Title: A Pivotal Moment In Time
1A Pivotal Moment In TimeCalled Out of
Obscurity (I Cor.
126-29)
- Presented By
- Dr. Marlene Groomes C.A.P.P
- MDC/Homestead Campus
- School Of Arts and Science
2Back to the FutureThe Event that Shook the
World
68th Top Event of the Millennium
3The Times
4Jim Crow The American Caste System
- 1877 - 1960, Jim Crow was more than a series
of rigid anti-Black laws. It was a way of life.
African Americans were relegated to the status of
second class citizens it was the legitimization
of anti-Black racism. - Even many Christian ministers/theologians
taught that Whites were the Chosen people, Blacks
were cursed to be servants, and God supported
racial segregation. Craniologists, eugenicists,
phrenologists, and Social Darwinists, taught the
belief that Blacks were innately intellectually
and culturally inferior. Politicians gave
speeches on the great danger of integration the
mongrelization of the White race.
5The Horrors of Jim Crow
- Blacks could not shake hands with Whites it
implied social equality - Blacks and Whites were not allowed to eat
together/or area must be partitioned - Black male never to light cigarette for White
female (it implied intimacy) - Blacks could show no public affection, especially
kissing, it offended Whites. - Whites didnt use titles of respect to Blacks,
only first names. Blacks used titles to Whites,
no first names.
61906 Timeline
-
- 1903 -- Ford sold first automobile
- 1905 Einstein's Theory of Relativity
- 1906
- 1/31 Earthquake in Ecuador (8.6).
- 4/7 - Mount Vesuvius erupts and devastates
Naples. - 4/18 - San Francisco Earthquake (7.8) - The most
disastrous earthquake in America's history,
killed 3,000 250,000 homeless - 9/18 - Typhoon with tsunami kills an estimated
10,000 persons in Hong Kong. - 9/22 - Race riots in Atlanta, Georgia. Killed 21
blacks and their business district is severely
damaged. Atlanta, GA - 9/27 - Pensacola Hurricane
- 10/11 - San Francisco public school board ordered
Japanese students to be taught in racially
segregated schools. - 10/23 First Powered Flight In Europe
- 12/4 - Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, the first
intercollegiate Greek- fraternity for African
Americans, was founded at Cornell. - 12/24 - Fessenden makes the first radio
broadcast DeForest invented triode electron
tube, allowing amplification of electric signals,
critical for long-distance telephones, radio/tv.
7The Red Summer of 1906
8Los Angeles, CA Circa 1906
- Settled in 1781 by 11 men and their families -3
Spaniards, 2 blacks, 2 mulattos, 4 Indians. - By 1900 there were over 100,000 residents of the
city. A popular destination for many wanting to
live the American dream. - In April 1906, the city was impacted by an
earthquake that devastated San Francisco. - It became a center of oil production in the early
20th century. - The city was warned that the county would soon
dry up unless they built an aqueduct. - L.A. was a growing metropolis with a richness of
racial and ethnic groups. Mexican, European,
Asians, blacks, and Indians . - There were over 6,000 blacks in the city, whose
population had doubled from the prior 10 years. - It was called the Promised Land/ the New or
American Jerusalem.
9The Great San Francisco Earthquake April 18,1906
10Azusa Street- Los Angeles, CAColor lines were
washed away.
- Services conducted in a small holiness mission on
Azusa St. birthed a global spiritual renewal. - When revival started, thousands converged on the
city from all over the world to attend. - They found a renewed sense of purpose by being
saved, sanctified, or filled with the Holy Spirit
with the evidence of speaking in other tongues. - In one meeting over twenty nationalities were
counted. - Fine ladies could be found lying on the floor
next to domestic servants and washer women.
Prominent churchmen and government officials sat
next to field hands. - It was the great social equalizer for race,
gender, age, and class.
11William J. Seymour
The Leader and His Legacy
Revival is like a fire that is carried by the
windits sparks will ignite the dry wood in every
direction it blows. (Joyner, 2001)
1870-1922
12His Life and the Greatest Revival of the 20th
Century
Verdunville, LA 1870
13Chosen Leader
- Son of former slaves
- Illiterate
- Self-taught by reading Bible
- Blind in one eye
- Severely scarred from Smallpox
- Called the humble, faithful Pastor
- Hailed the founder of the modern Pentecostal
Movement - Helped spark spiritual renewal in the U. S. and
the world. - A man - ahead of his times and bigger than his
is environment
14Stumbling Block to Education
- Segregation Laws/Teaching Any instructor who
shall teach in any school, college or institution
where whites and blacks are received and enrolled
as pupils for instruction shall be deemed guilty
of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof,
shall be fined. - Seymour was barred from the room, listened to
Parham through an open door in his Houston Bible
school. He was not even permitted to pray with
others while seeking the baptism of the Holy
Spirit. - Seymour didn't let that stop him from pursuing
God. - He soon had grasp all of Parham teachings and was
- released to start a negro work in California.
