Front cover image for Winds from the north : Canadian contributions to the Pentecostal movement

Winds from the north : Canadian contributions to the Pentecostal movement

Much of the scholarly focus on early twentieth-century Pentecostalism is dominated by the origins debates of the United States. The polarization between those who argue for Parhams theological contribution or Seymours African American experiential contribution are well known. Beyond these debates scholars typically focus on the role of Americans in the development of Pentecostalism. However, the Hebden mission in Toronto, Canadian women, and the Latter Rain revival illustrate the transnational and innovative qualities of the movement. This book contextualizes the global story of Pentecostalism
eBook, English, 2010
Brill, Leiden, 2010
Church history
1 online resource (vi, 293 pages)
9789004192515, 9789004185746, 9004192514, 9004185747
667293234
Like a might rushing wind : innovation and the transnational character of Pentecostalism / Michael Wilkinson and Peter Althouse
A Canadian Azusa? : the implications of the Hebden Mission for Pentecostal historiography / Adam Stewart
Charles W. Chawner and the missionary impulse of the Hebden Mission / Michael Wilkinson
The ecumenical significance of Canadian Pentecostalism / Peter Althouse
The function of myth and remembrance among Pentecostals in the Canadian Mid-west / Randall Holm
Zelma and Beulah Argue : sisters in the Canadian Pentecostal movement / Linda M. Ambrose
Zelma Argue's theological contribution to early Pentecostalism / Pamela M.S. Holmes
Aimee Semple McPherson : "shot in the arm" for French-Canadian Protestantism / Michael di Giacomo
Aimee Semple McPherson and the reconfiguration of Methodism in America, 1916-1922 / David Michel
Oneness seed on Canadian soil : early developments of oneness Pentecostalism
David A. Reed
Wynn T. Stairs : Atlantic Canadian Full Gospel Pentecostal leader / Shane Flanagan
The new order of the Latter Rain : restoration or renewal? / D. William Faupel
The Latter Rain Movement and the phenomenon of global return / Mark Hutchinson