2.3 Gifts of the Holy Spirit
At various times in His dealings
with men, God conferred the use of His power (“Holy
Spirit”) on men. However, this was never in the form of a
“blank cheque”, as it were, enabling them to do what they
wished; always the use of this Holy Spirit was for a specific purpose.
When it was accomplished, the gift of the Holy Spirit was withdrawn. We
must remember that God’s spirit acts in a way which fulfils the
purpose which is in His mind. This purpose may allow short-term
suffering in the lives of men in order to bring about His long-term
purpose (see Study 6.1), so it is to be expected that His Holy Spirit
would not necessarily be used to alleviate human suffering in this
life. Any such relief it does achieve will be for the higher purpose of
expressing God’s mind to us.
This is in marked contrast to
some attitudes to the Holy Spirit today; the impression is given that
belief in Christ is worth it because of the immediate material benefit,
e.g. healing from illness or the acquisition of money. This would
explain why in poorer countries like Uganda there has been a marked
outbreak of people claiming to possess spirit gifts of healing and,
historically, such claims have often coincided with times of great
human need. This in itself places present claims of spirit possession
under some suspicion; if someone is looking for experience which
transcends the present human plight, it is easy to claim to have found
something which fills the bill.
God has always given His spirit
to achieve specific, defined objectives. Because of this, those who
truly possessed the gifts of the spirit knew exactly what they were to
use them for, and therefore did not achieve only partial success in
their use of them. This contrasts with the many failures and partial
cures experienced by those who claim to have spirit gifts of healing
today.
The following examples all
indicate specific reasons and objectives being behind the granting of
spirit gifts. In none of these cases was there any subjective element
associated with possessing the gifts, nor were the possessors of the
gifts able to use them just as they saw fit. Because we are talking of
God’s spirit, it is inconceivable that men could direct the use
of it, seeing that it was given to them in order to perform certain the
specific desires of God, rather than those of the men who had the
temporary use of it ( cf. Is. 40:13).
§
Early in Israel’s
history, they were commanded to make an elaborate tent
(“tabernacle”) in which the altar and other holy items
could be kept; detailed instructions were given concerning how to make
all the items which would be necessary for the worship of God. To
accomplish this, God gave His spirit to certain men. They were,
“filled with the spirit of wisdom, that they may make
Aaron’s garments...” etc. (Ex. 28:3).
§
One of these men,
Bezaleel, was “filled with the spirit of God, in wisdom, and in
understanding, and in knowledge, and in all manner of workmanship, to...work
in gold and...in cutting of stones...in all manner of
workmanship” (Ex. 31: 3-5).
§
Num. 11:14-17 records how
some of the spirit/power delegated to Moses was taken from him and
given to the elders of Israel, for the purpose of enabling them to
correctly judge the people’s grievances so that there was less
pressure on Moses. Just before Moses’ death, the spirit gift was
transferred from him to Joshua so that he, too, could properly lead
God’s people (Dt. 34:9).
§
From the time that the
people of Israel entered their land until their first king (Saul) they
were governed by men called judges. During this period they were often
oppressed by their enemies, but the book of Judges records how the
spirit of God came upon some of the judges in order to deliver Israel
miraculously from their invaders - Othniel (Jud. 3:10), Gideon
(Jud. 6:34) and Jephthah (Jud. 11:29) exemplify this.
§
Another judge, Samson, was
given the spirit in order to kill a lion (Jud. 14:5,6); to kill 30
men (Jud. 14:19) and to break apart cords with which he had been tied
up (Jud. 15: 14). Such “Holy Spirit” was therefore not
possessed by Samson continually - it came upon him to achieve specific
things and was then withdrawn.
§
When God had a special
message for His people, the spirit would inspire someone to speak out
God’s word. When the message was ended, the spirit gift of
speaking directly on God’s behalf was withdrawn, and that
person’s words would again be his own personal ones, rather than
those of God. One of many examples:-
“The spirit of God came
upon Zechariah...and said unto them (the people), Thus says God, Why do
you transgress the commandments of the Lord...?” (2 Chron. 24:20)
See 2 Chron. 15:1,2 and Lk.
