The Nature Of Pentecostal Spirituality

The Nature Of Pentecostal Spirituality

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The Nature of Pentecostal

Spirituality

One of the scribes … asked him, “Which commandment is the first of all?” Jesus answered, “The first is, ‘Hear, 0 Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is one; you shall love thc Lord your God with all

all you

heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with

your strength.’ The second is this, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no othcr commandmcnt greater than these.”

Mark 12:28-31 (NRSV)

.

.

What is

spirituality?

On the surface this would seem to be a

fairly easy question

to answer. But

any survey

of

offerings

in

your

local Christian bookstore on the

subject

will demonstrate

quickly just

how difficult this term is to define. To be sure, there are definitions which deserve our further reflection. But these are rare. Most of what

passes for advice or reflection on

spirituality

is little more than froth. It

may incorporate

an element of truth, but much of it is aimed at the

popular market and it is often little more than the latest

pop-psychology

or self- help

scheme with little or no relation to Scripture.

We can be judgmental of this state of affairs, of course, but our

day differs little from those which have come and

gone

for centuries before us. Some folks in the New Testament viewed their

prayers

on street corners and their

self-congratulatory giving

of alms as

symbolic

of their

spirituality.

Jesus called it

hypocrisy

and

suggested

that

genuine spirituality

was as secret as it was

genuine (Matthew 6:1-6).

The Corinthians believed that

public

outbursts of

tongues,

or if you would prefer, uninterpreted eruptions

of vocal

ecstasy

were demonstrative of their

spirituality. They

were the

truly spiritual ones,

the

pneccmatikoi. Paul, however, responded

with his lesson on

charismata,

those

many and varied manifestations of God’s

grace

which

point

back to the Giver,

build

up

the

other,

and reach out to the world

undergirded by

a healthy understanding

of self, as being the real marks of spirituality. There are

many

other

examples

we could cite from

Scripture

which would

provide

similar conclusions. The

meaning

of Christian

spiritu- ality,

is at times elusive. In a sense, when we look for it we are in the greatest danger

of

losing

the

very object

of our

quest (Luke 9:23-24). True

spirituality

involves

the giving

over of our

very

selves to the One we

worship

and adore

(Romans 12:1-2).

Recently

as I lectured on the rise of asceticism and the monastic movement,

I was struck once

again by

the

aspects

of these movements which

consciously aspired

to

genuine spirituality.

The earliest monas- tic men and women were hermits who lived in small,

sparse,

isolated caves or cells in the deserts of

Syria

and

Egypt.

Some of

my

students criticized them for

running away,

for

embracing

an individualistic form of

religious expression,

for

failing

to confront the world and the

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104

perfectionism, acts of

self-denial,

a new form of sectarianism. But

problems

which an

increasing

alliance between church and state and the

development

of civil

religion brought

to bear

upon genuine

Chris- tian

testimony.

Others criticized them for

seeking

an artificial form of

of

trying

to work out their own salvation

by engaging

in

or of

producing

others viewed them as

giving

themselves

up

as

gifts

to their Lord and to the

church, those spiritual

few who were called to

pray

and to meditate and to work and to

pray again

in a methodical

rhythm

which remembered both God and

neighbor.

To be

sure,

even asceticism and monasticism have their weak

points and their failures. There are those who are

running away

who do not understand even in a community what it means to be

part

of the

larger

spirituality

intent on their acts than

they

are on the desired results of their actions. But there are the

many

who,

in this

vocation, this

calling,

have not

genuine

Christian

spirituality

but

by

their lives and

to or called us to our own

expressions

whole, who fail to connect

only

demonstrated prayers

have contributed greater spirituality. Pentecostal

spirituality

with

reality,

who are more

of

in a

sense,

from other forms

Charismatic”

and

Emerging

from

upon sanctification,

Wesleyan-Holiness “baggage.”

is no

different,

of Christian

spirituality.

The

symbols,

rites, and rituals

may

differ a bit but

beyond that,

sometimes even in the midst of all that, the

object

is the same.

My good

friend Russell P.

Spittler

is

undoubtedly

correct when he notes that

Spirituality

is “the

gestalt

of

piety,”

and that it is “not native to the Pentecostal tradition”

spirituality,

Pentecostal and

in

Burgess

and McGee,

eds., Dictionary

Charismatic Movements

(Regency/Zondervan, 1988), 804].

the

Wesleyan-Holiness

movement with its

emphasis

the Pentecostal Movement inherited some

generation

chafed at.

stagnation today drinking

of

Pentecostal

Some of it was

good,

such as an

of it was not

good.

Sometimes

emphasis upon

a life of holiness. Some

those

things

in which one

generation

chose not to

engage,

the next

What one culture found to be a helpful consensus in their

quest

for

genuine spirituality

became

signs

of

legalism

and

to the

spiritual development

of another culture. It is difficult

to

explain

to our children

why chewing gum, playing

ball, or

soda

pop

were such taboos

among

those who

preceded

us in the Pentecostal tradition. But

they

were

important

at the

time, not only

as

signs against

the encroachment

because of that we should be slow to

genuine

marks of

spirituality, criticize.

and

generation

or each culture free

of the modern

world, but as

a relative

matter,

with each

Does this make

pentecostal spirituality

to do that which is

good

in its own eyes?

I think

not, for we have,

after all,

adopted Scripture

as our

norm, and that stands above all

things except

the

Living

Word Himself. Some

things

do not

change.

