Click to join the conversation with over 500,000 Pentecostal believers and scholars
| PentecostalTheology.com
1
The Search
for Pentecostal
Identity
When the Pentecostal Movement first burst on the
religious
scene at the turn of the twentieth
century,
the
early participants
in the revival self-consciously
wrestled with the issue of Pentecostal
identity.
At times
early
Pentecostals seemed almost fixated on the issue of identifying
what was distinctive about their movement and their particular
brand of Christian
experience.
Frank
Bartleman,
one of the eyewitnesses
at the Azusa Street
revival,
for
example, creatively constructed an
apologetic
scheme from Protestant church
history
in order to herald the
eschatological significance
of the Pentecostal experience
for world
Christianity.
In his
writings
and
ministry Bartleman
argued
that the modem Pentecostal
outpouring
of the
Holy Spirit signaled
the
culminating
events in a
process
which was
readying the church for the Second
Coming
of Jesus
Christ,
a historical
process of divine
preparation
that started with the Reformation.
Through Martin Luther and his
recovery
of the biblical truth of justification
by faith,
God restored to the church the
personal experience
of salvation. Then
later, through
John
Wesley
and his
recovery
of the biblical truth of
sanctification,
God awakened the church to the life of holiness and Christian
maturity. Finally, through
the modern
day
Pentecostal
revival, God was
restoring
to the church the
power of Holy Spirit baptism,
the miracles of divine
healing
and the
supernatural gifts
of the
Spirit.
This restoration was
designed by
God to
empower
his
people
for the task of world-wide
evangelization
as the few
remaining grains
of sand were sifting through
the
hourglass
of human
history.
How
widely
Bartleman’s historical
apologetic
was known and accepted by
other
early
Pentecostals is a matter of
speculation,
but the conception
of the full
gospel
shadowed in this rationale
pervasively shaped
the
religious identity
of those who were
swept
into the movement. Those who
experienced
the
early
twentieth
century outpouring
of the
Holy Spirit
conceived of themselves as God’s end-time
people who, by
God’s
grace,
were
saved,
sanctified and baptized
in the
Holy Spirit.
Pentecostal
psychology
was
shaped
at its core
by
an
eschatological intensity
and an existential identification with “the full
gospel”
of New Testament
Apostolic Christianity.
To be Pentecostal was to be
shaped by
the New Testament narrative in its fullness.
Of
course,
the small band of Pentecostal faithful at the
beginning
of the
century
could
hardly
foresee the different historical
forces, theological developments,
socio-cultural
changes,
ecclesial
political alliances,
and Christian renewal movements that would
transfigure Pentecostalism into a global movement of some
significance by
the end of the
century.
At the end of the twentieth
century
there is little doubt that
Pentecostalism,
like the
proverbial “grey mare,”
ain’t what she used to be. Little
scholarly
debate can be generated over whether or not
1
2
the Pentecostal movement has
changed
in its
identity
over nine
decades, but the debate is fully charged over what kind of continuities in identity, if
any,
link the Pentecostals of
today
with the
pioneers
of the
articles and review
essays
in this issue
probe
various
what the Pentecostal movement
was,
what Pentecostalism has become
today
and what
challenges lay ahead
for the
movement. The
aspects
of the
questions
of
Pentecostal movement in the future.
Address,
delivered last fall at the 22nd Pentecostal Studies. Professor
The lead article in this issue is Bill
Faupel’s
Presidential
Annual
Meeting
of the
Society
for
Faupel’s
address,
“Whither
The other vision locates
Pentecostalism?” articulated two alternative visions which are
currently competing
for the soul of the movement in the United
States, although the
implications
for Pentecostals world-wide can be readily discerned in his
analysis*
One vision views Pentecostalism
historically
as an offshoot of Fundamentalism and links its current
identity
and mission with the fortunes of a
reinvigorated Evangelicalism.
Pentecostalism
historically
with the
pietistic
and
experiential
forms of faith associated with the more liberal
wing
of
Christianity.
Within this latter
vision,
the current
identity
and mission of Pentecostalism is linked with the
experiential recovery
of its
pietistic
roots and its future service of Christian renewal within the
many expressions
of the Christian
community.
