William J. Seymour and The Origins of Global Pentecostalism by Gaston Espinosa
William J. Seymour and The Origins of Global Pentecostalism by Gaston Espinosa
William J. Seymour and The Origins of Global Pentecostalism by Gaston Espinosa
Gastón Espinosa
with a foreword by harvey cox
WILLIAM J. SEYMOUR AND THE
ORIGINS OF GLOBAL PENTECOSTALISM
a biogr aphy and documentary history
Gastón Espinosa
foreword xiii
preface xix
acknowledgments xxi
seymour timeline xxiii
introduction
Definitions and One Hundred Years of
Historiography on Seymour 1
PART I
BIOGRAPHY
Chapter 1 American Pentecostal Origins: Parham and Seymour 41
Chapter 2 Holy Awe and Indescribable Wonder: The Azusa Street
Revival 53
Chapter 3 Moses and Mecca: Seymour, Azusa, and Global Origins 69
Chapter 4 God Makes No DiVerence in Color: Azusa’s Transgressive
Social Space 96
Chapter 5 Wrecking the Spirit of Azusa: Grumbling and the Road
to Decline 109
Chapter 6 Race War in the Churches: Promoting Peace by Taking
the Initiative 126
Chapter 7 We Don’t Believe in Relics: Seymour in Ignominy 143
Conclusion Holy Restlessness and Cracking Bottles 149
viii Contents
PART II
DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF WILLIAM J. SEYMOUR,
THE AZUSA STREET REVIVAL, AND
GLOBAL PENTECOSTAL ORIGINS
A. Seymour’s Spiritual Writings from the Apostolic Faith, 1906–08
Introduction 161
1. Letter from William J. Seymour to Warren Faye Carothers 161
2. Letter from William J. Seymour to Charles Fox Parham 162
3. Bro. Seymour’s Call 163
4. The Apostolic Faith Movement 163
5. The Precious Atonement 165
6. The Way into the Holiest 166
7. River of Living Water 167
8. In Money Matters 169
9. Counterfeits 170
10. “Behold the Bridegroom Cometh!” 172
11. Gifts of the Spirit 174
12. “Receive Ye the Holy Ghost” 176
13. Rebecca; Type of the Bride of Christ—Gen. 24 177
14. The Baptism with the Holy Ghost 180
15. [Good-Bye] 182
16. The “Latter Rain” in Zion, Ill. 184
17. The Holy Spirit Bishop of the Church 185
18. Letter to One Seeking the Holy Ghost 188
19. Testimony and Praise to God 189
20. “The Marriage Tie” 190
21. Questions Answered 194
22. Christ’s Messages to the Church 201
23. Portsmouth and Richmond, VA 206
24. “To the Married” 207
25. Sanctified on the Cross 210
26. The Baptism of the Holy Ghost 211
27. The Holy Ghost and the Bride 215
—Historical Overviews
Introduction 309
39. Charles Shumway, “A Critical Study of ‘The Gift of
Tongues’ ” 309
40. J. C. Vanzandt, Speaking in Tongues 314
41. Frank Bartleman, Azusa Street 316
42. Arthur Osterberg, Oral History of the Azusa Street Revival 319
43. Glenn Cook, The Azusa Street Meeting 320
44. Seymour Obituary, “Brother Seymour Called Home” 322
“Salvation in Sweden” 359
“Sweden” 359
78. Thomas Ball Barratt, Baptized in New York 360
“In Norway” 361
79. A lexander Boddy, A Meeting at the Azusa Street Mission,
Los Angeles 361
80. Lucy Leatherman, “Pentecostal Experiences” 362
notes 389
bibliography 411
index 429
FOREWORD
harvey cox,
hollis research professor of divinity,
harvard university
expecting for centuries had in fact come and that the ancient promise that
the Gentiles would one day enter into the commonwealth of Israel had been
accomplished. He did not ask them to leave their inherited faith but to rec-
ognize this new and final stage of its history. His message to Gentiles was
that because of God’s action in Jesus Christ they were no longer “outsiders”
to the divine promises. The wall had been broken down, and they were now
fellow citizens with Jews in a new and inclusive spiritual covenant.
Nor did Luther have any intention of founding a church or a denomina-
tion, least of all one that would bear his name. Like many of his contempo-
raries, he insisted that the Catholic Church needed to be radically reformed
and rescued from what he considered the fabricated and malicious leadership
of the papacy. For his part, Seymour was convinced that God was pouring
down a new shower of blessings, a “latter rain,” on the whole church, cleans-
ing it from its sinful divisions along racial and denominational lines. All
three men had the whole church, the entire people of God, indeed the whole
world in mind.
None of these three singular men foresaw what the results of their labors
would be, and perhaps that is just as well since all three would surely have
been both pleased and deeply disappointed. After some two centuries of
porous borders between what would eventually be called “Christian” and
Jewish congregations a certain parting of the ways took place, although cur-
rent historical research indicates the split was never as severe as earlier schol-
ars believed. When eventually the prelates of the Roman Catholic Church
responded to Luther’s eVort to reform it, they excommunicated him, and the
reformation was ultimately confined to the northern regions of Europe. Its
universal hopes were dashed. Likewise William Joseph Seymour would have
been horrified to think that the revival he encouraged, beginning at Azusa
Street, would one day be viewed as a congeries of separate “denominations.”
His fond hope was that those who were touched by the new outpouring of
the Holy Spirit, with gifts of prophecy, tongues, and healing would return
to their own congregations as joyful bearers of this good news. The sad
fact is that when they tried to, most of them were ridiculed, shunned, and
expelled. When they eventually went their separate ways it was with bitter
disappointment and great reluctance.
There is another fascinating parallel. St. Paul, Luther, and Seymour were
not lone rangers. There were evidently other messengers spreading the gospel
in places like Ephesus and Corinth at the time of Paul. He respected some of
them. They “sowed and watered,” he writes. Some of them he distrusted and
opposed. His epistles warn against teachers of false doctrine. Still, when the
dust of history settled it became clear that St. Paul played a preeminent role,
a first among equals. Luther had other reformers to contend with too. Acting
on the same stage at the same time were such formidable figures as Bucer,
Foreword xv
Melanchton, Karlstadt, Muntzer, and of course, John Calvin. Some had ideas
close to Luther’s. Some were to his right and some to his left. Luther engaged
with many of them, cooperated when he could, disagreed when thought he
had to, and sometimes lashed out with fierce polemic. In one sense there
were multiple “reformations” going on in early sixteenth-century Europe.
All these figures played their parts in the drama. But, again, it is hard to
imagine what we now call “the” Reformation without the towering person
and driving inspiration of the monk from Wittenberg.
One of the finest features of this volume is that Espinosa boldly enters the
heated arguments about Seymour’s role in the birth of Pentecostalism, gives
all parties their due, but still persuades at least this reader that both Seymour
and the Azusa revival played a central role in the appearance of the modern
Pentecostal movement. He does this in three ways. First, he includes here all
the confirmed writings on spiritual and theological topics that researchers
agree come from Seymour’s own hand. Second, he includes other invaluable
sources from the early days and years of the movement. Third, and perhaps
most important, he sketches out a biography of Seymour himself, filling out
his portrait with a cautious and evenhanded examination of the theses and
theories advanced by other serious scholars. He explains and respects their
contributions, but comes out with an assessment of the critical place of Sey-
mour that any subsequent writer must contend with.
