Los Angeles 1906 ~ A New Pentecost
Los Angeles, California, was a
popular destination at the turn of the twentieth century for many
Americans dreaming of greater opportunities and purpose. By 1906
this city was quickly becoming a major hub of activity. In April of
that year two events focused the world’s attention on Los Angeles:
The city was impacted by an earthquake that also devastated San
Francisco, and services conducted in a small holiness mission on
Azusa Street birthed spiritual renewal globally. Thousands of
individuals converged on the city to attend the revival at Azusa
Street’s mission, where they found a renewed purpose and passion in
serving Jesus Christ and were commissioned to share the message of
His love and power with others. Almost a century later, the
activities of the renowned Azusa Street outpouring in Los Angeles
are hailed as one of the greatest events in Christian history.
Today, Pentecostal and Charismatic believers throughout the world
reflect on the significance of Azusa Street in their spiritual
heritage and development.
Pentecost Prior to Azusa Street
Los Angeles was not the only place and time of
spiritual renewal, however. The Spirit of God was being poured out
in other parts of the world simultaneously. Revival was sweeping
parts of Europe, specifically in Wales. In the United States the
same transforming revivals were taking place in Minnesota, North
Carolina, and Texas. Among the spiritual manifestations accompanying
these outpourings included remarkable healings, complete
transformations of lifestyle, deliverance from ungodly habits,
physical demonstrations of emotion, and speaking in languages
unknown to the speaker. For centuries there had been testimonies of
some of these same manifestations among isolated groups, such as the
Huguenots in France and Irvingites in England. In 1891 Daniel Awrey
spoke in other tongues in Delaware, Ohio, and his wife spoke in
tongues in 1899 in Beniah, Tennessee. Since the days of the early
apostles, there are recordings throughout history of men and women
speaking in languages unknown to them. And to those who met at Azusa
Street it was viewed as a sign of the restoration of true New
Testament Christianity. These early “Pentecostals” believed they
were experiencing the same infilling of God’s power as the apostles
did on the Day of Pentecost. Obeying the commands of Christ upon His
ascension, the early apostles gathered together in Jerusalem to
await the promised Holy Spirit, who empowered the Christian Church
to complete the work that Christ had started on the earth. Even
today, Pentecostal and Charismatic believers reflect on the passages
recorded by Luke in Acts, chapter 2: “And when the day of Pentecost
was fully come, they were all with one accord in one place. And
suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind,
and it filled all the house where they were sitting. And there
appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon
each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and
began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them
utterance,” (Acts 2:1-4, KJV).
In addition, sincere Christians in Los Angeles had been praying for
revival and seeking more of God for several years prior to the 1906
outpouring. Frank Bartleman, a revival participant, wrote, “It would
be a great mistake to attempt to attribute the Pentecostal beginning
in Los Angeles to any one man, either in prayer or in
preaching…‘Pentecost’ did not drop suddenly out of heaven. God was
with us in large measure for a long time before the final
outpouring.” In addition to Bartleman, some of those early seekers
included E. J. Boehmer, Elmer Fisher, Joseph Smale, Demos and
Goolisar Shakarian, and Louis and Cena Osterberg. Consumed with the
desire for more of God, these men and women prayed, witnessed,
preached, and prophesied about a forthcoming outpouring of God’s
Spirit.
Charles Fox Parham influences the Pentecostal
Movement
While great revivals were taking place around the
world, perhaps the most noted outpouring prior to the Los Angeles
revival occurred in January 1901 at the Bethel Bible School in
Topeka, Kansas. After studying the Bible and spending time in
prayer, several students experienced glossolalia (speaking in other
languages). Agnes Ozman is reported to have been the first to
receive the experience, followed by several other students and the
teacher, Charles Fox Parham. As a result, Parham soon coined the
term that speaking in other tongues was the “Bible evidence” that
one had been baptized with the Holy Ghost, becoming convinced that
this was in accordance with scripture. Up to this point most
holiness adherents believed that one was baptized with the Holy
Spirit upon being sanctified. Parham and others, however, taught
that there were three works of grace available for the Christian,
namely salvation, sanctification, and the baptism of the Holy Ghost
with the “Bible evidence” of speaking in other tongues.
