The Modern Shift in the Roman Catholic Understanding of Speaking in Tongues
The Modern Shift in the Roman Catholic Understanding of Speaking in Tongues
- Research Article
- 10.1177/0740277513482622
- Mar 1, 2013
- World Policy Journal
Nearer, My God, to Thee
- Book Chapter
10
- 10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.878
- Jan 22, 2021
- Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History
American Pentecostalism is a Christian movement that takes its name from the ecstatic empowerment of early Christians on the Jewish feast of Pentecost, described in Acts 2:1–4 of the New Testament. Known for its enthusiastic worship, the movement holds that the supernatural gifts and manifestations described in the Bible are still available to Christians who have been “filled with the Spirit” through an experience known as “baptism in (or with) the Holy Spirit (or Holy Ghost).” These gifts and manifestations include divine healing, prophecy, and—most notably—glossolalia, also known as “speaking in tongues,” a form of ecstatic vocalization that Pentecostals equate with the spiritual phenomenon of that description found in the New Testament. The origins of Pentecostalism trace to the Wesleyan-inspired Holiness movement of the 19th century, which pursued Christian perfection through “entire sanctification,” an experience subsequent to salvation said to enable Christians to live a sinless life. Most adherents equated sanctification with baptism in the Holy Ghost. By the late 19th century, Holiness had broadened into an ecumenical, multiracial movement whose most zealous advocates sought to recover the power and practices of 1st-century “Apostolic” Christianity, expected the imminent Second Coming of Christ, and embraced uninhibited worship. In 1901, Holiness evangelist and Bible school teacher Charles Fox Parham identified glossolalia as the telltale sign of Holy Ghost baptism in the New Testament, and a revival featuring that manifestation erupted at his school in Topeka, Kansas. Parham promoted the new teaching throughout the lower Midwest, founding a string of “Apostolic Faith” missions. In 1906, an African American Holiness preacher who had briefly affiliated with Parham, William Joseph Seymour, carried the Apostolic Faith message to Los Angeles, where he founded a mission on Azusa Street and led an epochal revival that drew many into the new “Pentecostal” movement. Early Pentecostalism had no hierarchy or authoritative structures and quickly succumbed to doctrinal controversies. First, a dispute over entire sanctification separated “Holiness Pentecostals,” who adhered to the original Wesleyan teaching, from “Reformed” adherents who viewed sanctification as a process realized progressively over a lifetime. Shortly thereafter, a “Oneness” or “Jesus Name” branch emerged among Pentecostals who rejected the doctrine of the Trinity. Formal denominations developed within each of these three branches, although many Pentecostals remained independent of formal affiliation. The middle decades of the 20th century witnessed rapid growth and institutional proliferation within Pentecostalism amid two parallel trends: professionalization and bureaucratization on the one side, and revitalization currents like the divine healing or “Deliverance” movement on the other. Meanwhile, Pentecostal beliefs and practices spread through mainline Protestant, Roman Catholic, and Orthodox churches, giving rise to the Charismatic Movement. These various strains overlapped and converged in a variety of “neo-Pentecostal” forms over succeeding decades, inspiring creative and controversial expressions such as the Prosperity Gospel, entrepreneurial networks of apostles, and new denominations like Vineyard USA. Pentecostalism in the 21st century reflects the entirety of this historical legacy and thus forms a manifold tapestry of extraordinary range and complexity.
- Research Article
5
- 10.1177/004056397103200101
- Feb 1, 1971
- Theological Studies
THE INCREASING frequency of the phenomenon of speaking in tongues, in the Roman Catholic and other Christian denominations, challenges one to outline a theology of this spiritual gift. Morton Kelsey has made an important contribution in the field of psychology. However, while psychological investigations are valid and interesting, they can hardly throw adequate light on supernatural phenomena. One may compare 1 Cor 2:14-16: unspiritual man does not receive the gifts of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned. The spiritual man judges all things, but is himself to be judged by no one. Tor who has known the mind of the Lord so as to instruct Him?' But we have the mind of Christ. The present essay will be approached purely from the biblical point of view. First, it might be useful to give a brief survey of representative exegetical expositions of the pertinent scriptural texts. After this we shall discuss tongues from (a) the individual's and (6) the community's point of view. It is becoming impossible to assemble all the articles relating to glossolalia. Our main interest, however lies in the fact that there is a general tendency among more recent exegetes to accept to some degree the validity of this spiritual experience, to interpret tongues as genuine languages uttered in nonecstatic state rather than gibberish in ecstatic or frenzied state.
- Research Article
- 10.5406/21568030.9.1.02
- Jan 1, 2022
- Mormon Studies Review
The Women's Ordination Movement in the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints: Historical and Sociological Perspectives
- Research Article
- 10.5406/15549399.55.3.05
- Oct 1, 2022
- Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
Pioneer Mother
- Research Article
- 10.18290/rt.2015.62.5-9
- Jan 1, 2015
- Roczniki Teologiczne
Artykuł podejmuje kwestie związane z chrztem w Duchu Świętym i jego sprawowaniem we wspólnotach eklezjalnych. Dar chrztu w Duchu Świętym nie powinien być rozumiany jako duchowe uzupełnienie chrztu, gdyż w sakramencie chrztu ten sam chrześcijanin otrzymał już Ducha. Chrzest w Duchu Świętym jest w rzeczywistości ponownym przeżyciem żywej wiary, która może stać się dla człowieka czymś formalnym albo może mu jej zabraknąć w przeżywaniu spotkania z nieskończoną miłością Boga. Ten dar może być udzielony zarówno wierzącym, którzy podczas otrzymania go są wezwani do podjęcia specjalnej misji (np. J. Vanier), jak i niewierzącym. Dar tego chrztu jest przeważnie celebrowany w małych wspólnotach, które przez katechezy, modlitwy i świadectwo pomagają osobie otworzyć się w pełni na Ducha. W odróżnieniu od pentekostalizmu Kościół katolicki wierzy, że brak mówienia językami nie jest koniecznym warunkiem do potwierdzenia zaistnienia chrztu w Duchu Świętym (nawet jeśli ten dar jest komuś udzielony), ale widoczna przemiana życia. Ta przemiana dokonuje się z sercu człowieka i wyraża się w głębokim pragnieniu modlitwy, uczestnictwa w Eucharystii, miłości Kościoła, zaangażowania w ewangelizację.