Still, after all is said and done, the question remains: Does William Joseph
Seymour belong in this gallery of spiritual giants and world changers? I think
the answer is yes, but the issue is still disputed. Do numbers count for any-
thing? Religious demographers now estimate the count of Pentecostals and
Charismatic Christians as approximately 630 million. That places them as the
second most numerous Christian family, just behind Roman Catholics, but
ahead of Protestants and Eastern Orthodox. Yet, despite their astonishing
growth, especially during the past half century, scholarly attention to them
was pathetically sparse until the past two decades. Just as inexplicable has
been the lack of attention paid to Seymour. Wander the aisles of any library
and you will find whole shelves, often whole sections, devoted to St. Paul and
to Martin Luther. This is as it should be, but the wholesale discounting of
Seymour is hard to explain. It is painful to think that such patent disregard
might stem, at least in part, from racism. Does a one-eyed Black man, a son of
former slaves, with no formal education really belong in this Christian pan-
theon? Now, however, with this present volume, and with others appearing,
the gap is being filled.
Remember the parable of the mustard seed. Momentous things some-
times spring from small beginnings, and the advent of the Pentecostal wave
was surely one of these. Espinosa conjures the scene on Bonnie Brae Street
and later at 312 Azusa Street in fascinating detail. Picture a leaky frame
xvi Foreword
Five hundred years after Luther defied Rome, the denominations that trace
their roots to the sixteenth century are still with us. And after the longed-
for consummation Seymour proclaimed in the early years of the twentieth
century did not appear, Pentecostalism is thriving. Furthermore in one of
its multiple expressions it is flourishing in “faraway places” like China and
Africa to which he had dispatched missionaries, and wanted to send more.
From a historical perspective it is virtually impossible to sort out just how
much of the Pentecostal explosion stems exclusively or mainly from Azusa
Street. There were demonstrably other very similar revivals, some includ-
ing tongue-speaking, prophecy, and healing, already in progress when the
news from Azusa Street arrived. Espinosa gives these movements careful
and balanced attention. But in the end he insists, and I think rightly, on the
indispensable role of Seymour and Azusa Street. Indeed, I know of no other
volume that deals so comprehensively with just how the Azusa dna found
its way to all corners of the earth.
Finally, what about Seymour’s theology? Seymour himself has not made
it easy for later generations to know what he thought. A modest person, he
often did not attach his name to the articles he wrote for the weekly news-
paper, The Apostolic Faith, which he began publishing right away in 1906.
But by now careful students of the paper have confirmed the pieces written
by Seymour himself from 1906 until 1908, and as I have pointed out above,
Espinosa has included them all in this volume. In doing so he has rendered
a remarkable service to ordinary readers and scholars alike. Now, one can
study what Seymour wrote on a wide variety of topics, from the new birth
and the plan of salvation to the nature of God and the human soul. In incor-
porating these precious writings, along with other key documents, in this
volume Espinosa has not only greatly strengthened the value of the book,
he has also provided a model of how future studies should be prepared. The
format itself suggests a kind of Pentecostal spirit. It is anti-elitist, inviting the
reader not just to accept the judgment of the expert but to join in the process
of historical reflection.
Who can say what a future evaluation of Seymour and Azusa Street, writ-
ten, say, in 2106 at the two hundredth anniversary, might conclude about
their place in Christian and world history? But whatever future scholars de-
cide on these matters, this evocative portrait of the one-eyed preacher and
this collection of key writings will have to be taken into consideration.
This book analyzes the life and ministry of William J. Seymour, the Azusa
Street Revival, and his influence on global Pentecostal origins through
an introduction, biography, and documentary history. It is similar to and
yet diVerent from Larry Martin’s very fine theologically framed and self-
published eight-volume “Azusa Street Library.” The first volume is a biogra-
phy followed by seven short primary source books. As a Pentecostal “revival
evangelist,” he stated that he created the series to inspire “a hunger in the
hearts of the people of God.” 1
This present book covers much of the same material in half of Martins’
eight volumes. It diVers because it is the most comprehensive collection
of materials on Seymour, Azusa, and his influence on Pentecostal origins
in one volume that is academic in tone, critical in analysis, comprehensive
in scope and vision, and yet also written for the general public. It also takes
a historical and phenomenological approach to the study of Pentecostalism
that seeks to—in the words of Mircea Eliade—interpret religious traditions,
experiences, and practitioners on their own plane of reference from a critical
but fair-minded scholarly perspective. Drawing on Ninian Smart’s method-
ological notion of bracketed realism, it seeks neither to aYrm or deny the
truth claims of its subjects, but rather to understand them in light of their
larger socio-religious context.2 Despite its comprehensiveness, it is not a gen-
eral history of Pentecostal origins and development in every single country
around the world, but rather a study that focuses exclusively on Seymour’s
life, Azusa Street revival, and influence on global Pentecostal origins from
1906 to 1912 in select countries like England, Norway, Sweden, Liberia,
South Africa, India, and China.
This book begins by defining key theological terms and phrases and
explains the diVerences between Pentecostals, Charismatics, and Neo-
Charismatics, and then provides a historiographical overview of how Sey-
mour has been interpreted over the past one hundred years. Next it provides
a short biography that analyzes Seymour’s life and ministry, his relation-
ship with Charles Fox Parham, both of their views on race relations, and
xx Preface
pleted without the generous support over the years of Jim Lewis and the
Louisville Institute for the Study of American Religion, James Leech and
the National Endowment for the Humanities (neh), Kent Mulliken and
the National Humanities Center (nhc), and Presidents Pamela Gann and
Hiram Chodosh and deans William Ascher and Gregory Hess of Claremont
McKenna College. Finally, I thank Valerie Millholland, Miriam Angress,
Sara Leone, and Duke University Press for their enthusiastic support.
SEYMOUR TIMELINE
gastón espinosa
The Pentecostal movement is one of the most powerful and fastest grow-
ing grassroots religious movements in the world today. This book explores
William J. Seymour, the Azusa Street Revival, and his influence on global
Pentecostal origins across the U.S. and around the world from 1906 to 1912
in select countries like England, Norway, Sweden, Liberia, South Africa,
China, and India.1 The following chapter will set the context for the biog-
raphy and documentary history by defining key terms, phrases, and move-
ments and by providing an historical overview of how Seymour has been
interpreted over the past one hundred years.
Most scholars break the global Pentecostal movement into three
main groupings: Denominational Pentecostals (Classical Pentecostals/
Pentecostals) (16 percent), Charismatics (Protestant, Catholic, Orthodox)
(39 percent), and Neo- Charismatics (Independents/Postindependents/
Nondenominationals) (45 percent). In this study, denominational and clas-
sical Pentecostals will simply be referred to as Pentecostals. Pentecostalism’s
proliferation into twenty-three thousand denominations has understandably
led some to question whether it’s even possible to define a Pentecostal and
a global Pentecostal movement.2 While clearly there are many streams and
combinative theological traditions that feed into the larger global movement,
there are nonetheless two salient beliefs and experiences that tend to unite
most Pentecostals, Charismatics, and Neo-Charismatics around the world.
The first is the necessity of having a personal, born-again conversion expe-
rience with Jesus Christ and the second is a desire to be baptized and filled
with the Holy Spirit—or being “born-again and Spirit-filled.” Contrary to
stereotypes, a person does not have to speak in tongues to be considered
a Pentecostal or Charismatic Christian, but they normally desire to do so.
