I think you’re kind of warping things here. Utterance can be almost anything that comes out of your mouth; it describes something/anything which is spoken. So, random free vocalization, though not language, is something that is ‘uttered’, i.e. ‘spoken’. Just like language, just like gibberish, just like the nonsense vocables of some songs. Not sure what your point here is.
‘Tongues’ is not supernatural; it refers to rational language(s). That’s what the word ‘glôssa’ means.
Scripturam ex Scriptura doesn’t always work – you need to put things into historical and cultural perspective to gain a better understanding of what was written. Each book, letter, etc. was written for a specific audience at a specific point in time. That needs to be put into historical and cultural perspective to make better sense of it.
Though I do not follow your particular spiritual path, I assure you I am not an atheist.
I am not disproving anything, but rather putting what was written into a cultural and historical perspective (e.g. the demographics of Corinth in the 1st century AD) which, if anything, sheds a clearer light on the subject.
‘Tongues’ is not supernatural; it refers to rational language(s). That’s what the word ‘glôssa’ means.
Scripturam ex Scriptura doesn’t always work – you need to put things into historical and cultural perspective to gain a better understanding of what was written. Each book, letter, etc. was written for a specific audience at a specific point in time. That needs to be put into historical and cultural perspective to make better sense of it.
Though I do not follow your particular spiritual path, I assure you I am not an atheist.
I am not disproving anything, but rather putting what was written into a cultural and historical perspective (e.g. the demographics of Corinth in the 1st century AD) which, if anything, sheds a clearer light on the subject.
the gifts of the Holy Spirit are supernatural they are explained as such in 1cor 12 through 14. The word
glossa = of uncertain affinity; the tongue; by implication, a language (specially, one naturally unacquired):—tongue. acts 2:4 Greek.
yes right we do need to have what is known as authorial intent
that is done by using the circle of Contextual meaning:
1.what was the author saying
2. who was the author saying it to?
3. what was the time frame in which it was said
4. how did they apply it when it was said?
5. how do we apply it today.
we can go back and forth with hermeneutical methods all you would like sir, but you are incorrect in your point of
" you need to put things into historical and cultural perspective to gain a better understanding of what was written."
If you do not follow steps 1 to 5 .
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