know, then the 
      unbeliever and the unlearned man would be convinced of all. 
      The use of the word "unlearned," in verses 23 
      and 24, shows that the languages referred to were not supernatural. They 
      could be learned by proper study. One can learn any foreign language if he 
      studies it enough. If the languages used in I Corinthians 14 were a 
      supernatural gift, then it would be available to the unlearned as well as 
      the educated. If speaking in tongues means speaking in some mysterious 
      language known only to God and not known to any group of men, no matter 
      how much learning and education a man has, he will not understand the 
      heavenly language. But foreign languages, known and spoken by men, can be 
      learned. The fact that these languages were the kind that unlearned men 
      did not understand indicates they were known, normal, human languages. 
      Remember, then, that tongues in the Bible 
      simply mean languages and, in the case of I Corinthians 14, foreign 
      languages, unknown by some who attended the church services. 
      THE MOTIVE BEHIND IT
      I have already mentioned that there are only 
      three places in the Bible where people spoke in tongues: Acts 2:1-11; 
      10:44-46; 19:1-6. 
      The central and most important Bible passage 
      on the subject of tongues is found in Acts 2:1-11. First, it is important 
      because it is the first time tongues are discussed in the New Testament. 
      Second, it is important because speaking in tongues was on a larger scale 
      in Acts 2 than in either of the other cases mentioned. Third, it is the 
      most important passage because this is the only instance where we can be 
      absolutely sure that speaking in tongues was a miraculous gift. 
      Acts 2:4 states: "And they were all filled 
      with the Holy Ghost, and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit 
      gave them utterance." 
      In Acts 10 and 19 the Bible simply says they 
      spake with tongues. There is no hint that speaking in tongues in Acts 10 
      or 19 was a supernatural gift. Only in Acts 2:4 does the Bible say "as 
      the Spirit gave them utterance." 
      Now, what was the motive behind this 
      supernatural gift on the day of Pentecost? There were at least 3,000 
      unsaved people present. There could have been more; but according to verse 
      41, three thousand souls were saved: "Then they that gladly received 
      his word were baptized: and the same day there were added unto them about 
      three thousand souls." 
      On the day of Pentecost, God had a problem: 
      3,000 un-saved people were present. The Galileans knew the plan of 
      salvation. They could present the Gospel clearly, but they could not speak 
      in the languages of those who needed to hear the message. The problem God 
      faced was language barrier. He wanted these 3,000 precious souls to be 
      saved, but the men who knew how to present the Gospel could not speak in 
      the languages of the unconverted. So God allowed them to speak in 
      languages which they had not learned. They spoke in other languages 
      supernaturally, in the words of Acts 2:4, "...as the Spirit gave them 
      utterance." 
      Sixteen different nationalities are named as 
      hearing in their own language the wonderful works of God. These 
      Spirit-filled Christians at Pentecost witnessed for Jesus in sixteen 
      different languages beginning with that of the Parthians and ending with 
      that of the Cretes and Arabians: 
      "And they were all amazed and marveled, 
      saying one to another, Behold, are not all these which speak Galileans? 
      And how hear we every man in our own tongue, wherein we were born? 
      Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites, and the dwellers in Mesopotamia, and 
      in dudaea, and Cappadocia, in Pontus, and Asia, Phrygia, and Pamphylia, in 
      Egypt, and in the parts of Libya about Cyrene, and strangers of Rome, Jews 
      and proselytes, Cretes and Arabians, we do hear them speak in our tongues 
      the wonderful works of God. " --Acts 2:7-11. 
      When these precious unconverted people heard 
      the Gospel, they trusted Jesus Christ as Saviour. And the Bible states in 
      Acts 2:41, "Then they that gladly received his word were baptized: and 
      the same day there were added unto them about three thousand souls." 
      The important thing on the day of Pentecost 
      was not the speaking in tongues but the conversion of 3,000 sinners. And 
      that places importance on soul winning, not on speaking in tongues. The 
      tongues were secondary and incidental. They were only a means to an end; 
      the end was soul win ning. 
      That is certainly consistent with Acts 1:8, 
      where Jesus said, 
      "But ye shall receive power, after that 
      the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall be witnesses unto me both in 
      Jerusalem, and in all Judaea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part 
      of the earth." 
      It is said of John the Baptist in Luke 