These core beliefs reportedly helped unite forty-five thousand Pentecostals,
Charismatics, and Neo-Charismatics from 113 countries around the world
in spiritual unity across races, languages, denominations, and nationalities
at the Azusa Street Revival Centennial Celebration in Los Angeles on April
25–29, 2006, where participants claimed there was no confusion about the
2 INTRODUCTION
movement’s main identity and core distinctives, despite their own unique
denominations, customs, and theological traditions.3
Pentecostals take their name from Acts 2:4, where on the “Day of Pentecost”
the Holy Spirit reportedly fell on the Apostles and they began to speak in
unknown tongues. They affirm all of the spiritual gifts listed in the New
Testament, including tongues, prophecy, service, evangelism, wisdom,
knowledge, pastoring, teaching, exhortation, faith, healing, working mira-
cles, distinguishing/discerning spirits, casting out evil spirits, contributing,
giving aid, mercy, administration, interpretation of tongues, and apostle-
ship (I Cor. 12:8–10, 28–30; Ephesians 4:11; Rom. 12:6–8; 1 Pet. 4:11; Mark
16:17). Today many Pentecostals, Charismatics, and Neo-Charismatics teach
that all of the above gifts are available today except apostleship, which they
believed was reserved for the New Testament period—though a small but
growing sector of the movement argues that this gift is also available today.
Pentecostals teach that the baptism in the Holy Spirit is normally evi-
denced by speaking in tongues. Tongues are considered a supernatural mani
festation of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:4, 10:46, 19:6; I Cor. 12:10) that is avail-
able to all born-again Christians (John 3:3) regardless of a person’s race, class,
gender, nationality, or Christian denominational affiliation. For this reason,
the Pentecostal/Charismatic movement often transcends these boundaries.
There are two types of tongues: a divinely given human language one has
never studied (xenolalia—Acts 2) and a divinely given language known only
to God (glossolalia—in all other accounts in Acts 8:17–19, 10:44–46, 19:1–6).
The modern classical Pentecostal movement in the United States was born
in the wake of Charles Fox Parham’s Topeka Bible School revival in 1901 and
William J. Seymour’s Azusa Street Revival in Los Angeles from 1906 to
1909. Pentecostalism was influenced by nineteenth-century Protestant evan-
gelicalism, the Holiness and Keswick movements, revival and divine healing
movements, and African American spirituality.4 Parham and Seymour (for
a short time) taught that the baptism in the Holy Spirit must be evidenced
by speaking in unknown tongues, which they believed was a divinely given
human language one had never studied. This developed into the initial evi
dence theory and has been adopted by the Assemblies of God, Church of
God (Cleveland), Foursquare, Pentecostal Assemblies of the World, and
other denominations. However, by October 1906 Seymour and later F. F.
Bosworth, Charles Mason, G. A. Cook, and most global Pentecostals taught
that tongues was just one of the evidences of the Spirit baptism and that it
could manifest itself as xenolalia or glossolalia. Parham never changed his
view that it must always be xenolalia.5
INTRODUCTION 3
Protestant Pentecostals in the U.S. trace their roots back to Parham, Sey-
mour, Ambrose Tomlinson, Charles Mason, G. T. Haywood, F. M. Brit-
ton, J. H. King, and others before 1950 and attend classical Pentecostal de-
nominations like the Assemblies of God, Church of God in Christ, United
Pentecostal Church, Church of God (Cleveland), International Pentecostal
Holiness Church, Foursquare Church, and other denominations and inde-
pendent churches.
They generally come in two theological varieties: Trinitarian and One-
ness. Most affirm the Trinity (God as one essence in three distinct persons)
and the fundamentals of the Protestant evangelical faith: biblical inerrancy,
the virgin birth, the deity of Christ, Jesus’s bodily resurrection from the
dead, salvation through Christ alone, and Jesus’s second coming. Oneness
Pentecostals affirm these doctrines except the traditional Christian view of
the Trinity, which they deem tri-theistic or the belief in three separate Gods.
Instead, they argue the Trinity is three modes of the same one person—
Jesus. They argue that Matthew 28:19–20 teaches people to baptize in the
“name” of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. That “name,” they
reason from the context, is Jesus. They also teach that Acts 2:38 proves the
apostles baptized people in the name of Jesus only. Therefore, all Trini-
tarians must be rebaptized in only Jesus’s name. The largest U.S. Oneness
denominations are the United Pentecostal Church (white), Pentecostal As-
4 INTRODUCTION
semblies of the World (black), and Apostolic Assembly of the Faith in Christ
Jesus (Latino).8
CHARISMATICS
NEO-CHARISMATICS
appointed Missouri senator John Ashcroft U.S. Attorney General. Palin and
Ashcroft attended Assemblies of God churches, which are members of a de-
nomination based in Springfield, Missouri, that traces its roots back to Sey-
mour, Parham, and the Azusa Street Revival. The Pentecostal influence in
public life is a global trend that reflects Seymour’s socially liberative message
that the Spirit baptism breaks down all human-made racial, class, educa-
tional, and national barriers and unites all born-again, Spirit-filled Christians
into one body of believers.17
mind relationship. Although these practices were at risk of being diluted into
white “evangelical middle class religion,” they are alive and well in the Two-
Thirds world, where “oral modes of communication” are usually the most
effective way to spread the Christian message, he argued.27
Vinson Synan steered a middle path in his The Holiness-Pentecostal Move-
ment (1971), arguing for the biracial origins—though with Parham as the doc-
trinal originator. Both “share roughly equal positions as founders” because
Parham laid the “doctrinal” foundations and Seymour served as the catalytic
agent. “It was Parham’s ideas preached by his followers that produced the
Azusa revival of 1906 and with it the worldwide Pentecostal movement.”
Synan affirms Seymour’s pivotal role, yet rejects Hollenweger’s notion that
Pentecostalism began as a “Negro phenomenon.” Synan also broke ranks
with previous writers by pointing out Parham’s racial attitudes and his sym-
pathy for the Ku Klux Klan. However, he argued that southern tradition and
mores rather than white supremacy per se were to blame. Like Brumback, he
argued that Parham’s conflict with Seymour was not due to racism but to his
corrective ministry and his denunciations of “hypnotists” and “spiritualists”
“who seemed to have taken over the [Azusa] service[s].” 28
James Tinney disagreed with previous interpreters and argued that Azusa
was largely an African-A merican “event” that “originated as a Black reli-
gious development . . . springing from African and Afro-A merican impulses
in the most immediate sense.” 29 Leonard Lovett criticized scholars for fail-
ing to make a clear-cut distinction between precursors and the mainstream
movement and for hailing Parham as the “Father” of Pentecostalism while
“fail[ing]” to fully recognize black contributions: “The exponents of the
interracial view are so eager to make their point that they fail to see that
Parham’s efforts, at best, were a continuation of [previous] sporadic light
showers [of glossolalia that had already taken place in history], while Sey-
mour’s Azusa Street Revival was the torrential downpour that created a ma-
jor worldwide flood.” 30
In the Vision of the Disinherited: The Making of American Pentecostalism
(1979), Robert Mapes Anderson argues that Hollenweger’s black origins the-
sis was “inaccurate” because Parham was the true “founder” and “originator”
of Pentecostalism. Anderson admitted Parham’s racism, moral failings, and
unique theological views. However, he contends that Seymour preached a
simplified version of Parham’s views and that although Seymour’s own vi-
sion was potentially “revolutionary,” it was later domesticated and “trans-
formed into social passivity, ecstatic escape, and finally, a most conservative
conformity.” 31
Douglas Nelson challenged Anderson in his 1981 dissertation, “ ‘For Such
a Time as This’: The Story of William J. Seymour and the Azusa Street
Revival.” Seymour, he argued, was a “great leader directly responsible for a
12 INTRODUCTION
and the Reshaping of Religion in the Twenty-First Century, that although Azu-
sa’s interracial character and ethos attracted seasoned Christian leaders and
the masses, defections by white leaders along with latent racial animosity led
Seymour to become defensive and restrict the movement’s top three leader-
ship roles to “people of color.” Although he had more right than any other
single person to be called the “father of Pentecostalism,” he died with little
fanfare from white colleagues. Despite this, Azusa’s message swept around
the world because its restorationist message spoke to the spiritual emptiness
and longing of our time by promoting a kind of primal spirituality, which
manifested itself in primal speech (ecstatic utterance/glossolalia), primal piety
(visions, healing, spirit possession, and archetypal religious expressions), and
primal hope in a future millennial kingdom where their wrongs would be
righted. This once despised and ridiculed group is now quickly becoming
one of the preferred religions of the global poor.36
In “Visions of Glory: The Place of the Azusa Street Revival in Pentecostal
History” (1996), Joe Creech popularized the modern multiple centers theory
of Pentecostal origins. He claims that early eyewitnesses, denominational
historians, “Azusa boosters,” and modern scholars like Hollenweger uncriti-
cally adopted Bartleman’s (alleged) claim that Azusa was the “starting point”
for global Pentecostalism, thus creating the “myth” of Azusa’s influence.
