1 Corinthians 13 starts, "If I speak in the tongues of men or of angels, ...". I'm not sure what the or of angels means exactly, but it would seem to imply not a known language?
Hi SotS,
I had a look at a few online commentaries, and admittedly I was looking for one that went with the view that the word 'tongue' in the NT does
not refer to something that is not a known language.
Barnes takes such a view, from what I can see. He says,
And of angels - The language of angels; such as they speak. Were I endowed with the faculty of eloquence and persuasion which we attribute to them; and the power of speaking to any of the human family with the power which they have. The language of angels here seems to be used to denote the highest power of using language, or of the most elevated faculty of eloquence and speech.
I think he means that an angel might say something eloquent, like, "Greetings, Sword Of the Spirit..." but he would address you in your own language. I don't think we can deduce from what Paul is saying in 1 Cor. 13:1 that glossolalia is the language of angels.
Paul also says in 1 Cor 14:2,
"For he that speaketh in an unknown tongue speaketh not unto men, but unto God: for no man understandeth him; howbeit in the spirit he speaketh mysteries"
Barnes says about this verse,
But unto God - It is as if he spoke to God. No one could understand him but God. This must evidently refer to the addresses "in the church," when Christians only were present, or when those only were present who spoke the same language, and who were unacquainted with foreign tongues. Paul says that "there" that faculty would be valueless compared with the power of speaking in a manner that should edify the church. He did not undervalue the power of speaking foreign languages when foreigners were present, or when they went to preach to foreigners; see 1 Corinthians 14:22. It was only when it was needless, when all present spoke one language, that he speaks of it as of comparatively little value.
For no man understandeth him - That is, no man in the church, since they all spoke the same language, and that language was different from what was spoken by him who was endowed with the gift of tongues. As God only could know the import of what he said, it would be lost upon the church, and would be useless.
One view, which I think I agree with, is that modern glossolalia is not the same as what the New Testament describes, but is something akin to whistling or humming, and it can be done to God's glory but is not a so-called 'gift of the Spirit'.