4:18,19 for other examples.
From this it should be evident
that receiving the gift of the use of God’s spirit for a
particular purpose was not
§
A guarantee of ultimate
salvation
§
Something which endured
all a person’s life
It has to be said that there is
much hazy reasoning about gifts of the Holy Spirit. People claim to
have ‘received the Holy Spirit’, and in many a Gospel Hall
the preacher dangles the carrot of ‘receiving spirit
gifts’, wealth and health before those considering
‘accepting Jesus’. But the question must be pressed, Which
gifts? It is inconceivable that men do not know exactly which gift they
possess. Samson was given a spirit gift to kill a lion (Jud. 14:5,6);
as he faced the roaring animal he would have known exactly what the
spirit had been given him for. There could have been no doubt in his
mind. This stands in stark contrast to those today who claim to have
received the Holy Spirit, but cannot perform any specific act; nor do
they know which gift(s) they are supposed to have.
There is surely no alternative
but to conclude that such people have had a dramatic emotional
experience connected with Christianity, and the subsequent U-turn in
their attitude to life has left them with a strange feeling of newness
within themselves. Being aware of this, they have seized on the Bible
passages concerning Holy Spirit gifts, and concluded, ‘This must
be what I’m experiencing!
As we struggle against the
deceptiveness of our own feelings (Jer. 17:9), we must keep our feet on
the solid rock of Bible principles. In nothing is this need more
apparent than in a study of how God’s spirit works. We all like
to think that God’s power is working with us in our lives. But
how and why is He doing so? Do we really possess the spirit gifts as
men did in the Bible record? If we wish to truly know God and have a
living relationship with Him, we will recognise the urgency of properly
understanding these things.
Having the Holy Spirit gifts was
no guarantee of salvation. It is grace that saves, not Spirit gifts
(Eph. 2:8). Men like Saul, Balaam (Num. 23:5,16), Judas (Mt. 10:1) and
those of Mt. 7:21-23 all had the gifts; and yet they will not be saved.
It’s a scary thought- that God can use us to do His will, even
empower us to do His work; and yet this of itself is irrelevant to our
personal salvation.
Reasons
For The Gifts In The First Century
Remembering the basic principles
which we have already learnt about the gifts of God’s spirit, we
now come to the New Testament record of the spirit gifts which were
possessed in the early church (i.e. the groups of believers who lived
in the generation after the time of Jesus).
The Lord’s last command
was for the apostles to go throughout the world preaching the Gospel
(Mk. 16:15,16). This they did, with the theme of Christ’s death
and resurrection foremost in their message. But remember that then
there was no New Testament as we know it. As they stood in market
places and synagogues speaking about this man Jesus of Nazareth, their
story could have sounded bizarre - a carpenter from Israel who was
perfect, who died and was then resurrected in accurate fulfilment of
Old Testament prophecy, and who was now asking them to be baptised and
follow His example.
In those days, other men were
also trying to develop cult followings. There had to be some way of
proving to the world that the message preached by the Christians was
from God Himself, rather than being the philosophy of a band of
fishermen from Northern Israel.
In our day we appeal to the New
Testament records of the work and doctrine of Jesus in order to prove
that our message is from God; but in those days, before it was written
down and available, God allowed His preachers the use of His Holy
Spirit in order to underline the truth of what they were saying. This
was the specific reason for the use of the gifts in the sight of the
world; the absence of the written New Testament would have also made it
difficult for the new groups of believers to grow in their faith. The
numerous practical problems which arose amongst them would have had no
clear solution; there would have been little means of guidance for them
to grow in their faith in Christ. So for these reasons the gifts of the
Holy Spirit were made available for the guidance of the early believers
through inspired messages, until the New Testament record of these
messages and the teaching of Jesus was written and circulated.
As ever, these reasons for the
granting of the Holy Spirit were made abundantly plain.