Aside from a condescending tone throughout and suggestion that past schol-
ars were driven more by ideology than the facts, Creech claims (a) there were
many other centers and points of origin that were equally important and in-
dependent such as William Durham’s Mission in Chicago and Gaston Barn-
abas Cashwell’s Mission in North Carolina; (b) that they not only rivaled but
in Durham’s case arguably surpassed Azusa in theological influence and lead-
ership development; (c) that because these Azusa-influenced leaders did not
maintain “institutional” and “structural” ties with Azusa and because they
often kept their preexisting Protestant institutional structures, theological
tendencies, and social dynamics, this “demonstrates” that “Azusa played only
a limited substantive role in the institutional, theological, and social devel-
opment of early Pentecostalism”; and (d) that “only a handful” of people and
“a few congregations” adhered to Seymour’s interracial message. The idea
that Azusa’s “spiritual ethos” and interracial vision and message of equality
were part of the “marrow” of Pentecostal theology and spirituality is a myth
invariably perpetuated by black Pentecostal scholars, Douglas Nelson, Har-
vey Cox, and others, Creech implies. He further claims, “It is also unclear
whether or not racial equality, even where it existed, was a core theological
tenet” at all in early Pentecostalism. Without showing precisely how, he fur-
ther claims that Donald Dayton, James Goff, Gary McGee, Grant Wacker,
and Edith Blumhofer demonstrate that Pentecostal origins “arose from mul-
tiple [preexisting] pockets of revival” and that even Azusa-influenced leaders
14 INTRODUCTION
like Durham and Florence Crawford worked “in direct opposition to Sey-
mour.” He argued Pentecostalism’s theological “raison d’être came not from
Azusa but from . . . Parham.” He claims that Seymour and Azusa were one
of many leaders and centers and that they played a “limited substantive role”
in Pentecostal origins.37
In Gastón Espinosa’s dissertation on the origins of the North Ameri-
can Latino Pentecostal movement (1999), he argues that although Parham
influenced some of Seymour’s theological views on the spiritual gifts and
tongues, they ultimately created two overlapping but still competing visions
and versions of Pentecostalism that differed in some of their key theological,
social, and racial views. Seymour’s created a “transgressive social space” at
Azusa from 1906 to 1909 wherein people could invoke pneumatic experiences
to cross some (though not all) of the social, racial, and gender boundaries
of the day. Espinosa challenged the biracial interpretive paradigm of Azusa,
arguing that Latinos and other immigrants helped transform a largely black
and then biracial, American, English-language prayer meeting on 214 Bon-
nie Brae Street into a multi-racial-ethnic, multilinguistic, and international
revival on 312 Azusa Street.38
Larry Martin argues in The Life and Ministry of William J. Seymour (1999)
that Seymour was critical to Pentecostalism. He traces how the fires of the
Pentecostal movement passed from Parham to Seymour, who popularized
the movement and also promoted racial equality. He links Seymour to Par-
ham’s Apostolic Faith Mission and argues that Seymour only severed these
ties after Parham’s incendiary remarks in October 1906. He concludes that
Parham was a “racist” whose support for the Ku Klux Klan “amounted to
little less than white supremacy.” He points out a number of important and
hitherto unreported facts about Seymour’s family and early life.39
Rufus Sanders challenged previous writers by arguing in William Joseph
Seymour: Black Father of the 20th Century Pentecostal/Charismatic Movement
(2001) that Seymour was the black founder and “Father” of Pentecostalism.
Although Parham “planted the seed” and “help[ed] to formulate . . . Pente-
costal theology,” it was Seymour’s experiences that served as the bedrock
for the new faith—though he does credit Parham as “Seymour’s father in
this new-found faith.” Despite the fact that “white historians deliberately
denied Seymour’s title of ‘Father,’ ” Sanders contends that he was the “main
architect of modern Pentecostalism” and that “every ritual and practice of
Pentecostalism had a precedent in African-A merican traditional religion.” 40
Grant Wacker suggests in Heaven Below: Early Pentecostals and American
Culture (2001) that the genius of Pentecostalism lay in its ability to balance
“two seemingly incompatible impulses in productive tension . . . the prim-
itive and pragmatic . . . idealism versus realism, or principle versus practi-
cality.” Pentecostals were thus able to “capture” the proverbial “lightning in
INTRODUCTION 15
a bottle and, more importantly, keep it there, decade after decade, without
stilling the fire or cracking the vessel [bottle].” He argued that the deeper
problem with race relations was that Pentecostal leaders (black and white)
and newspaper editors were “indifferent about race” because “on the whole,
pentecostal culture failed to provide a sustained theology of racial reconcili-
ation for whites and blacks alike” because it only played a “slight role in their
theological thinking.” He notes this inability was not due to a lack of desire,
but rather to a resignation that whites were simply unwilling to acknowledge
and accept black leadership and racial reconciliation.41
Grant Wacker and Augustus Cerillo questioned the “Edenic” theories of
race relations—that race relations went from good to bad after “the snake
of white racism” entered the movement—in their essay on Pentecostal his-
toriography (2002). They criticized Parham’s racial views and recognized
Seymour’s leadership role, but also contend that Parham was the primary
founder and initiator. They noted recent “multicultural” approaches to Pen-
tecostal origins and argued “a convincing black interpretation of Pentecostal
origins awaits further research and must successfully answer . . . Blumhofer’s
charge [following Creech] that it derives not from the primary sources but
from the presentist-driven creation of the ‘myth of Azusa Street.’ ” 42 Exactly
why they are called “multicultural” approaches and “black interpretations”
while other views are not called “white” approaches and interpretations is
unclear.
“bigotry and racial oppression.” Although he rejects the nominal leader the-
ory, he echoes the divine origins theory stating that Azusa “neither started
nor finished with . . . Seymour. It . . . [was] scripted by a larger hand.” 45
In Spreading Fires: The Missionary Nature of Early Pentecostalism (2007),
Allan Anderson argues that an American bias in Pentecostal historiography
has led scholars to uncritically accept the claim that Parham and Seymour
are the sole founders of global Pentecostalism. He contends that the liter-
ature finds multiple leaders and centers (e.g., Ellen Hebden, Levi Lupton,
Ivey Campbell, Marie Burgess, Pandita Ramabai, Minnie Abrams at Mukti).
