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  1. Oct 28, 2009 · Speaking in tongues (also known as “glossolalia,” from the Greek word “glossa” meaning tongue or language) has been part of Catholic experience at two periods of our history. The first was in the very early Church, as recorded in the New Testament. There are three references in the Acts of the Apostles to speaking in tongues (Acts 2:4,6 ...

  2. Speaking in tongues in Scripture. The first occurrence of tongues speaking in Scripture appears in Acts 2:1–13, where the gift of tongues seems to be functioning as a reversal of the Tower of Babel ( Genesis 11:1–9 ). 4. Rather than scattering and confusing their language, people are gathered together, and they miraculously understand one ...

  3. Aug 29, 2020 · Does the Nazarene Church believe in speaking in tongues? In a 1976 statement still cited today, the Nazarene general superintendents strongly opposed speaking in tongues by Nazarenes and advised churches not “to schedule in our churches speakers or singers who are known to be active in the so-called charismatic movement.”.

  4. Jan 1, 2020 · While he was speaking, “the Holy Spirit came on all who heard the message” and the Gentile listeners began “speaking in tongues and praising God” (vv. 44-46). Likewise, after conversing with a group of disciples in Ephesus, Paul baptized them in the name of Jesus then placed his hands on them and “the Holy Spirit came on them, and ...

  5. Speaking in angelic tongues or just babbling? Speaking in tongues is a practice in which people utter words or speech like sounds often used by believers in ...

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  6. Speaking in tongues was a gift bestowed by the Holy Spirit, but it, or any other gift, can be misused. Speak-ing in tongues was no mark of spirituality, because the Corinthian church was unspiritual, having manifested carnal-ity (3:1-3) and even gross sin (5:1). And so Paul points them to a Scripture they should have known, saying, “In the

  7. May 9, 2019 · The first physical sign of the infilling of the Spirit is speaking in tongues. This is the one physical sign that is consistent in its recurrence, as pointed out earlier. However, the Baptism is not a goal but a gateway. It is a door to Spirit-filled living. It marks a beginning, not an end.

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