The spiritual gift of Tongues is one of the most discussed, misunderstood, and debated gifts in the New Testament. Although referenced only in a handful of passages (Acts 2; 1 Corinthians 12–14), it has produced wide-ranging interpretations across Christian traditions.
In Scripture, the gift appears in two primary forms:
- Known human languages supernaturally spoken (Acts 2)
- Spirit-prompted prayer or praise that may be unintelligible without interpretation (1 Corinthians 14)
Regardless of the form, the purpose of the gift is never self-exaltation, but the edification of the church and the advancement of the Gospel.
Tongues at Pentecost: Known Languages, Not Secret Ones
The first and clearest example of tongues occurs at Pentecost:
“Each one heard them speaking in his own language.”
—Acts 2:6
This event established two biblical truths:
1. Tongues Enabled Communication, Not Exclusivity
The apostles spoke recognizable languages they had never learned to proclaim the Gospel across cultural divides.
2. Spiritual Gifts Serve the Entire Body
Gifts do not exist to elevate certain believers or create spiritual hierarchies (1 Corinthians 12:7).
This is why Paul strongly warns against using tongues in ways that divide, confuse, or glorify individuals.
Tongues as a Bridge-Building Gift
You highlight an important insight often overlooked: those with the gift of tongues often excel in cross-cultural, cross-generational, and cross-context communication.
This broader understanding aligns with the heart of the Pentecost event:
- God breaking down barriers
- Bringing people from different cultures into one family
- Demonstrating that Christ is for all people
Therefore, the gift of tongues can include:
- Supernaturally learning or acquiring languages
- Communicating across cultural or racial lines effortlessly
- Translating spiritual truth into forms people can understand
- Making outsiders feel welcomed, seen, and included
- Acting as “ambassadors” of reconciliation
This reflects Paul’s heart:
“I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.”
—1 Corinthians 9:22
The gifted person becomes a bridge, not a barrier.
Tongues as Prayer and Worship
Some believers experience tongues primarily in:
- Prayer
- Worship
- Private devotion
Paul acknowledges this dimension:
- “One who speaks in a tongue speaks not to men but to God.” (1 Cor. 14:2)
- “I will pray with my spirit.” (1 Cor. 14:15)
This form of tongues:
- Deepens intimacy with God
- Helps express what words cannot
- Encourages personal devotion
- Must be exercised with humility and discernment
- Should not overshadow the Gospel or unity of the church
Paul is clear that private tongues is permissible, but public tongues must include an interpreter (1 Cor. 14:27–28).
Clarity, Unity, and Order
Regardless of how tongues manifests, Scripture insists:
- It must build up the church (1 Cor. 14:12)
- It must not create confusion (1 Cor. 14:33)
- It must be exercised with interpretation in public (1 Cor. 14:27)
- It must not elevate some believers over others (1 Cor. 12:21)
Tongues is not a mark of spiritual superiority.
The Holy Spirit gives diverse gifts to prevent division—not create it.
Historical Perspectives
Martin Luther
Luther believed:
- Biblical tongues were real human languages
- The gift had largely ceased in everyday church life
- Tongues could cause disorder if misused
- The gift was not necessary for salvation or holiness
- The Gospel—not tongues—was the heart of Christian unity
Luther’s primary caution was against seeking tongues as a spiritual badge.
John Wesley
Wesley believed:
- Tongues was a genuine supernatural gift
- It could aid evangelism and Gospel mission
- It should be approached with humility and discernment
- It was not a requirement of salvation
- Its purpose was always to build up the church and reach the lost
Wesley encouraged openness without fanaticism.
The Catholic Church
The Catholic tradition teaches that tongues is:
- One of the legitimate charismatic gifts
- A Spirit-enabled form of praise, worship, or proclamation
- Also potentially a human language not learned naturally
- Subject to discernment and pastoral oversight
- Always intended to glorify God and edify the Church
Catholic teaching emphasizes that tongues may take different forms and must always be approached with order and humility.
Distinguishing Tongues from Interpretation
Paul teaches that the gifts of tongues and interpretation are distinct:
- The speaker may not understand what was said
- An interpreter communicates the meaning
- Without interpretation, tongues serve only the speaker
- With interpretation, tongues serve the church
This reinforces Paul’s emphasis on building up the body.
Biblical Cautions and Misunderstandings
Because tongues is highly visible and emotionally charged, several dangers must be addressed:
Using Tongues as a Status Marker
Scripture rejects any form of spiritual elitism.
Confusing Emotional Experience with Spiritual Reality
Tongues feels dramatic, but drama isn’t holiness.
Seeking the Gift for Attention
Paul warns strongly against gifts used for self-promotion.
Dividing the Body Over Tongues
Paul devotes three chapters (1 Cor. 12–14) to correcting this exact problem.
Dismissing the Gift Entirely
Skepticism can become as harmful as fanaticism.
Overlooking Interpretation
Paul never permits uninterpreted public tongues.
Tongues must always operate inside biblical boundaries.
People with This Gift Often…
- Pick up foreign languages with unusual ease
- Communicate effectively across cultures, generations, and social barriers
- Carry deep empathy for unbelievers
- Act as “ambassadors” who make outsiders feel included
- Build bridges between communities
- Translate spiritual truth into accessible language
- Are drawn to missionary work
- Sense what people need spiritually and emotionally
- Serve as signs or invitations to those far from faith
- Help unify diverse groups within the body
Summary
The spiritual gift of tongues:
- Is a real gift of the Holy Spirit
- Serves both communication and devotion
- Must always be exercised in love, humility, and order
- Exists for the benefit of the church, not individual prestige
- Helps bridge cultural, linguistic, and spiritual divides
- Points always to Christ, not the gift or the gifted
Bible References
| Mark 16:15-18 | Christ states that speaking in new tongues will accompany those who preach the good news. |
| Acts 2:1-12 | Holy Spirit comes at Pentecost |
| Acts 10:44-46 | Gentiles hear Peter speaking in tongues |
| Acts 19:4-7 | Paul places his hands on disciples and they speak in tongues |
| 1 Corinthians 12:7-11 | Gift of tongues mentioned by Paul |
| 1 Corinthians 12:28-31 | Gift of tongues compared to other gifts |
| 1 Corinthians 13:1 | Without love, speaking in tongues is worthless |
| 1 Corinthians 14:1-25 | Paul gives details on the gift of tongues |
The Spiritual Gifts Project is always looking for personal perspective about the spiritual gifts. If you would like to share your experiences and help further all of our understanding about a particular spiritual gift, please visit our feedback page.
- Zondervan, 1468-1469
Other Gifts
- Spiritual Gift of Knowledge
- Spiritual Gift of Discernment (Distinguishing of Spirits)
- Spiritual Gift of Faith
- Spiritual Gift of Miracles
- Spiritual Gift of Helping
- Spiritual Gift of Healing
- Spiritual Gift of Exhortation
- Spiritual Gift of Compassion and Mercy
- Spiritual Gift of Giving
- Spiritual Gift of Servanthood
- Spiritual Gift of Leadership
- Spiritual Gift of Wisdom
- Spiritual Gift of Administration