While not wanting to underestimate Azusa’s importance, he asserts that
Pentecostalism “was not a movement that had a distinct beginning in the
USA or anywhere else, or a movement based on a particular doctrine,” but
rather was “a series of . . . historically related movements where the emphasis
is on the exercise of spiritual gifts.” He challenges the American missionary
“origins” view of the global movement by focusing on early Pentecostal mis-
sionaries from outside the United States. However, he does not emphasize
the fact that most of the first pioneers (and those they influenced) prior to
1907 were white missionaries from western Europe—thus displacing Sey-
mour’s multi-ethnic band of pioneer missionaries and their converts for a
largely homogenous band of white western Europeans and their converts.
Unlike Creech, who downplays Seymour’s decisive influence, Anderson
carefully acknowledges that Seymour’s Azusa revival was the main center
in North America from 1906 to 1909 and that it directly contributed to the
birth of classical Pentecostalism.46
The most recent articles and dissertations on Seymour focus on his theol-
ogy, ethics, and racial practices. Derrick Rosenior argues in his dissertation
(2005) on reconciliation that although Seymour held to racial equality after
the various divisions, he became “very skeptical of the intentions of whites
who came to Azusa” and as a result curtailed their leadership—though
largely as a rearguard reaction to past attempted takeovers.47
Cephas Omenyo (2006) traces Seymour’s influence on West African, Li-
berian, and Ghanaian Pentecostalism and argues contrary to Ogbu Kalu for
a link between Seymour, Lucy Farrow (who preached Seymour’s message
in Africa), and William Wade Harris because Farrow and other Azusa mis-
sionaries ministered among Harris’s people, the Kru. He implicitly critiques
the theological a priori behind some recent multiple centers theories when
he points out that human movements cannot have spontaneous multiple
global origins: “The Pentecostal experience ‘does not drop from heaven,’ but
is usually experienced through human agency.” 48
Stephen Dove (2009) argues that although Seymour and Azusa “es-
chewed traditional” lectionaries and set schedules from 1906 to 1908, they
INTRODUCTION 17
nonetheless created their own unique form of music and liturgy that actually
emphasized the Christological rather than pneumatological aspects of Pente-
cost.49 Similarly, Charles R. Fox Jr.’s dissertation (2009) analyzes Seymour’s
soteriology, pneumatology, and ecclesiology. He unpersuasively argues that
some scholars accuse Seymour of “rejecting the Hispanic contingency [sic]”
and of engaging in “blatant discrimination” against Latinos, a topic that
will be thoroughly discussed in chapter five. Although Fox claims to move
beyond apologetics, his stated goal was to “write Seymour’s contribution
back into the ongoing discussion” of theology.50
Rene Brathwaite (2010) attempted to challenge Cecil Robeck’s purported
view that Seymour rejected “the Bible evidence” theory of the baptism with
the Holy Spirit, arguing that he instead “made certain clarifications in light
of personal and pastoral concerns,” which was a “commendable biblical bal-
ance to the issue.” He also states that because Seymour revised his Apostolic
Faith Mission Constitution to state that only people of color could occupy the
top three leadership posts, Seymour “was now guilty of racial discrimina-
tion.” However, he fails to demonstrate from Seymour’s own statements that
this decision was motivated by racial prejudice. In fact, Seymour explicitly
stated that his decision to restrict leadership posts to people of color “is not
for discrimination,” but “for peace” and to “keep down the race war” and
“friction” in the churches.51
Marne Campbell (2010) insists that Azusa was an “accidental revival” and
a “working class insurgency that challenged the racial order dominated by
wealthy Anglo-A mericans committed to the maintenance of white suprem-
acy.” Although Los Angeles promised racial equality to new migrants, “it
was actually Seymour and . . . Azusa that delivered it.” 52 Likewise, John
Foxworth argues in his dissertation (2011) that Raymond T. Richey kept alive
Seymour’s vision of divine healing and the use of material objects like hand-
kerchiefs in passing on healing power in early American Pentecostalism.53
Estrelda Alexander writes in her path-breaking book Black Fire: One Hun-
dred Years of African American Pentecostalism (2011) that despite Seymour’s
efforts to create a racially inclusive and unified church, he failed to bring
long-term unity because of white-led divisions, which led to disenchantment
and prompted him to restrict white leadership roles. However, Seymour’s
shortcomings were not due primarily to a lack of desire or will power, she
notes, but to “a conspiracy of silence by white religionists [who] relegated
Seymour to a footnote” and to “petty sectarian attitudes in early African
American Pentecostalism.” 54
Vinson Synan and Charles R. Fox Jr.’s book William J. Seymour: Pioneer
of the Azusa Street Revival (2012) examines Seymour’s theological views on
sin, salvation, the Holy Spirit, and ecclesiology. The first biographical sec-
18 INTRODUCTION
centers, and stated that Seymour was a “nominal leader” whom God left after
the 1911 split with Durham?58
But isn’t it true that Cashwell, Durham, and Crawford led equally im-
portant centers that were independent of Seymour and Azusa? Again, the
evidence indicates otherwise. Cashwell, Durham, and Crawford (among
others) acknowledge Seymour and Azusa’s influence not only in their
spiritual outlook, but also in some of their theological, social, and racial
views. Cashwell said he crucified his racial views at Azusa, encouraged and
preached to interracial audiences in the South, taught Seymour’s Pentecos-
tal theological views in his newspaper, and reportedly led the “Azusa of
the South” during his revival in Dunn, North Carolina. He also preached
Seymour’s message to scores of pneumatically oriented independent, Holi-
ness, Methodist, Baptist, and Presbyterian leaders like F. M. Britton, J. H.
King, A. J. Tomlinson, M. M. Pinson, H. G. Rodgers, G. F. Taylor, H. A.
Goss, and others.59 They received it, brought many of their denominations
into Pentecostalism or splintered off to form their own, and often added to
their denominational name “Pentecostal,” a term popularized by Seymour.
This, rather than Bartleman’s alleged influence, is why—much to Creech’s
puzzlement—they credit Azusa as one of the main sources of and/or influ-
ences on their movements.
This is also why, despite Cashwell’s defection from Pentecostalism in 1909,
leaders like F. M. Britton and S. D. Page of the Pentecostal Holiness Church
(phc) made the arduous and expensive trip from North Carolina to Los
Angeles to visit Azusa and even take a keepsake photo of themselves stand-
ing in front of the “312 Apostolic Faith” door sign in coat and tie with their
Bibles and songbooks in hand. They did this long after the Azusa revival had
ended in 1909 and after they had developed their own denominations. Just a
novelty photo? Perhaps, but believing that they just happened to travel more
than two thousand miles west to Los Angeles and just happened to show
up at Azusa in coat and tie along with their Bibles, songbooks, and a large
box camera just to take a novelty photo stretches credulity.60 Their spiritual
ties to Azusa were taught by Cashwell and others and transcended their ties
to Cashwell alone as evidenced by the fact that they still revered Azusa long
after he left the phc in 1909. Clearly Cashwell had passed on to them more
than just a few stories for they felt a deep spiritual and genealogical connec-
tion to Seymour and Azusa, even if their denominations did not maintain
“structural” ties. So did many others.
Even if Cashwell, Durham, and Crawford didn’t maintain any “institu-
tional” and “structural” ties with Azusa and even if some later broke with
Seymour on one key point or another, this doesn’t prove he didn’t have a
pivotal and paradigmatic influence on their general theological, social, and
racial outlook. The primary reasons why they didn’t establish “institutional”
20 INTRODUCTION
and “structural” ties with Azusa prior to 1914 are several: because almost
everyone (including Seymour himself) saw it as an interdenominational re-
vival and renewal center (a phrase used by Crawford and her followers to
describe Azusa), the Azusa Mission wasn’t yet a denomination (that took
place in 1914), and because they went to Azusa with the hopes of bringing
the fires of revival back to their own denominations and traditions.