15Humble Beginnings
Frank Bartleman
Azusa St. Committee
Prayer meetings on Bonnie Bray
16A Father Kills His Son
- Seymour- the message was about Jesus and racial/
gender reconciliation. At Azusa blacks and
whites, men and women were in leadership under
Seymour-unprecedented in the days of Jim Crow. - Seymour-"No instrument that God can use is
rejected on account of color or dress or lack of
education." - His dream was shattered when his mentor Charles
Parham visited Azusa Street in October of 1906. - The educated, white Parham was appalled at what
he called "darky camp meeting stunts - Parhams racist views were hardening. By 1910 he
had become Klan supporter - Parham challenged Seymours authority and
unsuccessfully tried to take his church. He
start a nearby rival ministry which soon failed. - Before 1906 had ended, most Azusa leaders left to
form congregations, such as the 51st Street
Apostolic Faith Mission, the Spanish AFM, and the
Italian Pentecostal Mission, which consisted
primarily of immigrant or ethnic groups, the
poor, outcasts, newcomers, and/or the low-wage
laborers.
17From Beauty to AshesScattered all over
the Earth
- It is hailed as one of the greatest events in
Christian history. - However, the Azusa revival was destroyed by
racism, jealousy, factioning, division and thief. - Clara Lum a leader in the ministry stole the
mailing list of 50,000 monthly subscribers,
because she was heartsick Seymour married. She
started another church in Oregon - Because of these problems the sparks of revival
and the gospel were carried all over the world.
Twenty-five churches were started in L.A. in the
first four years. - Many denominations were born from this movement,
ex. Assemblies of God. But, racial segregation
was institutionalized - Today, this great symbol of Gods moving in the
earth is a parking lot.
We are on the verge of the greatest miracle the
world has ever seen." William J. Seymour
18The Fire That Ignited the World
- Some factors make this movement significant in
large cultural terms - The massive number of adherents makes this the
most important spiritual event of the 20th
century - At least for a few years corporate worship
transcended racial, gender, and age hierarchies
dominated by Jim Crow paternalism. - It often overshadowed other mainline
denominations, especially in the South. - The press was critically important in sustaining
its national and worldwide exposure. (Stephens,
2002)
19Parallels and Paradigm Shifts
- Bethlehem stable and Azusa stable
- Humble shepherds and Seymour
- Political and Social Oppression
- Past and Present Global impact
- Old Jerusalem and New Jerusalem
20- THE FLAME of Pentecostalism was first lighted in
1901 that speaking in tongues was a sign of
baptism in the Holy Spirit. It might have
sputtered if not for William Joseph Seymour, a
black preacher - He set out for L A, where his own baptism in the
Spirit in 1906 brought him an enthusiastic
following. He founded a the Azusa St. mission in
an abandoned livery stable - Within two years his multicultural ministry sent
missionaries to 25 countries. - Pentecostalism is a religion of the heart. Since
a personal experience of God is as important as
doctrine, it is an adaptable faith. - By the end of the 1960s, Protestants and
Catholics had embraced the gifts of the Spirit in
Charismatic renewal movements. Their worship
services may feature speaking in tongues, and
spiritual healing. - Today about a half billion are Pentecostal or
Charismatic, and Pentecostals alone outnumber
Anglicans, Baptists, Lutherans and Presbyterians
combined they are the second largest sub-group
of global Christianity.
21From Seed to Fruits of Harvest
- Lakewood Church is a megachurch of 30,000 adult
in Houston, Texas
The impact from this small seed is continuing.
Through this Pentecostal Revival and subsequent
Charismatic Renewal more ministers, missionaries,
churches have been planted, and people brought to
salvation than any other movement in church
history. Soon the numbers of those impacted will
eclipse all other religious movements put
together. Rick Joyner
Yoido Full Gospel Church Seoul Korea 800,000
members Largest church in the world
22Global Impact of Pentecostalism
- Pentecostals/Charismatics- Segments of
Christianity which believe in and experience the
dynamic work of the Holy Spirit including
supernatural demonstration of Gods power, with
dynamic and participatory worship and zeal for
evangelism. (Ma,2004) - Worldwide Impact
- Educational reform and the establishment of many
Colleges, Universities, and Seminaries at home
and abroad. - Social and political liberation through legal and
governmental reform. - Worldwide improvements and modernization of
health care. - Racial and gender equality and justice.
- Positive changes in socio-economic conditions.
- Establishment of innumerable publications and
periodicals. - Establishment of multimedia conglomerates- which
utilizes radio, film, TV, and internet to preach
the Gospel. Ex. TBN the largest Christian
network, and possibly the largest of any in the
world. - Supernatural phenomena millions of documented
healings, miracles, salvations, revivals,
psycho-social and socio-economic transformations. - Growth of a massive underground church movement
in Asia, which will lead billions to Christ.
23Lessons For Us 100 Years Later
- Destiny and purpose doesnt have to be limited by
your circumstances or environment, race, gender,
or age. - Dont let your perceived limitations define
you. - Seymour modeled, sound judgment, spiritual
balance, personal integrity, and faithfulness He
demonstrate the value of racial unity and
cultural harmony. (Martin, 1999) - One man with God can change the world.
- True and rich treasures can come to us from
studying history - Those who look to the past, find
the future. (Joyner, 2001)