<table class="Panel ViewArticlePanel">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td class="Heading" colspan="2">Southern Baptist belief on 'prayer language' defies ban</td></tr>
<tr>
<td class="Details"> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<div class="HorizontalRule"></div></td></tr>
<tr>
<td colspan="2">
<div class="PageTitle">Official policy bans missionaries from speaking in tongues</div>
<div class="PageTitle"></div>
<div style="BORDER-TOP: #ffffff 10px solid; FLOAT: right; BORDER-LEFT: #ffffff 10px solid; POSITION: relative; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff"><span></span><span></span><span></span><br><br> </div>
<div class="Content">By Julia Duin<br>The Washington Times<br><br>WASHINGTON -- Fifty percent of Southern Baptist pastors revealed in a poll they believe the Holy Spirit bestows a "private prayer language" on believers, a repudiation of official denominational policy banning its missionaries from speaking in tongues. In a survey released Friday, the Nashville, Tenn.-based LifeWay Research, the research arm of America's second-largest Christian denomination, revealed that 50 percent of Southern Baptist pastors answered "yes" when asked the question: "Do you believe that the Holy Spirit gives some people the gift of a special language to pray to God privately?" Forty-three percent of the 405 pastors polled said "no," and 7 percent responded "don't know."
<br> <br>Ed Stetzer, LifeWay's research director, called the results "surprising." "As a whole, Southern Baptists are less affirming of a private prayer language so the fact that 50 percent of the pastors answered 'yes' is very surprising," he said. "There are a lot of implications birthed out of that . Southern Baptists have become at least half of them more open to a practice that was not mainstream 100 years ago." However, the denomination's leaders remain split over whether speaking in tongues even exists. Forty-one percent of Southern Baptist pastors polled said the spiritual gift ceased after the early days of the church, compared with 29 percent of other Protestant pastors.
<br> <br>Many Southern Baptists oppose the current practice of tongues, one of nine "gifts of the Holy Spirit" mentioned in 1 Corinthians 12. In November 2005, the denomination's International Mission Board forbade future missionaries to pray privately in tongues even though the head of the board, Jerry Rankin, had admitted to using a "private prayer language" for more than 30 years.
<br><a href="http://wpherald.com/articles/5028/1/Southern-Baptist-belief-on-prayer-language-defies-ban/Official-policy-bans-missionaries-from-speaking-in-tongues.html">http://wpherald.com/articles/5028/1/Southern-Baptist-belief-on-prayer-language-defies-ban/Official-policy-bans-missionaries-from-speaking-in-tongues.html
</a></div></td></tr></tbody></table><br>**************************************<br>N.b.: Listing on the lgpolicy-list is merely intended as a service to its members<br>and implies neither approval, confirmation nor agreement by the owner or sponsor of
<br>the list as to the veracity of a message's contents. Members who disagree with a <br>message are encouraged to post a rebuttal. (H. Schiffman, Moderator)<br>*******************************************