What is
fascinating
Briggs’ understanding
of
orthodoxy
pietistic
traditions of
Christianity. shared
by early
twentieth
Faupel’s
articulation
of this
between
and late nineteenth
sought
to
about Professor
challenge
is his
analysis
of what
brought
the Pentecostal movement to this fork at the crossroads.
Utilizing
the
theological thought
of Charles Briggs, Faupel
seeks to show the
ideological compatibility
and the
theological
convictions of the
early
Pentecostals. From a
conceptual perspective,
Pentecostalism is the
logical
outcome of liberalism–both share an
identity
with the
This common bond with
pietism
century
Pentecostalism
century
liberalism is
significant, Faupel notes,
because Pentecostalism emerged
when the Fundamentalist-Modernist battle was
heating up. The leaders of the
early
Pentecostal movement felt a sense of dissonance with both
groups.
Pentecostals chart their own
their
independence
from the
theological
constraints of the Fundamentalist-Modernist
controversy,
Pentecostals conceived of their
identity
as “Fundamentalists
plus.”
The
“plus,” however,
was the experience
of
Holy Spirit baptism,
belief in
present-tense
miracles and the
practice
of
walking
with the
living
God. such
that Pentecostals
way. Expressing
qualifications, Faupel
underscores neither
ideologically
nor
historically Fundamentalists; instead,
By making
linked themselves with the “Orthodoxism” of the
demonstrated that their they
knew it or not–with the
the Pentecostals convictions were
compatible–whether brand of “orthodoxy” described
by Briggs.
2
3
In his discussion of the
history
of Pentecostalism’s
development, Faupel
notes that
key “defining
moments”
brought
about a new Fundamentalist
identity
in the movement. These moments of definition consolidated in 1942 when some of the
major
Pentecostal
groups became charter members of the National Association of
Evangelicals. However,
the Charismatic Renewal of the 1960s and 1970s within the mainline Protestant churches and the Roman Catholic church served as
a
challenge
to this
newly
found
Evangelical identity
of Pentecostalism. Standing
at the crossroads while
approaching
a new
century, Faupel hopes
that the Pentecostal movement will remember its
origins
and take the
route, though
less secure and
clear,
of
defining
its own
identity
and its own mission on its own terms. To be
sure, Faupel’s
address raises crucial
questions
of
early
Pentecostal
identity, especially
the issue of historical
origins
versus
ideological compatibility
in
socially locating and
defining
a
theological
movement. But
standing
at this end of the century, Faupel’s challenge
is
surely
the watershed one
facing
the Pentecostal movement.
When
Faupel’s analysis
is
compared
with Bartleman’s
rationale,
at least two
interesting
factors about the self-definition of Pentecostals can be identified.
First,
Bartleman’s
apologetic
from church
history
at the
beginning
of the
century
shows the exclusive Protestant character of
early
Pentecostal
self-understanding. Faupel’s analysis
at the end of the
century
discloses the broader context of Christian
community
in which Pentecostals face the issue of who
they
are and what the purposes
are for the movement. In this
context,
the
conception
of Pentecostalism as an off-shoot
of Evangelicalism
functions to freeze the understanding
of the movement in terms of its
mid-century
Protestant character. After the Charismatic Renewal of the 1960s and 1970s Pentecostals
surprisingly
found themselves
sharing
their distinctive experience
of
Holy Spirit baptism
with Roman Catholic and Orthodox Christians. And
equally surprising,
the Third Wave of the
Holy Spirit has more
recently brought Evangelical
Christians into the
supernatural experience
of the
Spirit’s empowerment
for Christian mission. These liberating
movements
provide
a more inclusive
community
for theological
reflection on Pentecostal
identity,
an
identity
now formed not
only by
its
origins
but also
by
its historical evolution.
Appreciation of the
Holy Spirit’s
work over the
span
of this
century
is crucial for Pentecostals to understand the raison d’être of the movement of which they
are a part.
A
comparison
of
Faupel’s
own answer to the current
identity
crisis with Bartleman’s
apologetic
for his own time reveals a second
point
of importance.