      1:15,16, 
      "For he shall be great in the sight of the 
      Lord, and shall drink neither wine nor strong drink; and he shall be 
      filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb. And many of the 
      children of Israel shall he turn to the Lord their God." 
      To put the emphasis on speaking in tongues 
      would be like having someone bring you a million dollars in a brown paper 
      bag, and you dump the money into the trash and get excited over the paper 
      bag. The paper bag was the instrument in which the money was delivered. 
      The money is the important thing, not the bag. 
      The tongues on the day of Pentecost were the 
      instrument through which the message was delivered that resulted in 3,000 
      souls saved. The salvation of 3,000 sinners was the important thing, not 
      the tongues that delivered the message. Winning souls was the motive 
      behind speaking with tongues in Acts, chapter 2. 
      Aside from the three instances recorded in 
      the book of Acts, one other place in the New Testament mentions speaking 
      in tongues. It is in Paul's discussion of the gifts of the Spirit in I 
      Corinthians 12:1-14. Verse 10 lists, among other gifts, "divers kinds 
      of tongues." The church at Corinth is the only New Testament church 
      that spoke with tongues. It is never mentioned in connection with the 
      churches in Macedonia, Achaia, Judea, Samaria, Asia, Rome or any other 
      place. 
      First Corinthians, chapter 14, does not 
      contain a list of exhortations to speak in tongues but a long list of 
      restrictions against the practice. Paul is not encouraging the Christians 
      at Corinth to exercise the gift but to refrain from its use. He is not 
      giving a set of rules on how to speak in tongues but rather laying down 
      strict regulations to restrain its use in the church. 
      Before giving a number of these regulations 
      found in I Corinthians 14, I should call attention to the fact that the 
      tongues in I Corinthians 14 are different from those in Acts 2, Acts 10 
      and Acts 19. 
      In Acts 2 the disciples simply preached the 
      Gospel in the languages of those present. They heard the Gospel, trusted 
      Christ as Saviour and 3,000 were saved. The tongues used on the day of 
      Pentecost were not unknown languages to the hearers. 
      The tongues mentioned in I Corinthians 14 
      were unknown to the congregation. They were foreign languages not known by 
      the people in the church, thus they were unknown tongues. 
      Now, notice several regulations Paul lays 
      down in regard to speaking in tongues. 
      First, no tongues or foreign languages 
      were to be used in the church except when people present understood what 
      was being said. 
      "If any man speak in an unknown tongue, 
      let it be by two, or at the most by three, and that by course; and let one 
      interpret. But if there be no interpreter, let him keep silence in the 
      church; and let him speak to himself, and to God. " -- I Cor. 14:27, 
      28. 
      Second, there should never be more 
      than two or three in any service speaking in other languages or tongues.
      "If any man speak in an unknown tongue, let it be by two, or at the 
      most by three, and that by course; and let one interpret" (vs. 27). 
      Third, only one person was to speak at 
      a time. Any time two or three were speaking at the same time it was 
      clearly out of order. "...let it be by two, or at the most by three, 
      and that by course" (I Cor. 14:27). If tongues were ever spoken in a 
      service, it had to be "by course," never two speaking at the same time. 
      Fourth, any religious service where 
      speaking in tongues caused confusion was clearly not of God: "For God 
      is not the author of confusion, but of peace, as in all churches of the 
      saints" (I Cor. 14:33). 
      Fifth, under no condition was a woman 
      to speak in an unknown tongue in the church: 
      "Let your women keep silence in the 
      churches: for it is not permitted unto them to ,speak; but they are 
      commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the law. And if they will 
      learn any thing, let them ask their husbands at home: for it is a shame 
      for women to speak in the church. " -- I Cor. 14:34, 35. 
      That is a strange statement for the Apostle 
      Paul to make, since in I Corinthians 11:3-10 he had just given 
      instructions how women were to dress when they prayed or prophesied in the 
      church. Now, in I Corinthians 14:34 and 35 he says they are not to speak 
      at all but to keep silent. 
      Has he forgotten what he has just written? Is 
      he stupid? Has he lost his mind? No, not at all. These verses forbid-ding 
      women to speak in the church are found in the middle of this chapter on 
      speaking in tongues. He is giving regulations on the use of tongues in the 
      church, and he says the women are to keep silent. They are not permitted 
      to speak! 
      Dr. W. A. Criswell said: 
      
