Author Topic: What is the Pentacost? My folks was Methodist.  (Read 8673 times)

Offline YaadPyar

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What is the Pentacost? My folks was Methodist.
« on: April 25, 2006, 07:10:37 am »
Just thought ya'll might like to know what Jack & Ennis didn't....



Pentecostalism at 100: A major religious force
By Jane Lampman, Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
Mon Apr 24, 4:00 AM ET




As the 1906 earthquake shook San Francisco, another quake of sorts was occurring in southern California - tremors that reconfigured the Christian world.

This week, tens of thousands from around the globe are gathering in Los Angeles to celebrate the centennial of the Azusa Street Revival, an "outpouring of the Holy Spirit" that begat the modern Pentecostal movement.

Over the past century, that movement has sparked a fresh focus on New Testament "gifts of the Spirit" in many denominations. Its influence now embraces one-quarter of all Christians - more than 500 million of them.

"To everyone's surprise, Pentecostalism has grown at a rate no one predicted 50 years ago," says David Daniels, professor at McCormick Theological Seminary in Chicago.

Today, a reverse missionary movement has begun - to bring revival to the West. The largest thriving churches in secular Europe, for instance, are pastored by Africans.

"We've not given up on Europe and North America," says the Rev. Roberto Miranda, senior pastor at Lion of Judah Congregation in Boston. "The legacy of Azusa is very much alive, and many believe that a huge revival is imminent."

Looking to the future at the Los Angeles meeting, Pentecostals will hear from US pastors like T.D. Jakes and leaders from Latin America, Africa, and Asia, home to the world's largest church. South Korea's Yoido Full Gospel Church, begun in a tent in a Seoul slum in 1958, boasts more than 700,000 members.

Each of the five evenings, a revival will be hosted by pastors from a different continent. During the day, celebrants will visit sessions on such topics as "The Holy Spirit and Healing," "Prayer Movements and Pentecostal Power," and "Spiritual Renewal in Marriage and Family." The last day will involve a community outreach in the city.

Pentecostals fit under the Evangelical umbrella, but they parted with their cousins in their insistence that first-century "gifts of the Spirit" - healing, prophecy, speaking in tongues - remain alive in Christian practice.

Disparaged in the early decades of the 20th century, their ethos of the Holy Spirit powerfully at work in worship and daily life eventually spawned the Charismatic movement within both Protestant and Roman Catholic faiths, and later, in the 1980s, a neo-Charismatic movement that created new denominations such as the Vineyard churches.

"Pentecostalism is no longer limited to the classic Pentecostal movement," says Dr. Miranda, who leads a Baptist church with a largely Latino congregation. "It's a biblical phenomenon that's gone beyond denominations and is part of the whole body of Christ."

Embracing a Charismatic outlook has "transformed our church from staid and traditional to very open to the moving of the Spirit," Miranda says. That includes "praying for physical healing, spiritual deliverance, allowing space for prophecy and tongues, and being open to changing the order of worship."

For Pentecostals, worship involves the expectation of "God's manifest presence." Praise and a lively, upbeat music characterized their services from the start.

At Lion of Judah church on Easter Sunday, jubilant singing interspersed with prayer filled the first hour of the service. Celebratory music (backed by a band with drums, flute, saxophone, violin, and guitar) gave way to quieter songs, leading up to the sermon on "being a disciple, not just a Christian." Then came the altar call for those seeking prayers, with gentle music continuing in the background.

Ushers with boxes of tissues moved in the aisles, a sign that the praise/prayer segment involved individual as well as collective communion with the divine.

Music is central to Pentecostal worship and, some say, to its inroads into people's hearts. Some scholars call it one of the two roots of gospel music. Elvis Presley visited the Church of God in Christ (CGC), the largest Pentecostal denomination today. It is largely black, though it has always had white clergy and members.

"Musicologists note that jazz, blues, and other singers talked of going to black Pentecostal churches to learn new riffs, runs, and chords because the style was open to improvisation," says Dr. Daniels, ordained a CGC pastor. "The liveliness and jubilance was attractive to many people."

Indeed, praise songs and the expressiveness of Pentecostal worship, including the lifting up of hands, has spread through Evangelical churches and nondenominational megachurches.

Yet the focus on "gifts" identified in the book of Acts is also characteristic and has resonated with people across the globe, while putting off some in the West.

The 1906 Azusa revival began with the preaching of William Seymour, a son of former slaves. Seymour had learned about Holy Ghost baptism and speaking in tongues from a minister in Houston. The speaking in tongues that erupted among the small group stirred controversy throughout Los Angeles and began drawing huge interracial crowds. Thousands came to the revival, which went on continuously, every day for three years.

