Asuza St: America, Pentecostalism
{Based on As at the Beginning by Michael Harper, They Speak with other Tongues
by John Sherrill, Asuza.txt from Rohn Price WWW blessings page}
1) Parham and Stone's Folly
The year: 1900 - a young methodist minister compared his life and ministry
to acts and decided his needed to change. To seek the deeper life he opened
a bible college in a building called Stone's folly with the aim of seeking
with the students the secret to the life displayed in Acts.
They concentrated on the second experience of the spirit. An idea that the
church had been increasingly interested in for 50 years. A lot of this interest
was exhibited by the people involved in the Holiness movement.
Parham and his students soon discovered that in most cases in Acts of this
second experience those who recieved the experience spoke in tongues. Those
cases where they were not explicit, they could argue that they occured. They
began praying for this experience. On New years eve at 7.00pm Miss Ozman
was filled with the spirit and began to speak in tongues.
2) The second college and Seymour
The college soon closed down because the building was sold. Parham drifted
for a few years and then began another college. At this college, among others,
he taught a young negro minister named W.J. Seymour.
3) Asuza Street - three years of outpouring
Seymour, with the experience of the spirit and tongues left to take up a
pulpit in Los Angeles. His first sermon, - first of a series he planned on
the holy spirit - caused the elders to lock him out of the church.
In 1906, rejected for his strange beliefs, began ministry in 214 North Bonnie
Brae Street and later due to pressure from neighbors moved to 312 Asuza Street.
Here a derelict partially burnt livery stable next to a tomb stone factory
was the birth place of the modern pentecostal movement. Continuous meetings
were held there every day for a period of three years beginning in mid-April,
1906. It is the most important address in the history of the pentecostal
movement. This was the address of a three year revival that firmly established
the pentecostal theology and the pentecostal movement.
What was it like in the Asuza st mission? The following are some quotes from
the paper published by the Apostolic Faith Mission at 312 Azusa Street in
Los Angeles,THE APOSTOLIC FAITH, one ofthe primary means by which news of
the revival was spread:
These are copied from the Rohn Price Blessings page.
The news has spread far and wide that Los Angeles is being visited with a
"rushing mighty wind from heaven." . . . One brother stated that even before
his train entered the city, he felt the power of the revival. . . . There
is such power in the preaching of the Word in the Spirit that people are
shaken on the benches. Coming to the altar, many fall prostrate under the
powerof God, and often come out speaking in tongues. Sometimes the power
falls on people and they are wrought upon by the Spirit during testimony
or preaching and receive Bible experiences. . .
The demonstrations are not the shouting, clapping or jumping so often seen
in camp meetings. There is a shaking such as the early Quakers had and which
the old Methodists called the "jerks."
On the second page of the same issue, Glen A. Cook provided his testimony,which
he wrote:
I could feel the power going through me like electric needles.The Spirit
taught me that I must not resist the power but give way and become limp as
a piece of cloth. When I did this, I fell under the power, and God began
to mold me and teach me what it meant to be really surrendered to Him. I
was laid out under the power five times before Pentecost really came. Each
time I would come out from under the power, I would feel so sweet and clean,
though I had been run through a washing machine. . . . My arms began to tremble,
and soon I was shaken violently by a great power, and it seemed as though
a large pipe was fitted over my neck, my head apparently being off. . . .
About thirty hours afterwards, while sitting in the meeting on Azusa Street,
I felt my throat and tongue begin to move, without any effort on my part.
Soon I began to stutter and then out came a distinct language which I could
hardly restrain. I talked and laughed with joy far into the night.
In the fourth issue (p. 4), G. W. Batman wrote,
"I received the baptism with the Holy Ghost and fire and now I feel the presence
of the Holy Ghost,not only in my heart but in my lungs, my hands, my arms
and all through mybody and at times I am shaken like a locomotive steamed
up and prepared fora long journey."
William H. Durham recorded his testimony in the sixth issue of THE APOSTOLIC
FAITH (February-March, 1907), p. 4, where he wrote:
On Friday evening, March 1, His mighty power came over me, untilI I jerked
and quaked under it for about three hours. It was strange and wonderful and
yet glorious. He worked my whole body, one section at a time, first my arms,
then my limbs, then my body, then my head, them my face, then my chin, and
finally at 1a.m. Saturday, Mar. 2, after being under the power for three
hours, He finished the work on my vocal organs, and spoke through me in unknown
tongues.
R. J. Scott, the superintendent of Home and Foreign Missions in Winnipeg,
wrote as follows in THE APOSTOLIC FAITH (February-March, 1907),. 7:
After a trip of nearly 3500 miles, we arrived in Los Angeles on Sunday morning,
Nov. 29. I left my family at a hotel and proceeded with my son on a search
for Azusa Mission. After I was there a short time, a lady got up and testified,
and the power of God fell on her and she began to tremble. . . . Well, glory
to God, after this sister trembled for a few minutes, she started to speak
in an unknown tongue to me, and to my surprise, after she had uttered a few
sentences, she spoke in English, giving the interpretation of what she said.
In the same issue (p. 8), Clara E. Lum of the Azusa Street Mission wrote:
When I came to Azusa Mission, I went in for the baptism with the Holy Ghost
immediately. Had some digging to do, but the Lord met me. I was filled with
the Holy Ghost many times and was shaken many times by the power of God.
