Irenaeus Against Heresies of Marcus - Speaking in Tongues Anti-Christ
Irenaeus Against Heresies of Marcus describes modern speaking in tongues. Musical worship was always mixed up with charismatic women gladly following men who claimed to be inspired. The songs were speaking in tongues or magical incantations often repeating magical words or numbers over and over. The goal was always to lead weak men and women to look for God only through his agents.
I don't want to be at loggerheads with you, or just argue. But you write in the most censorious manner. And then you write stuff like this. You accuse me of slander. Is there anything I wrote toward you that isn't true? But look at your post here. What do Charismatics, even the most theologically 'off' ones out there, have to do with Marcus' teaching? Did you read any of the three chapters in Ireneaus' book about this? Maybe there is something else out there about Marcus? I think I read I read about him and the use of wine in Eusebius, probably quotes from Ireneaus. But I did not come across any reference to music or singing in Ireneaus section on him. I have never heard a Charismatic teach on aeons or the adoptionist teachings of Marcus.
Marcus also had a really bizaar belief system according to Ireneaus, which involved dividing God up into various elements and letters of the Greek alphabet.
Irenaeus indicates that he had sex with female converts. He comes off as some kind of sex cult leader who taught himself as some kind of instrument of grace.
Charismatic gibberish does not appear in the Bible except in two instances: First, the "lord, lord" sayers were musical prophesiers. They might be singing Hallelujah, Hallalujah over and over as a meaningles song. Jesus said "I don't even know your name."
I would have to guess here that you are talking about Matthew 7, and that you are referring to speaking in tongues as 'gibberish.' If you are referring to Matthew 7, where do you get that the passage has anything to do with music? You have a really nice handle, but where is the grace in what you write, and where is the regard for truth?
Honestly, you seem to have little regard for truth in what you write. I quoted from Ireneaus because you did not believe he supported speaking in tongues. I showed that he was a continuationist, not a cessationist, and he wrote about his own time about brethren speaking in tongues. Then you said I had found 'some website that supports the sign gifts.' Well, any collection of early writings that get dubbed as the writings of 'the early church fathers' by those who use such titles is going to contain writings that are continuationist in nature, because many of them were continuationist both in belief and experience. The reason for that is that the Bible does not teach these gifts ceased, and many of them had experiences that go along with that. Basically, the framework for your cessationist ideas had not been created yet. Why would anyone believe in a doctrine that is not taught in scripture and did not really exist yet? You may be able to find a few quotes from certain church leaders who did not experience certain gifts of the Spirit and tried to come up with theological explanations for that, that later got cobbled into what you believe.
Back to Matthew 7, if that is what you are referring to. Based on what authority do you say this has to do with 'musical prophesyings' or saying 'Hallelujah, Hallelujah' over again? That is actually a Hebrew word, and if it is worthy of being included in the Bible as a word to praise God, why do you not hold it in higher regard? Is repetition evil? Are the four living creatures who cry out 'holy, holy, holy' wrong to do so? I did not see a rebuke at them for doing so in the book of Revelation.
Where is your regard for the truth? You constantly make false assertions about things you know little about. I show you Biblical or historical evidence that debunks your claim, and then you write that you don't read my post, call my quoting the actual historical documents 'egregious', claim they were from a site that supported sign gifts, and then complain about it being a Roman Catholic site. You are free to look for differences at the ethereal library if you like. Chances are slim that you will find anything substantial.
If you are wrong about something, why not just admit it and say, "I did not know that." If you are wrong and then insult the information or the bringer of the information that proves you wrong, and try to discount it with some lame excuse, and then go on to spout falsehoods, with a condescending attitude. People may think you are stupid and arrogant, and if you want to persuade people, that is not a very good method. You are currently establishing yourself as someone whose quotes you have to look up because she is not accurate with her references.
Thinking about posting in response to you the verse about casting pearls to swine comes to mind. I realize there are other posters here, though, that may benefit. But how does it make you feel when other posters on a forum think of posting to you as casting pearls before swine? I would really like, and I actually pray, that you won't act like a pig in the parable. Instead, I would hope that you would value both scripture and other useful information, like history, even be humble and admit when you are wrong, and show respect for scripture and truth? I am not trying to crush your feelings or anything, but being forthright like this is the way I know how to deal with the censorious attitude combined with spouting false information. Why don't you pray about whether you are being arrogant and condescending and whether you are lacking respect for the truth of God's word, mainly, and also history? And then you can ask God for grace to interact with others in a gracious and edifying manner. I'll pray the same.
Btw, in the section on Marcus, Irenaeus
again affirms his believe in the contemporary functioning of the gift of prophecy. I have found nothing in his section on Marcus about speaking in tongues.
I quote below from the ccel dot org version of ANF01. The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus
Chapter XIII.
But already some of the most faithful women, possessed of the fear of God, and not being deceived (whom, nevertheless, he did his best to seduce like the rest by bidding them prophesy), abhorring and execrating him, have withdrawn from such a vile company of revellers. This they have done, as being well aware that the gift of prophecy is not conferred on men by Marcus, the magician, but that only those to whom God sends His grace from above possess the divinely-bestowed power of prophesying; and then they speak where and when God pleases, and not when Marcus orders them to do so.