The Gift of Tongues
The gift of tongues was a divinely
bestowed supernatural ability to speak in a
human language that had not been learned by
the one speaking. According to the Apostle
Paul, when believers exercised the gift of
tongues in church, they were to speak one at a
time, and only two or three were to speak in a
given service (1 Cor. 14:27). Furthermore,
when tongues were spoken in the church, they
were to be interpreted by someone with the gift
of interpretation so that the others might be
edified by the God-given message (1 Cor. 14:5,
13, 27). In this way, tongues did not serve as a
private prayer language, but rather—like all
spiritual gifts—as a means by which one might
serve and edify the body of Christ (1 Cor. 12:7;
1 Pet. 4:10).
Tongues "Will Cease"
In 1 Corinthians 13:8 Paul made an interesting,
almost startling, statement: “Love never fails;
but if there are gifts of prophecy, they will be
done away; if there are tongues, they will cease;
if there is knowledge, it will be done away.” In
the expression “love never fails,” the Greek
word translated “fails” means “to decay” or “to
be abolished.” Paul was not saying that love is
invincible or that it cannot be rejected. He was
saying that love is eternal—that it will be applicable
forever and will never be passé. Tongues,
however, “will cease.” The Greek verb used in
1 Corinthians 13:8 means “to cease permanently,”
and implies that when tongues ceased, they
would never start up again.
Here is the question that this passage poses for
the contemporary charismatic movement: if
tongues were supposed to cease, has that
already happened, or is it yet future?
Charismatic believers insist that none of the
gifts have ceased yet, so the cessation of tongues
is yet future. Most non-charismatics insist that
tongues have already ceased, passing away with
the apostolic age. Who is right?
It should be noted that 1 Corinthians 13:8 itself
does not say when tongues were to cease.
Although 1 Corinthians 13:9-10 teaches that
prophecy and knowledge will cease when the
“perfect” (i.e., the eternal state) comes, the language
of the passage—particularly the middle
voice of the Greek verb translated “will
cease”—puts tongues in a category apart from
these gifts. Paul writes that while prophecy and
knowledge will be “done away” (passive voice)
by “the perfect,” the gift of tongues “will
cease” in and of itself (middle voice) prior to
the time that “the perfect” arrives. When did
this cessation of tongues take place? The evidence
of Scripture and history indicate that
tongues ceased in the apostolic age.
Evidence from Scripture
What biblical or theological evidence is there
that tongues have ceased? First, the gift of
tongues was a miraculous, revelatory gift, and
the age of miracles and revelation ended with
the apostles. The last recorded miracles in the
New Testament occurred around A.D. 58, with
the healings on the island of Malta (Acts 28:7-
10). From A.D. 58 to 96, when John finished
the book of Revelation, no miracle is recorded.
Miracle gifts like tongues and healing are mentioned
only in 1 Corinthians, an early epistle.
Two later epistles, Ephesians and Romans, both
discuss gifts of the Spirit at length—but no
mention is made of the miraculous gifts. By that
time miracles were already looked on as something
in the past (Heb. 2:3-4). Apostolic
authority and the apostolic message needed no
further confirmation. Before the first century
ended, the entire New Testament had been written
and was circulating through the churches.
The revelatory gifts had ceased to serve any
purpose. And when the apostolic age ended
with the death of the Apostle John, the signs
that identified the apostles had already become
moot (cf. 2 Cor. 12:12).
Second, tongues were intended as a sign to
unbelieving Israel (1 Cor. 14:21-22; cf.
Is. 28:11-12). They signified that God had
begun a new work that encompassed the
Gentiles. The Lord would now speak to all
nations in all languages. The barriers were
down. And so the gift of languages symbolized
not only the curse of God on a disobedient
nation, but also the blessing of God on the
whole world.
Tongues were therefore a sign of transition
between the Old and New Covenants. With the
establishment of the church, a new day had
dawned for the people of God. God would
speak in all languages. But once the period of
transition was past, the sign was no longer
necessary.
Third, the gift of tongues was inferior to other
gifts. It was given primarily as a sign (1 Cor.
14:22) and was also easily misused to edify self
(1 Cor. 14:4). The church meets for the edification
of the body, not self-gratification or personal
experience-seeking. Therefore, tongues
had limited usefulness in the church, and so it
was never intended to be a permanent gift.
The Evidence from History
The evidence of history also indicates that
tongues have ceased. It is significant that
tongues are mentioned only in the earliest
books of the New Testament. Paul wrote at
least twelve epistles after 1 Corinthians and
never mentioned tongues again. Peter never
mentioned tongues; James never mentioned
tongues; John never mentioned tongues; neither
did Jude. Tongues appeared only briefly in
Acts and 1 Corinthians as the new message of
the gospel was being spread. But once the
church was established, tongues were gone.
They stopped. The later books of the New
Testament do not mention tongues again, and
neither did anyone in the post-apostolic age.
Chrysostom and Augustine—the greatest theologians
of the eastern and western churches—
considered tongues obsolete. Writing in the
fourth century, Chrysostom stated categorically
that tongues had ceased by his time and
described the gift as an obscure practice.
Augustine referred to tongues as a sign that
was adapted to the apostolic age. In fact,
during the first five hundred years of the church,
the only people who claimed to have spoken in
tongues were followers of Montanus, who was
branded as a heretic.
The next time any significant tongues-speaking
movement arose within Christianity was in the
late seventeenth century. A group of militant
Protestants in the Cevennes region of southern
France began to prophecy, experience visions,
and speak in tongues. The group, sometimes
called the Cevennol prophets, is remembered
for its political and military activities, not its
spiritual legacy. Most of their prophecies went
unfulfilled. They were rabidly anti-Roman
Catholic, and advocated the use of armed force
against the Roman Catholic church. Many of
them were consequently persecuted and killed
by Rome.
At the other end of the spectrum, the
Jansenists, a group of Roman Catholic loyalists
who opposed the Reformers’ teaching on justification
by faith, also claimed to be able to
speak in tongues in the 1700s.
Another group that practiced a form of
tongues was the Shakers, an American sect
with Quaker roots that flourished in the mid-
1700s. Mother Ann Lee, founder of the sect,
regarded herself as the female equivalent of
Jesus Christ. She claimed to be able to speak in
seventy-two languages. The Shakers believed
sexual intercourse was sinful, even within marriage.
They spoke in tongues while dancing
and singing in a trancelike state.
Then in the early nineteenth century, Scottish
Presbyterian pastor Edward Irving and mem-
bers of his congregation practiced speaking in
tongues and prophesying. Irvingite prophets
often contradicted each other, their prophecies
failed to come to pass, and their meetings were
characterized by wild excesses. The movement
was further discredited when some of their
prophets admitted to falsifying prophecies and
others even attributed their “giftedness” to
evil spirits. This group eventually became the
Catholic Apostolic Church, which taught
many false doctrines, embracing several Roman
Catholic doctrines and creating twelve apostolic
offices.
All of those supposed manifestations of tongues
were identified with groups that were
heretical, fanatical, or otherwise unorthodox.
The judgment of biblically orthodox believers
who were their contemporaries was that all
those groups were aberrations. Surely that
should also be the assessment of any Christian
who is concerned with truth. Thus, we conclude
that from the end of the apostolic era to
the beginning of the twentieth century there
were no genuine occurrences of the New
Testament gift of tongues. They had ceased, as
the Holy Spirit said they would (1 Cor. 13:8).
The gift of tongues is not for today.
Adapted from John MacArthur, Charismatic Chaos (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan Publishing House, 1992). For a fuller treatment of the
gift of tongues, consult this resource.