Ok, so my friend at school is talking about how at his church service(he's evangelical church or something) some people got soooo into worship they started speaking different languages, which was caused by the Holy Spirit. I told him that yes this kind of thing where people talked different languages has happened(at the Tower of Babyl and Pentecost) but this is just church, and there is no point in that happening unless you were preaching to some foreign person. I think i was wrong though because you never really know what God's will is. but my question is, is this from the Holy Spirit or people just being stupid to make themselves think they are holy? I believe it's totally garbage, but i was wondering what the Coptic Community has to say on it. Maybe I was wrong. Thanks guys.
Comments
How great is our God!!!!
I was in the middle of reading an article by Bishop Youssef about this very subject when I saw your post.
Here is the link to the article: http://www.suscopts.org/messages/lectures/pneumlecture4.pdf
Pope Shenouda wrote about the same thing in pages 137-150 of his book Comparative Theology (Link: http://www.orthodoxebooks.org/node/10)
I will attempt to give a very short summary, but I advise all to look at the links I provided:
Let us look at a selection from 1 Corinthians 14 Here we see that there is a state of prayer where the Spirit prays, but the understanding is unfruitful. About this St. Paul said in verse 28 : "But if there is no interpreter, let him keep silent in church, and let him speak to himself and to God"
In Chapter 14 St. Paul also says: We see that St. Paul does not advocate, and rather speaks against speaking in tongues to a congregation if there is no interpreter, and as he says: yet in the church I would rather speak five words with my understanding, that I may teach others also, than ten thousand words in a tongue.
Please pray for me,
Anba Bola
I don't understand your inference relative to His Holiness. His Holiness saying the Lord's Prayer is not the equivalent of people babbling in false, non-recognized tongues. Coptic is a real language. The babblings at these revival meetings are non-descriptive words, not founded in any languages. I have attended some of these meetings to find out first hand what goes on, and it was all faked. I cannot corroborate whether His Holiness went to a meeting like this in his lay years or even in any clerical capacity, but it is impertinent.
In this last post you clarified things. In your initial post, it was very vague and I did not quite understand what you were trying to say.
I think by starting posts with haha puts the reader into confusion as to intent.
So please bear with one another in love.
Father Peter
Hey Geomike,
How great is our God!!!!
I was in the middle of reading an article by Bishop Youssef about this very subject when I saw your post.
Here is the link to the article: http://www.suscopts.org/messages/lectures/pneumlecture4.pdf
Pope Shenouda wrote about the same thing in pages 137-150 of his book Comparative Theology (Link: http://www.orthodoxebooks.org/node/10)
I will attempt to give a very short summary, but I advise all to look at the links I provided:
Let us look at a selection from 1 Corinthians 14 Here we see that there is a state of prayer where the Spirit prays, but the understanding is unfruitful. About this St. Paul said in verse 28 : "But if there is no interpreter, let him keep silent in church, and let him speak to himself and to God"
In Chapter 14 St. Paul also says: We see that St. Paul does not advocate, and rather speaks against speaking in tongues to a congregation if there is no interpreter, and as he says: yet in the church I would rather speak five words with my understanding, that I may teach others also, than ten thousand words in a tongue.
Please pray for me,
Anba Bola
Almost all of my church doesn't know Coptic.
Does that mean that we shouldn't pray in Ccoptic?
God bless and Pray for me,
Cyril