Tongues: General
There
are two prophecies concerning the gift of tongues and the baptism of the Holy
Spirit, one in the Old Testament and one in the New Testament. Isaiah 28:11 is
the prophesy that the jews will be evangelised in Gentile languages; Acts 1:5
is the prophecy of the event which would signal the beginning of the Church Age
-- 1 Corinthians 12:13.
Israel
was responsible before God as the custodians of the Word of God -- Romans
3:1-2, and for evangelisation. The failure of Israel to evangelise resulted in
divine discipline. She lost the custodianship of the Word to a "new
people," the Church: Day of Pentecost, 32 AD. Israel was evangelised in
Gentile languages which was a sign (1 Corinthians 14:21-22) of the fifth cycle
of discipline (Leviticus 26) which was to begin in AD 70. (The Romans destroyed
Jerusalem and Israel was dispersed)
The
fulfillment of the prophecies were seen in the book of Acts. Jews were evangelied
in Gentile languages on the day of Pentecost and after - Acts 2:7-11. The
Church began on the day of Pentecost; all Jewish believers received the baptism
of the Holy Spirit entering them into union with Christ - 1 Corinthians 12:13.
In Acts 10:44-48 this was extended to
Gentile believers in Caesarea - Acts
11:15. In Acts 19:1-6 other believers in various locations and at different
times received the baptism of the Holy Spirit, entering them into union with
Christ, making them Chuch Age believers.
Why
was tongues the first gift to be used on the day of Pentecost?
Tongues
was the first gift to be used on the day of Pentecost and its primary use was
evangelism. The great barrier to evangelism was that the city was filled with
many people who spoke many languages, therefore a language barrier existed.
Pentecost
began the Church Age and a new modus operandi began immediately: spiritual
gifts came into operation. However, because tongues was the first gift used it
does not imply that it was the most important. 1 Corinthians 12:28 says it is
the least of all spiritual gifts.
The
gift of tongues was used only in the first part of the Church Age. In the
pre-canon period there were both temporary gifts and permanent gifts. In the
post-canon periof there were only permanent gifts. The unusual activities in
the book of Acts must be regarded in the light of the fact that the canon was
not completed and not circulated; Acts is simply a history of the pre-canon
period. Therefore during that period there was a great crash program called
temporary gifts: a stop-gap measure to take up the slack, which later on would
be taken up by the completed canon. The gift of tongues was discontinued upon
the completion of the canon (actually before that).