Meanwhile, William Seymour was traveling throughout the United
States in search of a better life. An African-American from
Louisiana, he was the son of former slaves. Much of Seymour’s
childhood spiritual influence came from Roman Catholicism and
Baptist traditions. It was during his travels that Seymour entered
into a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
He was converted in Indianapolis and joined the Methodist Episcopal
Church. A few years later he was “wholly sanctified” in Cincinnati,
Ohio, during his affiliation with another holiness group. He became
a preacher following a severe case of smallpox that left him blind
in one eye and his face disfigured.
In 1905 Seymour traveled to Houston, Texas, in search of relatives.
There he attended a black holiness congregation pastored by Lucy
Farrow. (She was a former slave and the niece of famous abolitionist
Frederick Douglass.) Farrow moved to Kansas City to serve as a
governess and cook for evangelist Charles Fox Parham, at which time
Seymour became the interim pastor for the holiness congregation in
Houston. In the late fall of 1905, Farrow returned to Houston and
testified of her spiritual experience. She had been baptized with
the Holy Ghost with the evidence of speaking in other tongues. Soon
after Farrow returned to Houston, Parham relocated his ministry
there as well.
Parham conducted services in Bryan Hall and taught training classes
on conviction, repentance, sanctification, healing, the Holy Spirit
in different operations, prophecies, and the Book of Revelation.
Seymour was faithful in attending Parham’s services and training
sessions. However, due to segregation laws of the time Seymour was
forced to sit in the hallway while listening to Parham and others
teach. He was not even permitted to pray with others while seeking
the baptism of the Holy Spirit. Nonetheless, Seymour hungered for
more of God and was determined to learn. Parham later noted that
Seymour could recite word-for-word the teachings he learned while
sitting under Parham’s ministry.
Pentecost Comes to California
Los Angeles resident Neely Terry, who attended a
small holiness church pastored by Julia Hutchins, made a trip to
Houston, Texas, in 1905. She attended the church that William
Seymour was pastoring. Although Seymour had not yet received the
baptism of the Holy Ghost with evidence of speaking in other
tongues, he was convinced that it was biblical and preached the
message with great fervency. Impressed by Seymour’s character and
message, Terry told her church about him upon her return to
California and they invited him to visit. Seymour agreed to go, much
to the shock of Charles Parham and others in Houston. Nonetheless,
they laid hands on him and sent him forth for his evangelistic
endeavor, which was originally scheduled to last for one month.
Seymour
arrived in Los Angeles on February 22, 1906, and within two days was
preaching at the holiness church pastored by Julia Hutchins. He
preached on regeneration, sanctification, faith healing, and the
baptism of the Holy Ghost with evidence of speaking in other
tongues. Hutchins rejected Seymour’s teaching and within a few days
locked the doors of the church to keep him from preaching there. A
council of elders rejected Seymour’s teaching, predominately because
he had not yet experienced the blessing about which he was
preaching. Some felt that he should discontinue preaching about the
baptism of the Holy Spirit and speaking in other tongues. Yet, in
the midst of the persecution, Seymour continued to be steadfast and
unmovable in his work for the Lord. Those in the congregation who
were hungering and thirsting after the deeper things of God felt
compelled to spend hours in prayer. Several received confirming
visions that God was about to bless Los Angeles with a spiritual
outpouring.
The
group continued to gather for prayer and worship, ultimately
conducting services in the home of Richard and Ruth Asbery at 214
Bonnie Brae Street. Others learned of the meetings and began to
attend, including some white families of nearby holiness churches.
Then, on April 9, 1906, a breakthrough occurred as Edward Lee was
baptized with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in tongues after
Seymour had prayed with him. The two then made their way to the
Asbery home. There they had a song, prayers and testimonies,
followed by Seymour’s sermon using Acts 2:4 as a text. Following the
sermon Lee raised his hands and began to speak in tongues. The
Spirit of God moved upon those attending and six others began to
speak in tongues that same evening. Jennie Moore, who would later
marry William Seymour, was among them. She became the first woman in
Los Angeles to receive the Spirit-baptism. She then began to sing in
tongues and play the piano under the power of God, having never
played the piano prior. A few days later, on April 12, William
Seymour finally received his baptism at about four o’clock in the
morning, after having prayed all night long.