§
“When he (Jesus)
ascended up on high (to heaven), he...gave (spirit) gifts unto
men...for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the (preaching)
ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ”, i.e. the
believers (Eph. 4:8,12).
§
So Paul wrote to the
believers at Rome, “I long to see you, that I may impart unto you
some spiritual gift, to the end you may be established” (Rom.
1:11).
Concerning the use of the gifts
to confirm the preaching of the Gospel, we read:-
§
“Our Gospel came not
unto you in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy Spirit, and
in much assurance” through the miracles wrought (1 Thes. 1:5 cf.
1 Cor. 1:5,6).
§
Paul could speak of
“those things which Christ has worked by me, to make the Gentiles
obedient by word and (miraculous) deed, through mighty signs and
wonders, by the power of the spirit of God” (Rom. 15:18,19).
§
Concerning the preachers
of the Gospel, we read, “God also bearing them witness, both with
signs and wonders, and with various miracles...gifts of the Holy
Spirit” (Heb. 2:4).
§
A Gospel preaching
campaign in Cyprus was backed up by miracles, so that “the deputy
(governor), when he saw what was done, believed, being astonished at
the doctrine” (Acts 13:12).
Thus the miracles led him to
really respect the doctrines being taught. At Iconium also, “the
Lord...gave testimony unto the word of his grace, and granted signs and
wonders to be done” (Acts 14:3). The ministry of the Lord Jesus
Himself had been backed up by the miraculous Spirit gifts- the Spirit
of the Lord was upon Him exactly because
He had been anointed to preach the Gospel (Lk. 4:18).
All this is summarised by the
comment on the apostles’ obedience to the command to preach:
“They went forth, and preached every where, the Lord working with
them, and confirming the word with signs following”
(Mk. 16:20).
Specific Things At Specific
Times
These gifts of the spirit were
therefore given in order to perform specific things at specific times.
This shows the error of claiming that the miraculous possession of the
gift is a permanent experience throughout a person’s life. The
apostles, including Peter, were “filled with the Holy
Spirit” at the feast of Pentecost, soon after Jesus’
ascension (Acts 2:4). They were therefore able to speak in foreign
languages in order to launch the preaching of the Gospel in a
spectacular way. When the authorities tried to clamp down on them,
“Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit” was thereby able to
convincingly answer them (Acts 4:8). On their release from prison they
were enabled by the gifts to go on preaching - “they were all
filled with the Holy Spirit, and they spake the word of God with
boldness” (Acts 4:31).
The watchful reader will spot
that it does not say that “they, being already full of the
spirit”, did those things. They were filled with spirit to
perform certain things, but had to be re-filled to achieve the next
objective in God’s plan. Paul likewise was “filled with the
Holy Spirit” at his baptism (Acts 9:17), but years later he was
to again be “filled with the Holy Spirit” in order to
punish a wicked man with blindness (Acts 13:9).
In speaking of the miraculous
gifts, Paul wrote that the early believers possessed them
“according to the measure of the gift of Christ” (Eph.
4:7). The Greek word for “measure” means “a limited
portion or degree” (Strong’s Concordance). Only Jesus had
the gifts without measure, i.e. with total freedom to use them as He
wished (Jn. 3:34).
We will now consider those
spirit gifts which seem to have most mention as being possessed in the
first century.
The First Century Spirit Gifts
Prophecy
The Greek word for
‘prophet’ means someone who forth-tells God’s Word -
i.e. any person inspired to speak God’s words, which at times
included foretelling of future events (see 2 Pet. 1:19-21). Thus
“prophets” - those with the gift of prophecy - came
“from Jerusalem unto Antioch. And there stood up one of them
named Agabus, and signified by the spirit that there should be a great
famine throughout all the world: which came to pass in the days of
Claudius Caesar. Then the disciples, every man according to his
ability, determined to send relief unto the brethren” (Acts
11:27-29). This kind of highly specific prophecy, which had a clear
fulfilment within a few years, is quite lacking amongst those who now
claim to possess the gift of prophecy; indeed, so sure were the early
church that this gift really was possessed amongst them, that they gave
their time and money to relieving the hardship which had been
prophesied. Few examples of this kind of thing can be found amongst
those who claim the gift of prophecy today. Indeed, if the gift of
prophecy is possessed, we ought to be able to write down the words
‘prophesied’ and treat them with the same respect as we do
the Bible.
