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| PentecostalTheology.comThe
Charismatic
Movement
Peter Hocken
than
origin
than the Pentecostal attention of
many
doctoral
on the
development of the
detailed
scholarly level,
191
in the United States
of the
it has not
yet
attracted the
so there are as
yet
no
movement in
any
at a
In this
article,
I will
attempt
to
survey
the
development Charismatic movement
in the mainline churches of the United States. Being
a movement or stream, it is of its nature more
fluid and
complex
a denomination or cluster of denominations.
Being
more recent in
movement,
candidates,
monographs
of the Charismatic
mainline churches of North America.’ There are a few historical studies which deal with
aspects
of this
subject,
for
example,
the
writings
of David E.
Harrell, Jr.,2 and,
at a more
popular level,
some books
by
Vinson
Synan.3
The
general
studies
are
mostly
of a more
popular character,
the most useful
being the two studies
by
Richard
Quebedeaux.4
the
movement in the
Dictionary of
the Pentecostal
one of the few
attempts
at an
available
Charismatic Charismatic
Movements remains
Recurring 1993). Perrin, Signs (Ph.D.
My
own article on
and
‘There
is, however,
a
comparative study of the Assemblies of God and the Catholic Charismatic Renewal from an ecumenical a Ph.D. Dissertation from Marquette University: Terrence
perspective, originally
Robert Crowe, Pentecostal
Unity:
Frustration and Enduring Hopes (Chicago, IL: Loyola University Press,
There is also a doctoral dissertation on the churches: Robin D.
and Wonders: The Growth
Vineyard
of the Iiineyard
Christian
Fellowship
Dissertation; Pulman, WA: Washington State University, 1989). There was a dissertation on the origins of the Charismatic movement in the mainline Churches of the United States that,
unfortunately, was never published: James T. Neo-Pentecostalism:
The Charismatic Revival in the Mainline Protestant Connelly, and
Chicago, Connelly
–
Roman Catholic Churches in the United States, 1960-1971
(Ph.D. Dissertation;
IL: The University of Chicago, 1977). There are, however, two articles
based on his doctoral research: “The Charismatic Movement:
by in As the
1967-1970,”
Spirit Leads Us, eds. Kevin and Dorothy Ranaghan (Paramus, NJ: Paulist Press, 1971), 211-232; “Not
in
Reputable
Churches? The
Reception
of the Charismatic Movement in the Mainline Churches in
America,”
in
Essays
on Apostolic Themes, ed. Paul Elbert (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 184-192.
1985),
Origins
2 See in particular All Things are Possible: The Healing and Charismatic Revivals in Modern America
(Bloomington,
IN: Indiana
University Press, 1975);
“The
and Evolution of the Charismatic
Revival, 1945-1980,”
Miscellanea Historiae Ecclesiasticae 7 (1985): 287-298; Pat Robertson: A Personal, and Political Portrait
(San Francisco, CA: Harper &
Religious
Row, Publishers,
‘ The
1987).
Twentieth-Century
Pentecostal The
Churches and Charismatic Renewal
Exciting
Growth Pentecostal
Explosion: Movements of FL: Creation Under His Banner: Full (Altamonte Business Springs, House, 1987);
Men ‘s
History of Gospel
Fellowship International (Costa Mesa, CA: Gift Publications, 1992). See also Richard M. Riss, A
MA: Hendrickson Survey of 20th-Century
Revival Movements in North America
Publishers, 1988), 147-162.
4 The New Charismatics (Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co., 1976) and The New Charismatics Il (San Francisco, CA: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1983).
(Peabody,
1
192
overview. Some other works
examining
the Charismatic movement that are more biblical and
theological
6
in their orientation contain some data on its historical
development.6
Statistical Evidence
There have been a few
attempts
to
gather
statistics
concerning
the involvement of North Americans in
charismatic-type Christianity.
The results of a
Christianity Today-Gallup poll
were
published
in 1980.’ This
poll
claimed that 19% of the
population
were Pentecostal or Charismatic,
and of
these,
17%-that is 4% of the
population-spoke in tongues. Of these Pentecostals and
Charismatics,
27% were Roman Catholic,
21%
Baptist,
8%
Methodist,
6%
Lutherans,
and 4% Presbyterians.’
These
percentages
tend to reflect the numerical
strength of these traditions in American
society.
In
spring 1992,
a national
survey
of
4,001
Americans was conducted for the Bliss Institute
by
the
Survey
Research Center at the
University of A.kron.9 The
survey,
entitled “The National
Survey
of Evangelicals,” was intended to
probe
the
diversity
within American
Evangelicalism. The
survey
used different tests to determine the extent of Pentecostal/Charismatic
experience
in the United States.
Using
the test of
self-description,
4.7% of the United States
population registered
as Pentecostal,
6.6% as
Charismatic,
and 0.8% used both
terms, giving
a total
percentage
of 12.1.’°
According
to this
survey
“outside the historic Pentecostal
denominations,
the label ‘charismatic’ is much more
likely
to be
adopted
than the term
‘pentecostal.’
The
only exception
to this
pattern
is found within
non-pentecostal
black churches where
approximately equivalent
numbers
expressed pentecostal
as charismatic identities.”” The
percentage
of the
population
who have on occasion
spoken
in tongues is lower: the
survey
found that 8.7% of the
5Peter D. Hocken, “Charismatic
Movement,” in Dictionary of Pentecostal
and Charismatic
Movements,
eds.
