God
used a southern black preacher, reared under Jim Crow and with little formal
education, to ignite a revival that has reshaped the face of Christianity
around the world. The Azusa Street Revival (1906-09) ignited a world-wide movement
that Harvard professor, Dr. Harvey Cox, says is still “reshaping religion in
the 21st century.”
William Joseph Seymour (1870-1922),
the leader of the revival, was born to former slaves Simon and Phillis Seymour
in Centerville, LA where they attended the local black Baptist church. William committed
his life to Christ at an early age and experience the call of God, even as a youth.
Although little is known of his
early life, he would have been reared in the poverty and segregation that was
the lot of most blacks in the South at that time.
He Finds His Way to
Houston
In 1895, at the age of 25, Seymour
moved to Indianapolis, IN where he worked for a time as a waiter in a
fashionable restaurant. In 1900 he moved to Cincinnati, OH where he encountered
“holiness” teachings through the Church of God (Anderson, IN). Seymour embraced
this teaching of a second blessing, called sanctification, that would purify
the heart and enable one to live a victorious life over sin.
In 1903, Seymour moved to Houston,
TX where he began attending a black “holiness” church pastored by Lucy Farrow,
the niece of Frederick Douglas. When Farrow accepted an invitation to go to Kansas
with Charles and Sarah Parham, she turned the congregation over to Seymour and
he became the pastor.
In 1906 Farrow returned to Houston
with the Parhams and reconnected with Seymour. She told him of an experience
she had while in Kansas called the “baptism in the Holy Spirit,” which had been
accompanied by speaking in tongues as on the Day of Pentecost in Acts 2:4. Seymour
was deeply impacted by her testimony.
After a series of meetings in the
city, Parham decided to remain in Houston and open a Bible school in a large
house that he rented for that purpose. Wanting to learn more about the baptism
in the Holy Spirit, Seymour enrolled in the school.
His
application created somewhat of a problem because of southern Jim Crow laws and
customs that mandated the segregation of blacks and whites. Parham skirted the local
restrictions by arranging for Seymour to sit in an adjoining room where he
could listen to the classes through an open door.
Seymour
was thus able to hear Parham’s teaching of a baptism in the Holy Spirit with
the “Bible evidence” of speaking in tongues, and it resonated deeply with him.
Seymour
Departs for Los Angeles
While
attending classes and continuing to pastor his congregation, Seymour received
an invitation to go to Los Angeles and pastor a storefront holiness mission. He
sensed God calling him to Los Angeles and departed Houston sometime in February
1906.
Although
Seymour had not received the experience Parham preached, he was fully convinced
of its veracity and was prepared to preach it without compromise. In his first
service at the mission in Los Angeles he, therefore, broached the subject of a
third blessing called the baptism in the Holy Spirit evidenced by speaking in
tongues.
His
audience, however, was not open to this teaching and when Seymour returned for
the evening service, he found the door padlocked. The elders had decided that
he was preaching false doctrine and chose to lock him out.
Deep Spiritual Hunger
& Prayer Bring Revival
Some
of the members had compassion on Seymour and he was invited to stay in the
homes of Edward Lee and then Richard Asberry. Having an intense hunger for the
life and power of the Holy Spirit, Seymour gave himself to almost constant
prayer. He later said,
Before I met Parham, such a hunger to
have more of God was in my heart that I prayed for five hours a day for two and
a half years. I got to Los Angeles, and there the hunger was not less but more.
I prayed, “God, what can I do?” The Spirit said, “Pray more.” “But Lord, I am
praying five hours a day now.” I increased my hours of prayer to seven and
prayed on for a year and a half more. I prayed to God to give what Parham
preached, the real Holy Ghost and fire with tongues with love and power of God
like the apostles had (Hyatt, 2000 Years ofCharismatic Christianity, 144).
Noticing that their new guest was
spending much of his time in prayer, the Asberrys decided to open their home,
at 214 Bonnie Brae Street, to evening prayer meetings. When revival erupted in
the prayer meeting, the crowds came and soon overflowed onto the porch and
lawn.
Realizing that the Asberry home was
too small to contain the crowds, Seymour and others began looking for larger
facilities for their prayer meeting. They finally located an older dilapidated
building at 312 Azusa Street in downtown Los Angeles. This 40’ x 60’ two-story
structure had formerly been a Methodist Episcopal Church, but more recently had
been used as a stable and warehouse.
They removed the debris and
installed rough plank benches and a makeshift pulpit made from wooden
shoeboxes. On April 14, 1906, they held their first meeting in the new
facilities and revival fires blazed even more brightly.
