Disfellowshiped: Pentecostal Responses to Fundamentalism in the United States, 1906-1943
Description: Employing studies in population ecology as a framework for understanding the growth of religious movements, Disfellowshiped traces the growth of the Pentecostal movement. The author explores how the Pentecostal movement developed in relationship to Fundamentalism from its roots in the Holiness movement to the formation of the National Association of Evangelicals. Particular attention is given to the various critiques and rebuttals exchanged between Fundamentalists and Pentecostals, exploring how these two movements influenced and shaped one another. This book shows how, despite their mutual antagonism, these two movements held far more in common than in contrast. This book will be of great importance to all those interested in the history of Fundamentalism and the rise of Pentecostalism. Endorsements: ""Pentecostalism emerged in the early years of the twentieth century, shortly followed by Fundamentalism. The adherents of the two movements shared an Evangelical heritage and yet they disagreed sharply with each other. Members of each group denounced the other as betrayers of the gospel and worse. Gerald King has analyzed their antagonistic rhetoric and its theological premises, vividly illuminating a world in which the two sides 'disfellowshiped' each other."" --David Bebbington author of Victorian Nonconformity (Cascade, 2011) ""For too long historians, following the lead of a handful of anti-pentecostal preachers from the 1920s, have treated fundamentalism and pentecostalism as totally distinct movements. As Gerald W. King's compelling book reveals, the relationship between pentecostals and fundamentalists has been far more complicated than most scholars realize. Disfellowshiped is a carefully researched book that makes a significant contribution to the religious history of the interwar era."" --Matthew Avery Sutton author of Aimee Semple McPherson and the Resurrection of Christian America (2007) About the Contributor(s): Gerald King is a recent PhD graduate of the University of Birmingham (UK).
1112054226
Disfellowshiped: Pentecostal Responses to Fundamentalism in the United States, 1906-1943
Description: Employing studies in population ecology as a framework for understanding the growth of religious movements, Disfellowshiped traces the growth of the Pentecostal movement. The author explores how the Pentecostal movement developed in relationship to Fundamentalism from its roots in the Holiness movement to the formation of the National Association of Evangelicals. Particular attention is given to the various critiques and rebuttals exchanged between Fundamentalists and Pentecostals, exploring how these two movements influenced and shaped one another. This book shows how, despite their mutual antagonism, these two movements held far more in common than in contrast. This book will be of great importance to all those interested in the history of Fundamentalism and the rise of Pentecostalism. Endorsements: ""Pentecostalism emerged in the early years of the twentieth century, shortly followed by Fundamentalism. The adherents of the two movements shared an Evangelical heritage and yet they disagreed sharply with each other. Members of each group denounced the other as betrayers of the gospel and worse. Gerald King has analyzed their antagonistic rhetoric and its theological premises, vividly illuminating a world in which the two sides 'disfellowshiped' each other."" --David Bebbington author of Victorian Nonconformity (Cascade, 2011) ""For too long historians, following the lead of a handful of anti-pentecostal preachers from the 1920s, have treated fundamentalism and pentecostalism as totally distinct movements. As Gerald W. King's compelling book reveals, the relationship between pentecostals and fundamentalists has been far more complicated than most scholars realize. Disfellowshiped is a carefully researched book that makes a significant contribution to the religious history of the interwar era."" --Matthew Avery Sutton author of Aimee Semple McPherson and the Resurrection of Christian America (2007) About the Contributor(s): Gerald King is a recent PhD graduate of the University of Birmingham (UK).
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Disfellowshiped: Pentecostal Responses to Fundamentalism in the United States, 1906-1943

Disfellowshiped: Pentecostal Responses to Fundamentalism in the United States, 1906-1943

Disfellowshiped: Pentecostal Responses to Fundamentalism in the United States, 1906-1943

Disfellowshiped: Pentecostal Responses to Fundamentalism in the United States, 1906-1943

