Is It Biblically True? Tongues: The Sign of Being Filled with the Holy Spirit
There have been many discussions about the sign gift of tongues. Some believe speaking in tongues is the sign that a believer is filled with or baptized in the Holy Spirit. Thus, many Christians yearn for this specific gifting under the belief that tongues is the manifestation needed to confirm they have received the Spirit of God. Today, I want to test this with Scripture to see whether that belief is true. Is speaking in tongues the sign of being filled with or being baptized in the Holy Spirit? If so, what about those who have never spoken in tongues? If not, what is the purpose of this miraculous gifting?
Introduction
Background on the Idea
Phrase that came into prominence in modern times in the holiness movement of the 19th century. It was used by such teachers as W.E. Boardman and Asa Mahan to describe the “second blessing” of sanctification. Toward the end of the century, partly through the influence of R.A. Torrey (1856–1928), the meaning of the phrase shifted from sanctification to empowering for service. With the turn of the century, baptism of the Spirit as evidenced by speaking in tongues became the distinctive teaching of the emerging Pentecostal movement.
An evangelical charismatic reformation movement that usually traces its roots to an outbreak of tongues-speaking in Topeka, Kansas, in 1901 under the leadership of Charles Fox Parham, a former Methodist preacher. It was Parham who formulated the basic Pentecostal doctrine of “initial evidence” after a student in his Bethel Bible School, Agnes Ozman, experienced glossolalia in January 1901.
Basically Pentecostals believe that the experience of the 120 on the day of Pentecost, known as the “baptism in the Holy Spirit,” should be normative for all Christians. Most Pentecostals believe, furthermore, that the first sign or “initial evidence” of this second baptism is speaking in a language unknown to the speaker.