Some

things

do. There are

undoubtedly

which we do and hold that future Pentecostals will

reject

or

things

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105

modify

because

they

find them

standing

between that which is

truly spiritual

and themselves. But there will also be much that we will

pass on to them and for which

they

will be thankful.

As I pondered the

spirituality

of the ascetics and monks, I was also reminded of the times I have been

privileged

to

participate,

for short periods,

in monastic life. I have. been drawn

by

their

regularity

of time spent

in common

prayer-five

or six times a day. I have been attracted by

their meditations on various

portions

of

Scripture, by

their

singing of the

Psalms, by

their

periods

of silence in which

they

listen … listen … listen. But I have

also, perhaps

even

mostly,

been

impressed by

the quality

and the content of their

prayers.

Not

only

have

they sought

to worship

and to

praise

God, to confess

their

sinfulness, or to make per- sonal

petitions,

but

they

have viewed themselves in

community

with their

neighbors

both within the

monastery

and outside. Their

prayers for all who

travel,

for those in

ministry,

for those who are sick or at death’s door, for those who are

helpless,

or

homeless,

or

poor,

for those who are without

hope-these are,

for

me,

also

genuine signs

of their

spirituality.

I take

great joy

and not a little comfort that such prayers

are offered

daily

for me as well as for the world. I cannot imagine

the loss to the church of this enormous band of

“prayer warriors” were

they

to disappear.

In the

end,

it was Roberta Bondi, a friend, and

patristics

scholar who teaches at

Emory University,

who reminded me

through

her book To Pray

and To Love

(Fortress, 1991 ),

of the nature of

genuine spiritual- ity.

“Our wholeness as human

beings depends upon living

out the Great Commandment,” she wrote, which “is the most fundamental of all

early

monastic convictions.” “The

starting point

of a life of

prayer [such

as one finds in

monasticism]

is to

know,

no matter how

dimly, that we are created for and called to love”

(p. 28)

Ultimately, then,

monastic

spirituality

is not all that different from pentecostal spirituality.

Its end is love; the love of God and the love of neighbor.

Their forms

may differ,

but their content is the same. In this issue, five authors speak

to various

aspects

of Pentecostal

spirituality. Dan Albrecht

begins

the discussion with a creative and

important

dis- cussion of Pentecostal ritual. His discussion of the icons of Pentecostal spirituality

which involve the various senses

including sound, sight, and the tactile dimensions is

ecumenically suggestive, pointing

to an area worth

exploring

with the Orthodox Churches. Pentecostals should readily

find themselves and their actions described in the sections on modes of ritual

sensibility

and

ultimately

the kind of transformation of self and of the

community

which takes

place

as

collectively they seek God. Much of this we inherit not

only

from the

Wesleyan- Holiness tradition and the revivalist tradition, but also from the African-American

religious

tradition.

Roland Wessels leads us

through

an

historical-theological study

of the Pentecostal shibboleth called

“Spirit-baptism.”

He

provides

an

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106

overview of the

development Keswick, and

Wesleyan-Holiness

of this doctrine

from its

evangelical, roots to its formulation

among early

Pentecostals. This

experiential reality,

viewed

by many early

Pente- costals as the

epitome

of Pentecostal

spirituality,

and

experienced

in a Cane

Ridge-like context,

where charisms could be

freely manifested, he

contends, was the contribution of the 1906 Azusa Street revival.

changes provide

it also has

David

Bundy, provides

a further clue to the

spirituality

of the Azusa Street revival. His research has turned

up

several

previously unpub- lished letters

exchanged

between Thomas Ball Barratt of

Norway

and the staff of the

Apostolic

Faith Mission on Azusa Street. These ex-

which

Bundy places

within their

larger

historical context

a window onto the

type

of

“spiritual

advice” which was

being given by those who helped

to lead the mission.

Pentecostal

spirituality

is not all a matter of

experience,

ramifications for the

way

Pentecostals interface with the world. One concrete

example

of this is found in one

aspect

of the

ministry

of Aimee

Semple

McPherson.

Gregg

Townsend offers

up

an assessment of this manifestation of Pentecostal

spirituality.

Influenced

by

her

in the Salvation

Army,

“Sister” exhibited a form of Pente-

which fed and clothed thousands, a manifestation

background

costal

spirituality

deserving

of renewed reflection homelessness,

Finally,

Donald L. Gelpi posed

to

challenged

in a

day

of

rising unemployment,

and riots borne of

hopelessness.

looks

carefully

at the

theological challenges

charismatic

spirituality

at a time when the Catholic Charis- matic Renewal celebrates its first

quarter century.

The renewal has

the

larger

church with the

reality

of

personal

conversion and a new

appreciation

for the

Holy Spirit.

The

larger

church, on the other

hand,

challenges

the renewal, and indeed, classical Pentecostal- ism to move

beyond

a

privatized

or individualistic

spirituality

into a more

fully

biblical

spirituality

manifested in

community.

A more

balanced

charismatic

spirituality

can result if the renewal and the

you authenticity, spirituality.

church take

seriously

the

gifts

and criticisms of the other.

As

you

read and think about the

unique

contributions of each of these authors I hope you will ask also how their

insights

can

challenge

to live out the Great Commandment with more

integrity

and

for herein lies the

key ‘

to the true nature of

pentecostal

Cecil M.

Robeck,

Jr.

Editor

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