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Overview

Description: Employing studies in population ecology as a framework for understanding the growth of religious movements, Disfellowshiped traces the growth of the Pentecostal movement. The author explores how the Pentecostal movement developed in relationship to Fundamentalism from its roots in the Holiness movement to the formation of the National Association of Evangelicals. Particular attention is given to the various critiques and rebuttals exchanged between Fundamentalists and Pentecostals, exploring how these two movements influenced and shaped one another. This book shows how, despite their mutual antagonism, these two movements held far more in common than in contrast. This book will be of great importance to all those interested in the history of Fundamentalism and the rise of Pentecostalism. Endorsements: ""Pentecostalism emerged in the early years of the twentieth century, shortly followed by Fundamentalism. The adherents of the two movements shared an Evangelical heritage and yet they disagreed sharply with each other. Members of each group denounced the other as betrayers of the gospel and worse. Gerald King has analyzed their antagonistic rhetoric and its theological premises, vividly illuminating a world in which the two sides 'disfellowshiped' each other."" --David Bebbington author of Victorian Nonconformity (Cascade, 2011) ""For too long historians, following the lead of a handful of anti-pentecostal preachers from the 1920s, have treated fundamentalism and pentecostalism as totally distinct movements. As Gerald W. King's compelling book reveals, the relationship between pentecostals and fundamentalists has been far more complicated than most scholars realize. Disfellowshiped is a carefully researched book that makes a significant contribution to the religious history of the interwar era."" --Matthew Avery Sutton author of Aimee Semple McPherson and the Resurrection of Christian America (2007) About the Contributor(s): Gerald King is a recent PhD graduate of the University of Birmingham (UK).

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498255394
Publisher: Pickwick Publications
Publication date: 08/05/2011
Series: Princeton Theological Monograph , #164
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

Gerald King is a recent PhD graduate of the University of Birmingham (UK).

Table of Contents

Foreword Allan H. Anderson ix

Acknowledgments xiii

List of Abbreviations xv

part 1 Introduction

1 Defining the Study 3

2 Historical Background 19

Part 2 Genesis

3 Emerging Pentecostalism (1906-1909) 37

part 3 Adaptation

4 Forming Denominations (1910-1919) 65

5 Emerging Fundamentalism (1920-1924) 94

part 4 Retention

6 Battling One Another (1925-1929) 125

7 Adopting a Fundamentalist Rhetoric (1930-1934) 151

8 Battling a Common Foe (1935-1943) 177

part 5 Conclusion

9 Conclusion 207

Appendix A Articles A. J.Gordon 221

Appendix B Bibliography of Anti-Pentecostal Articles in Holiness Periodicals 222

Appendix C Book Advertisements in the Christian Evangel in 1915 224

Appendix D Book Advertisements in the Pentecostal Evangel in 1920 225

Appendix E A. C. Gaebelein's Anti-Pentecostal and Anti-Healing Articles from Our Hope 228

Appendix F D. M. Panton's Articles in Pentecostal Evangel from 1920-1925 230

Appendix G Book Advertisements in the Pentecostal Evangel in 1925 231

Appendix H Sermons of J.N.Hoover 236

Appendix I Cartoon from Pentecostal Evangel (15 May 1937) 239

Appendix J Cartoon from Pentecostal Evangel (8 June 1940) 240

Appendix K Cartoon from Pentecostal Evangel (14 August 1937) 241

Bibliography 243

Index 253

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Pentecostalism emerged in the early years of the twentieth century, shortly followed by Fundamentalism. The adherents of the two movements shared an Evangelical heritage and yet they disagreed sharply with each other. Members of each group denounced the other as betrayers of the gospel and worse. Gerald King has analyzed their antagonistic rhetoric and its theological premises, vividly illuminating a world in which the two sides 'disfellowshiped' each other."
—David Bebbington author of Victorian Nonconformity (Cascade, 2011)


"For too long historians, following the lead of a handful of anti-pentecostal preachers from the 1920s, have treated fundamentalism and pentecostalism as totally distinct movements. As Gerald W. King's compelling book reveals, the relationship between pentecostals and fundamentalists has been far more complicated than most scholars realize. Disfellowshiped is a carefully researched book that makes a significant contribution to the religious history of the interwar era."
—Matthew Avery Sutton author of Aimee Semple McPherson and the Resurrection of Christian America (2007)

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