Stanley
M.
Burgess
and
Gary B.
McGee
(Grand Rapids,
MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1988). The section dealing with North America is on p. 130-144.
Charles E. Hummel, Fire in the Fireplace: Charismatic Renewal in the Nineties (Downers Grove, EL: InterVarsity Press,
6E.g.,
the Shame: on the
1993); Peter Hocken, The and Glory
Reflections 20th-Century Outpouring of the Holy Spirit (Guildford, England: Eagle, and Wheaton, IL: Harold Shaw Publishers, 1994). ‘ Kenneth S.
Kantzer,
“The Charismatics
Among Us,” Christianity Today, 22 February 1980, 25-29.
BKantzer,
“The Charismatics Among Us,” 25-26.
9 The information
concerning this
“The
survey and its findings is taken from a paper
Spirit-Filled Movements in Contemporary America: A Corwin E. Survey Perspective” by
Smidt,
on Mainstream
Lyman A. Kellstedt, John C. Green and
James L. Guth for a conference Protestantism and Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements held at Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, California, on March 10-12, 1994.
‘° Smidt, et al.,
“The Spirit-Filled Movements in Contemporary America,” 11-12. “Smidt,
et al., “The Spirit-Filled Movements in Contemporary America,” 17.
2
1.1%
of all Americans tongues.”” Taking
193
and
of Americans
sample
made this claim, of whom 2.5% were
white Pentecostal
black Pentecostals. 12
A more recent survey by the
Barna Research
Group reports
that 90%
“pray
to God” and 12%
pray
“in charismatic
a wider
range
of markers than
self-description
and glossolalia
as a way of
determining
the
percentage
who
Pentecostals and Charismatics
yielded higher figures:
22.9% of the American
public (917 of 4001 ),
of whom 47.1%
(432 of 917)
exhibited
markers.” Of the
larger
25.8% were
are
full charismatic
Charismatics within Evangelical Catholics and 15.5% Pentecostals
number,
denominations,
22.1% Roman (white
and
black).”
It would
appear
experience
been
steadily spreading and, (2)
it is mainline
that 6%
belonged
to nondenominational Charismatic churches. ‘?
Thus, this 1992
survey suggests
overall that
(1)
Charismatic has
in the
general population
of the United
States;
not a
deeply-anchored phenomenon
in the life of the
churches.
.
Charismatic
The General
Development of the
in the Mainline Churches
Movement
The comments conversations 1994; (2) familiarity
preparation
Dictionary of Pentecostal
and
from
or
Movements;
in the and, (5)
some
join American groupings
that follow are based on:
(1)
interviews
with several Charismatic leaders
during
the first half of
with most of the literature
emanating Charismatic Renewal
agencies, particularly
the denominational confessional
family
newsletters or
magazines;” (3)
some research done in the
early
1980s on Charismatic
origins; (4)
further research done in
for the article on the “Charismatic Movement”
and Charismatic
recent research on
independent
Charismatic churches and
why people
them. This
survey
does not cover the United
Methodists,
the
Baptists,
other than the
Anabaptist.’8 *
the Southern
Spirit-Filled
Baptists
or
any
of the smaller
12 Smidt, et al., “The Spirit-Filled Movements in Contemporary America,” 10-11. The survey shows that “slightly more than one-half of those affiliated with white pentecostal
churches
report speaking
in
tongues,
while
only one-third
of those affiliated with black
National and International pentecostal
churches do so” (14).
“See
Religion Report,
17 May 1993. It is not clear whether the 12% is of the whole population or 12% of the 90% who pray to God. “Smidt, et al., “The Spirit-Filled Movements in Contemporary America,” 22-23. “Smidt, et al., “The Spirit-Filled Movements in Contemporary America,” 23. ‘6This figure is arrived at
by deducting
the mainline Evangelical Charismatics (25.8%) from the total “Third Wave” figure of 31.8% given in Smidt, et aL, “The
Movements in Contemporary America,” 24.
“These
periodicals
are: Acts 29
(Episcopal
Renewal
Renewal
Ministries);
Lutheran
(International Lutheran Renewal Council); Renewal News
and Reformed Renewal Ministries
(Presbyterian
International);
Manna
(United
Methodist Renewal Services
Committee); and, Empowered
(Empowered Ministries, representing Renewal in the
‘8 These
Anabaptist stream).
omissions reflect a
variety
of factors: a lesser amount of reliable
3
194
Hardly any
mainline Christian tradition in the United States
reports
a steady growth
and
expansion
of Charismatic Renewal
throughout
the period
from the 1970s to the 1990s. In
virtually
all
cases,
the 1970s saw an element of “denominationalization” of the movement,’9 partly stimulated
by
the Catholic
example,” partly
necessitated
by
the stream element in the
planning
and execution of the Kansas
City
conference of July
1977.
Almost all the seasoned Charismatic leaders in the United States see the Kansas
City
conference as a kind of
high
watermark of the movement. Those
present
were convinced that this
epic
event was ushering
in a new era of
spiritual awakening
and of inter-stream cooperation.
Instead of this
hope being realized,
most date the beginnings
of decline and/or lack of direction from the
period immediately following
Kansas
City
which Crowe describes as “an
apex of unrealized desires.”” Some are convinced that the decline followed from a failure to heed the
major prophecies given
at Kansas
City calling the
shepherds
of the flocks to
repentance.
