I don't know whether Floo has, but I have - I was a member of a charismatic anglican church for 15 years in the 70s, 80s and early 90s, to my undying shame. I left because I could no longer deny the complete lack of results from praying for healing and miracles, and the cliched, vague, self-serving rubbish served up as prophesy, usually in a silly pastiche of 17th-Century English. It is at best an irrelevance and distraction from what Christianity is really about, and is often much worse than that - snake-oil merchants like Morris Cerullo, Kenneth Copeland and Joyce Meyer getting rich by exploiting vulnerable people, and hair-raisingly right-wing politics, including uncritical support for Israel. Thank God I came to my senses in 1992, and got out.
Hi, SteveH; I agree that some of the political baggage attached to the charismatic movement is distressing - and certain elements adherance to the discredited 'prosperity Gospel' drivel a disgrace, but no-one, even in their wildest dreams, could ever accuse the Kirk of being extreme or dangerously out of kilter with the Gospel (well, not in the realms of pursuing the charisma, anyway.....there are a few issues on other matters which bear scrutiny) Whilst I have attended prayer services for healing, and other purposes, these have never been anything less than controlled, disciplined and very moving, with no mass hysteria of any description (After all, this IS the Church of Scotland!) However, like others in the Kirk, from liberal through evangelicals, we have explored personal prayer and worship, and found tounges useful as an aid. As posted, this is an aid, an adjunct to personal devotion, and at no time was I ever out of control, or not conscious of what I was doing. I use the gift not as prophesy, or a declaration of piety to which I am not entitled, but as an assist to my private or small group prayers - and simply would not do so were there others in the room who were uncomfortable with the gift. Do do so would disturb their prayer time, and that is simply bad practice.