Azusa Street Revival
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The Azusa Street Revival (1906–1909) took place in Los Angeles, California, and was led by William Seymour (1870–1922), an African American preacher.
Seymour preached that Glossolalia was evidence of Holy Spirit baptism; his first Los Angeles parish therefore expelled him. Seymour continued preaching until he and a small group experienced glossolalia. Crowds began to gather and a mission space was found on Azusa Street, in a run-down building in downtown Los Angeles. Worship there was frequent, spontaneous, and ecstatic, drawing people from around the world to a revival that lasted about three years and brought much attention to it. The Azusa revival was multi-racial, welcomed poor people, and encouraged the leadership of women, which was very controversial at the time. The revival drew many from the Holiness Movement, Baptists, Mennonites, Quakers, and Presbytarians as well as people from various other denominations. The location is part of Little Tokyo, Los Angeles, California.
Azusa's "five-fold doctrine" was:
- salvation;
- sanctification or holiness;
- speaking in tongues as evidence of Spirit baptism;
- divine healing;
- the "very soon" return of Christ.
Bibliography
External links
- [Azusa Street: the feature film.]
- [Azusa Street Centennial]
- [The Apostolic Faith]
- [Apostolic Assembly of the Faith in Christ Jesus]
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