You assume that Paul is speaking in tongues in similar fashion to what is spoken today. I do not believe that the narrative supports that Paul spoke without knowledge of what he was saying. Paul knew several languages and spoke to different audiences is those languages when it was appropriate. The Corinthians made speaking in tongues something it was never meant to be.
In Acts we have folks getting saved and speaking in tongues with the audience comprehending what was said in their native language. What was going on in Corinth is not the same from what we can deduce from the scriptures. We do not have any record of what was said by any of these believers. I find that strange.
There is nothing in 1 Cor 12-14 that supports the fantasy that folks were speaking in a heavenly language. There is the probability that some spoke in their language and no one else present understood that language hence the need for an interpreter.
What we have today is folks getting excited about gifts for the sake of demonstrating power. Here again I do not see this a operating in love but rather personal gratification.
Your eisegesis, elaborate though it may be, does not consider the rest of scripture and the new nature Christ has given those who love Him.
For the cause of Christ
Roger
In Acts we have folks getting saved and speaking in tongues with the audience comprehending what was said in their native language. What was going on in Corinth is not the same from what we can deduce from the scriptures. We do not have any record of what was said by any of these believers. I find that strange.
There is nothing in 1 Cor 12-14 that supports the fantasy that folks were speaking in a heavenly language. There is the probability that some spoke in their language and no one else present understood that language hence the need for an interpreter.
What we have today is folks getting excited about gifts for the sake of demonstrating power. Here again I do not see this a operating in love but rather personal gratification.
Your eisegesis, elaborate though it may be, does not consider the rest of scripture and the new nature Christ has given those who love Him.
For the cause of Christ
Roger
Have you come across anyone, ever, with the learned ability to prophesy accurately? How about work miracles (and I don't mean the parlour tricks of charlatans)? Or perhaps healing? No? Then it's unlikely that the gifts spoken of in 1 Corinthians 12 are learned abilities.
Nothing in Scripture requires that the manifestation of speaking in tongues as described in 1 Corinthians 12 must conform to the pattern of Acts 2. We just assume that it should. Acts 10 doesn't conform to Acts 2 either, but that is conveniently overlooked.
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