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Denise's avatar

“Speaking in tongues.” I’ve been in churches that said that unless you “gibbered and guttled” called “speaking in tongues,” you were not “filled with the Holy Spirit.

I’ve been in ones that the chaos of people “manifesting with demons” and others “speaking in tongues” was uncomfortable and distracting.

Most sing phrases of a song over and over and over until people go into a type of trance and start the guttural gibberish, people going to the front on their knees, crying, rhythmically dancing … it reaches a crescendo and then the “pastor” ( who might know 5 people in the congregation with no desire to actually Shepard’s the flock) brings it around to a prayer, a cherry picked Bible verse and people file out.. emotional but not edified not feeling like they e been with “brothers and sisters “ as few actually talk or care to know each other. It’s a concert and an emotional outlet, perhaps a feel good moment. They leave never cracking a Bible but looking at screens. Sad

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ClearMiddle's avatar

OK, you asked for it. One minor point with the Greek, a misspelling. γλῶσσα transliterates as "glōssa". The macron over the transliterated "o" (ō) differentiates between the Greek letters omega (ω) and omicron (ο). The accent (shown as circumflex over omega "ῶ") also falls on the transliterated ō, so it could be written as "glṓssa", but accents are typically omitted from transliterations, and acute over macron over "o" can be a bit difficult to make out anyway.

Oh, one other thing, not involving Greek. There was a time not that many years ago when I was attending two churches, one on Sunday mornings (mine) every week and another, intermittently in the afternoon. Both met in the same sanctuary. The former was a mainline denomination church with no particular gospel to share. The latter was an ethnic (Fijian) Pentecostal church that preached the gospel, that was instrumental in bringing me fully back into the faith. God had a hand in that, for sure.

"Speaking in tongues" was not a big thing, and I don't even know if they were doing that or just speaking in their native language. I never asked, and it only happened occasionally, not even every week. What I do know is that they liked to sing contemporary songs from earlier decades, and sometimes in Fijian, showing phonetic lyrics on the screen. This meant that I was able (already knowing the English lyrics) to sing along with them instead in their language!

Fond memories.

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