CBN.com -- CRAIG VON BUSECK: You've written a book called The Century 
                  of the Holy Spirit: 100 Years of Pentecostal and Charismatic 
                  Renewal. Can you tell us about the earliest days of 
                  the Pentecostal renewal? How did it begin and what caused it 
                to grow? 
                DR. VINSON SYNAN: The background of it was 
                  the Holiness Movement that had been around for the whole 19th 
                  century -- mainly from Methodist roots. The Methodists had 
                  sort of read these people out of the church by 1894 and there 
                  were a lot of people, maybe 100,000 in America, who were seeking 
                  a deeper walk with God in what they called the second blessing 
                  of sanctification, which they also called the Baptism in the 
                  Holy Spirit. 
                And so as the new century came on the world, there were people who 
                  believed there would be a new outpouring of the Holy Spirit to usher 
                  in a new century -- a century of world evangelization. 
                This movement started in Topeka, Kan., in a Bible school led by a 
                  former Methodist pastor, Charles Fox Parham. In a watch night service, 
                  December 31, 1900, going over into the very first day of the century, 
                  a young lady by the name of Agnes Ozman asked the teacher and the 
                  students to lay hands on her and to pray that she would be baptized 
                  in the Holy Spirit. She expected to speak with tongues in what they 
                  call the Bible evidence. 
                Well, she did speak with tongues. They said she spoke the Chinese 
                  language. She was unable to speak English for three days. When they 
                  tied speaking with tongues to the Baptism in the Holy Spirit, that's 
                  what created the Pentecostal Movement. Then not only tongues, but 
                  healing, casting out of demons, prophecy and many other gifts of the 
                  Spirit began to be manifested there in Topeka. 
                It spread from there down to Houston, Texas, where a black man, William 
                  Joseph Seymour, was brought into the movement by Parham. Then he went 
                  to Los Angeles in 1906 in the famous Azusa Street Meeting. From there 
                  that movement spread all over the earth -- overnight almost. It was 
                  a tremendous beginning for a movement. 
                VON BUSECK: Church historians have given 
                  evidence of times of "tongues speaking" occurring in different 
                  areas and in different times since the birth of the church 
                  on the day of Pentecost. Though speaking in tongues was manifested 
                  at times, no one was taught to seek for the experience as 
                  they were taught to seek for justification, sanctification 
                  and so forth. What was it that inspired Charles Parham to 
                  encourage his Bible students to seek the "Baptism of the Holy 
                  Ghost?" 
                SYNAN: Well, he had studied the teachings 
                  of the Holiness Movement, including salvation, sanctification, 
                  healing, and the Second Coming. And he noticed that there 
                  was no standard evidence of receiving the second blessing 
                  -- Baptism in the Holy Spirit. Some people said you would 
                  shout or weep or fall on the floor. The way he tells it, he 
                  was teaching his students the major doctrines of the Holiness 
                  Movement at that time, and when he got to Baptism in the Holy 
                  Spirit, he told his students there are many different ideas 
                  of how you know you've received this. He said, "I'm going 
                  on a weekend preaching revival at a Free Methodist church 
                  in Kansas City." And he gave a homework assignment to the 
                  students. He said, "Study the Scriptures and when I get back 
                  report on what is the Bible evidence. How do you know you 
                  received the Holy Spirit?" 
                Well, when he got back, the students said, to tell the truth, when 
                  we study the Scriptures, we see that they spoke with tongues in almost 
                  every case. If you want to know what the Bible evidence is, it has 
                  to be tongues. He said he was astonished at the answer. There are 
                  other people who believe that he already knew what the answer was 
                  and that he was trying to get the students to confirm it. 
                J. Roswell Flower, the founding secretary of the Assemblies of God, 
                  said, "Agnes Ozman's experience [being baptized in the Holy Spirit] 
                  made the 20th century Pentecostal Movement." After this, millions 
                  of people sought to receive an instantaneous Baptism in the Spirit, 
                  expecting to speak with tongues. That's what made it different from 
                  the Holiness Movement and other movements of the day. 