One eye-witness, Emma Cotton, later reminisced about those
experiences: They shouted three days and nights. The people came
from everywhere. By the next morning, there was no way of getting
nearer the house. As the people came in they would fall under the
power, and the whole city was stirred. They shouted there until the
foundation of the house gave way, but no one was hurt. During those
three days, there were many people who received their baptism, who
had just come to see what it was. The sick were healed, and sinners
were saved just as they came in.
Moving to Azusa Street
Following the initial outpouring of the Holy Spirit
in Los Angeles, interest grew in the prayer meetings. The crowds
became too large for the Asbury home on Bonnie Brae Street and were
moved to the yard. Soon this became too limited as well. The group
then discovered an available building at 312 Azusa Street, which had
originally been constructed as an African Methodist Episcopal
Church. Having fallen into disrepair, the building was used as a
stable to house hay and livestock. Nonetheless, it was secured and
cleaned in preparation for services.
Within
days, the Los Angeles press learned of the revival services
conducted at the Azusa Street Mission and newspaper reports were
published throughout the United States and the world. Thousands
learned of the revival and were drawn to the meeting. They all came
together in worship: men, women, children, black, white, Hispanic,
Asian, rich, poor, illiterate, and educated. They flocked to Los
Angeles with both skepticism and spiritualhunger.

In September 1906 a local newspaper reporter frowned on the events
taking place and wrote that the Azusa Street mission was a
“disgraceful intermingling of the races…they cry and make howling
noises all day and into the night. They run, jump, shake all over,
shout to the top of their voice, spin around in circles, fall out on
the sawdust blanketed floor jerking, kicking and rolling all over
it. Some of them pass out and do not move for hours as though they
were dead. These people appear to be mad, mentally deranged or under
a spell. They claim to be filled with the spirit. They have a one
eyed, illiterate, Negro as their preacher who stays on his knees
much of the time with his head hidden between the wooden milk
crates. He doesn't talk very much but at times he can be heard
shouting, ‘Repent,’ and he's supposed to be running the thing...
They repeatedly sing the same song, ‘The Comforter Has Come.’”
Yet, while some stirred the waters of opposition, the river of God’s
Spirit was flowing mightily in Los Angeles. God had proven faithful
in answering prayer; revival had come. Within months the Azusa
Street mission, known as the Apostolic Faith Mission, was the
largest congregation in the city, with as many as 1300 attending the
services, and the revival fervor continued for three years.
Services
were held three times daily, often without a break in the
“spontaneous” services. Humility was fundamental at the mission, and
Seymour often admonished that “our highest place is low at His
[Jesus’] feet.” The message was the love of God, and unity and
equality were priority. Frank Bartleman noted, “The ‘color line’ was
washed away by the blood.” Women were provided positions of
leadership at the mission as well. The Apostolic Faith, published by
the mission and reaching a worldwide distribution of more than
50,000, promoted such unity. In 1907 the paper noted, “One token of
the Lord’s coming is that He is melting all races and nations
together, and they are filled with the power and glory of God. He is
baptizing by one spirit into one body and making up a people
thatwill be ready to meet Him when He comes.”
Eyewitness Accounts from Azusa Street:
Revival
participant A. C. Valdez, Sr. later wrote: On the platform, a black
man [Seymour] sat behind two wooden boxes, one on top of the other.
They were his pulpit…. Occasionally, as Pastor Seymour prayed, his
head would be so low that it disappeared behind the top wooden box….
Everything about the Azusa Street Mission fascinated me—especially
the prayer or “tarrying room” on the second floor.
Usually one hundred or more black, brown and white people
prayerfully waited there for the Holy Spirit to come upon them.
Dozens of canes, braces, crutches and blackened smoking pipes leaned
against the barnlike walls.
Many times waves of glory would come over the tarrying room or
meeting room, and people would cry out prayers of thanks or praise
as they received the baptism in the Holy Spirit.
Meetings used to go past midnight and into the early hours of the
morning. Hours there seemed like minutes. Sometimes after a wave of
glory, a lot of people would speak in tongues. Then a holy quietness
would come over the place, followed by a chorus of prayer in
languages we had never before heard.
Many were slain in the Spirit [in a trance-like state], buckling to
the floor, unconscious, in a beautiful Holy Spirit cloud, and the
Lord gave them visions.
