I'm glad you mentioned the interpretation coming along with the tongues. I've been puzzled by that. I don't have the gift of tongues or interpretation. I have a friend who told me a story about visiting someone in a remote area of Colombia from an old indigenous tribe, and she was able to speak to him in his language, even though she had no prior knowledge of this language, and they were all amazed. That sounds like tongues to me. Then she's also told me about when she's just praying by herself and speaks in a language of God that she doesn't understand, but she knows God does. I don't get that. Where's the interpretation? I don't see what the purpose of that would be, to speak in a language only God understands to God Himself. I don't judge her. She's a very faithful woman and has been encouraging to me in so many ways. I don't get it, though. Anyhow, i did want to say that i appreciate your posts. You seem very well spoken. God bless.
I Corinthians 14 explains this. Speaking in tongues edifies the speaker. Paul wished all his readers would do that, but he would prefer they prophesied and edified the congregation. For greater is he who prophesies than he who speaks in tongues--- unless he interprets-- that the church may be edified.
The chapter goes on to explain that uninterpreted tongues do not edify other people. But one who gives thanks in tongues gives thanks in tongues well. He goes on to teach that if one speak in tongues let it be by two or three and to let one interpret, but if there be no interpreter, let him keep silent in the church and speak to himself and to God.
So uninterpreted tongues are a way the speaker can pray to God and can edify himself or herself. A lot of personal devotional activity, like prayer in our own language also, is self-edifying. In church, tongues need to be interpreted to edify the congregation.
We also need to keep in mind that the 'commandments of the Lord' in scripture for church meetings may not be about the type of church meetings many Christian are used to. For example, many modern church meetings either have a priest leading liturgy or else on pastor assigned to give one long sermon for 30 to 45 minutes. The congregation sings before and after. Another individual might pray. Some churches have a very small version of the Lord's Supper with a tiny token meal either weekly, monthly, or less frequently.
But in the New Testament, we see they ate a meal together for the Lord's Supper, and for the ministry of the word type activities, in I Corinthians 14:26, we see that the speakers in the meeting (more than one) could be 'every one of you' within the parameters that Paul laid down. Believers could share a psalm, teaching, tongues, revelation or interpretation in the meeting. There are specific instructions for the speaker in tongues and interpreter in the verses that follow. The church is commanded to 'Let the prophets speak two or three, and let the other judge.' They are to yield the floor if someone else receives a Revelation. Paul says, "For ye may all prophesy one by one....'
Paul does not specifically mention a specific role for pastor/elder/bishop to speak in the church meeting. Since that role aligns somewhat with teaching, 'every one of you hath....a doctrine' allows for these church leaders to teach in the meetings as well.
Hebrews 10:24-25 tell the readers to consider how to provoke one another to love and to good works and not to forsake assembling. But it also indicates what we should do when we assemble--'but exhort one another.'
Some Pentecostal meetings are a merger of the traditional evangelical meeting and this type of meeting we see in scripture, carving out a little space for tongues and prophecy, but restricting the teaching for the most part to someone in a clergy role. Other Pentecostal churches have done away with the place for tongues an interpretation in the meeting. The Azusa Street Revival, at times, had meetings more similar to what was described in I Corinthians 14:26, and while there might be some niches of Pentecostalism that have elements of that or other vestiges of it with allowing testimonies, most churches restrict some of these activities to whoever is pastoring. I could say the same comparing some early Charismatic meetings to later one.
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