I do not know what you are trying to say with that last line, so I cannot claim credit for saying that.
I'll quote you: "If Paul wants the tongue interpreted--
not an uninterpreted tongue followed by something else, could this be a list of the types of things that speaking in tongues may be also. He also talks about praying in tongues a bit further down in the passage. "
I was responding to that. If you need to refresh your memory, it's in this post:
https://christianchat.com/threads/m...pentecostal-movements-5-35.77743/post-4753086
I do not know what you are trying to say. What does 'something else out of someone's imagination' mean.
It's the M.O. of modern P/Cs: someone speaks the gibberish (excuse me, "glossolalia") that we are talking about, and then someone says what they think is the interpretation of it. What I'm quite certain that's really going on:
1. P/Cs trying to convey the idea that God is working miracles among them (which I question),
2. One person speaks in modern tongues (which I say is gibberish nonsense, invented by their natural ability),
3. Another person invents an interpretation from his imagination,
4. Then they claim it's what is described in 1 Cor. 14 (which I say it isn't).
I thought by now you would understand my position. I've tried to make it very clear in this thread, starting with this previous post:
https://christianchat.com/threads/tongues-false-teaching.196454/post-4737227
An interpretation conveys the meaning of what was said in the tongue/language.
It's my understanding that Biblical tongues conveys a meaning, and the interpretation is a translation of the tongues. I understand it may not be a word for word translation, it might be a paraphrase. But both the tongues and the interpretation convey the same meaning. Not so with modern tongues. Modern tongues, IMO based on my research, is nonsense, and so-called interpretation is something someone invents in their mind. No one has actually heard from God. It is believed that the format of this activity is a manifestation of the Holy Spirit, but I say it's not. And whenever I question it and ask for clear evidence of the claim to divine origin, there is hostility and evasion, because they have a vested interest in keeping it mysterious. It's the mysterious nature of it that is deceiving people.
Paul goes on to say that in the church he would rather speak with his mind than in a tongue-- contrasting the two types of prayer. Paul says that someone gives thanks in tongues is not a comment on whether other people understand.
I didn't say it was. I said that tongues is giving thanks whether people understand it or not. Just because modern tongues is not understood doesn't justify the claim that it is of divine origin. If modern tongues is nothing but gibberish, nonsense, and a human ability as I say it is, then 1 Cor. 14 doesn't even apply to it. I'm making the point that Biblical tongues actually conveys meaning, since Paul said it blesses and is "giving thanks." Modern tongues (I'm saying) is not that. Modern tongues is gibberish and nonsense, and doesn't convey any meaning. The problem is when people assume that since they can't understand it, that it's Biblical, and that's simply not true.
My understanding of the passage is that speaking in tongues means speaking in languages. Chapter 13 suggests that may be tongues of men and of angels. I take 'no man understandeth him' to refer to those present in the assembly, the typical situation there. I do not/ take that to mean that no one on earth understands that language. Some people interpret it that way. I do not. Historically, Pentecosalism emphasized real languages, human languages. But many Pentecostals allow for tongues of angels based on i Corinthians 13. And some take 'no man understandeth him' to mean it isn't a normal human language. I do not. That is not the historical viewpoint within Pentecostalism either.
Parham was so convinced that the tongues they were speaking were languages, that they guessed what those languages were, and sent missionaries to those regions of the world. But there was 100% failure in regard to communicating anything at all with foreigners. So, rather than question what they were doing, they invented the Pentecostal tradition that those tongues were languages of angels. Nonsense! Pentecostalism is drowning in error in that regard.
In the situation Paul described, the way things happened in the church, those present did not understand.
Paul does not specify whether the languages are human or angelic in I Corinthians 14. Acts 2 describes people hearing their own languages 'in tongues'.
I established a long time ago that the tongues Paul was talking about in 1 Cor. 14 was human languages. Acts 2 makes that clear, and Peter acknowledges that tongues that people spoke were the same as they received. It's obvious that they are talking about human languages. According to proper hermeneutics, the rule of Biblical precedent is to be applied, that the first description of tongues is the same as all other mentions of it later. So, there is no reason to assume that the tongues of 1 Cor. 14 is any different in nature than the tongues of Acts 2. To claim a difference is to impose error on the scripture.
It should not be projected onto me either. My reading of Paul is that speaking in tongues in church is normal. Not interpreting tongues spoken out in the congregation is the problem. It is normal, based on what Paul writes, for members of the body of Christ to sing, teach, share revelations, speak in tongues and interpret. Uninterpreted tongues do not edify others. The passage seems to imply the Corinthians were speaking in tongues in the congregation without interpreting it, possibly going on and on like that. I do not agree with that.
Some Pentecostal churches have people speaking in tongues all at the same time 'en masse.' I don't agree with that. The churches I went to growing up did not have that, or at least I don't remember it. After a tongue, someone interpreted. At least one church I went to had people who taught on this as a matter of church order and doctrine. These were Assemblies of God churches for the most part. The A/G had churches that had different practice when it comes to tongues and order, apparently.
Here is where our paths diverge, since it is apparent that you still assume that modern tongues is the same thing as described in scripture, which I disagree.
You accused me of a straw man earlier, when I could not figure out what was supposed to be a straw man. This is a straw man. What I am saying is any language you do not understand sounds like gibberish to you. It does not sound like gibberish to others who know the language. But in the situation Paul describes in I Corinthians 'no man understandeth him' and speaking in tongues is interpreted through an interpreter. Chapter 12 lets us know that this comes through a spiritual gift. I Corinthians 14:13 tells the one who speaks in an unknown tongue to pray that he may interpret. I am a bi-lingual (a non-native speaker of Indonesian), and if I pray in one language, I can translate into the other. I do not have to pray for a spiritual gift to be able to do so.
Our paths diverge here, because you assume that the gibberish spoke by modern P/Cs is actual language. If you read the book I cited earlier, it shows that modern tongues is not language, so it's called "pseudo-language." If you don't understand what I'm saying, I don't know how to get past the confusion.