Title: AG%20History:%201914-1950
1AG History 1914-1950
- The Early Years 1914-1927
- Development 1927-1949
2The Early Years1914-1926
3A Call to Gather
- E.M. Bell called for a special convention in the
Word and Witness publication - This call is to all Churches of God in Christ,
to all Pentecostal or Apostolic Faith Assemblies
who desire with united purpose to cooperate in
love and peace to push the interests of the
kingdom of God everywhere. This is, however, only
for saints who believe in the baptism with the
Holy Ghost with signs following. (1913)
4Reasons for the Convention
- The following reasons were published in the Word
and Witness for the meeting - Unity among the churches
- Conservation of the work at home and on foreign
fields - Better support for missionaries
- Chartering with a legal name
- Bible school training for ministers
5The First General CouncilAugust 1914
- Ministers and Missionaries were half the
delegates - First 4 days dedicated to prayer and fellowship
- Mack Pinsons Keynote Sermon The Finished Work
of Christ - General Council of the Assemblies of God
- Voluntary Cooperation
6Two Restrictions for Marriage
- Divorce
- Disapproved except for adultery
- Divorced person should remain single
- No credential for anyone with two living spouses
- Women in Ministry
- Ordained only as Evangelists and Missionaries
- Not to be ordained as pastors (until 1935)
7AG First Two Leaders
- E. N. Bell, General Superintendent (1914
1920-1923) - Well-educated Baptist background, tall and 22
years older than Flower. Just began his first
pastorate in Arkansas. Edited Word and Witness.
Ideas about women in ministry strong influence.
Supported tongues as initial evidence. He was a
shaper of AG doctrine in its formative stages.
8Two Leaders (cont)
- J Roswell Flower, General Secretary (1914 -1916)
(Executive until 1959) - Immigrant from Canada. No formal training for
ministry. Before his call, he read law. Founder
of the Pentecostal Evangel, along with his wife.
Strong upholder of AG doctrines.
9General Superintendent
- E. N. Bell 1914 and 1920-1923
- Arch P. Collins 1914-1915
- Baptized in Spirit while pastoring a Baptist
Church - John W. Welch 1915
- Protector and Shaper of AG beliefs
- Problems of the nature of the Godhead
10The New Issue1913-1916
- Overemphasis of Jesus Christ as Savior, Healer,
Baptizer, soon coming King. - Jesus Only
- Re-baptizing believers in Jesus name only (Acts
238) - 1916 General Council statement against the new
move of God/Oneness - Split ¼ leave AG
11Tongues
- 1918 General Council issue over Tongues as the
Initial Physical Evidence of Spirit Baptism - Reaffirmed that tongues for the AG was our
distinctive testimony (Aug 1914)
12Expansion
- 1915 General Council officially affirmed the
evangelization of the heathen by NT methods. - 1919 Missionary Department established with J
Roswell Flower-funds to 206 Foreign Missionaries - John Welch in 1920 The General Council of the
Assemblies of God was never meant to be an
institution it is just a missionary agency. - HQ Findlay, Ohio- St. Louis- Springfield (1918)
132nd General CouncilNovember 1914
- Meeting at the Stone Church in Chicago
- "As a Council, ... we commit ourselves and the
Movement to Him for the greatest evangelism that
the world has ever seen." - Why? Jesus is coming
14(No Transcript)
15What Grew The Assemblies of God?
- Henry C. Ball Reaching the Spanish-speakers
- Ethel and Marcus Musick- She preached, he
supported - Robert and Mary Craig- sobering drunks and
training leaders - Evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson- The Queen of
the Evangelists
16Challenges for Missions
- 1914-1927 were the most unstable years for AG
missions. - Many early GC missionaries dropped out because of
difficulties - Age, illness, poorly trained and prepared,
hardships on the field and some unable to work
under man-made guidelines/policy
17AG Missiology
- The Key Evangelizing in Light of Jesus Soon
Return - Alice E. Luce, India First significant AG
missiologist. She wrote New Testament Methods
influenced by Roland Allens Book Missionary
Methods St. Pauls or Ours? - To the 3-Self Formula, Luce added
- Signs and Wonders
18Early Missionary Characteristics
- Aim Establish 3-Self Churches that could
reproduce themselves - Lillian Thrasher compassion, courage, and good
business sense - Ivan Voronaeff sacrifice
- W.E. Simpson Martyr for China/Tibet
- Victor Plymore Paid with his family
19(No Transcript)
201900-1921 Summary Decisions that Framed AG
Missions
- April 1914 Reason for Being Missions
- Nov. 1914 Commitment to greatest world
evangelism - 1915 New Testament Methods
- 1917 First Missions Committee
- 1919 Foreign Missions Department Formed
- 1920 Survey of the Fields
- 1921 Alice Luce Pauline Methodology
211900-1921 Lessons Learned
- Spirit baptism is empowerment to bear witness to
the ends of the earth. - Understanding that not all practices and trends
are are or equally effective. The guidance of the
Spirit and Structure. - Deep commitment to the Bible. Anything goes in
the name of the Spirit is not biblical. - Balance of the Spirit and the Word.
