Pentecostal Pioneers
feavery@prysm.net (feavery@prysm.net)
Fri, 9 Feb 96 21:49:16 CST
On Thu, 8 Feb 96 Tyler G. Nally wrote:
Does anyone have info on African-American Pentecostal Pioneers such
as William Seymour?
Bro Nally
Please allow me to share the following with you.
I took this from page 19 of The Holy Spirit in Christian Education.
Sylvia Lee, Editor
Published by Gospel Publishing House
Neeley Terry, a member of a black Nazarene mission on Santa Fe Street
in Los Angles, California, was visiting Houston when she met William
Seymour. Miss Terry was so impressed with him that on her return she
pressed the interim pastor, Mrs Julia Hutchinson, to invite Seymour to
hold meetings with a view to his becoming the pastor. According to the
earliest accounts of Seymour's ministry, he traveled to Los Angeles in
early February 1906 and ministered in the Nazarene mission with some
acceptability before his insistence on tongues as the evidence of the
baptism in the Holy Spirit led to the church being locked against him.
Rejected by the holiness believers, Seymour continued regular meetings
in the home of Richard and Ruth Asberry, Baptist relatives of Neeley
Terry. Early in April, Lucy Farrow and J.A. Warren from Houston joined
him, and on the evening of April 9, 1906, Pentecost came to the small
group of praying believers. Seymour himself did not receive the Holy
Spirit baptism until April 12.
To accommodate the growing crowds, Seymour moved the services to a
former Methodist church at 312 Azusa Street that had more recently
served as a livery stable and tenement house. It would be the center
of revival for the next 3 years.
In His love
Floyd E. Avery
feavery@prysm.net
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