Healing
Seeing that the apostles were
preaching the good news (Gospel) of God’s coming Kingdom of
perfection on the earth, it was fitting that they should confirm their
message by doing miracles which gave a foretaste of what that time
would be like, when “the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and
the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped. Then shall the lame man
leap...” (Is. 35:5,6). For more about conditions in God’s
Kingdom, see Study 5. When God’s Kingdom is established on earth,
such promises as these will not be fulfilled in half measure, nor will
there be ambiguity over whether the Kingdom is here or not. Therefore
God’s miraculous confirmation of the message of that Kingdom was
in a conclusive, definite form which could not be denied; for this
reason many of the miraculous healings performed by the early believers
were in the sight of the general public.
A classic example is found in
Peter’s healing of the lame beggar who was laid each morning at
the temple gate. Acts 3:2 mentions that they laid him there daily - so
he would have been a familiar sight. Having been healed by
Peter’s use of the spirit gift, “he leaping up stood, and
walked, and entered with them into the temple, walking and
leaping...And all the people saw him walking and praising God: and they
knew that it was he which sat for alms at the Beautiful gate of the
temple: and they were filled with wonder and amazement at that which
had happened unto him. And as the lame man which was healed held
Peter...all the people ran together unto them in the porch...greatly
wondering” (Acts 3:7-11).
Peter then immediately launched
into an open-air talk about the resurrection of Christ. Having the
unquestionable, irrefutable evidence before them in the form of that
healed beggar, we can be sure that they would have taken Peter’s
words to be those of God. The temple gate at “the hour of
prayer” (Acts 3:1) would have been thronged with people, like a
shopping mall on a Saturday morning. It was in a place like this that
God chose to confirm the preaching of His word by such a clear miracle.
Likewise in Acts 5:12 we read that “by the hands of the apostles
were many signs and wonders wrought among the people”. The usual
claims made by ‘faith healers’ today seem to revolve around
things which have happened in some back-street hall rather than on the
streets, and in the audience of ‘believers’ hyped up into a
spirit of expectancy for a ‘miracle’ to occur, rather than
before the hard-hearted general public.
Let it be said that the present
writer has had considerable experience of discussing these issues with
present claimants of spirit possession, and also of witnessing many
claims of spirit possession. Yet my ‘personal testimony’ of
seeing many inconclusive ‘healings’, and at best partial
cures, need not be specifically elaborated; any honest member of these
churches will admit that a lot of this goes on. On many occasions I
have put it to my well-meaning Christian friends of this persuasion:
“I’m not unwilling to believe that you might have these
great powers. But God has always clearly shown who has His power and
who hasn’t; so it isn’t unreasonable for me to ask you to
demonstrate the fact to me - and then I might be more inclined to
accept your doctrinal position, which at present I just can’t
reconcile with Scripture”. Never has a clear “demonstration
of the spirit and of power” been given me.
By contrast to my attitude, the
orthodox Jews of the first century had closed minds to the possibility
that Christians possessed God’s miraculous spirit gifts. Yet even
they had to admit, “This man does many miracles”
(Jn. 11:47) and, “For that indeed a notable miracle has been
done...is obvious to all them that dwell in Jerusalem; and we cannot
deny it” (Acts 4:16). Likewise those who heard the Apostles
speaking in tongues were “confounded” (Acts 2:6). The
crowds who saw Christ’s miracles commented: “We never saw
it like this” (Mk. 2:12), as if they had seen plenty of
pseudo-miracles of the kind claimed today, but those of the Lord Jesus
were in an evidently different category. The same awed response from
the unbelieving general public does not occur today in response to
those claiming to speak with tongues. If just one miracle hit the
headlines throughout Jerusalem, is it not reasonable to suggest that if
a true miracle were done in London’s Trafalgar Square or
Nairobi’s Nyaharuru Park or Moscow’s Red Square, there
would then be world-wide recognition that God’s miraculous spirit
gifts are possessed today? Instead, Christians of this persuasion
expect the world to seize upon the following sorts of
‘evidence’ as reasons for their faith in this.
