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f _wP_'TV- W m Pentecostals after a Century Global Perspectives on a Movement in Transition I j Edited by jfl Allan H. Anderson and Walter J. Hollenweger C0RDA8C. BURNETT IJBPARY ASSEMBLIES OF GOD THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY 760-IS Journal of Pentecostal Theology Supplement Series 15 Editors John Christopher Thomas Rickie D. Moore Steven J. Land Sheffield Academic Press Sheffield Pentecostals after a Century Global Perspectives on a Movement in Transition Edited by Allan H. Anderson and Walter J. Hollenweger Sheffield Academic Press Copyright © 1999 Sheffield Academic Press Published by Sheffield Academic Press Ltd Mansion House 19 Kingfield Road Sheffield SI I 9AS England Typeset by Sheffield Academic Press and Printed on acid-free paper in Great Britain by Cromwell Press Trowbridge. Wiltshire British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 1-84127-006-7 CONTENTS Foreword by Harvey Cox 7 Acknowledgments 13 List of Contributors 15 ALLAN ANDERSON Introduction : World Pentecostal ism at a Crossroads 19 WALTER J. HOLLENWEGER The Black Roots of Pentecostalism 33 ERROL OLIVER Response 45 ROBERT BECKFORD Black Pentecostals and Black Politics 48 ROSW1TH gerloff Response 60 roswith Gerloff Pentecostals in the African Diaspora 67 JOSEPH ALDRED Response 87 ALLAN ANDERSON Dangerous Memories for South African Pentecostals 89 Patrick Kalilombe Response 6 Pentecostals after a Century JUAN SEPULVEDA Indigenous Pentecoslalism and the Chilean Experience 11 1 J. ANDREW KIRK Response 135 Lee Hong Jung Minjung and Pentecostal Movements in Korea 138 bae hyoen Sung Response 161 Walter j. hollenweger Rethinking Spirit Baptism: The Natural and the Supernatural 164 Richard Massey Response 173 WALTER J. HOLLENWEGER Crucial Issues for Pentecostals 176 MARTIN ROBINSON Response 192 LYNNE PRICE Scholarship and Evangelism: Oil and Water? 197 ALLAN ANDERSON Global Pentecostalism in the New Millennium 209 Index of Authors 224 FOREWORD Harvey Cox I am still trying to explain to polite but puzzled inquirers who identify me with The Secular City, a book I wrote nearly 35 years ago, how and why I became interested in Pentecostalism. Isn’t this, they ask. a com­ plete about-face, a sort of scholarly equivalent of eating crow? I do not deny having changed my mind over three and a half decades. Only dead people have not. But as I think about my own spiritual and intellectual trajectory, my interest in the fastest growing Christian movement in the world seems more like a natural development than a retraction. The thesis of my earlier book was that God, despite the fears of many reli­ gious people, is also present in the ‘secular’, in those spheres of life that are not usually thought of as ‘religious’. Have not Pentecostals vigor­ ously reclaimed many of these spheres as places where we are invited, on a daily basis, to ‘walk with God’? The Secular City was also, at points, a severe criticism of the traditional churches for ignoring the marginated populations of the world. Pentecostalism continues this vig­ orous critique, and appeals to millions of people the other churches have consistently failed to reach. Finally, I argued in The Secular City that there was a kernel of truth in the overblown claims of the so-called (and now forgotten) ‘death of God’ theologians. They saw, in a somewhat sensational way, that the abstract deity of western theologies and philosophical systems had come to the end of its run. Their forecast of what would come next was dramatically mistaken, but the volcanic eruption of a Christian movement that relies on the direct experience of the Divine Spirit rather than on archaic creeds and stately rituals seems to corroborate their diagnosis while it completely undercuts their pre­ scription. In a nutshell, my interest in Pentecostalism arises from my recogni­ tion that this powerful moving of the Spirit, so thoroughly documented by this excellent book is responding to many of the conditions I wrote 8 Pentecostal* after a Century about so many years ago. Neither as a Christian nor as a scholar can I ignore what is going on before our eyes as the twentieth century draws to a close. My response to people who are surprised at my interest in (and affection for) Penlecostals is to express my surprise that they are not interested. Even if they are non-believers, 1 point out to them that there is much that Pentecostalism can teach us about our common fu­ ture. I say this because I believe Pentecostalism represents a dramatic example of a much larger development. After all, even sceptics simply cannot ignore a religious movement that already encompasses 400 million people and is multiplying geometrically every day. Indeed, by now, even the most casual observers of the world religious scene have begun to suspect something of more than passing impor­ tance is going on. Maybe they have seen, or at least heard about, Robert Duvall’s brilliant film The Apostle, which portrays—honestly and not dismissively—an American Pentecostal preacher. Or this suspicion might dawn when they see the picture of a worried looking Pope John Paul II with the caption ‘Losing His Flock?’ on the cover of a weekly news magazine which reports that the pope is desperately worried about the millions of Brazilians and other Latin Americans who are quitting the Roman Catholic Church to join some other—usually a Pente­ costal—church. Or they might discover the astonishing fact that the largest single Christian congregation in the whole world—which I visited a few years ago—is the Yoido Full Gospel (Pentecostal) Church in Seoul, Korea. Or they might notice the sober projections by eminent sociologists that—given current growth curves—by early in the next century, Pentecostals in all their variegated manifestations may out­ number both Catholics and Protestants. There is indeed something noteworthy going on, and it is not just ‘religious’. No thoughtful person, believer or non-believer, can deny it. Still, amazingly, many continue to do so. Why? As ebullient as they are in their song and praise, Pentecostals still