.
The Century of the Holy
Spirit
.
Origins of the
Pentecostal and Charismatic Renewal
.
by Dr.
Vinson Synan
Introduction:
"The touch felt round the
world"
[Note: Dr. Vinson Synan, in the
first chapter of his book, Century Of The
Holy Spirit: 100 Years Of Pentecostal And
Charismatic Renewal, 1901-2001,
describes the beginning of the early
Pentecostal movement at the turn of the
twentieth century.]
On January 1, 1901, a young woman named Agnes
Ozman was baptized in the Holy Spirit at a
small Bible school in Topeka, Kansas. A
student of former Methodist pastor and
holiness teacher Charles Fox Parham, Ozman
received a startling manifestation of the gift
of tongues and became, in effect, the first
Pentecostal of the 20th century.
“I laid my hands upon her and prayed,”
Parham later recalled of the event. “I had
scarcely completed three dozen sentences
when a glory fell upon her, a halo seemed to
surround her head and face, and she began
speaking the Chinese language and was unable
to speak English for three days.”
According to J. Roswell Flower, the founding
secretary of the Assemblies of God, Ozman’s
experience was the “touch felt ’round the
world.” As Topeka and the rest of the nation
celebrated the new century, few people could
have imagined that this humble event would
trigger the worldwide Pentecostal charismatic
movement, one of the mightiest revivals and
missionary movements in the history of the
church.
Beginning with only a handful of people in
1901, the number of Pentecostals increased
steadily to become the largest family of
Protestants in the world by the beginning of
the 21st century. With more than two hundred
million members designated as “denominational
Pentecostals,” this group had surpassed the
Orthodox churches to become the second largest
denominational family of Christians, exceeded
in number by only the Roman Catholics.
Origins of the early
Pentecostal movement
Perhaps the most important immediate precursor
to Pentecostalism was the Holiness movement
which issued from the heart of Methodism at the
end of the Nineteenth Century. From John Wesley,
the Pentecostals inherited the idea of a
subsequent crisis experience variously called
“entire sanctification,”” perfect love,”
“Christian perfection,” or “heart purity.” It
was John Wesley who posited such a possibility
in his influential tract, A Plain Account of
Christian Perfection (1766). It was from Wesley
that the Holiness Movement developed the
theology of a “second blessing.” It was Wesley’s
colleague, John Fletcher, however, who first
called this second blessing a “baptism in the
Holy Spirit,” an experience which brought
spiritual power to the recipient as well as
inner cleansing. This was explained in his major
work, Checks to Antinominianism (1771). During
the Nineteenth Century, thousands of Methodists
claimed to receive this experience, although no
one at the time saw any connection with this
spirituality and speaking in tongues or any of
the other charisms.
In the following century, Edward Irving and his
friends in London suggested the possibility of a
restoration of the charisms in the modern
church. A popular Presbyterian pastor in London,
Irving led the first attempt at “charismatic
renewal” in his Regents Square Presbyterian
Church in 1831. Although tongues and prophecies
were experienced in his church, Irving was not
successful in his quest for a restoration of New
Testament Christianity. In the end, the
“Catholic Apostolic Church ” which was founded
by his followers, attempted to restore the
“five-fold ministries” (of apostles, prophets,
evangelists, pastors, and teachers) in addition
to the charisms. While his movement failed in
England, Irving did succeed in pointing to
glossolalia as the “standing sign” of the
baptism in the Holy Spirit, a major facet in the
future theology of the Pentecostals.
Another predecessor to Pentecostalism was the
Keswick “Higher Life” movement which flourished
in England after 1875. Led at first by American
holiness teachers such as Hannah Whitall Smith
and William E. Boardman, the Keswick teachers
soon changed the goal and content of the “second
blessing” from the Wesleyan emphasis on “heart
purity” to that of an “enduement of spiritual
power for service.” Thus, by the time of the
Pentecostal outbreak in America in 1901, there
had been at least a century of movements
emphasizing a second blessing called the
“baptism in the Holy Spirit” with various
interpretations concerning the content and
results of the experience. In America, such
Keswick teachers as A.B. Simpson and A.J. Gordon
also added to the movement at large an emphasis
on divine healing “as in the atonement” and the
premillenial rapture of the church.
Neo-Pentecostals and
Charismatics
This first wave of Pentecostal pioneer
missionaries produced what has become known as
the “Classical Pentecostal Movement” with over
11,000 Pentecostal denominations throughout the
world. These continued to proliferate at an
amazing rate as the century came to an end. In
retrospect, the pattern established in South
Africa was repeated in many other nations as the
movement spread around the world. That is, an
enterprising Pentecostal pioneer such as Lake
broke the ground for a new movement which was
initially despised and rejected by the existing
churches. This phase was followed by organized
Pentecostal denominational missions efforts
which produced fast-growing missions and
indigenous churches. The final phase was the
penetration of Pentecostalism into the mainline
Protestant and Catholic churches as “charismatic
renewal” movements with the aim of renewing and
reviving the historic churches.
Strangely enough, these newer “waves” also
originated largely in the United States. These
included the Protestant “Neo-pentecostal”
movement which began in 1960 in Van Nuys,
California, under the ministry of Dennis
Bennett, Rector of St. Marks Episcopal
(Anglican) Church. Within a decade, this
movement had spread to all the 150 major
Protestant families of the world reaching a
total of 55,000,000 people by 1990. The Catholic
Charismatic Renewal movement had its beginnings
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1967 among
students and faculty of DuQuesne University. In
the more than thirty years since its inception,
the Catholic movement has touched the lives of
over 70,000,000 Catholics in over 120 nations of
the world. Added to these is the newest
category, the “Third Wave” of the Spirit, which
originated at Fuller Theological Seminary in
1981 under the classroom ministry of John
Wimber. These consisted of mainline Evangelicals
who moved in signs and wonders, but who
disdained labels such as “pentecostal” or
“charismatic.” By 1990 this group numbered some
33,000,000 members in the world.
In summary, all these movements, both
Pentecostal and Charismatic, now number over
640,000,000 and have come to constitute a major
force in Christendom throughout the world with
explosive growth rates not seen before in modern
times. In 2010, these groups united together to
form Empowered21
which will continue to focus on the growth of
the movement in the 21st Century.
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