First of all, my stand (so far): I believe that modern Charismatic tongues is a human ability, not languages, and therefore contain no message. Therefore, it cannot be a gift of the Holy Spirit, since it's not miraculous. Further, any attempt at interpreting tongues is a feeble attempt at mimicking what is seen in scripture. I'm basing this on my experience in Pentecostal and Charismatic circles for 25 years, and on my reading and research for the past 20 years.
What about basing some aspect of what you believe about this on scripture? Is there any reason, Bibilically, why you think that none of the expressions of speaking in tongues or claims of other people understanding it can be genuine? That's the issue here.
I certainly would not rule out the idea that some percentage of cases of speaking in tongues are not the real thing. It is another thing to decree that the Holy Spirit never works in this way which scripture shows him working.
One of the objections to my stand is the growth of Pentecostalism and the Charismatic movement, which is cited as evidence against what I'm saying. But popularity and sincerity are not the criteria for evaluating a movement. In fact, popularity of a movement is evidence that the movement has a carnal element.
The church in Jerusalem grew, we might guess to 10,000 or so in the accounts we read in the book of Acts. That alone was not evidence of a lack of spirituality. Acts does not present it that way. I can see some carnal elements, btw. But growth is not the evidence.
If someone is using growth as evidence against what you are saying, that is not a very good argument, btw.
One of the radical proofs that early Christianity was of God was the prolific miraculous nature of their deeds. Modern P/Cs (Pentecostals/Charismatics) claim miracles, but provide little to no evidence of them. Such hype is described by 2 Pet. 2:18 and Jude 1:16 as "great swelling words." And the result is described as "clouds without water."
In my experience, the vast majority of Pentecostals, and Charismatics also, are not braggadocious about having performed miracles. There are some who talk quite a bit about them, but you don't actually see any when they lay hands on the sick. I have seen that also. That does not mean that God does not perform miracles. I went to a church that had a Christian school associated it with it and attended that school for one year. A student a year ahead of me had very visibly crossed eyes and wore glasses that magnified the size of her eyes many times. She obviously had a visual problem. She was healed after an evangelist laid hands on her. I even 'interviewed' her informally about it... as in had a conversation with her. I've known a number of other people to be healed. There are people healed in crusade evangelism. The cases that are healed are evidence that healing continues. The cases where people make claims but there are no miracles proves nothing about whether there is miraculous healing today.
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IMO the debate between cessationism and continuationism doesn't get anywhere because it doesn't address the heart of the issue. The real issue is the nature of tongues, and the fact that modern tongues is not the same thing as NT tongues. Every time I try to get some P/C to submit their tongues for evaluation, the response is always evasion and hostility. This tells me that I'm poking the heart of the issue. Because all modern P/C tongues that have been evaluated have been found to be a pseudo-language. It sounds like a language, but has no structure or sufficient vocabulary to convey meaning, therefore it is called a false language.[/quote]
If someone asked me to submit a sample of speaking in tongues for research, my mind goes to the fact that if there is no interpreter... let him speak to himself and to God. Is it for public consumption... of unbelievers? Paul presents negative effects. Would it be respectful to the Spirit to do so. Those would be my concerns.
I did once hear an audio of Perry Stone preaching at a church where he said this is for someone listening by the Internet and it was not to be interpreted and spoke in tongues. There may be some issues as to how that fits with Biblical church order. I played the clip for a PhD who taught Arabic and knew Farsi without telling him the background. He thought it might be Kurdish, but did not know. I did not pursue it further. In this case, it was presented, presumably, as a human language, unless the listener online was expected to interpret it.
I am writing as someone with an undergraduate degree in Linguistics with advanced degrees in another field. My PhD training did include social science research methodology, so I was trained to deal with threats to validity, natural experiments and various other issues related to experimentation that might be tangentially related to the issue.
Linguistics is not the only valid form of study. Pentecostal studies might approach topics using a theological approach or from the perspective of a historian. If you look at the issue from a historical perspective, there are numerous people who claimed to hear real languages around the time of the Azusa Street Revival, including in the meetings there, and have their 'speaking in tongues' identified as real languages. Vinson Synan was a historian who started the field of Pentecostal studies as an academic discipline. He was also a pastor and a part of a Pentecostal denomination. I asked him about the claim I had read about Agnes Ozman that she had spoken in Chinese in 1901. I asked him who in the town of Topeka would even know Chinese back then. He said he read it in some of their papers and it had been identified by someone at a Chinese laundry. I also read about Bohemian immigrants recognizing her speaking in tongues in English. Val Dez wrote about Russian being spoken 'in tongues' at the Azusa Street Revival and someone recognizing it, and understanding the interpretation if I recall correctly. Synan has an interview with elderly saints who were children at Azusa Street and one of them responded to his question that they spoke actual languages in tongues and part of what drew the crowds were people hearing their own languages in tongues. Testimonies along these lines from other locations made their way into The Apostolic Faith, the newsletter of the revival.
I posted somewhere in the forum an Assemblies of God article that dealt with numerous accounts of speaking in tongues in real languages, many of them more recent. The A/G has had a huge missionary effort, and there have been many such experiences over the years. I have also spoken face to face with individuals who claim to have had a tongue they spoke in identified as a real language or else heard their language spoken 'in tongues.' I can think of two individuals I have corresponded with, one of them a doctor in a theological field with whom I have had conference calls for prayer who I can say I know, even though it is virtual.
Historical analysis and eye-witness testimony of events are forms of evidence also. Let's say someone does speak in a fake tongue and a linguist spends hours and finds there is no pattern that he can identify as being a real language. Does that prove that these cases I mentioned did not take place? You cannot falsify another sample by looking at the evidence of another sample.
Also, even if you start from the assumption that linguistics is advanced enough to identify patterns in human language well enough to exclude a sample as being human language, then tongues are still falsifiable. Acts 2 deals with human language. I Corinthians 13 suggest speaking in tongues in men and of angels. If take that passage without an agenda, both are possible. Other things in Paul's list, like giving all to the poor, are possible actions. We might know enough about the ways in which human languages are inflected for meaning-- consonants, vowels, in some cases morii, tones, and intonation. But we cannot say this about angelic languages. Tongues is therefore unfalsifiable using Linguistic.
I have not read Samarin's book, but I believe a documentary-type film I saw may have included a bit of his research. I also skimmed a bit of one of his papers in a Sociology journal. He, or the researcher, ruled out an utterance in tongues from being a real language due to the lack of intonation. It was spoken in a high pitched monotone. I knew a Canadian who used to pray in English and in tongues using that same high pitched monotone. I could understand her English, but if I were to use the criteria presented in that video, I would have to exclude her English from being a real language due to the lack of tone.
IMO the solution to the problem is to expose modern tongues for what they really are - a counterfeit. I get that some have already done that with evaluation, but the word needs to be spread. I think if the nature of modern tongues is exposed, people will begin to see that it's not miraculous, and not of the Holy Spirit. As long as it remains mysterious, people are in the dark about it, and people will be deceived about it (as many are today). However, I realize this is a tall order.
Your interest and efforts might better be spent spreading another message-- the Gospel.
If some cases of speaking in tongues are genuine, couldn't it potentially be harmful for you to spread this message? Couldn't you find yourself bearing false witness against God?