§
Being cured (eventually)
of stomach ulcers; the process of curing is supposed to have begun
after a prayer meeting.
§
Deformed limbs growing
straight.
§
Sight or hearing being
improved, although frequently returning to its previous state.
§
Depression being lifted.
To these examples must be added
the fact that ambulances brought hospital patients to the T.O. Osborn
healing crusades in Nairobi, Kenya; the drivers, faced with the ethical
dilemma of whether to stay or return, remained - and just as well, for
the sufferers received no cure.
Yet the challenge calls out from
many publicity posters for such meetings: “Come expecting a
miracle!” Psychologically the stage is set for all manner of
autosuggestion and the like. Nowhere in the New Testament is there the
slightest hint that such a massive psychological softening-up was
needed before a miracle occurred. It is evident that some of those
healed in the first century did not have faith - one did not know who
Jesus was (Jn. 5:13; 9:36; Lk. 13:10-17; 7:11-17; 22:50; Mt. 8:14;
Mk. 1:32; 5:1-20).
A similar bombardment of the
psyche is achieved by the mind warping of repetitious prayers, the
rhythm of drums and rousing music. There can be no doubt that any
rational awareness of God - and anything else - is blanked out by all
this. The writer can recall attending several such meetings in various
places, and each time experiencing a cracking headache from the
struggle to retain a rational, balanced, Biblical awareness in the face
of the temptation to get lost in the rhythm of drums and hand-clapping.
That all of this appears to be the necessary prelude for a
‘miracle’ is proof enough that the ‘healings’
are a result of emotional and psychological conditioning, rather than
the direct operation of God’s spirit. By contrast, Peter was able
to use the true gift of miracles to heal people as they lay in the
streets (Acts 5:15); Paul’s use of the miraculous gifts was
personally witnessed by an unbelieving Government minister (Acts
13:12,13), as well as by many of the pagans living in the city of
Lystra (Acts 14:8-13). As was required by the very purpose and nature
of the spirit gifts, these things were done publicly, and could in no
way be shrugged off with any other explanation than to admit that here
was God’s power being openly displayed by His servants. Further,
many of those healed by Jesus and the apostles had no faith in the
miracle being performed; maybe their friends did and on that account
they were healed (Mk. 2:5), one man was deaf and had therefore not
heard the message of Jesus (Mk. 7:32); and the healing of the servant's
ear was certainly not expected by the servant (Lk. 22:50,51).
The effect of one of
Christ’s healing miracles was similar: “They were all
amazed (those who saw it), and glorified God, saying, We never saw
anything like this” (Mk. 2:12).
Tongues
The apostles, rough fishermen
that some of them were, received the great commission to go out into
all the world, preaching the Gospel (Mk. 16:15,16). Perhaps their
very first reaction was, “But I don’t know the
languages!” For them it wasn’t even a case of, “I was
no good at languages at school”, for they had had no schooling.
It was written all over them “that they were uneducated and
ignorant men” (Acts 4:13) when it came to that kind of thing. And
even for the more educated preachers (e.g. Paul), the language
barrier was still formidable. When converts were made, the reliance
which they would need to have on each other for edification (in the
absence of the written New Testament) meant that not understanding each
other’s language was a sizeable problem.
To overcome this, the gift of
speaking in foreign languages (“tongues”) and being able to
understand them, was granted. The N.I.V margin renders
“tongues” as “languages”. Obviously there is
stark opposition between this view of “tongues” and that of
many ‘born again’ Christians, who describe their ecstatic
utterances of unintelligible sounds as ‘‘tongues’.
This confusion can be cleared up by showing that the Biblical
definition of “tongues” is “foreign languages”.