The belief that Jesus' return was imminent spurred a missionary movement. Many departed for other countries to evangelize.

Barry Corey, a dean at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in South Hamilton, Mass., explains the zeal for spreading the gospel. In the Assemblies of God denomination, for instance, "after one becomes a Christian, there should be a second experience: the baptism of the Holy Spirit," he says. "This empowerment enables the believer to have an extra zeal that is miraculous - it's like a turbocharged faith."

Speaking in tongues isn't essential to be a Christian, but a sign of that second baptism, he adds. Some people may receive the gift of healing or prophecy.

Assemblies of God last year grew more rapidly than any other religious denomination in the US, though only by 1.81 percent.

As Pentecostalism matured, it also became more middle-class. Long known for its anti-intellectualism, recently the movement has developed colleges and universities. Most denominations have no formal education requirements for ordination, Dr. Corey says. "If God has called you, you go and preach."

Some Pentecostal pastors preach a "prosperity gospel" that stirs concern. "It's lending itself to corruption and leaders benefiting excessively," Miranda cautions.

Despite such challenges, this is an invigorating time for the Pentecostal/Charismatic movement. Its dramatic growth in the developing world has come as millions moved from rural life into huge cities. "People living on the edge of life don't have a lot to fall back on, and they need the miraculous provisions of God just to sustain them," Corey says.

To the faithful, this is the work of the Holy Spirit. The movement's global appeal can be seen also in its adaptability and the fertile ground for its teachings.

"Pentecostalism has the ability to translate itself into the language and culture of the people being reached, drawing on local music," says Leslie Callahan, who teaches religious history at the University of Pennsylvania. "Also, most of the rest of the world believes in some sort of metaphysical healing."

While missionaries born out of Azusa (and a similar revival in Wales) planted the seed, indigenous leadership has taken over abroad, and the reverse missionary effort is under way.



Copyright © 2006 The Christian Science Monitor

"Vice, Virtue. It's best not to be too moral. You cheat yourself out of too much life. Aim above morality. If you apply that to life, then you're bound to live life fully." (Harold & Maude - 1971)

Offline littledarlin

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Re: What is the Pentacost? My folks was Methodist.
« Reply #1 on: April 25, 2006, 07:17:25 pm »
it is too funny that you posted this.  i read it at work today and thought about posting it but wondered who had beat me to it   :D
We can hug on November, caress and nice oak.

TJ

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Re: What is the Pentacost? My folks was Methodist.
« Reply #2 on: April 29, 2006, 05:59:19 pm »
While the movie guys might have pronounced what Jack's mother believed in Pent-uh-cost or Pent-ah-cost, Annie Proulx correctly spelled the word when she wrote, 'he favored a sad hymn, "Water-Walking Jesus," learned from his mother who believed in the Pentecost.' Notice the word has no "a" in it.

I am Pentecostal by experience and definitely by choice. I am evangelical but I am not a fundamentalist.

TJ

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Re: What is the Pentacost? My folks was Methodist.
« Reply #3 on: April 29, 2006, 06:01:36 pm »
I watch the PBS-TV program "Religion & Ethics" on a local station and I get weekly email updates before the program is aired. In Oklahoma, they don't show it until Sunday Afternoon.
 
This year is the 100th Anniversary of a special event that took place on Azusa Street in Los Angeles 100 years ago.
 
I moved what I previously posted here to a related discussion thread: http://bettermost.net/forum/index.php?topic=1162.0

To read more about that the history of Pentecost in the USA go to the link above. IMO, the "Christian Science Monitor" newspaper is not a very good source when knowing the true historical facts about the American Pentecostal Movement which actually began at the end of the 18th Century and continued into the 20th Century and still exists.
« Last Edit: May 04, 2006, 02:02:46 pm by TJ »

TJ

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Re: What is the Pentacost? My folks was Methodist.
« Reply #4 on: May 04, 2006, 02:10:44 pm »
When Elvis Presley attended a Pentecostal church when he was growing up in Tupelo, Mississippi, it was an Assembly of God. Although no big deal was ever made of it in the public news media, an Assembly of God pastor in Memphis, TN, was considered BY Elvis to be his personal pastor, too.

Elvis' style of singing gospel music, including not standing still, would be no big deal in many Pentecostal or Charismatic churches today. Elvis' favorite music to sing when he was not performing in clubs or concerts was Southern Gospel Music. The quartets which were used as his backup groups in his gospel recordings were Southern Gospel quartets. Some of them even did background vocals on his non-gospel ballad recordings.

Offline Artiste

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Re: What is the Pentacost? My folks was Methodist.
« Reply #5 on: April 05, 2009, 06:37:17 pm »
Why did Annie mention Pentacost?