The
ups
and downs since Kansas
City vary
from tradition to tradition;
the causes of this variation would seem to include: denominational
openness
to
spiritual renewal; degree
of denominational or confessional
identity; quality
of national renewal
leadership; and,
the degree
of
reception
into local
congregational
life. The factors
affecting all traditions include a highly mobile
population;
faddish
approaches
to religion;
a culture oriented toward self-fulfillment and thus a
tendency for the culture to subvert the
gospel; and,
a
pragmatic society
more given
to action than reflection.
.
The Charismatic
Renewal
Among Episcopalians
movement in the
Episcopal
Church has seen three
main
phases:
the first
ending
in
1978;
the second
covering
the
period from 1978 to
1991;
and the third from 1991 on. Two men in particular. have influenced
Episcopal
renewal: Dennis Bennett
(1917-91)
and Everett L.
(“Terry”)
Fullam
(1930- ).
Their
gifts, emphases
and strongest
influence
correspond respectively
to the first two
periods.
In the first
period,
the
emphasis
was on
experience;
there was little
information,
the lack of denominational renewal newsletters among the fewer
Baptists,
figures
with a national
profile.
The Southern
Baptists
with Charismatic experience
and convictions have used the term “Fulness” to describe themselves, in view of the
mostly
in
opposition
to
explicitly
Charismatic claims and terminology
the denomination. A
magazine
F;Iness was
published
from 1978-1990, and then replaced with a much slimmer communique. My research on
Charismatic churches will be part of the forthcoming second issue of PNEUMA on the Charismatic Renewal.
independent
“See later sections for details of denominational or confessional Charismatic agencies. 20
21 See Hocken, “Charismatic Movement,” in DPCM, 136. Crowe, Pentecostal
Unity, 92. ..
4
195
thinking through
of Charismatic
experience
in relation to the
Episcopal Church and its tradition. The
“theology”
of Renewal was
largely
the use of Pentecostal
language,
and for all the
courage
and
clarity
of Dennis Bennett’s witness, his theology never won over
all the leaders in the
Episcopal
Renewal. The
early
1970s saw both the
period
of
major influence from the
Episcopal
Church of the Redeemer in Houston, Texas,
led
by Graham Pulkingham,22
and the formation of the
Episcopal Charismatic
Fellowship (ECF)
at Dallas,
Texas,
in 1973.
A new
phase
can be dated from
1978, particularly
due to the
impetus for Church Renewal in the
Episcopal
Church
coming
from the International
Anglican
Conference on
Spiritual
Renewal held at Canterbury, England, just
before the
bishops
of the
Anglican Communion
gathered
for their
ten-yearly
Lambeth Conference of that year.”
Stimulated
by
the
impact
of the 1975 Rome conference of Roman Catholic
Charismatics, Anglican
Charismatic leaders
sought
to convey
a fresh vision of the Charismatic Renewal
serving
the renewal of the churches of the
Anglican
Communion.24
Many Episcopal Charismatics had been alarmed
by
the excesses associated with the Discipleship movement,
and saw the
remedy
in a
deeper
interaction between the Renewal and their historic
Anglican
convictions and praxis. Thus,
the second
period
was marked
by
several features all pertaining
to Church renewal.
The immediate
impetus
of
Canterbury
1978 was evident in the series of twelve Conferences on Parish Renewal
organized by
the ECF for 1979,
described as
emphasizing
“Renewal
Episcopal Style. ,2′
The new vision was
particularly expressed
in ECF’s
change
of name to
Episcopal Renewal Ministries
(ERM)
in 1980. This
change
reflected
(1)
a concern not to
arrogate
exclusive claims for
itself,
a
willingness
to
cooperate with other currents of
spiritual
renewal26 and a desire to be a leaven within the wider church rather than a movement
apart; and, (2)
a development
from a focus on the individual to concern for the renewal of
parish
life.
Thus,
ERM’s new statement of purpose declared: “ERM
22 Besides the publicity generated by Pulkingham’s two books, Gathered for Power (New York,
NY: Morehouse-Barlow Co.,
1972) and They Left Their Nets (New York, NY: Morehouse-Barlow Co., 1973), the Church of the Redeemer was lauded Michael
experiment
by Harper in A New Way of Living (Plainfield, NJ: Logos International, 1973).
“See A New
Canterbury
Tale: The
Reports of
the
Anglican
International Conference
on
Spiritual
Renewal held at
Canterbury, July
1978
(Bramcote, England: 24
Grove Books, 1978) with an introduction by Michael
Michael Harper and Terry Fullam had been at the Rome
Harper.
conference. “They were taking part,
as observers, in the large Catholic charismatic gathering in Rome in 1975, when they conceived the idea for an Anglican gathering” [Charles M. Irish, “Praying
for the Death of the Charismatic Movement,” Acts 29 (August/September 1978): 6J. 25
26 See Acts 29 (December 1978): 1. See below for instances of such collaboration.
5
196
teaching,
Biblical
preaching,
worship,
characterized
by
biblical
teaching
ordered
of
leaders,
all
Fullam
epitomizes
this
period, profoundly biblical, well-grounded who,
as one observer remarked, teaching
sound
eminently
reasonable.”