On the Jewish feast of
Pentecost, soon after Christ’s ascension to heaven, the apostles
“were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to speak with
other tongues...The crowds came together (again, a public display of
the gifts!) and were confounded, because that every man heard them
speak in his own language. And they were all amazed and marvelled,
saying one to another, Behold, are not all these which speak
Galilaeans? And how hear we every man in our own tongue (the same Greek
word translated ‘languages’) wherein we were born?
Parthians and Medes...we hear them speak in our tongues...And they were
all amazed” (Acts 2:4-12). It is unlikely that the double
emphasis on the people’s amazement and their marvelling would
have been necessary if they had heard only the mumbo-jumbo spoken by
those who claim to have the gift today; that gives rise to petty
sarcasm or indifference, rather than the amazement and conviction from
understanding the words being spoken, which was experienced in Acts 2.
Apart from the clear parallel
between “tongues” and “languages” in Acts
2:4-11, “tongues” is very evidently used to mean
“languages” in other parts of the New Testament; the phrase
“peoples, and nations, and tongues” is used five times in
Revelation to speak of all the peoples of planet earth (Rev. 7:9;
10:11; 11:9; 13:7; 17:15). The Greek word for “tongues”
occurs in the Greek version of the Old Testament (called the
‘Septuagint’) in the sense of languages (see Gen. 10:5; Dt.
28:49; Dan. 1:4).
1 Cor. 14 is a list of commands
concerning the use of the gift of tongues; v. 21 quotes Is. 28:11
concerning how this gift would be used to witness against the Jews:
“In the law it is written, With men of other tongues and other
lips will I speak unto this people...”. Is. 28:11 primarily
refers to Israel’s invaders speaking to the Jews in languages
(“tongues”) they would not have known. The parallel between
“tongues” and “lips” indicates that
“tongues” were foreign languages. There are many other
indications in 1 Cor. 14 that “tongues” refers to
foreign languages. This chapter is Paul’s inspired criticism of
the abuses of the gifts which were taking place in the early church,
and as such it gives many insights into the nature of the gifts of
tongues and prophecy. We will now attempt a brief commentary upon it.
Verse 37 is a key verse.
“If any man thinks himself
to be a prophet, or spiritually gifted, let him acknowledge that the
things that I write unto you are the commandments of the Lord.”
If anyone claims to be
spiritually gifted, he must therefore accept that the preceding
commands about the use of the gifts are inspired by God. Any who today
disobey those commands are therefore openly admitting that they see fit
to despise God’s inspired words.
Verses 11-17:-
“Therefore if I know not
the meaning of the voice, I shall be unto him that speaks like a
barbarian, and he that speaks shall be like a barbarian unto me.
Even so you, as much as you are
zealous of spiritual gifts, seek that you may excel to the edifying of
the church.
Let him that speaks in an
unknown tongue pray that he may interpret.
For if I pray in an unknown
tongue, my spirit prays, but my understanding is unfruitful.
What is it then? I will pray
with the spirit, and I will pray with the understanding also: I will
sing with the spirit, and I will sing with the understanding also.
Else when you shalt bless with
the spirit, how shall he that is unlearned say Amen at your giving of
thanks, seeing he understands not what you say?
For you truly give thanks well,
but the other is not edified.”
To speak in a language which
those present at the service do not understand is therefore pointless.
The use of unintelligible speaking is ruled out - for how can a
truthful “Amen” be said at the end of a
“prayer” composed of gibberish which cannot be understood?
Remember that “Amen” means ‘‘So be it’,
i.e. ‘I totally agree with what has been said in this
prayer’. Speaking in language which is not understood by your
brethren does not edify them, Paul says.
I remember meeting a very
sincere Christian woman outside a major revival meeting. She sought to
persuade me that my position on various issues was
“devil-led” - by talking at me in “tongues” for
10 minutes. In no way could I be “edified” by that; surely
this is exactly what Paul is commanding not to do.
Verse 18:-
“I thank my God, I speak
with tongues more than you all.”