                VON BUSECK: As you said, six years after 
                  Agnes Ozman was baptized in the Holy Spirit, the Pentecostal 
                  Movement was launched to the world at the Azusa Street Revival 
                  in Los Angeles. What happened at those meetings that caused 
                  such a tremendous outpouring? 
                SYNAN: I've studied this for most of my 
                  life and there are people writing books and doing research 
                  on Azusa Street. There's nothing, humanly-speaking, that we 
                  can come up with that explains everything about Azusa Street. 
                  It has to be, in my view, a supernatural work of God. Here 
                  is a black pastor born in Louisiana to parents who had been 
                  slaves. He had been to Indianapolis and worked at a railroad 
                  station and as a waiter in restaurants. He had gotten into 
                  the Holiness Movement and had learned about tongues from Parham. 
                  He was invited to California to preach in a little black holiness 
                  church. They locked the door on him. He had not spoken in 
                  tongues yet, but he preached that it was the evidence. 
                Then he started holding prayer meetings in the home of a friend by 
                  the name of Asbury. For maybe two weeks they prayed and fasted. And 
                  then they began to speak in tongues in that prayer meeting in the 
                  home. And the crowds grew so large until he would speak on the front 
                  porch to hundreds of people on the streets. 
                They had to find a place to meet. They looked around downtown Los 
                  Angeles and found an old AME (African Methodist Episcopal) Church, 
                  which is now the First AME Church of Los Angeles. It was the first 
                  black church building in Los Angeles. But it had been sold and used 
                  as a stable and a lumber warehouse and all kinds of stuff. It was 
                  a broken-down shambles of a building. It had been burned and it looked 
                  terrible. But Seymour and his followers, made up mainly of black porters, 
                  washer women, maids -- just very poor people -- started a meeting 
                  in April of 1906. The central attraction was speaking in tongues and 
                  healing. People came from all over Los Angeles and then it got into 
                  the religious press. Stories were printed all over the country that 
                  people were speaking in tongues just like the apostles did. 
                And so there was a lot of curiosity. People came from all over the 
                  country, and even from Europe. That meeting went on for three-and-a-half 
                  years -- three services a day, seven days a week. The pastor was a 
                  black man, but soon the majority of the people were white. And so 
                  it was Azusa Street with Seymour that made this a worldwide movement 
                  through Frank Bartleman, who wrote articles that went all over the 
                  world. Soon people were speaking in tongues in Jerusalem, in Stockholm, 
                  in London and Rome -- all over the world, it just spread like an explosion. 
                VON BUSECK: Who were some of the most important 
                  leaders in the Pentecostal movement in the first half of the 
                  20th century? Who were the key leaders, and can you tell us 
                  about them? 
                SYNAN: Well, the leadership changed. Nobody 
                  stayed in charge for very long. In fact, they often say it 
                  is a movement without a man. There's no Luther, there's no 
                  Calvin, there's no Wesley who molded the movement into one 
                  church. It exploded and there were many churches starting 
                  all over, everywhere. 
                The first leader, of course, was Parham. Now he's the leader for 
                  about five years. Then Seymour, for three-and-a-half or four years, 
                  becomes the national leader. Then he drops out of sight because the 
                  mailing list for his paper called "Apostolic Faith" was moved to Portland, 
                  Ore. 
                Then the leadership moves to Chicago -- I call it the Chicago connection. 
                  William H. Durham was the pastor of the First Pentecostal Church in 
                  Chicago. From his church came all kinds of leaders. Italians spread 
                  Pentecostalism all over the world in Italian communities. From Chicago 
                  came Willis Hoover in Chile. He started the first Pentecostal movement 
                  in South America. From the Chicago area came Daniel Bergan Goonivingren, 
                  who went to Brazil and started a mass movement there. Durham was the 
                  founding theologian of the Assemblies of God was in the Chicago area. 
