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Portraits of a generation
With a focus on Holy Spirit power, charismatic Christians stirred enthusiastic responses across America just after 1900, first at a Bible school in Topeka and then in a small mission on Azusa Street in Los Angeles. Almost immediately, the religious revival spread to Houston, Chicago, and then northeastern urban centers. By the early 1910s the fervor had reached most parts of the United States, Canada, and northern Mexico, and eventually the converts called themselves Pentecostals. Today there are Pentecostals all over the world. From the beginning the movement was unusually diverse: women and African Americans were active in many of the early fellowships, and although some groups were segregated, some were interracial. Everywhere, ordinary people passionately devoted themselves to salvation, Holy Ghost baptism evidenced by speaking in tongues, divine healing, and anticipation of the...
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