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09-20-2013, 11:05 PM
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Isaiah 56:4-5
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Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: SOUTH ZION
Posts: 11,307
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Truthseeker
Do you think it is because that church has become worldly as some believe? Has TV, sports, movies etc.... hindered revival like some claim?
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Those that abstain from those things are not having revival.
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09-20-2013, 11:21 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 5,406
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Re: Has Pentecost changed?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Truthseeker
Do you think it is because that church has become worldly as some believe? Has TV, sports, movies etc.... hindered revival like some claim?
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I'm not sure. Probably 'worldliness', whatever that is, plays some part in it. More than that though I see that Pentecostalism, both oneness and trinitarian, becoming just another denomination with religious politics being played in the various organizations. Before, and I can only reference the 50s, the ministers were less educated, poorer, the churches were usually not the nicest in town, the people were more common, yet the ministers and laity fellowshipped other organizations, attended and supported the revivals in the area. Now each church seems to be almost an island unto itself, in competition with other churches in their area. For example, the church in which I grew up in was ALJC, but we didn't know the difference between that organization and the UPC for years. The pastors supported each other, visited each other, fellowshipped with each other. I saw that begin to change in the 60s, the ALJC became territorial and the UPC definitely became much more territorial. The unity was gone, the common ground was gone and the oneness movement slowly became just another movement like many which preceded it.
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09-20-2013, 11:53 PM
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Saved by Grace
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Decatur, TX
Posts: 5,247
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Praxeas
And lo, thou shalt surely leadeth the way
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Certainly not. Its by realizing my own tendency to let "life" and convenience dampen my enthusiasm and spiritual desire to a point that has in fact opened my eyes to my failure. Not wholesale failure, not leaving Christ. But I've had to ask do I love Him like I did at first? Have I allowed responsibilities and obligations to shorten (or even put off) my prayer time, study time? If I want to be honest about revival about a move of God I need to go stand in front of the mirror. I'm not alone though. Many pentecostals/Christians need to do the same. Are we more desperate for a move of God and revival than our next meal, than knowing where we'll live in 3 months, than having nice things, than going out to eat after church? Are we really more desperate for God than ourselves? Are you? Am I?
__________________
"Resolved: That all men should live to the glory of God. Resolved, secondly: That whether or not anyone else does, I will." ~Jonathan Edwards
"The only man who has the right to say he is justified by grace alone is the man who has left all to follow Christ." ~Dietrich Bonheoffer, The Cost of Discipleship
"Preachers who should be fishing for men are now too often fishing for compliments from men." ~Leonard Ravenhill
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09-20-2013, 11:58 PM
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Go Dodgers!
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 45,791
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Re: Has Pentecost changed?
And Lo, surely that has gone over your head. Thus saith Praxeas
__________________
Let it be understood that Apostolic Friends Forum is an Apostolic Forum.
Apostolic is defined on AFF as:
- There is One God. This one God reveals Himself distinctly as Father, Son and Holy Ghost.
- The Son is God himself in a human form or "God manifested in the flesh" (1Tim 3:16)
- Every sinner must repent of their sins.
- That Jesus name baptism is the only biblical mode of water baptism.
- That the Holy Ghost is for today and is received by faith with the initial evidence of speaking in tongues.
- The saint will go on to strive to live a holy life, pleasing to God.
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09-21-2013, 07:45 AM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 11,903
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Re: Has Pentecost changed?
Well we have church like we always have. I was raised in the 50's I should know.
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09-21-2013, 01:27 PM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 1,217
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Re: Has Pentecost changed?
Quote:
Originally Posted by seekerman
The difference between oneness pentecostal services in the 50s and oneness pentecostal services today is tremendous. I was there in the 50s and I occasionally visit today and today has very little in common with back then. If you could take the saints in the 50s and transport them to today, they wouldn't believe what was happening....or more accurately, not happening.
Oneness pentecostalism today is a mere shell of what it was 50-70 years ago. It's a completely different church.
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Amen!
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09-21-2013, 01:30 PM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 1,217
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Re: Has Pentecost changed?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jason Badejo
Is the spiritual health of a church to be based on how demonstrative they are?
The problem isn't "manifestations" it is a lack of time, yea, desire for prayer and the Word. There's not the same hunger and thirst for righteousness as at times in the past. People are too full and entertained to really be hungry spiritually. They might have to get off Facebook for a day.
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AMEN!
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09-21-2013, 02:39 PM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 1,217
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Re: Has Pentecost changed?