Because of his wide travels in
the preaching of Christ, Paul needed the gift of languages
(“tongues”) more than most.
Verse 19:-
“Yet in the church I had
rather speak five words with my understanding, that by my voice I might
teach others also, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue.”
This is quite plain. A brief
sentence about Christ in English will do me more good than hours of
preaching to me in a foreign language - or unintelligible speach.
Verse 22:-
“Wherefore tongues
are for a sign, not to them that believe, but to them that believe not:
but prophesying serves not for unbelievers, but for them which
believe.”
The use of tongues was therefore
mainly to be used for outgoing preaching of the Gospel. Yet today most
claims of ‘tongues’ possession occur among groups of
believers or (apparently) in their individual, personal experience,
while alone. There is a chronic dearth of examples of such people being
able to speak miraculously in foreign languages in order to spread the
Gospel. In the early 1990’s the door of opportunity opened to
preach Christ in Eastern Europe, but the ‘evangelical’
churches had to distribute their literature in English because of the
language barriers! Surely the gift of tongues should have been used if
it were possessed? And the great mass evangelist Reinhardt Bonke,
whilst claiming phenomenal possession of the spirit, still had to speak
to the crowds in Kampala, Uganda, through a translator.
Verse 23:-
“If therefore the
whole church be come together into one place, and all speak with
tongues, and there come in those that are ignorant, or unbelievers,
will they not say that you are mad?”
This is exactly what has
happened. In my experience, Muslims and pagans alike have mocked the
bizarre behaviour of those claiming the gift of tongues throughout West
Africa.
Verse 27:-
“If any man speak in
an unknown tongue, let it be by two, or at the most by three, and that
in order; and let one interpret.”
Only two or three people were
needed to speak in tongues during any service. It is unlikely that
there would be more than three different languages spoken by any
audience. A service would soon lose all coherence if each sentence of
the speaker had to be translated more than twice. If the gift of
tongues were possessed at a meeting in Central London, attended by
English people, with some French and German tourists present, the
speakers might begin:-
Pastor: Good evening.
First-tongue speaker: Bon
soir (French)
Second-tongue speaker: Guten
abend (German).
But naturally they must speak
“in order”, one after another. Confusion would result from
them speaking simultaneously; yet, because of the fundamentally
emotional nature of present ‘speaking in tongues’, the
phenomena does occur from the mouths of many people simultaneously. I
have observed that once one person starts, others are quickly
influenced to do likewise. It would seem that the ecclesia in Corinth
had some who were doing just what some Christians do today - they
induced themselves to ecstatic behaviour. And Paul is roundly
criticising this.
The gift of tongues would often
have been used in conjunction with that of prophecy, so that an
inspired message from God could be spoken forth (by the prophecy gift)
in a language foreign to the speaker (by the gift of tongues). An
example of such use of the two gifts can be found in Acts 19:6.
However, if at a meeting in London attended by English people and many
French visitors, the speaker spoke in French, the English people
present would “not be edified”. Therefore the gift of
interpreting tongues (or languages) would have to be present, so that
everyone could understand - in our example, to translate from French to
English. Likewise if a question were asked by one of the French
speakers, the speaker would not be able to understand him unaided, even
though he had the gift of speaking in French without personally knowing
it. The gift of interpretation would therefore be present to help in
this.
Without the presence of one with
the gift of interpretation when it was needed, the tongue gift would
not be used: “...let one interpret. But if there be no
interpreter, let him keep silence in the church” (1 Cor.
14:27,28). The fact that many modern claimants of ‘tongues’
speak in ‘language’ which cannot be understood by anyone,
and without an interpreter, is surely a case of flat disobedience to
these commands.
Verses 32,33:-
“And the spirits of the
prophets are subject to the prophets. For God is not the author of
confusion, but of peace, as in all churches of the saints.”