In a report from San Francisco that appeared in issue no. 7 (April, 1907),.
4, we read:
The power of God shook her so mightily that an elderly lady friend, who had
accompanied her to the meetings, was greatly agitated and excited about it;
she declared that the sister was having a fit, and said something ought to
be done to relieve her.When told that it was the power of God, and that the
sister would come out all right, she looked incredulous, and flew around
in great excitement. Evidently she had not seen it on this wise before. The
sister did not return to the meetings until Saturday night. . . . The sister
was again shaken by the mighty power of God. Her husband was sitting by her
side, and was evidently amazed; yet he recognized it as the power of God,
though not saved himself, he did not resist the power of God, nor try to
hinder his wife. When his wife went to the altar, still shaking under the
mighty power of God, he sat quietly in his seat, deeply moved by what was
going on.
In vol. 1, no. 5 (January 1907), p. 1, we read:
"One who received the Holy Ghost baptism in Clearwater, testified, 'It was
in morning worship. We read a chapter and I wanted to pray but the Lord tied
my mouth. The power began to come in waves. The Lord took full possession.
I fell over like a deadman. I was dead to the world. I tried to pray while
lying on the floor, but when my tongue was loosened, it was in a different
language."
In issue no. 7 (April, 1907), p. 4, the following was reported from San
Francisco:
On another night a Hawaiian brother was gloriously converted. . .. The Hawaiian
could not speak for some minutes after he arose to his feet, the power of
God was upon him to such an extent.
In theDecember, 1906 issue of THE APOSTOLIC FAITH (vol. 1, no. 4), p. 3,
thefollowing announcement appeared:
Sister M. E. Judy writes from Columbus, Ohio, that they have a tarrying meeting
there and others in different towns are tarrying with them in Spirit. She
says, "Last Sunday a burden of prayer came upon the people in our humble
little church in such power that our minister had no opportunity to preach,
just said a few words on "This is that" and closed.
Writing from Norway, A. A. Body wrote concerning T. B. Barratt's meetings
that "the meetings are liable at any moment to be swept by a wave of spiritual
power sweeping through all human arrangements. At times the noise is strangely
awesome, almost appalling to an 'outsider'" (THE APOSTOLICFAITH, vol. 1,
No. 6 [February-March, 1907], p. 1).
Levi R. Lupton wrote as follows from Alliance, Ohio, in the sixth issue of
THE APOSTOLIC FAITH (February-March, 1907), p. 5:
I then became perfectly helpless and for a season my entire body became cold,
and I was unable to move even to the extent that I could not wink an eye
for a short time. Yet, I was perfectly conscious and restful in my soul and
mind. After some three hours the power of God left my body except in my shoulders
and arms, which remained stiff during the entire time I was upon the floor.
Myrtle K. Shideler wrote as follows in the January, 1907 issue of THEAPOSTOLIC
FAITH (p. 3):
By the time the chorus ended, the power of God was so heavy upon me. I could
scarcely open my mouth, and every fibre of my being was trembling. Yet my
feet felt glued to the floor and my knees stiff, so I could not sit down.
I only got out a few broken sentences that I remember. (I never fainted in
my life and was never unconscious, but God certainly took me out of myself.)
He showed me things which there are not words enough in the English language
to express. . . . I was under the power the remainder of the meeting, and
for three days was as one drunken. . . . Since then, such waves of power
roll over me from time to time. I can scarcely keep my feet, and I am sure
if my old friends in California could see me, they would think I was indeed
insane.
People came to Asuza street from all around the world, received the baptism
and took it home with them. Thomas Ball Barratt came to Asmerica looking
for support to build a hall for the Oslo city mission, he left with something
better - the baptism (Harper p29ff for Barratt)
In 1888 he wrote in his diary "Lord baptise me fully in the Holy Ghost and
with fire". In 1902 he wrote to Robert Evans a leader in the welsh revival
of that time that "I want a fuller baptism of fire" and asked the welsh to
pray for Norway. He never visited Asuza street but corresponded with people
involved.
After being especially convicted during a sunday service he retired to his
room, locked the door and prayed and fasted. Just before 5pm the fire fell,
he didn't speak in tongues though - this happened a few days later. He became
the apostle of the revival to Norway after resigning because of opposition
from the mission, He is credited with founding the pentecostal church in
Norway.
Alexander Boddy, a church of England minister became interested in the revival.
He had been heavily involved in the Keswick movement - part of the Holiness
movement around the Keswick conferences that still run today. He visited
Barratt and then invited him to come to his church in England. The revival
broke out in his church also
Again the incidents provoked opposition - Leaders of the Holiness movement
attacked and condemned it
One of the Cambridge seven - Cecil Polhill received the baptism after his
return from China and soon became a co leader in the movement with Boddy.
By 1918 though both had lost the leadership to others. Smith Wigglesworth
and Stanley Frodsham to name two. The movement was now a separate denomination
shunned by all the main churches
Discussion Questions:
1) How important are signs and wonders to indicate Revival or any move of
the Spirit?
2) As a church and as church leaders how should we deal with people who have
a different way of expressing and demonstrating faith?
3) How should we balance the need to be open to the flow of God's Spirit
in challenging our beliefs and practise with the need to be true to the orthodox
faith?
4) How valid is the "remnant" theology which suggests that for any move by
the Spirit, God will call the "true believers" out?
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