Pentecostalism will define its
identity
and its mission–and thereby
the narrowness or the breadth of its ecclesial associations–through
the construction of a historical narrative. Both Faupel
and Bartleman remind Pentecostals that the movement did not
3
4
provides
pentecostal experience
his narrative of American
manner
arise in a vacuum. Each one constructs a narrative
history
in order to contextualize and
properly interpret
the character of the movement. And as Alasdair
Maclntyre
has
convincingly argued,
narrative
history
the
epistemological underpinnings
for the formation and maintenance of
identity.
Professor
Faupel
has well served the
scholarly interests of the
society,
as well as the Pentecostal/charismatic movement which it
studies, by formulating
in a
compelling
and
thought-provoking and
by including
in his construction a
part
of the Pentecostal
is seldom heard.
story
that
In the next article in this
issue, Harvey
Cox of the Harvard
Divinity School
points
out some
defining
characteristics of Pentecostal
Changed My of
of, Pentecostalism,
Springfield,
Christianity
from the
perspective
of a
sympathetic,
interested observer. After I was
appointed
as editor
of Pneuma,
one of the first
things
I did in preparation for this issue was to
get
in touch with Professor Cox and ask him to share some
personal
reflections on Pentecostalism. Given the lateness of
my request
and his
already
full writing
schedule,
I asked him if he would write his observations in the
genre
of a “How I
Mind”
piece. Having
had consumed his
book,
The Feast
Fools in the
early
1970s and
recalling
the
chapter
on “A Dance before the Lord” which demonstrated his interest
in,
and
appreciation
I wondered how his views of Pentecostals had changed
over the
past couple
of
decades, especially
in light of his new team-taught
course with Eldin Villafane on Pentecostalism at Harvard and his attendance at the last annual
meeting
of the
society
in
Missouri. Cox’s
graciousness
in
taking
on the
assignment was
predictably
matched
by
the
perspicacity
of his succinct observations. The
autobiographical
details
give glimpses
into his own
and make for a delightful reading experience.
Professor Cox
points
out the
positive impulses
resident in
Its
capacity
to
provide
an
experiential
authentic
spirituality;
its celebrative
worship;
its
seldomly-recognized “this
worldly”
where-the-rubber-meets-the-road
spiritual journey
Pentecostalism.
support oppressive
overcoming
center for an
brand of Christian
Pentecostalism. Cox identifies stronghold
in the Pentecostal demonstrated a
proclivity acquiesce uncritically
practicality;
its
impetus
toward social criticism of the distorted
values, beliefs and
practices
that
impoverish people’s
lives and
systemically
structures and evil
practices;
its
power
to
generate the ideals of an inclusive Christian
community
which
aspires
toward
the discriminations rooted in gender, ethnicity and
race;
its identification with the
poor,
the
marginalized
and those who suffer–these are but some of the
positive
characteristics that Cox divines in the Pentecostal movement. But there is a dark side to
several demons that seek to
gain
a
house. Pentecostals at times have also
toward a sectarian
to the status
spirit;
an
ability
to quo;
a
capacity
for an
easy,
4
‘ comfortable culture;
a
tendency political
movement
by
side
resources of their
origins
What
Cox observes
the Pentecostal
for
creating polarizing
for
generating psychological Cox’s article
really provides Pentecostal movement to serious
Bartleman’s,
the sectarian into full view
by
the stark contrast. importance
of Pentecostals Professor
come to see them,
Pentecostals can
redemption.
At
times,
5
reactionary
with the
prevailing social movements and the
co-option
of their
identity
is
prophetically
of diverse
elements,
formulas,
such as
dialogical partners,
such as
and
critical,
and who can
which Pentecostals can
apart from
the Christian
and
economically
mobile
relationship
to
support
positions;
a naivete in
allowing
the new
religious right; and,
an orientation toward a dogmatic
biblicism. Amidst this war of the better
parts
and the darker
of the Pentecostal
profile,
Cox beckons Pentecostals to
tap
into the
and become a people committed to the
praxis of social liberation.
about Pentecostal
instructive. Like most
religious groups comprised
movement has a mixed
identity,
rife with the
potential
tendencies within its various constituencies and
splitting
within its individual
participants.
a
platform
from which to call the
deliberation over the
integrity
of its identity
as a Spirit-empowered
people
of God. When the tone of Cox’s reflections are
placed
in the context of
apologetic
accent of
early
Pentecostalism is brought out
Such a
recognition highlights
the
finding
Cox,
who are both
sympathetic
supply
an outsider’s
looking glass through
themselves more
clearly.
