- Jul 2, 2018
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Thanks for your reply.Look at the counterfeit. Haven't you heard of skeptics coming into a Pentecostal church, hearing tongues and then the interpretation, and them saying they know the language of the tongues, and the interpretation given was wrong. What they HEARD was blasphemy. The tongues wasn't blasphemy, the counterfeit interpretation of tongues by the skeptic was of the devil.
I have asked a pastor who interprets what he hears. He hears tongues and it turns into English. The same service, a woman was in the audience to understood Zulu. Neither was the language of the tongues, but what they HEARD was the interpretation in a language they understood, and they matched.
I don't think you have to be a visitor to have skepticism about a tongues interpretation. I think we have all heard a message in tongues that was two or three sentences long followed by a five paragraph interpretation. What's up with that? On the other hand I have heard tongues that had recognizable verbal patterns that were matched in the interpretation. Most notably, repeated words in the tongues that were repeated words in the interpretation.
That's a good explanation from the pastor that interprets. But you said "He hears tongues and it turns into English." That's different than only hearing it in English.
I have heard interpretations which sound like the interpretation is coming like a prophecy, phrase by phrase. As if the Lord prompted them to interpret, but it came forth like a prophetic message. In fact, this seems to be the norm from my perspective.
The bottom line is that none of this is a biblical defense. We are entertaining hearsay and individual reports about what we suppose is happening. Again, I don't want to put the Holy Spirit in a box and say what can or cannot happen. But we need to be discerning about these things and not try to create doctrines out of what we suppose might be happening.
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