Ooh finally, there is two days left only. *cheers everyone
It is a morning flight and I'm going to KLIA from Ipoh in the midnight.
Will stay over at Peck Lian's place tomorrow, gonna walk around Ipoh old town and also shopping spree in the only two malls in Ipoh. I wanna buy a pair of new sneakers, a new purse and some t-shirts, hopefully there's something cheap and nice. =)
Went to Harvest Church for the 2nd time, bring Chris along, I think she did enjoy a lot too, not bad huh? =D
Harvest is totally different from Wesley Church. People in the Harvest are all praying in tongues,
i actually don't really know what is it, but this is the 1st time in my life watching people pray in tongues, quite amazing but kinda scary, because they will shout and tend to louder and louder, I always have goosebumps when they do that. They are praying in their own language, each person have different language for themselves to speak to the lord, but other people around them would never know what are they talking about, one auntie there told me this is to prevent devil from listen to what we wish from god.
So this is what praying in tongues means I get from google:
The gift of tongues is speaking in a language a person does not know in order to minister to someone who does speak that language. According to the apostle Paul, and in agreement with the tongues described in Acts, speaking in tongues is valuable to the one hearing God’s message in his or her own language, but it is useless to everyone else unless it is interpreted/translated.
A person with the gift of interpreting tongues could understand what a tongues-speaker was saying even though he did not know the language that was being spoken. The tongues interpreter would then communicate the message of the tongues speaker to everyone else, so all could understand. “For this reason anyone who speaks in a tongue should pray that he may interpret what he says”
But not every church practicing this way of praying, like Methodist Church, where I go to every Sunday, is praying in a very formal way, for me, normal way. They pray in a clear and understandable languages. I like them more, no offense. Anyhow, we're praising to the same lord, so no differences right, hehe.
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