The Azusa Street Revival and Its Legacy

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2009-11-01
Publisher(s): Wipf & Stock Pub
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Summary

In 1906 at 312 Azusa Street in Los Angeles a revival began that set in motion a global movement that has affected half a billion people. InThe Azusa Street Revival and Its Legacy, twenty writers, representing the international scholarship of the Pentecostal, Charismatic, and Renewal communities, reflect on the significance of the movement now and for the future.

Author Biography

Harold D. Hunter is Director of the IPHC Archives Research Center. Denominational executive positions, seminary teaching, and ecumenical dialogues have taken him to over 60 countries. Hunter co-edited with Peter Hocken All Together In One Place (Sheffield 1993), co-edited with Cecil M. Robeck Jr., The Suffering Body (Paternoster, 2006), and released Spirit Baptism: A Pentecostal Alternative (Wipf Stock, 2009). Hunter engages the World Council of Churches, WARC, the NCCCUSA Faith and Order Commission, and ICC. Cecil M. Robeck Jr. is Professor of Church History and Ecumenics at Fuller Theological Seminary. He is a primary interpreter of global Pentecostalism to the Vatican, the World Council of Churches, and other Christian organizations. For nine years, he was editor of Pneuma: The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal Studies. He is the author of Prophecy in Carthage: Perpetua, Tertullian, and Cyprian (Pilgrim 1992) and The Azusa Street Mission and Revival: The Birth of the Global Pentecostal Movement (Nelson, 2006).

Table of Contents

List of Contributorsp. 11
Introductionp. 13
The Azusa Street Revival: 1906-1909p. 27
Ordinary Prophet: William J. Seymour and the Azusa Street Revivalp. 29
The Role of Women in the Azusa Street Revivalp. 61
Pentecostal Healing at the Missionp. 79
Spiritual Hunger "on the Apostolic Faith Line"p. 93
From Azusa to Cleveland: The Amazing Journey of G.B. Cashwell and the Spread of Pentecostalismp. 111
"Networks and Niches": The Worldwide Transmission of the Azusa Street Revivalp. 127
What Good Can Come From Los Angeles? Changing Perceptions of the North American Pentecostal Origins in Early Western European Pentecostal Periodicalsp. 141
Azusa Missionaries in the Context of the Caste System in Indiap. 161
Revivals and the Global Expansion of Pentecostalism After Azusa Streetp. 175
Constructing Different Memories: Recasting the Azusa Street Revivalp. 193
The Legacy of the Azusa Street Revivalp. 203
Signs of Grace in a Graceless World: The Charismatic Structure of the Church in Trinitarian Perspectivep. 205
Encountering the Triune God: Spirituality Since the Azusa Street Revivalp. 215
Pentecostal Eschatology: What Happened When the Wave Hit the West End of the Oceanp. 229
The Church of God in Christ and the Azusa Street Revivalp. 243
The Blessings of Azusa Street and Doornfontein Revivals and Pentecost's Blind Spotp. 259
A Journey Toward Racial Reconciliation: Race Mixing in the Church of God of Prophecyp. 277
The "Place" of Women in Pentecostal/Charismatic Ministry Since the Azusa Street Revivalp. 297
After Azusa Street: Identity and Function of Pentecostalisms in the Processes of Social Changep. 317
Pentecostalism and Social Transformationp. 335
The Azusa Street Revival and the Historic Churchesp. 349
Divine Mandates of the Azusa Street Revivalp. 363
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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