In fact, the extant testimonies and evidence challenge Creech’s claims.
After Durham visited Azusa in 1907 he persuaded his North Avenue Mission
to accept Seymour’s theological, social, and racial outlook, he taught many
of Seymour’s views in his newspaper, and patterned aspects of his own re-
vival after Azusa. This is why his already diverse congregation became even
more multiethnic and global-mission minded. Most revealing, Durham also
preached at Azusa for a lengthy six weeks in 1911, promising Seymour he’d
usher in a “Second Great Azusa,” something Seymour would have never
allowed if they weren’t close friends with strong organic ties. He also stated
he was one of Seymour’s closest allies from 1906 to 1911.61 In fact, there is no
major compelling evidence that Durham’s split with Seymour over sanctifi-
cation in the summer of 1911 also led him and his followers to repudiate the
rest of Seymour’s doctrinal, social, and racial teachings.
The same is true for Florence Crawford—even after her departure from
Seymour in 1907. She not only credits Seymour and Azusa for teaching her
about the outpouring and baptism with the Holy Spirit but also adopted his
mission name (Apostolic Faith) for her own denomination and newspaper.
She certainly wasn’t taking her cues from Parham, whom she disliked and did
not recognize as the founder of Pentecostalism. She and her movement made
the rather bold claim that although others changed their Azusa-influenced
theology, “they hold on to the Bible doctrines as originally embraced by the
Apostolic Faith at the time of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit in 1906” at
the “Azusa Street Revival Center.” They viewed Azusa as a “revival center,”
not a denomination, and the place that taught them their core Pentecostal
doctrines, which they still clung to half a century later.62
The documentary evidence makes it clear that Seymour and Azusa had
a profound impact on these and other leaders across the United States.
Azusa-influenced evangelists were the thread that connected many of these
independent pockets of Spirit-oriented revivals into an identifiable movement
prior to 1912, however variegated, unruly, and loosely connected. Seymour’s
message, theology, and followers provided them with a common theological
grammar, spiritual outlook, and social-racial framework that they in turn
incorporated, developed, revised, and made distinctively their own.
INTRODUCTION 21
priori, which implies that a “vast and vague international network” can both
spontaneously erupt around the world and come together to form a broad
series of overlapping revivals that at some later point of time coalesce on their
own into a definable movement. This theological a priori and lack of human
actors is ironic because one of their chief criticisms of early writers is that
they were driven by a theological a priori and nationalistic (i.e., American)
ideology. However, unlike church history, the academic discipline of history
does not allow for deus ex machina—God’s hand in history—in this case a
spontaneous and simultaneous outpouring of the Holy Spirit around the
world. While this is normatively acceptable in traditional church histories
and theological seminaries and departments wherein one’s readers can af-
firm God’s handiwork in history, secular historians are constrained by their
discipline and method to look for all too human actors and causal agents.
They are bound by a craft that is theoretically and methodologically agnostic
with respect to the truth claims of its subjects. Instead, historians scrutinize
the archival sources, newspapers, and interviews for historical actors, inter-
connecting chains of events—no matter how loosely connected—and people
who originate and propagate ideas in order to trace historical change and the
development of ideas and social movements over time. For this reason, in
secular histories there are no spontaneous outpourings and movements that
erupt simultaneously in the United States, Canada, Europe, Africa, and Asia.
However rich and valuable to the community of faith, that’s another kind of
theological history and story altogether.
So in all fairness, just as some scholars have in fact overstated the influence
of America and Azusa (though ironically not Seymour) on global Pentecostal
origins, it appears that some other scholars have swung the pendulum too
far in the opposite direction. They have gone beyond the evidence and en-
gaged in a little of the very theoretical and methodological shortcomings and
hyperbole they accuse others of engaging in. Although Walter Hollenweger
believed that the debate over Azusa’s influence is a theological and ideological
rather than an historical and factual one, Allan Anderson and I both agree
that there’s enough evidence to make an argument for the historical origins
of the movement. After carefully wading through tens of thousands of pages
of primary and secondary source material about the origins of the Pentecos-
tal movement around the world over the past two decades, I am convinced
there’s compelling evidence to argue for Seymour and Azusa’s primal and
primary, though not exclusive or total, influence on American and global
Pentecostal origins from 1906 to 1912 in the aforecited countries around the
world, though not for the movement’s later development (an important dis-
tinction) and origins in other places.
While Creech’s and Bergunder’s theories are an important and helpful
correction to some writers who do in fact overemphasize America and Azu-
24 INTRODUCTION
sa’s contributions, their push for “non-Western,” non-A merican, and/or non-
Azusa origins has arguably gone beyond and in many cases contradicted the
earliest eyewitness reports. Like early U.S. Pentecostal historians they criti-
cize, some have flattened out the evidence and distinctions and reinscribed
Seymour’s marginalization in global Pentecostal origins, albeit for different
reasons and no doubt without malicious intent.
Still, it is important to take a moment to address their main charge that
Seymour and Azusa are not as important to global Pentecostal origins as
some hitherto argued. Why aren’t these other leaders and centers as equally
as important as Seymour and Azusa? First, Bartleman never said Azusa was
the “sole” and thus only starting point of American and global Pentecos-
tal “origins.” Throughout his book, Bartleman acknowledged other revival
centers in Topeka, Wales, and India that predated or developed concurrently
with Azusa. What Bartleman and other first-generation eyewitnesses stated
is that Seymour and Azusa were for a period of time the single most import-
ant leader, center, and catalyst (among many) in the crystallization of the
Pentecostal message and origins prior to 1912, though not necessarily the
only leader, center, and catalyst in the movement’s subsequent spread and
development.67
Second, some make a faulty leap in logic concerning historical agency
and the spread of ideas by assuming that the only way a person, center, and
ideology can have a life-changing paradigmatic influence on someone is if
the latter maintains “institutional” and “structural” ties with the former. As
any teacher, student, and revolutionary realizes, ideas can take on a life of
their own in people’s minds and spirits even without structural and institu-
tional ties. For this reason, few would deny the influence of revolutionary
thinkers like Marx on Vladimir Lenin, Chairman Mao, Ho Chi Minh, Fidel
Castro, and countless other “Marxist” revolutionaries who kept no personal
or structural ties to Marx. What they adopted were his core ideas and then
rearticulated and indigenized them in light of their intellectual and social
conditions in Russia, China, Vietnam, and Cuba. So too it was with Sey-
mour and Azusa. Their ideas and influence gave birth to and shaped global
Pentecostal origins around the world among people who embraced, blended,
and rearticulated them with other movements in light of their own context
and conditions.