        "In front of the ancient city of Corinth 
        was the deep blue sea. Behind the city of Corinth was the steep, high 
        Acro-Corinthus, an Acropolis far more prominent than that in Athens on 
        which was built the Parthenon. Crowning the imposing Acropolis at 
        Corinth was a magnificent temple to Aphrodite (Latin, 'Venus'). 
        "The Greek goddess of love and beauty was 
        worshiped with sexual orgies. The temple prostitutes who were used in 
        these orgies of worship worked themselves up into ecstatic frenzies as 
        they followed their heathen, immoral rituals. 
        "The sight of frenzied women speaking in 
        unknown tongues in their dedication to immorality was a common one in 
        the days of Graeco-Roman culture. Paul's abhorrence of such speaking is 
        explicable and obvious. Paul assumes that even strangers walking by an 
        assembly of God's people, seeing and hearing the women talking in 
        unknown tongues, would immediately say: 'What have we here; a little 
        colony of Aphrodite? Let us go in and enjoy the sensual pleasure.' 'No,' 
        said the apostle, 'a thousand times no! 
        When it comes to speaking in tongues, let 
        your women keep silent in the churches. It is a shame [mark this word 
        'shame'] for women to speak in unknown tongues in the church.' 
        "That interdiction still stands, unremoved. 
        The hysterical, unseemly excess of tongue-speaking women in public 
        worship is a reproach to the name of the Lord." 
       
