
Christian History Home > Issue 90 > From Azusa Street to the ends of the earth

From Azusa Street to the ends of the earth
Gary B. McGee | posted 4/01/2006 12:00AM
"Pentecost Has Come," roared the September 1906 headline of the Apostolic Faith newspaper, published by an obscure mission on Azusa Street in Los Angeles. New Testament Christianity finally was being restored to its charismatic fullness: "The gift of languages is given with the commission, 'Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature.'" Indeed, those who experienced "Pentecost" at the revival claimed that they spoke in Greek, Italian, Chinese, Japanese, Zulu, "dialects of India," Chippewa, and many more languages. While one Los Angeles paper decried this "Weird Babel of Tongues," the faithful at Azusa declared that God had bestowed these unlearned human languages so that they could speedily evangelize the world before the coming of Jesus Christ.
April 2006 marked the centenary of the Azusa Street revival, an event that was crucial to the major global awakening we now call Pentecostalism. From the barrios of Latin America to the house churches of China and the villages ... To view this item, you must be a member of ChristianHistory.net.
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