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Book Reviews – Holy Ghost Revival on Azusa Street: The True Believers, The Azusa Street Revival : When the Fire Fell, & They Told Me Their Stories

February 10th, 2010 | No Comments | Posted in Misc

It has been a while since I did a book review.  It is not for lack of reading but lack of writing.

Instead of one book review, I will review and contrast three books I have recently read on the Azusa Street Revival that took different paths to tell of this great outpouring.

Holy Ghost Revival on Azusa Street: The True Believers: Eye Witness Accounts of the Revival that Shook the World

This book is basically your classic book on Azusa Street.  The Azusa Street Revival was what many consider the catalyst for the pentecostal/charismatic movement the world over.  After a while they put out a newsletter the Apostolic Faith.  Eight out of ten books about Azusa Street are compilations of various articles from these newsletters.  The True Believers stands true to this form but refreshingly also gets articles from other periodicals from the period.

There is no editorializing in this book.  Instead they let the articles speak for themselves.

When I first studied Azusa I found the archives of the Apostolic Faith online and read almost everyone front to back.  That kind of spoiled every Azusa book I was to read from then after.

The Azusa Street Revival : When the Fire Fell by Roberts Liardon

I was actually given this book by Roberts Liardon and it was a nice change of pace for a book on this subject.  The first 100 pages of the 230 page book documents revival throughout the ages.  The actual Azusa Street Outpouring does not happen until page 105.

This book is more well documented than most and is more academic in its layout.  Instead of reprinting a collection of Apostolic Faith testimonies, Roberts has chapters on women of the outpouring, opposition, testimonies, Parham, Seymore, and his sermons.

This is a good book but its title is slightly misleading since it is more a book on revival in general and Azusa in specific.

They Told Me Their Stories by J. Edward Morris, Cindy McCowan, and Tom Welchel

This was by fat the most unique book I have read on Azusa Street.  A distant second would be Frank Bartleman’s own.

Tommy Welchel worked in a retirement home in the 1960′s that had lots of folks who were teens and young adults at The Azusa Street Revival.  They told him their stories and 40 years later he compiled them into a book.

This book tells many of the miracle stories you have read about elsewhere, limbs growing back where their was none, blindness healed, deafness healed, cripples walking, etc but has a unique twist.  They are not from the vantage point of the person who was healed, rather from the perspective of the everyday person who attended the Azusa Street Mission and was used by God to heal the visitors.

Another unique aspect of this book is the constant discussion of the Shekinah Glory of God that was often present in the meetings.  This was a big part of these people’s lives and while the presence is often mentioned in other books, it is a major theme in this one.  This book is a pretty short read (I read it in two sittings) and has an annoying use of comic sands font for titles.

In summary, Roberts Liardon’s book is the best written.  The True believers is the most straightforward and They Told me Their Stories has the most excitement.

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Review: Experiencing the Blessing – John Arnott

February 3rd, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Misc

Just finished Experience the Blessing by John Arnott.  The book was published in 2000 and is a collection of testimonies mostly by ministry leaders regarding their experience with the outpouring that began in Toronto.

This is really a great book.  This is not the kind of “come drink the kool-aid” kind of book I have read published by churches in “revival.”  The testimonies were self-written by well respected leaders in the Church.

Che Ahn, R. T. Kendall, Stephen Strange, Lindell Cooley, and Joseph Garlington among others.

What was really awesome is how many of the pastors testified that after being touched by the move in Toronto they no longer had to strive while ministering but instead were able to yield to the working of the Holy Ghost.

This book was a great reminder of how this move impacted Spirit-filled Christianity.

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Lighting Fires – Randy Clark

January 22nd, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Misc

I just finished the book Lighting Fires by Randy Clark.  The subtitle of the book is “Keeping the spirit of revival alive in your heart and in the hearts of others around you”  though the book really has nothing to do with that.

Lighting Fires is an autobiographical account of Randy Clark’s life up untill just after the beginning of the Toronto Outpouring.  Randy was the visiting minister when the fire fell there.

This book really inspired me on many levels.  My favorite quote,

Discovering that you just received a word of knowledge can really put the pressure on you – pressure from without, pressure from within, and pressure from on high.  As the natural man fights for the right to look nice and dignified in front of a crowd of friends and total strangers, the enemy in pounding from without, “Don’t do it!  You’re going to look stupid! Don’t say anything!”  But God keeps pouring on the pressure from on high and pretty soon you’re not just under the gun to give the word of knowledge; you’re sweating bullets.

Randy is  a personal hero of mine.  The man really came out of nowhere to lead an international move of God.  Great book.

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The River of Doubt

January 4th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Misc

Just finished The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt’s Darkest Journey by Candice Millard.  I got it for Christmas and was able to take it off my wish list.  I had never heard about this chapter of Theodore Roosevelt’s life and this made the book really exciting.

Long story short, fresh off his inability to form a new political party and win a third term as President of the U.S. Roosevelt decided to lick his wounds by exploring a 1,000 mile long unknown, uncharted river in the middle of Brazil.

When you read books documenting the lives of great men and women of past eras you cannot help but admire their grit.  At times I was reminded of the extent John Adams went to get Europe to recognize the United States during the revolution or Lester Summerall riding through Burma on mule or me attending Summer Camp with high school students.

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