What the Biblical Text Actually Says About: Speaking in Tongues

Much ink and venom have been spilled over the question of what tongues was in the New Testament and what, or even if, it should be today.  Most of the dialogue on the topic has been rooted in denominational dogma, cultural tradition, and personal experience instead of clear exegesis of the NewTestament texts.

Therefore, if anything in Acts or the rest of the New Testament is to be rightly understood, it must be read and understood within the socio-religious context of the people who first heard and read it.  Within the New Testament, any theological or religious idea was understood by Hebrew/Israelite/Jewish people in the context of the Law, the Prophets, and the Writings, i.e., the Old Testament.  It is within this framework that the issue of ‘tongues’ should be considered.

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What the Biblical Text Actually Says About: Speaking in Tongues

Much ink and venom have been spilled over the question of what tongues was in the New Testament and what, or even if, it should be today.  Most of the dialogue on the topic has been rooted in denominational dogma, cultural tradition, and personal experience instead of clear exegesis of the NewTestament texts.

Therefore, if anything in Acts or the rest of the New Testament is to be rightly understood, it must be read and understood within the socio-religious context of the people who first heard and read it.  Within the New Testament, any theological or religious idea was understood by Hebrew/Israelite/Jewish people in the context of the Law, the Prophets, and the Writings, i.e., the Old Testament.  It is within this framework that the issue of ‘tongues’ should be considered.

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What the Biblical Text Actually Says About: Speaking in Tongues

What the Biblical Text Actually Says About: Speaking in Tongues

by Brian Wright
What the Biblical Text Actually Says About: Speaking in Tongues

What the Biblical Text Actually Says About: Speaking in Tongues

by Brian Wright

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Overview

Much ink and venom have been spilled over the question of what tongues was in the New Testament and what, or even if, it should be today.  Most of the dialogue on the topic has been rooted in denominational dogma, cultural tradition, and personal experience instead of clear exegesis of the NewTestament texts.

Therefore, if anything in Acts or the rest of the New Testament is to be rightly understood, it must be read and understood within the socio-religious context of the people who first heard and read it.  Within the New Testament, any theological or religious idea was understood by Hebrew/Israelite/Jewish people in the context of the Law, the Prophets, and the Writings, i.e., the Old Testament.  It is within this framework that the issue of ‘tongues’ should be considered.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940154242308
Publisher: Calvert Biblical Institute for Study of Religion & Society
Publication date: 12/12/2016
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 574 KB

About the Author

ABOUT BRIAN S. WRIGHT, Ph.D(c)

Founder and Executive Director of Calvert Biblical Institute

     Brian Wright is a biblical scholar and author, having spent most of the last seventeen years of his studies investigating the Ancient Near Eastern languages, cultures, and history that birthed Judaism and Christianity. He holds a Master of Religious Education in Middle Eastern Studies from The American Institute of Holy Land Studies, has studied sociology and religion at Oxford Graduate School, and is completing a Ph.D. in Biblical Studies at Trinity Theological Seminary.  Following this, he intends further post-graduate and doctoral study in Semitic languages, biblical interpretation, and sociology of religion.  His latest book, The Great Yet Completely Misunderstood Commission of Jesus was published in February of 2011.  His other works include Blood & Seed:What Is The Eden Story Really Telling Us? released in October of 2010, its sequel, The GodBlood, due in 2017, and What the Biblical Text Actually Says About Speaking in Tongues, due in late 2016.

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