Although the prayer meeting was
soon organized into a church that they called the Apostolic Faith Mission,
prayer continued to be the foremost activity. One participant said, “The whole
place was steeped in prayer” (Hyatt, 2000
Years of Charismatic Christianity, 145).
Seymour, the recognized leader,
spent much of his time behind the pulpit with his head inside the top shoebox
praying. An unpretentious man, he recognized his own need for the continual
guidance and strength of the Holy Spirit. A contemporary, John G. Lake,
described him as a man of great spiritual power. He wrote,
God had put such a hunger into that
man's heart that when the fire of God came it glorified him. I do not believe
any other man in modern times had a more wonderful deluge of God in his life
than God gave to that dear fellow, and the glory and power of a real Pentecost
swept the world. That black man preached to my congregation of ten thousand
people when the glory and power of God was upon his spirit, and men shook and
trembled and cried to God. God was in him (Hyatt, 2000 Years of Charismatic Christianity, 145).
Christ Centered, Holy
Spirit Empowered Meetings
The services at Azusa were
spontaneous. There were no pre-announced events, no special choirs, singers, or
well-known evangelists. With no platform, everyone was on the same level and
anyone was free to share a testimony or word of exhortation.
Although the building was never
empty of people at prayer, the services usually began spontaneously around
mid-morning and continued until three or
four the following morning. One participant gave this description of a typical
service.
Someone might be speaking. Suddenly
the Spirit would fall upon the congregation. God Himself would give the altar
call. Men would fall all over the house, like the slain in battle, or rush for
the altar enmasse to seek God.
Presumptuous men would sometimes come among us. Especially preachers who would
try to spread themselves in self-opinionation. But their effort was short
lived. Their minds would wander, their brains reel. Things would turn black
before their eyes. They could not go on. We simply prayed. The Holy Ghost did the
rest (Hyatt, 2000 Years of CharismaticChristianity, 145).
Although dramatic Spiritual
manifestations captured the attention of the general public, Seymour made a
point to keep Christ at the center of the revival. When asked by a certain
woman to pray that she might speak in tongues, Seymour kindly exhorted, “Now
see here, Sister Sadie, don’t you ever go looking for tongues. Seek Jesus for Himself.
Seek the Lord. He’s the One.”
Frank Bartleman, who often gave
exhortations at the revival, agreed with Seymour and said, “I endeavored to
keep Him [Christ] as the central theme and figure before the people.” The January
1907 issue of The Apostolic Faith warned
the people not to become preoccupied with the manifestations but to stay
focused on Jesus.
We do not have time to preach anything
else but Christ. The Holy Spirit has not time to magnify anything but the Blood
of our Lord Jesus Christ. We are simply a voice shouting, “Behold the Lamb of
God!” When we commence shouting something else, then Christ will die in us. If
Christ be lifted up, he will draw all men unto Himself.”
The Crowds Flock to Azusa
As services continued at the Azusa
Street Mission, the news spread by word of mouth and religious periodicals that
God was doing a unique work there. The
Los Angeles Times gave local coverage, that although negative, caught the
attention of the local populace. Seymour began a paper called The Apostolic Faith that soon reached a
distribution of 40,000 copies.
News of the revival raised interest
everywhere and soon the faithful and the curious were journeying from far and
near to experience the event. They came from across the United States and
Canada and from foreign lands.
Missionaries on foreign soil heard
of the revival and came. Visitors claimed that they could feel a supernatural
atmosphere within several blocks of the mission. Multitudes received the Pentecostal
experience and went forth with new zeal, fresh vision, and a new message of
Spirit-empowerment for world evangelism.
Several denominations were swept
into the revival as a result of their leaders visiting the revival or by being
impacted by someone who had just visited the revival. Future denominational
leaders were also impacted by the revival.
C.
H. Mason and the Church of God in Christ
Charles
H. Mason and the Church of God in Christ were swept into the Pentecostal
revival when Mason visited the Azusa Street Mission during the fall of 1906.
Mason spent five weeks
in Los Angeles, most of the time at the Azusa Street Mission in prayer seeking
for the baptism in the Holy Spirit.
One day while sitting
prayerfully in the mission, someone said, “Let us sing.” Mason stood to his
feet and began to sing “He Brought Me Out of the Miry Clay.” He later described
what happened next.
The Spirit came upon
the saints and upon me. Then I gave up for the Lord to have His way within me.
