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Speaking in tongues. Christadelphian Presentation. Speaking in Tongues. “If with tongues of men I speak and/even of angels, and have not love…”. Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice . Dead Sea Scrolls Text Songs dedicated to particular Sabbaths in the first quarter of the year
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Speaking in tongues Christadelphian Presentation
Speaking in Tongues “If with tongues of men I speak and/even of angels, and have not love…”
Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice • Dead Sea Scrolls Text • Songs dedicated to particular Sabbaths in the first quarter of the year • Songs are for angels to utter in the heavenly tabernacle-sanctuary • Dates for the texts range from c. 75-50 BCE to c. 50 CE • Songs functioned primarily to form the identity and confirm the legitimacy of the priestly community
Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice • The recitation of the songs, which exhort the angels in the divine temple to praise God, would have been a way of associating the divine temple with the worshiping community at Qumran • They lift one up emotionally and imaginatively into the midst of heavenly choirs
Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice • ...to praise your glory wondrously with the divinities of knowledge, and the praises of your kingship with the m[ost] holy ones...how will it be regarded [amongst] them? And how our priesthood in their residences? And [...] their holiness? [What] is the offering of our tongue of dust (compared) with the knowledge of the divinity[ies?...] • 4Q400 2 1, 6-7
Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice • [...] through the wonderful height [...] tongue of purity [...] gods (~yhla), seven [...] 4Q400 3 1, 1-2 • ...Psalm of praise, on the tongue of the fou[rth]...[Ps]alm of [tha]nksgiving, on the tongue of the fifth...[Psalm] of exultation, on the tongue of the sixth...Psalm of [singing, on the to]ngue of the seventh of the [chief] pri[nces,] a powerful song [to the God] of ho[lines] with its se[ven] wo[nd]er[ful songs] 4Q403 1 1, 1-6
Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice • Proclaim his glory with the tongue of all who proclaim knowledge, his wonderful songs with the mouth of all who proclaim [him. For he is] God of all who sing {knowledge} for ever, and Judge in his power over all the spirits of understanding. 4Q4031 1 36-37 • In the chiefs of the praise-offerings are tongues of knowledge. They bless the God of knowledge in all the works of his glory. 4Q405 23 2, 12
Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice • There was awareness on the part of the Qumran sectarians that angels praised God in their own tongues • This may appear to be an unremarkable point except that it has a specific implication for 1 Cor 13:1. Paul’s reference to “tongues of angels” is a reference to tongues spoken within the Corinthian assembly when praising God.
Testament of Job • Dated to between the 1c. BCE and 1c. CE • In the Testament, Job gives one of his daughters some sashes, And she took on another heart—no longer minded toward earthly things—but she spoke ecstatically in the angelic dialect, sending up a hymn to God in accord with the hymnic style of the angels. And as she spoke ecstatically, she allowed “The Spirit” to be inscribed on her garment. T. Job 48:2-3
Testament of Job • Job’s other daughters likewise took on “the dialect of archons”, “the dialect of those on high”, and the “dialect of the cherubim” (T. Job 49:1-50:3) • What is clear from the Testament is that there is a concept of angelic language being spoken • Crucially, the writing of these hymns is described in terms that allow for the role of interpretation • The process of “explanation” implies interpretation of the hymns and this corresponds to the requirement for interpretation in Corinth
Testament of Job • After the three had stopped singing hymns, while the Lord was present as was I, Nereus, the brother of Job, and while the holy angel also was present, I sat near Job on the couch. And I heard magnificent things, while each one made explanation to the other. And I wrote out a complete book of most of the contents of hymns that issued from the three daughters of my brother, so that these things would be preserved. T. Job 51:1-4
Proposal Speaking in tongues in Corinth was praising God; when a language was known, it was a tongue of men; when it was not known it was regarded as a tongue of angels.
1 Corinthians • “sounding brass, tinkling cymbal” 1 Cor 13:1 • “pipe or harp” 1 Cor 14:7 • “trumpet” 1 Cor 14:8
Acts • Scholars have primarily asked whether the tongues mentioned in the account of Pentecost should be seen as glossolalia, akolalia, or xenolalia. • This is a debate about whether the phenomenon is a miracle of hearing or speaking and whether the speaking is intelligible foreign languages or unintelligible speech
Acts • Luke uses avpofqe,ggomai in Acts 2:4 (“utterance”) to describe the speech act “Moreover David and the captains of the host separated to the service of the sons of Asaph…who should prophesy with harps, with psalteries, and with cymbals” 1 Chron 25:1
Acts • In Pss 58:8 where the verb is used to describe the lying of the enemies of Israel, the Psalmist contrasts this with his singing (v. 17) • The related noun occurs in the Song of Moses (Deut 32:2, cf. Odes 2:2), “My doctrine (avpo,fqegma,) shall drop as the rain, my speech shall distil as the dew, as the small rain upon the tender herb, and as the showers upon the grass”
Acts • Luke is therefore invoking a liturgical framework for understanding the speech acts engendered by the Spirit at Pentecost: these involve praise, but not ecstatic praise. • Luke places the disciples in the Temple on the day of Pentecost; the word “house” is used by him (Acts 7:47, 49; Luke13:35, 19:46) when he is directly using Jewish scriptural material about the temple • A setting in the Temple makes it more likely that the Spirit would have inspired praise amongst other speech acts
Acts • The subject matter of the tongues is denoted by ta. megalei/a (v. 11) and this noun is used with verbs of proclamation in the LXX (e.g. Sir 18:4, 36:8, 2 Macc 3:34) including the praise of God’s mighty acts (e.g. Sir 17:10, Pss 70:19) • The Gentile “Pentecost”, modelled on the account in Acts 2, uses the verb megalu,nw (“to magnify”) to characterize the tongues (Acts 10:46). This verb is used elsewhere by Luke in describing Mary’s song of praise (Luke 1:46)
Acts • Peter’s speech is missiological and directed towards devout Jews of the Diaspora resident in Jerusalem, but there is no suggestion that this speech act had a multi-lingual character • Similarly, there is no evidence that the speech acts of praise initially initiated by the Spirit (v. 4) were directed towards any person or group. Their multi-lingual character allowed Diaspora Jews to understand something of what was being uttered, but this does not imply that the speech acts were delivered in their direction
Conclusion • The speech acts of tongues at Pentecost were “praise”. • The tongues at Corinth were “praise”. • Tongues could be tongues of men or angels depending on their human intelligibility to those present. • Tongues might need interpretation if tongues of men but would need interpretation if tongues of angels. • Tongues whether of men or of angels were engendered by the Spirit but were not ecstatic or frenzied-they were structured and hymnic