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5/26/2020 I pray in tongues every day, says archbishop of Canterbury | Justin Welby | The Guardian

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Justin Welby
I pray in tongues every day, says archbishop of
Canterbury
Church of England leader tells Christian radio station he speaks in
tongues as part of 5am prayer

Harriet Sherwood and Haroon Siddique


Mon 21 Jan 2019 00.01 GMT

1,400
The leader of the Church of England has said that he prays in tongues every day –
although the archbishop of Canterbury said it was “not usually an immensely ecstatic

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/jan/21/i-pray-in-tongues-every-day-says-archbishop-of-canterbury 1/7
5/26/2020 I pray in tongues every day, says archbishop of Canterbury | Justin Welby | The Guardian

moment”.

Justin Welby made the disclosure about his daily prayer routine in an interview with a
Christian radio station, Premier.

He said: “In my own prayer life, and as part of my daily discipline, I pray in tongues
every day – not as an occasional thing, but as part of daily prayer.”

He added: “It’s not something to make a great song and dance about. Given it’s usually
extremely early in the morning it’s not usually an immensely ecstatic moment.”

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Welby rises at about 5am each morning to have time to pray before his working day
begins.

The archbishop also said he expected to “hear from God through other people with
words of knowledge or prophecies – some of which I am unsure about, others I can
sense there being something of the spirit of God”.

“Words of knowledge” and “prophecies” are believed to be revelations from God about
people or future events. Both are common in Pentecostal and “charismatic”
evangelical churches.

The bible refers to speaking in tongues in several places, including Jesus telling his
apostles they will “speak with new tongues” as a sign that they believe in him.

Charismatic evangelical worship often includes people speaking in tongues and other
signs of possession by the Holy Spirit, including swaying, trances and falling to the
ground.

Some traditional Anglicans fear that such worship can alienate non-Christians, and
might suggest that not everyone is chosen to receive the “gift” of tongue-speaking.
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5/26/2020 I pray in tongues every day, says archbishop of Canterbury | Justin Welby | The Guardian

Welby is associated with the evangelical wing of the Church of England, and in
particular Holy Trinity Brompton in west London, the leading evangelical church in the
country, which brands itself as HTB.

In the 1980s, before he was ordained as a priest, Welby regularly attended HTB, which
attracts a large congregation of City workers and professionals to its evangelical Alpha
courses during which people are encouraged to speak in tongues.

The archbishop is a close friend of Nicky Gumbel, HTB’s vicar and the architect of the
Alpha course, which is now available in dozens of countries.

Welby has previously recalled that he first began to speak in tongues after he was
“overwhelmed by the love of God” as he read John 3:16 – “For God so loved the world,
that he gave his only begotten Son” – two weeks after becoming a Christian, aged 19.

“It was from that moment and in the days that followed I realised that the Holy Spirit
of God had touched me in a very powerful way,” he told the Anglican Communion
News Service in 2015. “I began to speak in tongues and began to learn of the intimacy
that Christ brings to us.”

In Mark 16:17, Jesus declared: “And these signs will accompany those who believe: In
My name they will drive out demons; they will speak in new tongues.”

However, the practice, also known as glossolalia, is not embraced by all Christians.
Cessationists believe that such gifts ended with Jesus’s apostles in the first century.

A US study by neuroscientists, published in 2006, supported the idea among many


people who speak in tongues that it reflects a state of mental possession. Brain images
of five women while they spoke in tongues showed that their frontal lobes – the
thinking, wilful part of the brain through which people control what they do – were
relatively quiet, as were the language centres.

In the Premier interview, Welby warns of “the danger of putting ‘charismatic’ as a tribal
category within the church”, saying that “all Christians are filled with the Spirit, so
every Christian is a charismatic in that sense”.

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Topics
Justin Welby
Christianity / Religion / Anglicanism

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