So there came a wave of Glory into me and all of my being was filled with the
Glory of the Lord. So, when He had gotten me straight on my feet, there came a
light which enveloped my entire being above the brightness of the sun. When I
opened my mouth to say Glory, a flame touched my tongue which ran down me. My
language changed and no word could I speak in my own tongue. Oh! I was filled
with the Glory of the Lord. My soul was then satisfied (www.cogic.org).
Mason
returned home to Memphis, TN where he guided the Church of God in Christ until
his death in 1961. The denomination today has over 6.5 million members and over
12 thousand congregations, with adherents in every state and over 60 nations.
A Future Assemblies of
God Official Impacted at Azusa Street
Another whose life was transformed
at the Azusa Street Mission was Ernest S. Williams who later served as general
superintendent of the Assemblies of God (1929-49). He first visited the revival
in 1907 and was astounded by what he encountered.
I wish I could describe what I saw.
Prayer and worship were everywhere. The altar area was filled with seekers;
some were kneeling; others were prone on the floor; some were speaking in
tongues. Everyone was doing something; all were seemingly lost in God. I simply
stood and looked, for I had never seen anything like it (Hyatt, 2000 Years of Charismatic Christianity,
146).
Interracial Character
The Azusa Street Revival exhibited
an amazing racial harmony at a time when America was racially divided by both
law and custom. Frank Bartleman, who wrote an eyewitness account of the
revival, said, “The color line was washed away in the blood” (Hyatt, 2000 Years of Charismatic Christianity,
147).
The original Azusa board of
directors reflected this racial harmony. This board, which governed the affairs
of the mission and issued ministerial credentials, consisted of seven women and
five men. Five of the women were white and two were black. Of the five men, four were white and one, Pastor Seymour, was
black.
Women
at Azusa Street
An amazing gender inclusiveness emerged
at Azusa Street at a time in America when women could not vote and were
excluded by most churches from any viable roles of leadership. Women were a
majority on the governing board and a number of powerful women evangelists,
pastors, and missionaries went forth from the revival.
The January 1908 issue of the Apostolic
Faith gave a clear statement of Seymour’s view of women in the church.
Before Pentecost, the woman could only
go into the “court of the women” and not into the inner court. But when our
Lord poured out Pentecost, He brought all those faithful women with the other
disciples into the upper room and God baptized them all in the same room and
made no difference. All the women received the anointed oil of the Holy Ghost
and were able to preach the same as men. They both were co-workers in Eden and
both fell into sin; so they both have to come together and work in the Gospel.
The Prophetic Impact of
Azusa
The revival on Azusa Street
continued unabated for about three years (1906-1909). During this period, it
was the key instrument in dispersing Pentecostalism around the world. This
occurred not only as a result of the many visitors who came from around the
world, but by the numerous missionaries, evangelists, and church planters who
went out from Azusa.
Seymour continued as pastor of the Azusa
Street Mission until his death on September 28, 1922 in Los Angeles. The
mission was torn down in 1931 and the property was made into a parking lot.
Seymour and the Azusa Street Revival
had, nonetheless, carved for themselves a prominent place in Christian and world
history. This was highlighted in 1999 when the prestigious Religion Newswriters
Association included the revival in its list of the “top ten” religious stories
of the past millennia.
This list included such momentous events
as the medieval Crusades, the 16th century Protestant Reformation,
and the publication of the Gutenberg Bible in 1455. Their reason for including
the Azusa Street Revival on this illustrious list was that it gave birth to the
Pentecostal-Charismatic movement, “Now Christianity’s fastest growing branch” (The Dallas Morning News, Saturday,
December 4, 1999, 4G).
An
Amazing Legacy
Indeed, out of this revival in an
old, dilapidated building at 312 Azusa Street in downtown Los Angeles, has
emerged a movement of Spiritual renewal that has impacted all of Christendom. On
the international scene, it is estimated that the world-wide constituency of
the Pentecostal- Charimatic movement now numbers over 700 million and is growing at the rate of 9
million per year.
What an amazing legacy for an
uneducated son of former slaves! William Seymour is a prime example of what God
can do through humble hearts that are completely yielded to Him.
Dr. Eddie Hyatt is a church historian and ordained minister who specializes in spiritual awakening in church history. This article is derived from his book, 2000 Years of Charismatic Christianity, published by Charisma House and used as a text book in Bible schools and seminaries around the world. His latest book, The Great Prayer Awakening of 1857-58, is availble from Amazon in both Kindle and paperback. Learn more of his ministry and vision for another Great Awakening at www.eddiehyatt.com.
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