Possession of Holy Spirit gifts
is not therefore to be associated with an experience which takes a
person out of the realms of normal consciousness; the spirit is subject
to the control of the user, rather than a force which takes them over
so that they act involuntarily. It is often wrongly claimed that demons
or ‘evil spirits’ possess the ‘unsaved’ (see
Study 6.3), but that the Holy Spirit fills the believers. But the
spirit power referred to in 1 Cor. 14:32 was subject to the
possessor’s control for specific ends; it was not an animating
force of good in contrast to the force of evil which is in human
nature. Besides, we have shown earlier that these powers of the Holy
Spirit came on the apostles at certain times to perform specific
things, rather than being present with them permanently.
The plea for possessors of the
gifts to use them in a way befitting God’s love of peace and hate
of disorder (v. 33), seems to fall on deaf ears in parts of the
Christian church today.
Verse 34:-
“Let your women keep
silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak;
but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also says the
law.”
In this context of using the
spirit gifts, it is undeniably laid down that a woman should not use
them during a church service. The wholesale disregard for this is to be
expected if the present phenomena of speaking in unintelligible
language is explicable in terms of emotional excitation, passing from
one person to another in an audience. Woman, children - indeed anyone
present with a willing mind - can be affected by such stimulus, and
therefore make the ecstatic utterances, which are passed off as
‘tongues’.
The prominence of women in
alleged ‘tongue speaking’ and ‘prophecy’ in
modern churches just cannot be reconciled with the clear command of
this verse. The desperate argument that Paul was a woman-hater is
quashed a few verses later: “If any man think himself to be a
prophet, or spiritually gifted, let him acknowledge that the things
that I write unto you are the commandments of the Lord” (1 Cor.
14:37) - not Paul personally.
Any believer in an inspired
Bible must therefore accept that these commands of 1 Cor. 14 must be
taken seriously; to flout them openly can only indicate a lack of
belief in the full inspiration of Scripture - or a self-declaration
that one is not spiritually gifted, seeing that someone who lacks the
gifts will deny that the commands of 1 Cor. 14 are the Lord’s
commands for us. The logic of this argument is telling, indeed
devastating.
As a footnote to this section,
it is highly significant that those sects which claim to speak in
tongues have been scientifically proven to have higher levels of
depression compared to people from other backgrounds. Keith Meador,
Professor of Psychiatry at Vanderbilt University, U.S.A., undertook a
major study analysing the relationship between depression and religious
background. He found that “the rate of serious depression
...among Pentecostal Christians was 5.4% compared to 1.7% for the
entire survey group”. The results of his work are written up in
the journal ‘Hospital and Community Psychiatry’, Dec., 1992.
An interesting article, reaching
the same conclusion, appeared in the International Herald Tribune, Feb.
11, 1993; the title speaks for itself: “Pentecostals top charts
when it comes to the blues”. Why is this? Surely it must be
related to the fact that the ‘experience’ of
spirit-possession, which Pentecostals (and others) claim, is no more
than a painful psychological illusion. It would seem that the
Pentecostal movement cannot accept that faith is believing in what
cannot be seen. They want to have God once again speaking to man
directly, guaranteeing health, being visible on earth. But such a view
of Him can only lead to disappointment with God [just consider the
millions of sick and needy Christians alive at this moment]. Faith
comes from hearing God’s word and living it out in all the
difficulty of a relationship with an invisible God, and a Lord and
Master whom having not seen we love. It can also be that a constant
emphasis on God’s power can lead to a kind of fatalism;
we need do nothing, because God’s Spirit will work everything out
regardless.
Felicitas Goodman made a study
of the phenomena of ‘tongue-speaking’ world-wide, across
cultures. She found that there is a consistent pattern of behaviour and
speech even in persons of different language families and from
different religious backgrounds. She concludes that the consistency is
because the phenomena “has a neurophysiological basis”,
i.e. the mind controls the body and speech in a certain way, regardless
of the religious beliefs held. Tongue speaking as practiced today is
therefore a phenomena, not something inspired by the Truth and Spirit
of God (Speaking In Tongues: A Cross-Cultural Study Of Glossolalia,
Chicago: University Of Chicago Press, 1972).