In the
image
reflected back to
affirm the
qualities they
like about themselves and start the
process
of
changing
those characteristics still in need of
in the
dialog,
the
Spirit gifts
us to see in the portrayal
mirrored back to ourselves the
restricting
sectarian cocoons we
spin
in
forming
our own distinctive
identity.
The
magnification
of what
distinctively
sets Pentecostalism
and has
persisted long. But, again,
that’s
only
in the next article identifies another
witness. Some Pentecostals
their
particular
rendition of Christian
experience
of faith.
appraises
the Pentecostal
of Pneuma from 1984-92. Those who have followed the
developments
the
past
nine
years
know that no
single person during
this
period
has done more than Dr. Cecil M.
the work of the
society
and in
promoting
an
Pentecostal movement to the broader church world. The
scholarly maturity
of the
society
has
greatly
accelerated
and Editor Robeck
played
a
key
role in this maturation of the
society through
the
superb job
he did in
and
enhancing
the
quality
of Pnezima. As
community
started
early one side of the coin. Mel Robeck stream of Pentecostal
community
Professor Robeck vantage point
of his
editorship
and its
journal, Pneuma,
over
of time Robeck, Jr.,
in advancing understanding
of the
during
this short time
period
expanding
the content
aim to
dialog
about as
part of the
broader
movement
from the
of the
Society
of Pentecostal Studies
5
6
Professor Robeck’s reflections
recently
exposing
society
he had as a
his
editorship
of Pneuma
of the
show,
the
relationship
dialogical partner
with the Commission on Faith and Order of the
NCC, the International Roman Catholic-Pentecostal
Dialogue
and most
with the Commission on Faith and Order of the World Council of Churches assisted his efforts in shaping the ecumenical character and editorial direction of Pneuma. In
addition,
gave
him a forum to widen the
conception
of the work of the
society by
the
journal’s readership
to the
range
of concerns
expressed
in the articles he was able to solicit from those with whom he met in his ecumenical
activity.
I know I
speak
for the entire
membership
in
expressing
the
deepest gratitude
to Dr. Mel Robeck for his magnificent
contribution to
SPS, Pneuma,
the cause of Pentecostal and Charismatic
scholarship
in the
academy,
and the task of bridge-building within the broader church world. Based on the
years
he
spent
at the helm of
Pnuema,
I asked Dr. Robeck to share with the
readership
of the
journal
what he had learned about the character of the Pentecostal
movement
during
his tenure.
Three features of Pentecostal Robeck’s
experience.
activity
inception Pentecostalism’s only proliferated
identity
stand out in Professor
identity
of
level,
North American
modem ecumenical
thinking
and
and
indigenous
character has
First,
he
points
out the ecumenical
Pentecostalism. To be
sure,
at the
organizational
Pentecostals
spum
the
“humanly-contrived”
movement. Yet Robeck notes that Pentecostals have formed their own ecumenical coalitions even
though
leaders of the movement do not use that
terminology.
More
importantly,
at the level of
koinonia,
Robeck summarizes a rich
history
of Pentecostal ecumenical
tied to the
Holy Spirit’s
work in
establishing
the
unity
of the church. Thus Robeck makes the
point
that Pentecostals
actually
are ecumenical but
they “just
don’t know it.”
Second,
he draws attention to the multi-cultural
identity
of the Pentecostal movement. From its
the movement was multi-racial and multi-cultural.
subsequent globalization
its multi-racial and multi-cultural
complexion.
Robeck observes, however,
that Pentecostalism’s multi-culturalism has never
understood or embraced as a
strength, although
growth
is a favorite refrain Pentecostals love to
sing
about.
that Pentecostals are multi-cultural but
they
have
yet
to learn “how to act like it.”
Third,
he describes the evangelistic identity
of Pentecostalism.
of Pentecostalism is well known but Robeck observes that the church’s
been
studied, world-wide As a
consequence,
Robeck notes
its
Certainly
the
missionary
thrust
in
disarray.