- 1921 General Council stated the objective of
missions was to produce indigenous churches, but
it took a long time to work out.
22Years of Development1928-1947
23Indigenous Churches
- 1914 there were 40 AG missionaries, years of
instability - 1920-1924 missionary numbers221
- First indigenous churches and national bodies
began to appear in the 1930s El Salvador and
then Burkina Faso (1934) - Problems with missionaries and old ways and
resistance from US churches.
24Compassion/ Charitable Work
- 1920 J Roswell Flower, first missions secretary
wrote about Pentecostal Standard Preaching as
priority, with no time for schools, hospitals,
etc. the latter were distractions. - However, in real life on the field compassion and
proclamation went together.
25Dislike of Denominationalism
- Pentecostals wanted to be Spirit-led, not
man-led. - Distrust of man-made organizations.
- Slow change of attitude and understanding of
reality. - Cooperative Fellowship or The Fellowship
preferred.
26Growth
- Ernest S. Williams elected Superintendent in 1929
and served 20 years. - During this period
- The Home Missions and Education Departments were
created 1937 Busy Bee- Buddy Barrel - Bible Institutes multiplied
- Gospel Publishing House increased publications
- Evangelicals began to recognize Pentecostals
- Women were ordained as pastors
27War
- Initially, WWII was not a worry Jesus was coming
soon. - In 1941, Noel Perkin reported that 104
missionaries had reached field only 4 failed. - 1941 Missions Dept offered to pay for
missionaries in China, Hong Kong and Philippines
to come home, but too late. - New Fields opened after the war
28Strategic Planning
- Rapid Changes between 1943 and 1959
- Continued development of Missions Department and
strengthening of the role of the department not
appreciated by independent-minded missionaries - By 1959, AG Missions was well-recognized by other
agencies. - 1943 Missions Conference
29Plans
- Develop positions of field secretaries
- Add 500 new missionaries
- Develop an advisory groups of pastors and laymen
- Provide missionaries with better training
- Promote missions better in US
- Raise 5 million for missions.
30AG History 1950s and Beyond
31Controversies
- New Order of the Latter Rain 1949
- Healing Controversies
32A New Generation for New Era
- Thomas Zimmerman (1912-1991) Elected one of 4
Assisstant General Superintendents in 1953 and
General Superintendent in 1959. Let us never get
the idea tat God has brought us to our present
plateau to terminate progress His command is,
Go Forward. (1968) - Philip Hogan, Executive Director of DFM in 1959
33Decade of Harvest
- G. Raymond Carlson 1990s Decade of Harvest
- Members and Adherents from 16 million to 30
million - Bible Schools increased by 43
- Total National Ministers increased 48
34The Charismatic Movement
- May 1960, Episcopal Priest Dennis Bennett
baptized in the Spirit and spoke with other
tongues. - Revival within the Catholic Church. Feb. 1967 at
Duquesne University 30 students and 2
theologians. Influence by David Wilkersons Cross
and the Switchblade. - David du Plessis (1905-1987) Pentecostal
Ambassador - Condemnation of the World Council of Churches
35Key Missionaries
- Melvin Hodges (1909-1988) The Indigenous Church
- J. W. Tucker Assembly of God Martyr
36Missions Developments
- Light For the Lost
- Chaplaincy
- Prison Ministry
- Speed the Light
- BGMC
37Faith Promise
- Local Church Missions Convention
- Establish a regular income for missions
- Getting people committed and involved
- J Philip Hogan I have been selling missions to
churches on a money-back guarantee for many
years If they set aside a portion for the lost
abroad, God will help them in the local church
(1963).
38Missionary Life Became More Complex
- Promotional duties
- Financial pressures
- Hostility and danger
- Qualifications
39Scandal
- Jim and Tammy Bakker 1987
- Jimmy Swaggart 1988
40Partnership
- 1980s change in the church around the world
partners in Gods work - Morris O. Williams, The Indigenous Church and the
Missionary (1978)
41Missions Leaders
- Loren Tripplett (1989-1997) stressed the
Spirits supernatural role in calling people to
enter the last days harvest in expectation of
Christs return. - The Fall of the Soviet Union opened up many
fields previously closed, increasing urgency of
the task - AGWM still thinking in terms of geography, not
people groups. - John Bueno (1997-2012) Partnership
42Missions CoreOur Four Pillars
- The widest possible evangelism (REACHING)
- Establishment of NT churches (PLANTING)
- Training national beleivers (TEACHING)
- Showing the Compassion of Jesus to the suffering
(TOUCHING)
43Unreached Peoples
- The ends of the earth Acts 18
- Lack of strategy
- Partnership may have eroded pioneering
- Hostility
- Center for Ministry to Muslims/ Global Initiative
- International Ministry Department and Compassion