Though
there were
pioneer
is dedicated to the renewal of the
people
and
parishes through apostolic
historic and charismatic experience. “27
This new
phase
was
particularly
to
spiritual growth,
to the exercise of gifts and to the formation
within the framework of
ordinary
church life.
Terry
as he is a
gifted
teacher who is
in
contemporary scholarship,
and
“has the
ability
to make radical
renewed
parishes
in the
Episcopal
a
significant
increase in
formation,
the second
period infra-structures-several Charismatic for Christian Renewal
Charismatic
component.
The
theological college, Trinity (TESM)
features of
Church before
1978/8
this second
period
saw
their number. In line with the
developing emphasis
on
teaching
and
saw the rise of various renewal
and a
theological college
collaborate;
missionary societies,
an Institute
with a
strong
Episcopal
School for
Ministry
illustrates certain distinctive
Church. These
identifying
in
Ambridge, Pennsylvania,
Renewal in the
Episcopal
characteristics are
( 1 ) the willingness
of different renewal
groups
to
(2)
the
emergence
of a strong Evangelical sector within the Episcopal Church; and, (3)
the
coming together
elements. TESM was not founded as a Charismatic
institution,
Catholic
but had a biblical and
Evangelical
of
Evangelical
and
vision
arising
out of
Evangelical
increasing secularity
Church.
However,
Charismatic
Renewal,
to its foundation. Of the
original Charismatic; by 1994,
the student
currents within the
Episcopal
Church29 that were
seeking
to counter the
of American culture and its influence on the
from its
inception
in
1976,
TESM was
open
to
as one
among
the currents that had contributed
17
students,
about one-third were body
had risen to
150,
and the
of the whole. A
parallel
number of Charismatics to
three-quarters
the
faculty,
led since 1990
by Bishop
development
has
happened among
by Fullam, explains
(Ted Nelson);
InterVarsity Fellowship impact
27This statement of purpose is found in Acts 29 (Summer 1980): 2. A short article
“It’s Official-Our Name is Changed,” Acts 29 (Summer 1980): 3-4,
the reasons for the change from ECF to ERM. That Fullam played a role in this formulation is indicated
major
by
his
personal explanation
of these four elements in “What is a Charismatic Church?” Acts 29 3!4 (1985): 1-2.
28 The most prominent
examples were St. Luke’s, Seattle, WA (Dennis Bennett); St. Paul’s, Darien, CT
and Truro (Terry
Fullam); the Church of the Resurrection, Dallas, TX
Church, Fairfax, VA (John Howe).
29Faith Alive
(begun by
the Brotherhood of St. Andrew and Fred
Gore);
on the
E. similar
Episcopal Church, especially Charles
through
Hummel; influences from Campus Crusade and later from the Cursillo
movement; the Charismatic Movement. Students coming out of these movements were entering Episcopal seminaries that did not know what to do with them.
6
197
and the first
Episcopal
bishop
to
identify strongly
TESM has also come
William
Frey,
former
Bishop
of
Colorado,
with Charismatic Renewal.
to
long
been in
strong
tension
represent
a
Catholic-Evangelical
has
as this work of the
Holy Spirit
and has
encouraged
biblical
orthodoxy
Winter
Park,
Florida in 1986. Evangelicals, Anglo-Catholics United for
Revelation,
rapprochement
within the
Episcopal
Church.3° While
Anglicanism
contained
Evangelical
and Catholic
wings,
these have
commonly
with each other. The Charismatic factor has perhaps
facilitated this
reconciliation,
has touched all strands within the
Church,
Evangelical
convictions without an anti-Catholic bias.3′
The
coming together
of
Episcopalians
with a
strong
concern for
and Church renewal led to the “3Rs” conference at
“that the Lord
Apostolic Witness,
Institutional
developments
of
Leadership
This
gathering
brought together
believed Salvation, Preaching,
held at the
Evergreen
The Institutes have
steadily courses for
clergy, spouses
of
and Charismatics to form
Episcopalians
Renewal and Reformation. 32 A Statement of United
Purpose
selected as areas in which the
participants
has
spoken
to us”:
Authority,
Life in the
Spirit, Evangelism
and Mission.33
later in this
period
have included the sponsoring Training Institutes,
Conference Center in Colorado now run
by ERM,34
and the foundation of the Order of St.
Philip
the
Evangelist.
and now offer
week-long
and an Advanced
Leadership follow-up
for
Clergy.
the desire to
develop Renewal-Episcopal style and
the rise of
a
strong
Charismatic
component, Episcopal
Renewal has not
yet produced any major theological writings.
This
lack, paralleled
in other
traditions, may
reflect the activist character of both American
expanded clergy, lay people
Despite TESM with
society
and of Pentecostal/Charismatic also
apologetics
Christianity
in
general.
It
may
of
theological energy
in
reflect with TESM the
absorption
and the defense of historic doctrinal
orthodoxy.35
By
the late
1980s,
the Charismatic Renewal in the
Episcopal
Church was made
largely up
of
(1)
small
groups
of Charismatics scattered across the United States without
ready
access to
any
Renewed
parish;
that
incorporated many
elements from the Charismatic
(2) parishes
30 this coming together is indicated by the publication The Evangelical Catholic,
in 1977.