Even if Creech’s point is granted in theory, as we have seen and will see
in the biography and documentary history that follows, there is strong
countervailing evidence that Durham, Cashwell, Mason, Cook, Johnson,
Boddy, and others adopted Seymour’s rather than Parham’s or someone else’s
Pentecostal theological, racial, and social outlook. As the rest of this book
documents, they spoke at one another’s missions (Durham, Cook, Boddy),
spoke at one another’s conferences (Lake, Mason), praised Seymour’s and/or
INTRODUCTION 25
had—and still has in some circles—a negative social stigma), sometimes used
“Pentecostal” in their denominational title, and often made unique Pentecos-
tal beliefs that tended to follow Seymour’s rather than Parham’s teachings a
requirement for ordination while also affirming Seymour’s social practices
on race all attest to his quiet influence. For example, after Cashwell brought
A. H. Butler and others into the Pentecostal experience, in 1909 Butler and
the Holiness Church of North Carolina changed their name to the Pentecos-
tal Holiness Church (phc) and added speaking in tongues to their denom-
ination’s articles of faith.70 The fact that leaders kept some or most of their
pre-A zusa evangelical Protestant beliefs isn’t surprising because Seymour
and his message were also evangelical and because he led an interdenomi-
national spiritual renewal and revival center that was not transformed into
a denomination until around 1914—by which time most other Pentecostal
groups had or were in the process of forming their own denominations (e.g.,
Assemblies of God in 1914). This mitigated against keeping or developing any
official structural ties to Seymour and Azusa. For these reasons, there simply
wouldn’t be any reason for a denominational leader to keep structural ties
with an interdenominational renewal center—let alone another denomina-
tion. However, this does not mean that they did not see their own ministries
as influenced to varying degrees by the Seymour’s theology, vision, and re-
vival, which most tend to imply when they note the influence of the Azusa
Street Revival on their denominational origins, theology, and early history.
Fifth, if one maps out the influence of these supposedly equally important
leaders and centers (e.g., Glad Tidings, Lupton, Hebden, and Mukti mis-
sions) in the aforementioned countries, they were not by any objective stan-
dard individually, or even all four collectively in this case, as important to global
Pentecostal origins as Seymour and Azusa from 1906 to 1909 and globally
from 1906 to 1912. Even if all four Pentecostal centers had never existed, Sey-
mour and his followers still would have birthed and developed the movement
in these countries (United States, Canada, India) at almost the same speed,
depth, and breadth without them not only because of Azusa’s pioneer mis-
sionaries, but also because of the steady stream of Azusa missionaries that
continued to visit these centers like the Mukti Mission year after year in the
first decade of the movement—something overlooked by most scholars. The
reverse is not true—these four movements would not have developed with
the same speed, depth, and breath in the aforementioned countries without
the Azusa-influenced missionaries, newspaper, and their converts and follow-
ers. Alfred and Lillian Garr and George Berg, for example, converted scores
of Protestant missionaries, mission centers, and natives to Pentecostalism
throughout India and China and planted Pentecostal works independent of
these other leaders and centers. And as we shall see in chapter 3, they also
INTRODUCTION 27
worldview that he or she did not create or develop. The fact that a person
modifies an existing idea should not deny its originator’s first paradigmatic
and foundational influence on subsequent thinkers and in their theological
explanations.
Ninth, some also conflate cause and effect. They assume that if non-A zusa-
influenced indigenous evangelists and missionaries spread and developed
Pentecostalism (i.e., effect) within a particular country or place then they
must have also created its original message and/or evangelistic impulse (i.e.,
cause). However, it was Seymour’s publications and missionaries who, along
with their followers (e.g., Durham), planted most if not all of the first seeds
and articulations of classical Pentecostalism in the aforementioned countries
prior to 1912, which were often subsequently incorporated and developed by
non-A zusa-influenced native evangelists.
Tenth, some argue that pneumatic experiences and references to tongues
and Pentecost prior to or concurrent with Seymour’s revival (e.g., Abrams
and Mukti) prove these leaders and centers developed their own unique brand
of classical Pentecostalism completely independent of Seymour, Azusa, and
their followers. However, pre-A zusa pneumatic experiences and references
do not a classical Pentecostal make. There are many people and movements
in history that affirmed pneumatic experiences, tongues, and/or even used
the word pentecostal (e.g., Joseph Smith and Mormonism; A. B. Simpson
and cma; Pentecostal Church of the Nazarene—which later dropped “Pen-
tecostal” from its name to disassociate itself from Pentecostalism), but that
never took that next step to self-identify as Pentecostal or join the movement.
Next, a careful examination of the dates of some of the explanations of
“pre-A zusa” pneumatic manifestations in centers like Mukti, India, reveal
that they actually postdate the 1906 start of Seymour’s revival (April), the
arrival of Seymour’s Apostolic Faith (September/October) newspaper in that
country/region, and/or in some cases the arrival of Azusa missionaries (Garrs,
December), to say nothing of Parham’s 1901 Topeka revival and newspaper
reports. This conflation has led some to reread, through a presentist lens,
pre-A zusa experiences in light of post-A zusa language and explanations.72 As
a result, pre-A zusa manifestations are conflated with their post-A zusa expla-
nations as evidence of a pre-A zusa “Pentecostal” experience and movement.
Twelfth, notwithstanding the important role of pre-A zusa revivals and
theological developments, word of the Azusa outpouring through word-
of-mouth and the 405,000 copies of Seymour’s Apostolic Faith newspaper in
circulation around the world (to say nothing of countless other papers that
also promoted his teachings and/or followed Seymour’s revival from a dis-
tance) also helped create a common predisposition,73 theological grammar,
and spiritual receptivity to Pentecostal practices and explanations prior to the
arrival of the first Azusa missionaries in places like India, China, and South
INTRODUCTION 29
costal origins. Furthermore, it also does not deny the importance that other
Pentecostal leaders and centers may have played in spreading Pentecostalism
to other countries and regions around the world, and especially in states or
regions never reached by the Azusa newspaper or missionaries. Although
beyond the purview of this study, but thankfully explored by Anderson,
Bergunder, and others, native and non-A zusa leaders clearly developed
their own independent and combinative theological centers that preached
elements of Seymour’s Azusa message along with their own native under-
standings of Pentecostalism. While some learned Seymour’s message first-
hand through his newspapers and/or missionaries, many learned it through
second-generation followers and secondary sources who—despite their being
one step removed—still articulated Seymour’s and the Azusa Street revival’s
message about the Spirit baptism, race relations, and theological world view,
rather than Parham or one of his followers. The result was a dynamic com-
binative spiritual movement that helps explain Pentecostalism’s adaptability
and rapid growth around the world.
he promoted his own vision and version of Pentecostalism, and how and
why he used it to challenge and supplant Parham’s theological, social, and
racial influence at home and abroad. It contends that Seymour and Parham
promoted two similar visions and versions of Pentecostalism that differed
on key theological, racial, and social points. These differences came into
sharper focus after Parham repudiated Seymour, his Azusa revival, and their
theological views and social practices starting in October 1906, something
downplayed by later writers seeking to emphasize their spiritual continuity
and unity. Parham not only charged that Seymour’s revival was a “coun-
terfeit,” but lamented in 1912 that it had superseded his own “true” revival
around the world.75
Third, this book challenges the notions that Seymour allowed explicit
racial prejudice to enter into his ranks, that he was guilty of racial discrim-
ination because in 1914 he restricted the top three leadership director posi-
tions to people of color, and that early leaders were oblivious to race mat-
ters. Instead, it contends that while some Pentecostal leaders may have been
oblivious to race matters, Parham and Seymour actively promoted their own
views on race matters in a clear, systematic, and sustained way throughout
much of their ministries. In fact, at times race matters seemed to consume
them. Parham invoked British Israelism to justify his racial views and white
supremacy and Seymour stated that the outpouring of the Holy Spirit united
followers across racial lines into “one lump” and body of believers. Further-
more, Seymour explicitly repudiated racial prejudice, forbade his followers
from discriminating against whites, and stated that Blacks must love their
white brothers and sisters even if they discriminated against them. He fur-
ther stated that the decision to reserve the top three leadership posts to peo-
ple of color was “not for discrimination,” but for peace and to keep down
racial division, friction, and race war in the churches.76
Fourth, this book challenges the theory that the genius of Pentecostalism
lay in its ability to hold the primitive and pragmatic impulses in productive
tension and by so doing “capture lighting in a bottle and . . . keep it there . . .
