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  1. May 26, 2021 · Speaking in tongues is a practice that goes back to Chapter 2 of the New Testament book of Acts of the Apostles, which tells of the first Pentecost or Shavuot celebrated in Jerusalem by Jesus’ disciples, all Jews and Aramaic-speaking Jews from the Galilee, shortly after their teacher’s death.

  2. Feb 2, 2023 · The first instance of Hebrew-speaking angels comes from the Book of Jubilees, considered the oldest source on this topic. The concept of specific languages having religious significance is far from unique to Judaism, but it's vital to understanding how early Christians perceived tongues.

    • Engrid Barnett
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  4. Jun 20, 2017 · 1 Answer. Sorted by: 10. Ronald A. N. Kydd in his book Charismatic Gifts in the Early Church mentions several second-century quotes that he argues refer to glossolalia, what we call speaking in tongues. His work clearly deals with the first century as well, but in that period he mentions only prophecy, not tongues.

    • Challenges of Building A Pentecostal Framework For Tongues
    • The Sources For Building A Pentecostal Framework For Tongues
    • Pentecostal Historians on Tongues Throughout History
    • Conclusion

    The focus here is on the alternative historical framework the original Pentecostal pioneers created to legitimize their practices and how they accomplished this. The tongues crisis or the solutions to the crisisthat early Pentecostal communities were facing after their heavy emphasis on this rite were addressed in previous articles. The early Pente...

    As demonstrated in Pentecostals, Tongues, and Higher Criticismthey especially had a great love for the German turned American historian and theologian, Philip Schaff; the Anglican writer, theologian and Dean of Canterbury, Frederick Farrar; the Anglican theologians Conybeare and Howson, and a very short list of other authors and publications. The e...

    Many readers are skeptical about such an assertion but the relationship is a strong one. The following are publications by Pentecostal authors who wrote for early Pentecostal journals, magazines, and newspapers. The dataset is focused on their citation of tongues history and dependance on Higher Criticism texts for their conclusions. The Pentecosta...

    The reader can clearly see a pattern developing here where the Pentecostal framework for speaking in tongues was based on Higher Criticism. It is noteworthy to see three who were left off the list that would have appealed to the Pentecostal Protestant sense. The great seventeenth-century churchman and Hebraist John Lightfoot, whose commentary on I ...

  5. As we study church history we find that speaking in tongues was not present after the apostolic era. There seems to be a large period of church history when tongues speaking did not occur. Early church leaders such as Justin Martyr, Origen, and Augustine testified that the gift ceased with the apostles.

  6. The stringent requirements that he set for miraculously identifying speaking in tongues seriously curtailed the rite in the Catholic Church. Women Throughout Catholic History Speaking in Tongues. The Gift of Tongues: Women’s Xenoglossia in the Later Middle Ages, by Christine F. Cooper-Rompato, is an excellent book covering this perspective.

  7. Today some Protestant churches believe that speaking in tongues is still a gift from the Holy Spirit. However, other Protestant churches reject this idea, believing the gift of...