Leadership Transforming Experience,”
Perspective,”
begun “The
Evangelical and Catholic Covenant begins with the declaration: “We believe that the Evangelical Faith and Catholic Order which the Anglican Communion has received 32 are
A
God-given.”
leaflet about
the
Episcopalians United further explains the 3 Rs: “the Revelation of God,
Renewal of the Church, the Reformation of
“SeeActs 29 4/2
Society.”
(1986): 1-3, statement dated 10 January 1986.
34 In 1989. See the announcement in Acts 29 (May 1989): 1, and Kevin Martin “A
Acts 29 (July/August 1990): 6.
“For a thoughtful reflection on Charismatic Renewal in the Episcopal Church, and some of the theological tensions within it, see D. William Faupel, “An
Mission
Analytical
and Ministry 7 (Spring 1990): 35-41.
7
198
Renewal into their
corporate life-emphasis
on
personal experience
of the
Spirit, every
member
ministry, styles
of
praise
and music in worship,
ministries of
healing-without describing
themselves as Charismatic; and, (3) overtly
Charismatic
parishes
with the
regular manifestation of
spiritual gifts
in their
Sunday liturgy.
Besides these people
and
parishes,
there are numerous
“post-charismatics,” many
of whom see their Charismatic
experience
as a
significant phase
on the way
to a richer
spirituality.
Within the above
categories,
the second would be far more numerous than the third,
though
the third has been increasing
in recent
years.
Parishes in the second would often
regard those in the third
overtly
Charismatic
category
as rather extreme and less
Episcopalian.
– .
The third
phase
in
Episcopal
Renewal dates from the
early 1990s, and reflects a
growing struggle
within the
Episcopal
Church for basic Christian
orthodoxy
in faith and morals. The difference between the third
period
and the second is that more renewed
Episcopalians
are facing
the
question:
“Will there be a future for Renewal within the Episcopal
Church?” So there is a
widespread
sense
among many Episcopal
Charismatics that it is not sufficient to
evangelize
and provide formation;
there is also a battle to be
fought against
unbelief within the Church. ERM has not until now
played
an
apologetic role, partly
because this is the direct interest of
Episcopalians
United. The role of Charismatics in
Episcopalians
United has the attraction of working
with fellow church
members,
but it can run the risk of alliance with bodies which
may
be more conservative than
they are,
and which may
not be as
open
to the creative work of the
Holy Spirit.36
Several Charismatic leaders remarked that in the last decade the middle has
dropped
out of the
Episcopal Church,
so that both the House of
Bishops
and the
clergy
in
general
are now more
polarized between the
doctrinally
conservative and the liberal. While renewed parishes
have
grown
in their
membership, many
of the new members have no
deep loyalty
to the
Episcopal
Church. The Charismatic
clergy, who
generally
do have such a loyalty, are not
itching
to
jump ship,
but many
know that
they
are in a
spiritual battle,
which could face
them with
painful decisions,
if the battle
goes
the
wrong way.
There has been a
widespread Episcopal tendency
to
play
down a distinctive Charismatic
movement,
and instead to understand the Charismatic sector as one dimension of a wider Renewal. In the third phase,
there is
stronger
affirmation of basic
Evangelical-Catholic identity among
renewed
Episcopalians, though
the assertion of Charismatic
identity
remains more
problematic.
Episcopal
Renewal is also characterized
by stronger
international connections than other
traditions, excepting
the Roman Catholic. The historic
Episcopal
link with Britain has been seen in visits from
leading
16 This point is taken up again in the conclusion.
8
199
Anglican
Charismatics from
England, especially
Michael
Harper and, more
recently, Bishop
David
Pytches,
as an
Anglican exponent
of the message
of John Wimber. The
Anglican
Communion worldwide has a Charismatic
agency
called
SOMA, 37 which has branches
in both the United States and Canada. SOMA is not a service agency
for Charismatic Renewal on the
pattern
of the Roman Catholic office in Rome,
but is a mission
body, aiming
to send out and receive inter-cultural short-term mission teams.
Renewal
Among
Lutherans
As in most of the mainline
churches,
the Charismatic Renewal
among Lutherans saw a
rapid growth
in numbers
during
the 1970s. It was estimated that
by
the
mid-1970s,
some 10% of Lutherans identified with the movement.38 A 1979
Gallup poll
for
Christianity Today estimated the
figure
as twenty
per
cent.
Also
parallel
to
many
other
traditions,
Lutheran Charismatic Renewal appears
to have suffered some decline
during
the 1980s. Attendance at the annual International Lutheran Conference on the
Holy Spirit peaked around 1980 at
18,000,39 though
the fall to the more recent level of 4,000-5,000 appears
to have
happened
in the mid-1980s.
However, big conferences are not the
only indicator,
and
virtually
all traditions saw a shift from
big
national events to smaller
regional
events
during
the 1980s. A rather different
picture
is
given by
a
survey
conducted
by Fuller
Theological Seminary
of Lutheran
pastors
of all Lutheran denominations. The Fuller
survey gave
the
following
results
While there are
clearly many
“ex-Charismatics”
among
the Lutherans,
the movement does not show
signs
of serious recession. At
“SOMA,
besides its Greek meaning, is an
acronym for Sharing
of Ministries Abroad. It publishes a newsletter called Sharing, produced with different national versions.