                In Memphis you have Charles Harrison Mason, who goes to Azusa Street, 
                  is baptized in the Spirit, comes back and turns his church, Church 
                  of God in Christ, into a Pentecostal church. And so Memphis becomes 
                  a great center. That has become the largest Pentecostal church in 
                  America with six million members. 
                And there were others here and there. In my church, I come from the 
                  Pentecostal Holiness Church, a man from Dunn, N.c., G. B. Cashwell 
                  went to Azusa Street and spoke in tongues. They said he spoke in German. 
                  He came back to Dunn and held a Pentecostal meeting, which they called 
                  Azusa Street east. And there, leaders of four or five different Holiness 
                  denominations came, spoke with tongues, and the Pentecostal Holiness 
                  churches became Pentecostal; through his ministry the Church of God 
                  in Cleveland, Tenn., became Pentecostal. So you see it spreading. 
                And then it breaks out in Europe with Thomas Ball Berritt; Louise 
                  Patros in Sweden; it goes into Russia with J. A. Voreniov; into Korea 
                  -- it spreads all over the earth in a very short time. 
                VON BUSECK: Some of the strongest churches 
                  and denominations that we have today grew out of the Pentecostal 
                  Movement -- denominations like the Pentecostal Holiness Church, 
                  The Assemblies of God, The International Church of the Foursquare 
                  Gospel, The Church of God in Christ and others were birthed 
                  at that time. Why have these denominations prospered around 
                  the world in light of the fact that many started with very 
                  humble beginnings? 
                SYNAN: The only thing I can say is that 
                  they released a tremendous power -- the power of the Holy 
                  Spirit -- and not just tongues, but all the gifts were released 
                  into the church. These people were excited. They believed 
                  Jesus was coming any moment. They had to win the world before 
                  Christ returned. That gave them a big motivation. 
                I think it was the joy of worship -- the power of praising God, singing 
                  in the Spirit, clapping their hands, dancing before the Lord. It was 
                  a very expressive kind of worship. It attracted poor people, mainly. 
                  But in time, by the middle of the 20th century, it was going into 
                  Episcopal churches, Lutheran, Presbyterian, and even the Catholic 
                  Church. But I think the growth came because very simple people believed 
                  God. 
                In the religious world there were a lot of people who said 
                  we see the power of God working. It was noisy and it was messy. 
                  These people shouted, they danced, but the common people heard 
                  this message gladly. The movement spread like wildfire all 
                  over this nation and all over the world. 
                Buy 
                  the Book: The Century of the Holy Spirit: 100 Years 
                    of Pentecostal and Charismatic Renewal.
                Also by Dr. Synan: In the Latter Days: The Outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the Twentieth Century
                The Holiness-Pentecostal Tradition 
                More on the Azusa Street Revival 
                Read 
                  more about Revival and Church History
                More from  Spiritual Life 
                
                 Dr. Vinson Synan is Dean Emeritus of the Regent University School of Divinity. He is author of several books, including In the Latter Days: The Outpouring of the Holy Spirit   in the Twentieth Century; The Century of the Holy Spirit: 100 Years 
                  of Pentecostal and Charismatic Renewal; and The Holiness-Pentecostal Tradition: Charismatic   Movements in the Twentieth Century.
Dr. Vinson Synan is Dean Emeritus of the Regent University School of Divinity. He is author of several books, including In the Latter Days: The Outpouring of the Holy Spirit   in the Twentieth Century; The Century of the Holy Spirit: 100 Years 
                  of Pentecostal and Charismatic Renewal; and The Holiness-Pentecostal Tradition: Charismatic   Movements in the Twentieth Century.
                 Craig von Buseck is Ministries Director for CBN.com. Read more of his articles and interviews on CBN.com.
Craig von Buseck is Ministries Director for CBN.com. Read more of his articles and interviews on CBN.com. 
                 
                
		
		  
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