decade after decade . . . without . . . cracking the vessel [bottle].” Instead, it
argues that the genius of Pentecostalism and the key to its growth and splin-
tering into almost innumerable denominations is due to its built-in tendency
to fragment and crack the bottle of denominationalism precisely because of
its leaders’ inability to balance these competing impulses. This is because its
aspiring leaders tend to emphasize the primitive impulse for direct, unmed-
iated revelatory experiences with God, that they invoke to justify breaking
out of their existing traditions (i.e., cracking and fragmenting the bottle of
denominationalism) to form their own new “Apostolic” ministries.77
This fragmentation process and thesis is evident in the lives of Parham,
Seymour, Crawford, Durham, Mason, and countless indigenous leaders
32 INTRODUCTION
around the world. It may help to explain why this one tradition has devel-
oped into 60 percent of all Protestant denominations in the United States
and 56 percent (23,000) globally. While some may lament this development,
some could look at it from a theological point of view as a vehicle for fulfill-
ing the Great Commission to make disciples of all nations and ethnic groups
and as an indigenization of the movement into the local rhythm, cadence,
and vernacular of the people.78
Fifth, this book argues that the power and attraction of the Azusa Street
revival lay in Seymour’s ability to create a Christian transgressive social space
wherein people from diverse backgrounds could watch, cross, and selectively
engage in otherwise socially, racially, theologically, and denominationally
prohibited and/or stigmatized practices in American society. These practices
included speaking in unknown tongues; interracial and interdenominational
mixing; touching, hugging, and laying hands on people for prayer and divine
healing across race, class, and gender lines; exorcising evil spirits; engaging
in enthusiastic worship and Negro spirituals; and testifying and prophesy-
ing, all reportedly, under the power the Holy Spirit. Seymour justified these
practices by citing the Bible (e.g., Joel 2:28 and Acts 2:17—“in the last days
your sons and daughters shall prophesy . . . and see visions . . . ”) and by al-
lowing people to have direct, unmediated revelatory experiences with God,
which they invoked to transgress some—though clearly not all—of the social
borders and boundaries of the day. Seymour stated the Holy Spirit was key to
this Christian transgressive social space because He was, in Seymour’s words,
a “means to be flooded with the love of God and power for Service” and
foster “a love for the truth in God’s word.” 79 Regardless of the claim’s verac-
ity, practically speaking the invocation of the Holy Spirit provided precisely
the kind of divine pretext that people needed to override many of unbiblical
social boundaries and conventions of the day.
This transgressive dimension was not just a short liminal moment limited
to a few weeks or months as some have suggested, but rather ran continu-
ously for three years at Azusa and spread around the world throughout the
twentieth century, despite the racial retrenchment that took place among
some white Pentecostals in the United States by the 1920s. In response to
external criticism and his own concerns about emotional excess, Seymour
began to gently rein in some unbridled charismatic practices by 1909 and run
his services decently and in order like a conventional church. Although it lost
some of its transgressive racial, social, and transdenominational appeal as a
result, it never lost all of it because he still promoted direct experiences with
God, the Spirit baptism, revival, and a desire to be flooded with divine love
for Christian service and community. By the time Seymour created the Azusa
Street Apostolic Faith Mission denomination in 1914, most of his followers
had already long since spread his theology and social practices around the
INTRODUCTION 33
world where they founded their own denominations and combinative trans-
gressive Christian social spaces, wherein they selectively blended core Pen-
tecostal beliefs along with local cultural (usually nontheological) practices.
Sixth, Seymour’s revival, theology, and transgressive Christian social
space were important because they fostered, stimulated, and released trans-
formational leaders and religious founders around the world. They not only
attracted a disproportionate number of seasoned missionaries and Christian
workers seeking spiritual renewal, but also those seeking a transformational
breakthrough in their visions and leadership styles. His theology, revival, and
Christian transgressive social space fostered and generated highly effective
transformational leaders. Herein lay one of the secrets of the revival and its
propensity to generate visionaries that break out of the bottle of denomina-
tionalism to spread their message among the masses.
In his classic study on leadership, James MacGregor Burns argues that
there are two types of leaders: transactional and transformational. While
transactional leaders can be effective because they provide a service or goods
in exchange for their follower’s support (e.g., politicians provides jobs in
exchange for votes or clergy provide ministerial services in exchange for
regular church attendance, loyalty, and support), Burns argues that trans-
formational leaders are generally the most effective and influential type of
leaders because they help their followership “release” their human potential
now “trapped in ungratified needs and crushed hopes and expectations.” 80
Burns, Bernard Bass, and Ronald Riggio believe they are also highly effective
because they transform their followers into agents of change by uplifting and
empowering them to reach their goals and by paying particular attention to
their individual needs (i.e., “individualized consideration”) and gifts (i.e.,
in this case their spiritual gifts). Finally, they are transformational because
they are intellectually (i.e., in this case doctrinally) stimulating, creative,
motivate ordinary people to do more than they thought originally possible
(i.e., in this case via the Holy Spirit), and because they provide a compelling
vision of the future (i.e., in this case to help fulfill the Great Commission to
spread the Christian message to all nations in order to help usher in Christ’s
Second Coming). In short, they encourage followers to try new approaches
and achieve extraordinary outcomes, all of which uplift and enhance their
self-worth. Their innovative ideas and creative visions and experiences are
not discouraged or criticized because they differ with the leaders’ views,
something that seems to resonate naturally with Pentecostalism’s emphasis
on empowering its followers via the Holy Spirit to unleash their spiritual
gifts to build up the church and transform their world.81
Seymour role modeled transformational leadership through a host of
activities, including in his individualized consideration, mentoring, and
promotion of each person’s spiritual gift(s). He and his revival stimulated
34 INTRODUCTION
at Azusa to people of color in order to end the racial strife in the churches,
and to form his own Azusa Street Apostolic Faith Mission denomination.
In all of these endeavors, Seymour’s ministry went through a very modest
but important shift from being a highly transformational to a slightly more
transformational-transactional environment that was increasingly bound
and routinized by his new church government and guidelines prescribed in
his minister’s manual.
However, there was never a complete loss of Seymour’s transformational
vision and style because this routinization was always reportedly tempered
by a focus on the work of the Holy Spirit, which kept the doors open to
transformational experiences, revelations, and new visions. Still, as a result
of these developments and this subtle shift along with the other reasons
outlined above (especially losing his newspaper, white-initiated divisions,
birth of other denominations), Seymour and Azusa were soon eclipsed by
other leaders, centers, and denominations as the most important catalysts for
global Pentecostal origins, development, and expansion. However, by this
time in 1912 his doctrinal, social, and racial dna was already deeply infused
in the movement’s genetic code around the world, even among those that
left him since many still clung to many of his core beliefs and social prac-
tices, however selectively and episodically practiced. Ironically, the loss of
Seymour’s newspaper, white support, and influence helped ensure that his
original, free-flowing transformational vision and version of Pentecostalism
was the one that was exported globally, which explains why some of his later
modifications after 1914 were never mainstreamed to the same degree into
the larger global Pentecostal movement.
NOTES
PREFACE
1. Martin, Life and Ministry of William J. Seymour, 11–12.
2. Eliade, The Quest, Preface, 4–10; Olsen, Theory and Method in the Study of Reli-
gion, 156.