More
sophisticated
at work in cross-cultural
evangelistic
efforts are often understanding
ministry, charges
of
proselytism ecclesial
organizations
of the assimilative
dynamics
from different denominations and
in different
parts
of the
globe,
and other
factors, have made the Pentecostal missions
enterprise
less sure-footed.
6
7
Pentecostals are
evangelistic
but
they
seemed somewhat confused about it.
Nearly
a decade of Pentecostal
watching
on a
global
scale and in a variety
of contexts has lead Robeck to his
profound
observation that in reality
Pentecostals have one
identity–ecumenical, globally multi-cultural and
evangelistic–but
in
self-understanding
and
praxis Pentecostals often
play
out another
identity.
Robeck’s anecdote for this schizophrenia
is
tough
medicine but Pentecostals would be wise to heed his counsel outlined in “where do we
go
from here?”
In the final article in this issue Frank Macchia reflects
theologically on the
significance of glossolalia. Speaking
in tongues as a consequence of
Holy Spirit baptism
has been at the core of Pentecostal
identity. Glossolalia has been viewed
by many
as the
essentializing experience
in what makes a Pentecostal a Pentecostal. Some of the most creative and fresh
scholarly
work
being
done
today
on
developing
a
theology
of glossolalia
has come from the
pen
of Frank Macchia. In this
particular study,
Macchia does not shrink from the classical Pentecostal view that connects
tongues-speech
with the
Baptism
in the
Holy Spirit. However,
he
interprets
the connection as a sacramental one.
Speaking
in tongues allows one to
experience
the
presence
of God in the
baptizing power
of the
Spirit through
a visible/audible act.
Analogous
to the sacraments of believer’s
baptism
and the
Eucharist, speaking
in
tongues
is an objective
act which
permits
an individual to
participate subjectively
in the
reality
to which the sacrament
points.
Like a sacrament,
glossolalia mediates God’s
grace
as a
reality objective
to the believer but elicits subjective participation
in God’s
freely given gift.
Macchia uses the thought
of Karl Rahner and Paul Tillich to tease out the
significance
of this sacramental
interpretation
of Pentecostal
experience.
When Professor Macchia’s sacramental
approach
is
compared
with the
early
Pentecostal rationale for Pentecostal
experience,
such as Bartleman’s,
a major shift in understanding can be observed. Macchia’s interpretation places
the Pentecostal
experience
within a
theological context that
explores
its common
significance
for Classical Pentecostals,
Charismatic Catholics and other Christians. Macchia’s approach, then,
overcomes the
tendency
of traditional
Pentecostals, mentioned
earlier,
to view
tongues
as the distinctive
experience
that distinguishes
Pentecostalism from other Christian communions. As
my colleague Jerry Camery-Hoggatt
never tires of
saying
about
Spirit baptism:
“That which is distinctive to a movement
may
not be central to a movement.” Macchia’s
approach provides
a
way
for the distinctive Pentecostal
experience
to be
integrated
into what is central in the
identity
of Christians
everywhere:
the
experience
of God’s
grace in Jesus Christ mediated
through
the
Holy Spirit.
Such a
viewpoint encourages
a self-understanding of Pentecostal
identity
which is formed and maintained
by
the
grace
of God in which all Christians
participate.
7
8
Tongues may
be a distinctive “sacrament” but the
grace
of God mediated
through
the “sacrament” forms a central bond of
identity which all Christians share
together
as God’s children.
Two review
essays
and five book reviews round out this issue of Pneuma. The two review
essays
also fit the theme of this issue: Augustus
Cerillo’s review of James Gof?’s book
explores
Pentecostal identity through probing
the
missionary origins
of Pentecostalism in the thought
and
ministry
of Charles
Parham;
David
Bundy’s
review of Alf Somdal’s book
explores
Pentecostal
identity
as it
expresses
itself in the formulation of
systematic theology.
A
reoccurring
theme
among
some of the
major
articles ‘in this issue is that the search for Pentecostal identity
is at a crucial
juncture
in this
closing
decade of the twentieth century.
As the movement transitions into the
twenty-first century,
Bill Faupel’s question,
“Whither
Pentecostalism?,”
and Mel Robeck’s question,
“Where Do We Go From
Here?,”
both have a
haunting prophetic ring
to them.
Murray
W.
Dempster Editor
8
Pentecostal Theology
Is something Philip Williams never found