Jeffrey K. Hadden
Department of Sociology
University of Virginia


Lecture:

PENTECOSTALISM

Lecture Outline:

The Feast of Pentecost

Development of the Pentecostal Movement

Charismatic Renewal

Holy Laughter as the Fourth Blessing


Part I

The Feast of Pentecost

Pentecost is Feast of Weeks in Old Testament

Pentecost is one of three Jewish pilgrimage festivals

Pentecost in Greek means literally fifty

For Christians of the early church, Pentecost commemorates the day the Holy Spirit decended in fulfillment of the promise of Jesus [Acts 2: 1-4]

Acts 2: 1-4

€œSeven weeks had gone by since Jesus€™ death and ressurection, and the Day of Pentecost had now arrived. As the believers met together that day, suddenly there was a sound like the roaring of a mighty windstorm in the skies above them and it filled the house where they were meeting. Then, what looked like flames or tongues of fire appeared and settled on their heads. And everyone present was filled with the Holy Spirit and began speaking in other tongues, for the Holy Spirit gave them the ability.€

Doctrine of the Trinity

This event marks the origin of the theological doctrine of the trinity:

  • Father
  • Son
  • Holy Ghost

Birth of the Church

Pentecost is also traditionally recognized as the date of the founding of the institutional church.


Part II

Development of the Pentecostal Movement

Death and Rebirth of the Gifts of Pentecost

While there is evidence of early Christians being filled with the Holy Spirit and speaking in tongues, conventional wisdom holds that this came to an end in the third century.

In the 19th century many Christians began to wonder why, if it happened in the early church, it couldn€™t happen how.

January 1, 1901

Dateline: Topeka, Kansas

  • Charles F. Parham founded Bethel Bible School in Topeka and with a small group of students consciously sought to recover the give of speaking in tongues. This speaking in tongues (glossalia) was considered to be the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
  • It occured on the first day of January, 190l but had little immediate impact.
  • In 1905 Parham preached at a revival in Houston, Tx.
  • William Seymour, a black holiness evangelist attended and was baptized in the Holy Spirit.
  • Seymour carried the message to Los Angeles

Azusa Street Mission

Distinctive Features of Pentecostalism

  1. Glossolia (speaking in tongues)
  2. Faith healing (and the belief that faith can sustain health)
  3. The vavacity of miracles ("lattaer rain")
  4. The vitality of worship

Growth and Institutionalization of the Movement

Pentacostal Church Growth in US*

Church

1950s

1990s

CHANGE

Assemblies of God

543,003

2.,257,846

+ 416%

Church of God (And.)

144,145

214,743

+ 149%

Church of God (Clev.)

197,464

672,008

+ 340%

Church of God in Christ

413,000

5,499,875

+1,332%

Four Square Gospel

89,215

207,455

+ 232%

Pentecostal Assoc of the World

42,000

500,000

+1,190%

United Pentecostal Intl

150,000

550,000

+ 367%

TOTAL

1,578,827

9,901,927

+ 672%
*Source: The information presented here is compiled from various sources, mostly figures offered by the individual groups. We have no way of verifying the numbers. While most of these figures are accurate within the resources of the groups to assess the size of their group, others give cause for cautious appraisal.

Estimate of Evangelical Growth in
Select Latin American Countries*

Estimated % of Population Growth
1960

1985

Estimate % Year
2010

Brazil

4.4%

15,9%

45.7%

Chile

11.7%

21.6%

38.8%

Costa Rica

1.3%

06.5%

32.4%

El Salvador

2.5%

12.8%

66.5%

Guatamala

2.9%

18.9%

126.8%

Puerto Rico

5.8%

20.9%

75.1%
*Source: David Stoll, Is Latin American Turning Protestant? Berkeley: University of California Press. 1990. pp. 337-8.


Part III

Charismatic Renewal

Outpouring of Holy Spirit Goes Mainstream

Distinctive qualities of Charismatic Renewal


Part IV

Holy Laughter as the Fourth Blessing

"Toronto Blessing" -- Top tourist attraction of 1994

www.religiousmovements.org