Pentacostal Movement
History of the Pentecostal Movement
The Pentecostal Movement, also known as Classical Pentecostalism, is a Christian-based faith that emphasizes a direct personal experience with God through Baptism, Prayer, and evangelism. There is not one version of Pentecostalism, but all are based on the name derived from the Jewish Feasts of Weeks, commemorating the descent of the Holy Spirit onto the followers of Christ, described in Acts II: "When the day of Pentecost came, they were all together in one place… all of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them" (Acts 2).
Pentecostalism is an evangelical sect, which focuses on the belief that the scriptures are 100% true, accurate and vital in contemporary life. Pentecostals accept Christ as a personal lord and savior and also that baptism with the Holy Spirit is separate from conversion. It is baptism that allows the spiritual gifts from God (speaking in tongues and divine healing) to come to humans. Pentecostals believe their views are the most correct form of the Apostolic Age of the early church, the one most focused on biblical authority, spiritual gifts, and miracles as part of everyday life (Anderson, 2009).
Many of the first Pentecostals were radical members of the early 20th century Holiness Movement who were energized by revivalism and their anticipation of the Second Coming of Christ, believing that they were living in the end times. The spread of Pentecostalism in the United States was based out of a three-year long revival in Los Angeles in the 1920s, and then divisions on doctrine which resulting in the Trinitarian and non-Trinitarian branches of the faith that comprise over 700 denominations. There is no central authority that governs the movement, but most affiliate for reasons of unity, networking, communication and worship with the Pentecostal World Fellowship (Pentecostal World Fellowship, 2013).
As a global religion, Pentecostalism has almost 300 million members, growing in the developing countries. Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians together form almost 1/2 billion members....
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