WHEN and WHY the Methodist church stopped speaking in tongues?

A Methodist Revival with Signs and Wonders in 1901 Propelled Barney Moore to Become an Early Pentecostal Missionary to Japan

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Do you happen to know the year and reason why the Methodist church stopped speaking in tongues? Researching and thank you in advance for any help you can give me!

A Methodist Revival with Signs and Wonders in 1901 Propelled Barney Moore to Become an Early Pentecostal Missionary to Japan

A Methodist Revival with Signs and Wonders in 1901 Propelled Barney Moore to Become an Early Pentecostal Missionary to Japan

11 Comments

  • Reply December 3, 2023

    Anonymous

    As the Holy Spirit wrote through Paul to the Corinthians, tongues were a sign to unbelieving Israel, as prophesied, warning of pending judgment that came in AD70. The purpose of tongues was completed.

    No one has spoken in biblical tongues since the first century.

    • Reply December 3, 2023

      Anonymous

      Duane L Burgess the Bible mentions divers tongues among the gifts given as tge Spirit wills. For you presume to assert that the Spirit does not give this gift? Based on what scripture?

      Irenaeus wrote of brethren speaking in tongues in his day around 200 AD.

    • Reply December 3, 2023

      Anonymous

      Duane L Burgess you are wrong sir, with all due respect.

    • Reply December 4, 2023

      Anonymous

      Duane L Burgess I must disagree. The gifts never ceased.

    • Reply December 4, 2023

      Anonymous

      Duane L Burgess resident cessationist

  • Reply December 3, 2023

    Anonymous

    Yes, the Methodist bishops had just went through a time of expelling he holiness faction. They particularly attacked all forms of emotionalism as primitive and due to psychological deficiencies. The leading Methodist writer on this subject was Buckley. Pentecostals were lumped as Holy Rollers and as being an embarrassment. Tongue speakers were expelled from the Methodist Churches as also from other mainstream American Churches.

    I remember a sister testifying about being expelled from the Methodist Church for speaking in tongues. That would have been in the thirties or forties. She went outside the Methodist Church and danced on a rock in front of the Church.

  • Reply December 3, 2023

    Anonymous

    Was it ever widespread among the Methodists? Wesley was a Continuationist.

    I read about speaking in tongues at a Methodist revival near the University of Georgia in 1801, a quote in _The New Charismatics II_. I have read a quote from a New Light Baptist speaking in tongues from the same era.

    • Reply December 3, 2023

      Anonymous

      Link Hudson Wesley believed but only said about one in a thousand spoke, Thus he believed. (from Scriptural Christianity – a sermon by Wesley).

    • Reply December 3, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Mushenhouse Interesting. I found the quote. He was talking about the early church.

    • Reply December 4, 2023

      Anonymous

      Link Hudson I believe both Wesley and Whitefield spoke of people being in a “trance” at their open air meetings.

    • Reply December 5, 2023

      Anonymous

      Derek Godfrey by a general consensus both Wesley and Whitefield were pre-mil tongue speakers but James Philemon Bowers can confirm this further for Philip Williams who possibly ceased speaking in tongues LTA

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