
For centuries, the church has debated the gift of tongues—whether it continues today, what it looks like, and why it matters. Many sincere believers have been taught that tongues ceased with the apostles, or that modern expressions are counterfeit. Others wait endlessly for a dramatic “Pentecost experience” that never comes, missing years of spiritual strength and freedom.
But a careful, mature reading of 1 Corinthians 14—especially verses 20-22—reveals a profound distinction that silences much of the confusion. Paul isn’t limiting or ending the gift; he’s clarifying two different expressions of tongues, one historical and public, the other deeply personal and ongoing. When we see this clearly, the arguments against tongues today crumble. And real-life testimonies prove the gift is as alive and powerful as ever.
Be Mature in Thinking: The Key to Understanding (1 Corinthians 14:20)
Paul begins this section with a direct challenge:
“Brothers and sisters, stop thinking like children. In regard to evil be infants, but in your thinking be adults.” (v. 20)
The Corinthians were acting childishly—enthusiastic about spiritual gifts but immature in how they used them. They prized public displays of tongues without interpretation, causing chaos and confusion in gatherings. Paul calls them to mature discernment: think like adults about how these gifts actually function.
What follows isn’t a restriction on tongues—it’s a sharp distinction that protects the gift’s true value.
The Two Tongues Distinguished (1 Corinthians 14:21-22)
Throughout the chapter Paul has been describing one primary expression of tongues:
“For one who speaks in a tongue speaks not to people but to God; for no one understands him, but he utters mysteries in the Spirit.” (v. 2)
“The one who speaks in a tongue builds up himself…” (v. 4)
“If I pray in a tongue, my spirit prays but my mind is unfruitful.” (vv. 14-15)
This is prayer, praise, and singing from the human spirit enabled by the Holy Spirit—directed solely to God, often unintelligible to others (hence needing interpretation in public).
The clearest evidence that these Corinthian tongues were not always known human languages?
Paul’s direct command:
“Therefore, the one who speaks in a tongue should pray that they may interpret what they say” (14:13).
If tongues were always real foreign languages that someone present could naturally understand—like at Pentecost—supernatural interpretation would never be needed. Someone who knew the language could simply translate it. Yet Paul treats interpretation as a separate gift (vv. 5, 13, 27–28), even requiring silence in church if no interpreter is present. This proves the personal prayer language is normally unintelligible to human ears—it speaks mysteries directly to God.
Paul uses the Isaiah quote to caution against misuse: if you speak this personal Spirit-language loudly in church without interpretation, it will confuse outsiders—they’ll think you’re mad (v. 23), just like Israel’s hardened response to foreign speech. But that doesn’t negate the gift’s private, Godward purpose.
Paul quotes Isaiah 28:11-12:
“In the Law it is written: ‘With other tongues and through the lips of foreigners I will speak to this people, but even then they will not listen to me,’ says the Lord.’” (v. 21)Then he applies it:
“Tongues, then, are a sign, not for believers, but for unbelievers; prophecy, however, is for believers, not for unbelievers.” (v. 22)
Here Paul draws a clear line between two expressions of the gift:
- Tongues as a Sign to Unbelievers (Xenolalia)
This is the miraculous ability to speak real, unlearned human foreign languages for proclamation and authentication.- Classic example: Pentecost (Acts 2)—the disciples spoke known dialects from around the world, proclaiming God’s mighty works. The crowd heard in their native tongues, leading to amazement, conversions… and mockery from some.
- This fulfilled Isaiah’s warning: God speaking to unresponsive Israel through “strange tongues,” confirming judgment while offering a final witness as the gospel expanded to Gentiles.
- It was public, evangelistic, intelligible to hearers without interpretation, and tied to the apostolic transition era.
- Tongues for Personal Edification (The Language of the Spirit)
This is not a sign to unbelievers at all. It is the language of your spirit enabled by the Holy Spirit—prayer and praise directed to God, edifying the speaker.
These are not the same. Conflating them leads to error. Maturity means recognizing the difference.
Paul’s Heart: He Wanted This Gift for Every Believer
Far from restricting tongues, Paul reveals his deep personal value for it—and his desire for all:
“I want every one of you to speak in tongues…” (v. 5)
“I thank God that I speak in tongues more than all of you.” (v. 18)
Yet from verse 19, most of this was private: “In the church I would rather speak five intelligible words… than ten thousand words in a tongue.”“Do not forbid speaking in tongues.” (v. 39)
Paul practiced this personal prayer language abundantly for his own edification. He wanted the same for every believer—direct spirit-to-Spirit communion that builds faith (linking to Jude 20: “building yourselves up in your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Spirit”).
There is no verse saying this personal expression ceases after the apostles or the canon. No expiration date. No “only for the sign era” clause.
The Analogy That Exposes the Truth
Every normal human is born with a mouth, tongue, and vocal cords—designed by God for speech. Yet not everyone speaks: some are mute by birth, illness, or choice. The capacity is universal; the manifestation is not.
