- Mar 28, 2005
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Oscarr,
Are you promoting the view that tongues is the "initial physical evidence" of the baptism with the Holy Spirit and that one will not be able to speak in tongues without this experience?
In Christ, Oz
My view is that the initial evidence of the baptism in the Holy Spirit is faith. When a believer comes to the certainty that the baptism in the Spirit is God's will for him/her, and uses the Scriptural way of receiving God's blessings by asking for Him to come into his/her life; and then receiving the Spirit into his/her spirit, then the believer makes a statement of faith: "I am now baptised in the Spirit". This assurance of faith is the first evidence. A person does not have to wait for a sensory "experience" for this to happen. In fact, waiting for a sensory manifestation before he/she believes that the baptism in the Spirit has taken place is actually faith in manifestations and experiences, rather than in the promises of God's Word. This is where some Pentecostals and others miss the point.
Where tongues comes into the picture is the fulfillment of what Jesus said to the woman at the well: "From out of your innermost being shall flow rivers of living water." Jesus was speaking to her of the Spirit that believers will receive.
Receiving the baptism in the Spirit accepts the Spirit into the believer's spirit. He now indwells the believer. But the Holy Spirit has to have a way of flowing out through the believer. Some believe that this is the fruit of the Spirit, but that does not happen right away. It can take weeks, months or even years for that to happen completely.
But a flow can happen right away as soon as the believer starts exercising the gifts of the Spirit. This is where I believe the gift of tongues comes in. There are two aspects of tongues: the prayer language, and the actual gift of tongues which is interpreted. The former is practiced before God in private, the latter in the church.
This is why I encourage believers to speak in tongues, because this is the best way of getting that flow of the Spirit to come out of the person.
Therefore, to answer your second question: A person does not have to speak in tongues in order to believe that they are baptised in the Spirit. But a person baptised in the Spirit is able to speak in tongues.
In the same manner, a car mechanic does not have to use a socket set to fix cars to be a mechanic, but as a mechanic he is free to use a socket set to fix cars if he sees the need for it.
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