      Sixth, Paul encourages the church to 
      speak in a language understood by the congregation: 
      "I thank my God, I speak with tongues more 
      than ye all: Yet in the church I had rather speak live words with my 
      understanding, that by my voice I might teach others also, than ten 
      thousand words in an unknown tongue. " --I Cor. 14:18, 19. 
      These are tremendous odds -- 5 to 10,000! 
      This would be enough to stop the practice of tongues forever in the 
      judgment of any ordinary fair-minded person. The practice has no, place in 
      the church. 
      Recently I wrote on the margin of my Bible 
      five reasons why tongues were not suited for public worship services. 
      
        - It could not be generally understood and 
        therefore required the services of an interpreter to be of any value.
        
 
        - It repelled unbelievers and did not edify 
        believers who could not understand what was being said. 
 
        - It led unbelievers to conclude that those 
        who spoke in this unintelligible manner, when they could have used known 
        languages, were out of their minds; they were mad. 
 
        - It might lead the hearers to conclude that 
        God is the author of confusion, since those who spoke in tongues claimed 
        to do so by the power of the Holy Spirit. 
 
        - It actually thwarted God's purpose which 
        is that His witness should be understood by all. 
 
       
      Why use such a round-about way to get the 
      truth to people? God never used such means nor did the apostles. 
      THE MISUNDERSTANDINGS ABOUT IT
      There are several misunderstandings regarding 
      speaking in tongues. Some say it is the evidence of the fullness of the 
      Holy Spirit. Others say tongues is a prayer language and they speak to God 
      in tongues. Still others insist that speaking in tongues is a sign of 
      spirituality. When one becomes spiritual enough he will speak with 
      tongues. 
      Is speaking in tongues the evidence of the 
      fullness of the Holy Spirit? Let us see what the Bible says. There is not 
      a single statement--either before or after Pentecost--in which the Bible 
      speaks of the gift of tongues as the evidence or part of the evidence of 
      being filled with the Holy Spirit. This is a doctrine not founded upon a 
      single clear statement in the Word of God. 
      Pastor Donald Gee, a well-known writer of the 
      Pentecostal movement, said in his booklet, Speaking in Tongues, the 
      Initial Evidence of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit: 
      
        "The doctrine that speaking with other 
        tongues is the initial evidence of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit rests 
        upon the accumulated evidence of the recorded cases in the book of Acts 
        where this experience is received. Any doctrine on this point must 
        necessarily be confined within these limits for its basis, for the New 
        Testament contains no plain, categorical statement anywhere as to what 
        must be regarded as THE sign." 
       