How I enjoyed shouting and praising God. During the tarrying, we
used to break out in songs about Jesus and the Holy Spirit, “Fill Me
Now,” “Joy Unspeakable,” and “Love Lifted Me.”
Praise about the cleansing and precious blood of Jesus would just
spring from our mouths. In between choruses, heavenly music would
fill the hall, and we would break into tears.
Suddenly the crowd seemed to forget how to sing in English. Out of
their mouths would come new languages and lovely harmony that no
human beings could have learned.
Beyond Azusa Street
As a direct result of the Azusa Street outpouring, thousands of
individuals were led into a deeper relationship with Jesus Christ.
People began to study the Word of God, become convicted of sin, and
surrender their lives to Christ. They were baptized with the Holy
Ghost, who led and guided them into greater spiritual truths found
in the Word of God. The Spirit of God empowered them with boldness
to fulfill the great commission. Signs and wonders followed those
who believed, such as blinded eyes being opened, deaf being able to
hear, mute being able to speak, the lame made to walk, and the dead
raised to life again. Such reports are commonplace among these early
Pentecostal believers, and all of these signs testify of the glory
and power of the Risen Christ. These early Spirit-filled believers
considered everyone to be witnesses, and many sailed to foreign
lands as missionaries to share the gospel message. This move of God
was not only for Los Angeles, but it was for the whole world—even
future generations. What happened at Azusa Street has helped renew
Christianity, bringing fresh vision and passion to the Great
Commission. Consumed with zeal for God and empowered by the Holy
Spirit, individuals have taken the Word of God to diverse villages
and races across the globe. As a result many have learned of the
love and grace of Christ, ultimately preparing the world for His
return. That same power of God is still filling men and women with
the Holy Spirit to continue the work of Christ throughout the world.
Ultimately hundreds of millions have been reached as an indirect
result of Azusa Street. Today there are more than 500 million
Pentecostal and Charismatic believers across the globe. May we
continue to go forward in the power of the Holy Spirit as witness
and ministers to reach this world for Jesus Christ.
William Seymour ~ A Brief Biography
William Joseph Seymour, pastor of the Azusa Street
mission, is recognized globally for his influence on the Pentecostal
movement of the Twentieth Century. Born on May 2, 1870 in
Centerville (St. Mary Parish), Louisiana, his parents had been
slaves and his father fought with the Union Army during the US Civil
War. Seymour was reared in poverty and began traveling at a young
age—living in Memphis, St. Louis, and Indianapolis. At age 25, he
worked as a waiter for some of the most upscale restaurants and
hotels in Indianapolis.
Early Spiritual Experiences
It was in Indianapolis that Seymour personally
accepted Jesus Christ, although during childhood he was affiliated
with the Baptist Church and the Roman Catholic Church. (He was
christened in the Catholic tradition on September 4, 1870, at the
Church of the Assumption in Franklin, Louisiana.) Upon his adult
conversion in Indianapolis he joined the Simpson Chapel Methodist
Episcopal Church and became firmly established in the rising
Holiness movement. A few years later, while living in Cincinnati,
Ohio, he received a deeper spiritual experience and testified of
being “wholly sanctified.” There he joined the Church of God
Restoration Movement, also known as The Evening Light movement. This
group taught that a great outpouring of the Holy Spirit would
precede the return of Christ, and they were committed to a radical
holiness doctrine and promoted Christian unity and racial
reconciliation.
In 1905 Seymour moved to Houston, Texas, in search of
relatives. He attended a black holiness congregation pastored by
Lucy Farrow, and soon he served as interim pastor when Farrow moved
to Kansas City to work in the home of Charles Fox Parham. Later that
year, Farrow returned to Houston and testified of her baptism with
the Holy Ghost with the evidence of speaking in other tongues. Soon
afterward, Charles Fox Parham relocated his ministry to Houston and
taught Bible training classes. Seymour faithfully attended these
classes despite segregation laws of the time, which forced him to
sit in the hallway while listening to Parham and others teach.
Seymour was not even permitted to pray with others while seeking the
baptism of the Holy Spirit. Nonetheless, Parham later noted that
Seymour could recite word-for-word the teachings he learned while
sitting under Parham’s ministry. To learn more read the “Charles Fox
Parham influences the Pentecostal Movement” section.
