glossolalia


Also found in: Dictionary, Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia.
Related to glossolalia: speaking in tongues
Graphic Thesaurus  🔍
Display ON
Animation ON
Legend
Synonym
Antonym
Related
  • noun

Words related to glossolalia

repetitive nonmeaningful speech (especially that associated with a trance state or religious fervor)

Related Words

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Este pentecostalismo classico tem caracteristicas bem marcantes, segundo Freston (1993) e Mariano (1999), que se agregam aos elementos liturgicos que lhes sao intrinsecos (o batismo no espirito santo e a glossolalia).
(20) When tongues are known languages, the scholarly technical term xenolalia is used; when that is not the case, glossolalia is the chosen term.
"Glossolalia." Upper Room Dictionary of Christian Spiritual Formation.
Distal extremity hypoalgesia was not observed, and all patients had no severe central nervous system symptoms, such as lags in response, seizures, confusion, difficulty in swallowing, glossolalia, deafness, narrow field of vision, strabismus, or photophobia, which were similar with Minamata disease.[2]
They not only share common musical and liturgical xenolalia, but also glossolalia when they sing and speak in tongues.
Come daybreak, you are drawn and wan, changed, the way Oklahoma's red dust must have stained the hand-spun hems of dresses worn by the stalk-thin women you weigh yourself against, reckoning nightly in your attic glossolalia a faith that compels you to seek more rousing fires, first through grace then by sore travails.
"Nine Lies People Believe About Speaking in Tongues" is written for people who are looking for answers to their questions about glossolalia and charismata, and for anyone seeking a new level of intimacy with God through a personal union with the Holy Spirit, in what the Apostle Paul presented to the Corinthian church as "a more excellent way,"
Seymour, the multiethnic Azusa Street congregation witnessed the beginning of what was to become a widespread religious experience; Latinos, among others, enthusiastically embraced expressions of a piety characterized by emotion, divine healing, and glossolalia. Espinosa argues that the history of the AG has been narrowly interpreted from a Euro-American historical perspective that often overlooked ethnic minority contributions.
The next day, traveling to the shrine where his kingship will be publicly announced, Saul encounters a band of prophets and is seized with a "prophetic ecstasy." In Old Testament terms, this could involve dancing, trances, ecstatic speech like glossolalia, or even cutting behaviors like the Baal prophets would later exhibit on Mt.
Along the way, she treats familiar questions in pneumatology with ecumenical import, such as the filioque, the role of the Spirit in soteriology, and glossolalia and other charismatic gifts.
Womb tongues is a term I use to describe the body's attempt, since birth, to 'speak' (pre-disclosure) the relinquishment/adoption trauma, in my case, through psychopathologies, psychosomatic illness, the non-religious use of glossolalia, and visual art.
glossolalia represents a simply radical feminist move in its rejection
No ano de 1965, ocorreu a efusao do Espirito Santo em reunioes, com manifestacao de oracao em linguas - a glossolalia, ou seja, o ato de falar linguas estranhas (PEREIRA, 2009).
The measurement of regional cerebral blood flow during glossolalia a preliminary spect study.
For example, his observations on the distinctive role played by glossolalia in this African Pentecostalism could help to reinvigorate this gift more widely in the Pentecostal and charismatic movements and could cause it to be given greater attention in Pentecostal theology (see pp.