Likewise, every born-again believer has a regenerated human spirit indwelt by the Holy Spirit (Romans 8:9-16). We all have the God-given “organ” for spiritual utterance. Paul wishes all would speak in tongues (14:5), but rhetorically asks, “Do all speak in tongues?” (12:30)—expecting “No,” acknowledging not all do, for various reasons: wrong teaching, fear, unbelief, or unwillingness to yield.
The gift is available to all. The manifestation comes through cooperation.
A Personal Testimony: From Years of Waiting to Sudden Freedom
One believer shares: For years, I didn’t speak in tongues. I believed it would “fall on me” like Pentecost—an external overwhelming. I waited and waited, but nothing came. Looking back, I could have avoided so much trouble and loss if I’d known how to pray in the Spirit.
I was looking outside when the Spirit was already in me, capable of utterance—just like natural speech. The difference between “waiting to receive a language” and “learning to speak” is ludicrous. Babies don’t wait passively; they babble and yield to the inner impulse.
One day, desperation cornered me. In a dark situation, human words failed—I didn’t even know what to pray (Romans 8:26). That evening, I felt strange syllables forming on my tongue (I’d felt them years before but resisted, thinking it madness). This time, I had no choice. I let it out—blabbered—and a force flowed—and something shifted. As I prayed and sang in the Holy Ghost, speaking mysteries to God, I felt it again: the weight on my chest lifting, every single time I prayed.
In one month, spiritual shackles that had bound me for years shattered. I was set free.
Only after tasting this can you understand the grief when someone calls it “not genuine” or “ceased.” You’ve experienced the edification Paul promised—the direct line bypassing mental limits, strengthening the inner man.
Living Proof: The Gift Is Still Alive Today
Consider a humble minister from a non-English-speaking country, invited decades ago to preach at a prestigious UK university. No formal education. Couldn’t form an English sentence. He trembled in fear but prayed continually.
As he stepped to the pulpit, he later said he didn’t remember what happened—the Spirit took over. He preached fluently for over an hour in proficient English. Afterward, people asked if he’d studied at Oxford or Cambridge.
This wasn’t the personal prayer language—it was xenolalia, the sign-expression for proclamation. But it happened decades ago, not in the apostolic era. The same Spirit who empowered Pentecost still equips His servants supernaturally today.
Burying the Anti-Tongues Arguments
Cessationists claim tongues (as real languages) were only a temporary sign to Israel and ceased. But this forces both expressions into one box, then declares the box closed—pure eisegesis.
- No verse says the personal, self-edifying prayer language ends.
- Paul practiced it more than anyone and wanted it for all—primarily in private.
- The “sign” function (v. 22) was one expression; the Godward mysteries were another.
- Paul repeatedly commands interpretation (14:13, 27–28)—something completely unnecessary if tongues were always naturally understandable foreign languages.
- Patterns of “silence” in later epistles prove nothing—Paul already said not to forbid it.
- 1 Corinthians 13:8-10 (“when the perfect comes”) is debated; many see it as Christ’s return, not the canon.
The overwhelming biblical evidence supports the gift’s continuation, especially the personal dimension for building faith.
Stop Waiting—Start Speaking
You don’t need another experience. The Holy Spirit already dwells in you. The capacity is there.
Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly.
Rejoice in the Lord.
Give thanks always.
Be filled continually with the Spirit — speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord (Ephesians 5:18-19; cf. Colossians 3:16).
Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks (Luke 6:45).
And as Paul declares: “The word is near you; it is in your mouth and in your heart” — the word of faith (Romans 10:8).
When your heart is filled, the petals — the pearls — rise gently on the updraft of the Spirit.
They come to your mouth, ready to be spoken.
Jesus said, unless you become like little children, you will never enter the Kingdom of heaven.
So come as a child.
A child doesn’t invent words.
A child doesn’t wait for perfect coherence.
A child feels the sounds already on the tongue — placed there by God —
and simply spills them out.
Blabber.
Incoherent syllables.
Sounds that make no sense to the adult mind.
But the Father leans in…
smiles…
hears perfectly…
and celebrates every babble.
That’s how the Kingdom comes.
So worship.
Sing psalms and hymns.
Make melody in your heart to the Lord.
And when those spiritual syllables rise —
when the mysteries bubble up —
when the new songs form on your tongue —
don’t resist.
Don’t edit.
Don’t wait for it to sound logical.
Open your mouth like a child.
Blabber.
Spill it out.
Let your spirit pray.
Paul wanted this overflow for you.
The Holy Spirit still does.
Stop waiting.
Start rejoicing.
Start singing from a full heart.
Start blabbering like a child before your Father.
The pearls will come.
The Kingdom will open.
You will be filled — and overflow.
This is the Spirit-filled
When you feel those syllables rise—don’t resist. Open your mouth. Yield your tongue. Let your spirit pray. Cooperate with the utterance He gives (Acts 2:4).
Paul wanted this for you. The Spirit still does.
Taste it, and you’ll never settle for less. This glorious gift—praying mysteries, singing in the Spirit, building yourself up—is yours today.
Speak.