Receiving the Baptism of the Holy Spirit
In 1906 Seymour arrived in Los Angeles, California,
upon accepting an invitation to preach at a Holiness mission there.
Seymour' preached on the baptism of the Holy Ghost with evidence of
speaking in other tongues and other subjects. However, because he
had not received the Holy Spirit baptism personally, many were
skeptical and he was forbidden to preach for the congregation.
Seymour then began participating in a Bible study and prayer meeting
at the home of Richard and Ruth Asbery at 214 Bonnie Brae Street.
Soon several individuals were baptized with the Holy Spirit and
began to speak in tongues, including William Seymour. He finally
received his Holy Spirit baptism about four o’clock in the morning
on April 12th, after having prayed all night. To learn more read the
“Pentecost Comes to California” section.
A Faithful Pastor
Interest in the movement increased, and soon the
services relocated to 312 Azusa Street in Los Angeles. Seymour led
these services with the help of a volunteer staff comprised of
blacks, whites, men and women. The local press published stories
about the spiritual manifestations experienced at the mission, and
soon other newspapers throughout the United States and the world
were informing readers about the Azusa Street outpouring. Seymour
also published The Apostolic Faith magazine that was circulated
globally. Upon learning about the revival, thousands of individuals
attended the meetings, experienced spiritual transformations, and
carried the message of Jesus and His power throughout out the world.
The revival continued unabated for about three years, until 1909.
During the peak of the Azusa Street meetings, Seymour married Jennie
Evans Moore on May 13, 1908. She had been active in the Asbery home
Bible studies and was a faithful participant at the Azusa Street
mission. She and Seymour formed a ministry team, and she often
preached at the mission in his absence. The couple resided in a
small apartment above the mission.
Leaving a Legacy
Following the revival, Seymour continued to serve as
pastor of the Apostolic Faith Mission on Azusa Street. He envisioned
organizing schools, rescue missions, and planting other
congregations, but most of these goals were never actualized before
his death. He also traveled throughout the United States, fervently
preaching against racism. Ironically, he ultimately suffered
rejection from some of his initial converts over racial issues.
William Joseph Seymour died on September 28, 1922, and is buried at
Evergreen Cemetery in East Los Angeles, California. His widow,
Jennie, continued to pastor the mission after his death until at
least 1931.
Hailed by some as the founder of the modern Pentecostal movement,
Seymour’s consecrated lifestyle, devotion to prayer, and unwavering
commitment to preach Jesus Christ and the full gospel helped spark
spiritual renewal in the United States and the world. Today, over
half a billion Pentecostal and Charismatic believers throughout the
world are a testimony of the pivotal impact that the Azusa Street
meetings had on Christianity. Consequently, the Azusa Street revival
has been noted as one of the major world events of the Twentieth
Century. It is evident that William Seymour was a willing vessel
devoted to his Lord, and that God used him in a powerful way to help
spread the message of Jesus Christ to all the nations of the earth.
Sources
Much of this historical material was gleaned from the
research of Larry Martin, particularly from his books:
Holy Ghost Revival on Azusa Street: The True Believers. Joplin, MO:
Christian Life Books, 1998.
The Life and Ministry of William J. Seymour: and a History of the
Azusa Street Revival. Joplin, MO: Christian Life Books, 1999.
Other sources include:
Bartleman, Frank. Another Wave Rolls In. Monroeville,
PA: Whitaker Books, 1971.
Davis, Clara. Azusa Street Till Now: Eyewitness Accounts of the Move
of God. Tulsa, OK: Harrison House, 1989.
Nickel, Thomas R., Azusa Street Outpouring: as told to me by those
who were there. Hanford, CA: Great Commission International, 1979.
Robeck, Cecil M. “Azusa Street Revival.” In The New International
Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements, eds. Stanley M.
Burgess and Eduard M. van der Maas, 344-350. Grand Rapids, MI:
Zondervan, 2002.
Robeck, Cecil M. “William Joseph Seymour.” In The New International
Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements, eds. Stanley M.
Burgess and Eduard M. van der Maas, 1053-1058. Grand Rapids, MI:
Zondervan, 2002.
Valdez, A.C and James F. Scheer. Fire on Azusa Street. Costa Mesa,
CA: Gift Publications, 1980.
Special thanks to Louis Morgan for compiling the material for the
Historical Section of this website.
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