represent a quiet revolution. They are not headline grabbers. They do not issue death decrees. They are not allied to surging nationalist movements. They do not take credit for kidnapping hostages or bombing airliners. Consequently, the spec­ tacular growth of their churches does not often heave into public view. Still, not only are they continuing to grow, I believe their growth holds within it a host of significant clues to the meaning of the more general global spiritual resurgence we are now witnessing. Lots of people, of eourse. have tried to fathom the meaning of thi > revival, and some have even focused on the Pentecostal movement as a prime example. Earnest sociologists, puzzled psychologists, and dili­ gent anthropologists have all taken their turns. But the picture they paint is often confused and contradictory. They point out that Pente- costalism seems to spread most quickly in the slums and shantytowns of the world's cities. Is it then a revival among the poor? Well, they concede, not exclusively. Its message also appeals to other classes and stations. Its promise of an unmediated experience of God, and of health and well being now, not just after death, attracts a wide variety of seekers. But whom does it attract, and why? Again, as the contributors to this volume demonstrate, the picture is not uniform. Pentecostals vary in colour and gender and nationality. They may be teenagers or old folks, though young adults lead the way. They may be poverty stricken or perched somewhere in the lower ranges of the middle class: there are not many well-to-do. They are what one writer calls the ‘discontents of modernity’, not fully at home with today’s reigning values and life­ styles. Another scholar even describes the movement as a ‘symbolic re­ bellion’ against the modern world. But that does not quite jibe either, for the people attracted to the Pentecostal message often seem even more dissatisfied with traditional religions than they are with the mod­ ern world that is subverting them. For this reason, another writer de­ scribes them as providing a ‘different way of being modem’. Both may be right. Refugees from the multiple tyrannies of both tradition and modernity, Pentecostals are looking for what it takes to survive until a new day dawns. Is there anyone who does not find a little of this wist­ fulness within? I certainly do. But how much does all this tell us? Are sociological or psychological analyses really enough to explain such a phenomenon? One historian has called the Pentecostal surge the most significant religious move­ ment since the birth of Islam or the Protestant Reformation. But these previous historic upheavals have for centuries defied attempts to explain them in merely secular categories, however sophisticated. The present religious rebirth, for which Pentecostalism is such a dramatic example, also seems to slip through such conceptual grids. More and more, even the most sceptical observers are beginning to concede that—whether for weal or for woe—something more basic is underway. 10 Pentecostals after a Century One of the first things I learned when 1 was writing Fire From Heav­ en and managed to visit congregations on four continents, was that the movement looks and feels quite different to outsiders than it does to insiders. The many millions of people who are ‘inside’ see themselves as grateful beneficiaries of a wondrous stirring of the Spirit, an out­ pouring that has already radically transformed their own lives and is certain to change many more. They believe the message they bear is good news for a desperate age and that it marks a welcome new gift of grace and wholeness for the world.'! cannot fully accept the totality of their interpretation of what their faith means, but that does not mean their interpretation is just to be seen as a curiosity. It is a key feature of the picture. This means that in trying to grasp the meaning of Pente- costalism as a suggestive clue to large religious and cultural changes, we must listen to both ‘inside’ and ‘outside’ voices. That is the great strength of the present volume. The most important thing I learned as I came to know the world­ wide Pentecostal movement is that it represents a clear signal that a big change is on the way for humankind, [it is a change, furthermore, that will not be confined to some special religious or spiritual sphere. Grant­ ed, there are many reasons to doubt whether such a metamorphosis is actually at hand. It is true that in philosophy and literary criticism, something called ‘postmodernism’ is the rage. But intellectuals like to imagine themselves on the cutting edge, and post-modemism could be one more pedantic self-delusion. Gurus and crystal gazers talk about a ‘New Age’, but they sound suspiciously like the ageing hippies who, 30 years ago, were hailing the imminent dawning of the Age of Aquarius. The ‘new world order’ President Bush’s ‘Desert Storm’ was supposed to introduce has turned out to be a mirage, and elsewhere in the inter­ national political arena we seem to be reeling backward to an era of ethnic and tribal blood letting, not moving into anything very new at all. There is every reason to share the scepticism of Ecclesiastes about whether there is ever any ‘new thing under the sun’. Still, despite the overheated atmosphere that will no doubt excite even more apocalyptic fantasies as 2000 CE arrives, the question stub­ bornly persists. Do the Pentecostal movement and the global religious stirring of which it is undoubtedly a part signal something larger and more significant that is underway? I think so. As a life-long student of religions—Christian and non- Christian. historical and contemporary, seraphic and demonic—I have

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"This book emerges from a consultation in June 1996 with Walter J. Hollenweger, acknowledged doyen of Pentecostal studies, held at Selly Oak Colleges, Birmingham. Different perspectives come from scholars from five continents, emphasizing the increasingly non-Western nature of this rapidly growing C
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