38Larry Christenson, ed.,
Welcome, Holy Spirit (Minneapolis, MN:
Augsburg Publishing House, 1987), 354.
“Lutheran Charismatic Renewal 6 (September 1980): 1.
‘o C. Peter
Wagner, “Survey
of the Growth of the Charismatic
Renewal,” unpublished
Pentecostal
report (1985),
cited in Vinson
Synan,
The
Twentieth-Century
(Altamonte
“Pastors declared” includes those who Explosion
Springs,
FL: Creation
House, 1987),
118.
acknowledge their Charismatic experience publicly, whereas “Pastors charismatic” includes those who report a Charismatic experience but who had not then made a public disclosure of this experience.
.
”
9
200
American Lutherans church
leadership,
has, however,
to one-third of participants
may concentration
Assigning
distinct
periods
One reason is Renewal, originally
called
first director
and then
each national
conference,
about
one-quarter
are new to the movement. Continued
growth among
Lutherans owe
something
to their
geographical
in
particular
states, and to local
patterns
of
fellowship
and service. The Renewal
among
made
very
little
impact
on the
both
governmental
and
theological,
in marked contrast to Lutheran Renewal in some Third World countries.
The Lutheran Renewal seems to have
changed
less in its
history
than
Renewal in other traditions.
is more difficult for the Lutherans.
for Lutheran
Renewal Services
(LCRS),
has been under the capable leadership Christenson,
its formation in 1974.
LCRS,
now called International Lutheran Renewal Center
(ILRC),41
serves all Lutheran
denominations, and has
always
included on its board
representatives
recently-formed
now the
largest numerically.
One of the more
significant developments
the Charismatic
to its
development
that the service
agency Lutheran Charismatic
of
Larry chairman,
since
churches. The America
(ELCA)
is
relation to the more conservative
Christians, organization,
Evangelical
from the different Lutheran Church of
Lutheran
in Lutheran Renewal is in Church-Missouri
Synod
(LCMS),
which was
very
critical of Charismatic Renewal in the earlier days.42
Because LCMS had a rule
prohibiting fellowship
with other
LCMS Charismatics formed their own Renewal service
Renewal in Missouri
(RIM),
in 1987 when
opposition
to Renewal had
significantly
decreased.43 A series of meetings were held in 1990 and 1992 between
representatives
of
Synod
and RIM to resolve the difficulties raised for denominational
significant
advance in
understanding
governance by the Renewal.
A occurred,
and a statement was
Some
drawn
up
with a series of common affirmations and
rejections.” difficulties remain
unresolved,
and these
meetings
will
probably continue.
simply
” In
1982, Lutheran Charismatic Renewal Services (LCRS) was merged with the International Lutheran Center for Church Renewal to form the International Lutheran Renewal Center (ILRC). At the same time, the LCRS newsletter Lutheran Charismatic Renewal was renamed International Lutheran Renewal. From January 1993, when publication was
Lutheran
changed from monthly to quarterly, the title became
Renewal, though still the newsletter of ILRC.
42 See the 1972 statement “The Charismatic Movement and Lutheran Theology” in Presence, Power, Praise: Documents
on the Charismatic
Renewal, ed. Kilian McDonnell (3 vols.; Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical Press, 1980), I, 321-363; the 1975 “Policy Statement Regarding the Neo-Pentecostal Movement,” in Presence Power Praise,
II,
I S-22 and the 1977
report
“The Lutheran Church and the Charismatic Movement: Guidelines for
Congregations
and
Pastors,”
in Presence Power Praise,
II, 307-324.
“The LCMS service agency, Renewal in Missouri, is led by Delbert Rossin, and
a newsletter entitled RIM Report. LCMS representatives continue to serve on the ILCS board.
produces
“RIMReport
21 (February 1994): 1, 3.
10
direction. the
Presbyterians,
traditions. There LCRS,
with a
group
201
leaders and teachers,
Phases in the evolution of LCRS and ILRS
are also less
easy
to identify
because there have been no clear
changes
of
policy
and
The Lutherans have not
produced
the kinds of
programs
of
for
example,
but Lutherans were
probably
more oriented to
congregational
renewal at an earlier
phase
than some other
was a
strong teaching ministry
from the start of
of
widely recognized
including Larry Christenson,
Dennis
Pederson,
Delbert
Rossin,
Morris
Voeks and Paul Anderson.
During
the
1980s,
the Lutherans
developed
a
strong
international with several of
and
leading
teams to most continents of the
Vaagenes,
George
their teachers
speaking world.
The Lutherans form attachment
discovered that
they being schwdrmerei,
outreach,”
tradition,
with a
strong of the 16th
century.
The
appealing
to
spiritual
a confessional
to the doctrinal confessions
development
of the Charismatic Renewal
among
Lutherans has been marked
by
this tradition.
First,
more
negatively,
Lutheran Charismatics
needed to defend themselves
against
the
charge
of
that is to
say,
enthusiasts
experience apart
from Word and sacrament.
Secondly,
more
positively, Lutheran Charismatics formulated a
stronger
doctrinal foundation in their
teaching. Thirdly,
Lutheran Charismatics have a stronger sense of
than
many
of the other mainline traditions
in the Charismatic Renewal. This confessional
identity
was reflected in the book Welcome
Holy Spirit’
international consultation and offered an
historical, theological,
biblical
of the Renewal
confessional represented
identity
and
practical understanding
which resulted from an
from
a Lutheran
.
among Lutherans,
Sexuality,” sharply Christenson’s necessitating
perspective.