      Those who teach that speaking in tongues is 
      the evidence of the fullness of the Holy Spirit get such an idea from 
      history, from books or from human experience, not from the Bible, since it 
      says nothing about it. 
      There are good reasons to believe that 
      speaking in tongues is not the evidence of the fullness of the Holy 
      Spirit. 
      First, as I have mentioned, the 
      Scripture nowhere says that speaking in tongues was the evidence. 
      Second, another evidence was promised. 
      Acts 1:8 states, "But ye shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost 
      is come upon you: and ye shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and 
      in all Judaea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth." 
      Here the Bible says that when they were 
      filled with the Holy Spirit they would receive power to witness. That is 
      exactly what happened in Acts, chapter 2. Filled with the Holy Spirit, 
      they preached the Gospel and 3,000 souls were saved! 
      It is said of John the Baptist in Luke 
      1:15,16, "For he shall be great in the sight of the Lord, and shall 
      drink neither wine nor strong drink; and he shall be filled with the Holy 
      Ghost, even from his mother's womb. And many of the children of Israel 
      shall he turn to the Lord their God." 
      Notice it says nothing about John the Baptist 
      speaking in tongues. It does say, "And many of the children of Israel 
      shall he turn to the Lord their God." When he is filled with the Holy 
      Spirit, he will be a great soul winner. If there is an evidence of the 
      fullness of the Holy Spirit, it is soul winning, not speaking with 
      tongues. 
      Third, there are examples in the Bible 
      of those who were filled with the Holy Spirit but did not speak in 
      tongues: Jesus--Luke 3:21,22 and Acts 10:38; John the Baptist--Luke 1:15, 
      16; the converts at Samaria--Acts 8:14-17; the Apostle Paul--Acts 9:17. 
      The great soul winners of our day are men who 
      have been filled with the Holy Spirit but never spoke in tongues. 
      Then there are the great evangelists and 
      preachers of yesteryear who were filled with the Holy Spirit but never 
      spoke in tongues: Dwight L. Moody, Charles G. Finney, Dr. R. A. Torrey, 
      John Wesley, George Whitefield, Charles Haddon Spurgeon, Billy Sunday, J. 
      Wilbur Chapman, George Truett, Gipsy Smith and many, many others. 
      Since God gave another evidence of the 
      fullness of the Holy Spirit, it is wrong and foolish for anyone to believe 
      that speaking in tongues is the evidence when God says nothing of the 
      kind. 
      There is another misunderstanding regarding 
      speaking in tongues. Some who speak in tongues say it is a prayer 
      language, basing the teaching on I Corinthians 14:2, "He that speaketh in 
      an unknown tongue speaketh not unto men, but unto God." A little study 
      here will clarify your mind. This verse simply says if a man speaks in the 
      church in a foreign language, which no one understands, then he is not 
      speaking unto men but unto God. Then the verse goes on to explain, 
      "...for no man understandeth him." The Scripture does not say and does 
      not mean that the tongues mentioned here were a language known only to 
      God. An unknown tongue is any foreign language unknown to you or unknown 
      to the person who hears it spoken. 
      If I spoke in Chinese to an English-speaking 
      audience who did not understand Chinese, I would not be speaking to men 
      because they would not understand the language. I would be speaking to 
      God, since He understands and knows all languages. What God has in mind 
      here is simply foreign languages unknown to those present but not unknown 
      to God. 
      Recently in a restaurant, I sat near several 
      people who were speaking in a language unknown to me. As I enjoyed my 
      meal, I wished I could understand what they were saying. But they were not 
      speaking to me since the language spoken was unknown to me. However, the 
      language they were speaking in was not unknown to God, and He heard and 
      understood every word. 
      There is no such thing as a special prayer 
      language. God understands one language as well as the other. He is 
      omniscient. There is no language unknown to God. He hears every 
      conversation. 
      Several years ago I led a lady to Christ who 
      knew very little English. When I asked her to pray, she indicated that she 
      could not speak the English language well enough to pray. I suggested that 
      she pray in her own native tongue, which she did. The tongue was unknown 
      to me. I have ab solutely no idea what she said, but I am sure God heard 
      every word. And when she had finished praying, a glow came over her face 
      as she reached out to shake my hand. The next Sunday I had the happy 
      privilege of baptizing her, and she made a faithful church member. There 
      is no such thing as a special prayer language. 
      There are those who believe that speaking in 
      tongues is a sign of spirituality. This is another misunderstanding. Only 
      one church in the Bible ever spoke with tongues--the church at Corinth. It 
      is clear from the Scriptures that this was not a spiritual church. Paul 
      said in I Corinthians 3:2, 3, 
      "I have fed you with milk, and not with 
      meat: for hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet now are ye 
      able. For ye are yet carnal: for whereas there is among you envying, and 
      strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk as men?" 
      Here the Bible specifically says the church 
      at Corinth was carnal and not spiritual. They were not able to eat strong 
      meat and must be fed on the milk of the Word (I Cor. 3:2). Some of them 
      were puffed up and offended with Paul (I Cor. 4:18). There was fornication 
      among them: a man living in sin with his stepmother and the church openly 
      taking his part (I Cor. 5:1). Church members were going to law with one 
      another before unbelievers (I Cor. 6:1-8). Some of the church members ate 
      meat offered to idols (I Cor. 8). There were divisions and heresies at the 
      Lord's Supper, and some came to the communion drunk (I Cor. 11:17-21). 
      Some church members denied the resurrection (! Cor. 15: 12). The only 
      church in the Bible where members spoke in tongues was not spiritual but 
      carnal. So, speaking in tongues could not be a sign of spirituality. Now, 
      these closing words. 
      I would exhort every Christian to be filled 
      with the Holy Spirit. You may as well try to beat back the tide with a 
      pitchfork as to try to do God's work without the fullness of the Holy 
      Spirit. 
      When you are filled with the Holy Spirit, 
      then spend your time winning souls to Christ. The whole purpose of the 
      Holy Spirit's coming into the world was to "reprove the world of sin, 
      and of righteousness, and of judgment" (John 16:8). What does it 
      matter if you speak with the tongues of men and of angels and never lead a 
      soul to Christ! What difference would it make if you could speak a dozen 
      languages--whether by human wisdom or by a miracle--if you never gave 
      anyone the plan of salvation or told a sinner how to be saved? 
      
      Be filled with the Holy Spirit and win 
      souls. 
      
      Contacting Sword of the Lord
      This, and other booklets, can be obtained by 
      contacting Sword of the Lord Publishers directly, please do not direct 
      your queries to Roy Lister (me), though I will be happy to answer any 
      questions regarding the subject matter of the material shown here. 
      
          Sword of the Lord Publishers 
          Po Box 1099 
          Murfreesboro 
          Tennessee, 37133 
          U.S.A
      
      © Copyright 1985 by Sword of the Lord Publishers  
  
      ISBN 0-87398-840-X 
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