Quote:
Originally Posted by seekerman
There is a marked difference between the move of the Spirit when I went to church in the 50s to when I visit an OP church today. Today, it seems there's a lot of mimicking of the move of the Spirit, worship seems forced not free as compared to the past. A wave of the Spirit would just move through the church in which I was raised, almost tangible and visible, a holiness if you will. Today, the preacher is more of a cheerleader telling the people what to do. Jump! Run! Shout! That wasn't the case in the past.
The music back then was purer, not as orchestrated, more spontaneous. Yes, brother so-and-so didn't have a great voice, his timing was off but when he sang it would bring the Spirit down. Sister so-and-so would sing the same song time off key time after time, but it wasn't the entertainment of the singing, it was the moving of the Spirit which followed. Today singing is taught, organized, planned and most of the time little more than secular entertainment. In the past, when the church was in worship and the 'bad' singers would begin singing ..."there is pow-er, pow-er, wonderful working power, in the blood...of the Lamb"....it may not have been pretty but the Spirit moved and worked in the people.
The church in which I was raised was small, most of the time less than 100 people. But there song service included anyone who wished to stand together on the rostrum and sing, men on one side, women on the other. People participated more in worship, a more intimate part of the church. That changed though, now it's a stay in your pew while the 'professionals' sing and entertain you type of service.
Revivals back then would last for weeks sometimes with the power of God moving each and every night. There was an excitement, an expectation, a knowing that the service each night would be a real Spirit filled, shouting, Holy Ghost moving service. I've been in revivals which lasted literally for months, not just weeks. It was amazing to see the workings of God in those services. Healings. Deliverences.
Yes, so much difference between then and now. But, as someone pointed out, it's not limited to oneness pentecostalism, it's throughout the Church. I don't know if we can reclaim the purity of Pentecostalism. I most of the time doubt it.
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I was there, also there in the 40's.
I started noticing a big difference when the music changed. Music has meaning. Ask the Jungle Tribes. I remember hearing sermons on, "That Jungle Music."
They changed the music to attract the young people. and the young people came---WITH INTERTAINMENT, instead of a hunger for God.
When the Spirit moved in those days, with or without the music, It wasn't a worked up emotional ho-down just to see if they could still do that.” When the Spirit moved, there was results. Someone was healed, or received the Holy Ghost, even a “come clean” repenting service.
And with the entertainment, came worldliness. But the worldliness could not have came into the church, if it hadn't already been in the home.
We weren't without fault. In my young days, I saw the hunger to know more about God, to draw closer to God, but our church lacked teaching. Emphasizing the outward appearance.
After about 15 yrs, we got a new Pastor, that was a teacher. That is when I began to love to go to church, and devour the Word. The church doubled in size, under his teaching.
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09-21-2013, 05:59 PM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Colorado
Posts: 637
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Re: Has Pentecost changed?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Esaias
http://www.oocities.org/heartland/7707/mcpente.htm
Frank Bartleman's book Azusa Street (a firsthand account) talked about how, later on, Pentecost had been replaced with emotionalism, many had gone cold, and many had reverted to using 'music to jazz up the people.'
I get the feeling that what passes for 'Pentecostal church' these days is a far cry from what shook the world in the early 20th century... Much less the late 1st century...
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I've read Frank Bartleman's book several times. It seems to me that revival, and all the revivals in Scripture, didn't start because some church or organization took out an ad campaign to hold "revival" on a certain date. True revival started because there existed in the hearts of a few individuals a holy dissatisfaction with the status quo. It started in prayer closets of a few crying out to God because they hungered for more of him. It started with those that didn't care what the cost was to have revival, they were willing to pay any cost, make any sacrifice, just to have greater communion with God. They weren't going to put God in a box anymore, but begin to seek God for its own sake, on his time schedule, not theirs.
As someone here posted not too long ago, the reason we don't have revival in the churches is because we've grown content to live without it. Revival cannot come without repentance, but when God's people believe they're okay with God, then why should they repent, and for what? But this is contrary to God's instructions:
"If my people (not the world, not backsliders, not the wicked, but those...) which are called by my name, shall humble themselves (actually come before God in the fear of the Lord, shedding the self-righteousness of self-sufficiency), and pray (without pre-determined time limits), and seek my face (not their own selfish wants or agenda), and turn from their wicked ways (not assuming they're "rich" in God and "have need of nothing"- Rev. 3:17) then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land." ( 2 Chron 7:14).
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09-21-2013, 06:48 PM
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Registered Member
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 7,616
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Re: Has Pentecost changed?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve Epley
Well we have church like we always have. I was raised in the 50's I should know. 
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What does "we have church" mean?
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