In
general,
ILRC has not
played
a
significant
role in the
politics
of American Lutheranism.
However,
the recent ELCA
report
on “Human
which
departs
from the historic Lutheran
teaching,
drew a
critical
response
from
Larry
Christenson in Lutheran Renewal.
critique
attracted much attention
the
printing of 30,000
extra
copies.4′
Renewal
Among Presbyterians
Charismatic Renewal in
Presbyterian
tradition,
and
Reformed
and Reformed Churches in the
United States has been characterized
by the following
five features.
1. In the earlier
years,
there was
stronger opposition
to Charismatic Renewal in some local
governmental
bodies than in
any
other
major
other than the Lutherans of the Missouri
Synod.
Several Charismatic ministers were involved in church
litigation seeking
to remove them from their
pastoral charges.
What became known as the 46 4’This was reflected in the name change mentioned in note 41. See note 38.
47 L. Christenson, “ELCA ‘Human
Sexuality’ Paper:
A
Response”
Lutheran Renewal 158 (January 1994): 1-6.
11
202
Presbyterian
Charismatic Communion
(PCC)
was the first denominational or confessional Charismatic body to
be formed in 1966.48 One of the
primary
motives in the establishment of PCC was to provide support
for
beleaguered pastors.’9
2. The
Presbyterian
Churches
gave
more serious
theological attention to the Charismatic movement than other Protestant Churches in the United States.so
3. While the Charismatic movement touched a
large
number of Presbyterian
and Reformed
Christians,
a considerable number of these subsequently
left their denomination to
join
Pentecostal or Charismatic Churches. A
report
in Renewal News in 1984 stated: “Since then [1966],
it is
conservatively
estimated that between
3,000
and
4,000 Presbyterian
and Reformed
pastors
in the United States have been involved in the charismatic renewal
personally
and between
200,000 and
250,000 laypersons.
Over one-half of these
laypersons
have left the Presbyterian
and Reformed denominations
during
the
past
15 5′ or 20 years feeling
unwelcomed or
deprived
of
spiritual
nourishment.”
4. PCC was founded to serve Charismatic Renewal in the various Presbyterian
and Reformed denominations. In
playing
this
role,
PCC was similar to its Lutheran
equivalent,
but different from the
Episcopal and United Methodist bodies that
simply
served Renewal in one Church. The
high
level of
“leakage”
of
Presbyterian
and Reformed Charismatics,
much
greater seemingly
than that of
Lutherans,
is possibly
linked with the more
liturgical
and confessional character of Lutheranism that
gives
Lutherans a
stronger
sense of traditional identity.
5. Unlike the
Episcopal Renewal,
the movement
among Presbyterians
and Reformed had no dominant
figures
who had significant impact
at a national level.
Phases of Development
The first identifiable
phase
is that of
spontaneous beginnings followed
by sporadic opposition
to Charismatic ministers. This
period came to an end in
1968,
with the reversal of the decision of the Phoenix
” Its original name was “The Charismatic Communion of Presbyterian Ministers.” ” It was in 1972 that it was
opened
to
lay persons
and the title
changed
to Presbyterian
Charismatic Communion
“An
(PCC).
early PCC
Newsletter includes the statement the
C. “Brick” Bradford: “Some
following by Secretary,
Synod
Executives and some Ministerial Relations Committees have cast shadows across the
George
competence of ministers who have received the Presbyterian
baptism in the Spirit with the manifestations as
described in Acts 2:4″ 3
Holy
(Newsletter, July 1967, 1). 50 See the
statements on “The Work of the
Holy Spirit” (United Presbyterian Church, USA, 1970) and “The Person and Work of the
Reference to ‘the in the
Holy Spirit, with Special
(Presbyterian Church in the United States, 1971), 51
in McDonnell, Presence, Power, Praise, I.
Baptism Holy Spirit”‘
“Presbyterian Charismatic Communion Changes Name to Presbyterian Renewal Ministries International,” Renewal News 84 (May-June 1984): 1.
‘
12
203
Presbytery
in Arizona that had
placed
severe restrictions on the Charismatic
practice
and
fellowship
of Rev. Robert C. Whitaker. Whitaker took his case to the
judicial
committee of the United Presbyterian
Church
(UPC)
at the national
level,
who found in Whitaker’s favor. This
controversy
contributed to the UPC
setting up
a study committee, leading
to their 1970
report
on the Charismatic Renewal. The decision for Whitaker
effectively
ended the initial
period of hassle and trial for Charismatic ministers.
A second
period
can be identified between 1968 and 1983-84. Presbyterians
shared in the Charismatic
surge
of the
1970s,
but the pressures
to
develop
a distinctively confessional form of Renewal were less evident than in the
Episcopal Church,
nor were there
comparable Charismatic infra-structures. There was a rise in the number of renewed congregations,
with an increased attention to
teaching.
