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What the Bible says about Disorderly Gathering
(From Forerunner Commentary)

Acts 2:6

Notice that the word "tongues" appears in verse 4, but in verse 6, the word "language" is used. Why were they not both translated the same way? The reason is that they are from two different Greek words. The one in verse 4 is the most familiar, glōssais, which means a "language" or "tongue." But the Greek word in verse 6 is dialekto, which has practically come into the English language untranslated as "dialect." These people from all over the Roman world not only heard in their own language, but they heard the disciples in their own dialect.

God refined this explanation to ensure that we would understand that this manifestation was of languages people were familiar with but did not necessarily speak themselves. They not only recognized the language itself but even the various local dialects within the language. The disciples, then, to whom God had given His Holy Spirit, did not speak unintelligible gibberish, but each person hearing heard each person speaking, not only in his own language but even in his own dialect!

When Jesus was on trial, Peter was identified as being Galilean because of the way he spoke. Suppose the Jews in Judea spoke Aramaic, and that Peter spoke Aramaic, which is likely. Yet, Peter from Galilee spoke it in a dialect different from the Judeans' Aramaic spoken in Jerusalem. So, that young lady in Jerusalem quickly identified Peter as a Galilean. This recognition is what Luke is referring to in Acts 2 in this awesome miracle. The miracle was not only in the disciples' speaking. The miracle of hearing may have even been greater because it had to work in each hearer's mind so that he recognized that each disciple spoke in his own dialect. That is pretty precise.

Based on what Paul writes in I Corinthians 14 about God's concern for order and organization at church services, it is probable that all who received God's Holy Spirit were not speaking at once. Rather, God organized it so that the language and dialect could be clearly and distinctly heard by those observing. This was an awesome miracle! The combination of these factors was never again repeated.

Luke does not tell us what those who were filled with the Holy Spirit uttered. Therefore, we can reason that the purpose of their speaking in other languages was, at this point, not to help the observers listen intently to the content they were hearing from the disciples but to grab their attention to listen to what the apostle Peter would say later in his sermon.

John W. Ritenbaugh
Pentecost and the Holy Spirit

Acts 19:32-40

They knew they had been called to assemble, but they did not understand the reason for their calling.

"And when the city clerk had quieted the crowd, he said: . . . 'if you have any other inquiry to make, it shall be determined in the lawful assembly [ekklesia]'" (verses 35, 39). He reminded the people that a legal assembly could be arranged. "For we are in danger of being called in question for today's uproar, there being no reason which we may give to account for this disorderly gathering" (verse 40). To this point the assembly, the ekklesia, was a confused mob of people, aroused in anger against the apostle Paul. "And when he had said these things, he dismissed the assembly [ekklesia]."

These verses show very clearly that ekklesia by itself requires qualitative modifiers. It can refer to a gathering that is either carnal or spiritual. The context has to define its usage.

Ekklesia, then, is more flexible than the English word "church," transcending its narrow boundaries. Ekklesia is not bound, as will be seen, by race; language; city, state, or national boundaries; corporate laws; space; or time. God may have inspired the writers to use it solely to connote the transcendence of His calling out. Tracing it back to its beginning and bringing it forward to the present will show this fact clearly.

John W. Ritenbaugh
Guard the Truth!

Related Topics: Assembly | Calling | Disorderly Gathering | Ekklesia


 

 




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