RickD wrote:
Good. Maybe this will help you see what I'm saying then. I'm not sure if you're aware that some "hyper-Pentecostal" groups believe that speaking in tongues is the sign that shows if one is a believer. In other words, according to them, all true believers speak in tongues. See if you can make the connection here:
Apples/oranges... but I can work with this to answer your question...
1) only those who are saved are true believers
2) all true believers speak in tongues
3) all those who don't speak in tongues, aren't true believers
4) therefore, speaking in tongues is a(the) sign of whether or not one is a true believer ( is saved)
In the above, you can see that they have replaced or added to by grace, through faith(trusting Christ) as the condition for salvation, by saying tongues is the sign/measure of all those who are saved.
See how it's the same as those who add to grace by faith, to say that good works are the sign/measure of someone who is saved?
There are really two separate issues here
1. Is it Scriptural to assert that all true believers speak in tongues
2. Is it "adding to grace" to say that something is an indicator of salvation.
1. The basic premise that all true believers speak in tongues is unScriptural
Ephesians 2:8-10 does not say that we are saved by grace through faith to speak in tongues
Jesus, Paul, John, and James do not claim that speaking in tongues is an indicator of genuine faith and salvation.
In fact Paul teaches us that different believers have different Spiritual Gifts. Some believers may have the Spiritual Gift of speaking in tongues, but it is unscriptural to assert that all believers have the specific Spiritual gift of speaking in tongues.
2. The second issue is whether this assertion is replacing or adding to grace.
If a person asserts that tongues are required to gain salvation or is in some way meritorious for attaining salvation then that is adding to grace.
Ephesians 2 tells us that we are saved by grace through faith, not by works which tells us that the cause of salvation is grace not works. So anyone who asserts that the cause of salvation is works or that works in any way enables salvation is replacing or adding to grace.
However, as has been pointed out many times salvation (through the work of the Holy Spirit) is the cause good works... not vice versa
So if grace causes salvation and salvation in turn causes good works, then the assertion that salvation causes good works does not add to or replace grace. It actually reinforces the primacy of grace by recognizing that both salvation and good works both have their primary cause in grace.
In Christ