It
was, however, only
in 1983 that PCC
began
to
develop training programs, following
a 1981 decision that PCC should focus on “the spiritual
renewal of the local church as a
community
of faith. ,,52 As a result,
the
“Spirit
Alive”
campaigns
were introduced as a
multi-year congregational
renewal
program. 53
The
following year,
in
1984,
PCC changed
its name to
Presbyterian
and Reformed Renewal Ministries International
(PRRMI). 54
These
steps, however,
did not halt the decline in the Charismatic Renewal movement
among Presbyterians
and Reformed. A
degree
of revitalization came with the
appointment
of Dr. Zeb Bradford
Long
as executive director of PRRMI from
January,
1990.55 Brad
Long,
who had been a
missionary
in Taiwan since
1980,
came from a situation of
dynamic
Charismatic
expansion
back to an American situation that was visibly
less vital than what
Long
had known in the 1970s.
Long
moved the PRRMI offices from Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma,
to Black Mountain,
North
Carolina,
and has been instrumental in bringing a new dynamism
to
Presbyterian-Reformed
Renewal. New
programs indicating
Brad
Long’s priorities
and convictions include the
following: (1)
the Dunamis
Project,
a retreat
program
aimed at
leadership development ; 56 (2) Prayer Mountains; 5′ and, (3)
Overseas Mission
Alive Events Emerging,” Renewal News 80 (September-October 1983): 1. See also “”Spirit
Gary R Sweeten, “Renewal of Congregations of All Sizes,” Renewal News 67 (July-August 1981): 3.
?3 See “First
Spirit
Alive Event Blesses
Many,”
Renewal News 82
1984): 1, 3-4;
and Carter
Blaisdell, “Spirit Alive,” Renewal News 125 (Winter 1992): 1, 3.
(January-February
“‘Renewal News 84
1984): 1, 3.
5″‘Brad Long Succeeds (May-June
Bradford,” Renewal News 116 (September-October 1989): 1,3.
The first Dunamis Project was held in early 1991: see “The Dunamis Project for Leadership Development,” Renewal News 121 (Fall 1990): 1.
Mountain retreats are described as a following of Jesus “to a
with the Father: see
“Prayer lonely place”
“Prayer Mountains,” Renewal News 122 (Winter 1991): 1.
13
204
adopted by
PRRMI in 1993
Outreach. S8 A new Mission Statement
reflects the addition of these further three
emphases
to
congregational
renewal.’9
teaching Vigils during
defender
with.
This recent
emphasis
on
prayer
has been
accompanied by regular
on
spiritual
warfare and the
holding
since 1991 of
Prayer
the annual
general assembly
of the
Presbyterian
Church (USA).60 During
this
period
PRRMI has
played
an
increasing
role as a
and advocate of traditional biblical
orthodoxy
in faith and morals, particularly
within the PCUSA.6′
Growing
dissatisfaction the liberal direction of national and
theological leadership
in the
to
smaller and
denominations,
PCUSA has led some Charismatic withdraw and
join
Presbyterian-Reformed
Presbyterian
Church. 62
Renewal in the
Anabaptist
Presbyterian congregations
more conservative
particularly
the
Evangelical
Tradition
and the Church of the
seems
by
now to
Charismatic
Brethren, though perhaps have had a
greater impact early
outbreak
among
Mennonites
Renewal
among
the Mennonites
slower at the
beginning,
than in most other Christian traditions. An
by Virgil Vogt. residential
community
in Minnesota
developed
as an
fellowship.63
A
significant
independent ministry
outside the Mennonite
impulse
came from the Reba Place
Fellowship
in Evanston, Illinois, led
Reba Place
began
around 1957 as an intentional
in the
inner-city,
and
only
became Charismatic in the
early
1970s. Due to the fact that a majority of the members of Reba Place were Mennonite the community’s relationship
beginnings
.59 “Exalting Christ, Igniting
with the
Congregational
‘$ See “Overseas Mission Outreach,” Renewal News 124 (Fall 1991): 1, 3. This article notes that “Both the Dunamis Project and the Prayer Mountains had their
in Korea and Taiwan” (3).
the Church in the power of the
Prayer…. Leadership Development….
Renewal…. Mission Holy Spirit through Outreach…. So That the Church
May be Empowered To Do
All That Christ Commands.” Renewal News 130 (Spring 1993): 16.
‘See
Doug McMurry,
“A
Report
on the PC
(USA)
General
Assembly Prayer Vigil,” Renewal News 131 (Summer 1993): 12. 6′ This role is
particularly
evident in Renewal News 134 (Spring
1994) with the controversies
following
the denominational
support
for the
Re-Imagining God, Church and the Community Conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in November 1993.
prominent Presbyterian congregations
62 The Evangelical Presbyterian Church (EPC) was founded around 1980 from the United Presbyterian Church, the northern denomination in the 1985 union between the
major Presbyterian
denominations of the North and the South. Of the six
listed as PCUSA in my article “Charismatic Movement” in Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements, eds. M. Burgess and Gary B. McGee (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan
Stanley
Publishing House, 1988), 140, three have since seceded to join
EPC: those in Pompano Beach, FL; Virginia Beach, VA; and Charlotte, NC.
63 see Gerald Derstine,
Following the
Fire
(Plainfield,
NJ:
Logos International,
1980).
14
205
Mennonite
Church became an
important
issue. The
relationship
went through
a number of
phases
from
approval
to
disapproval
and dissociation,
but to later affiliation as a local church with the Mennonite Church
and the Church of the Brethren. 64
Mennonite Renewal Services (MRS)
was one of the denominational service agencies
founded in 1975 in order to have denominational sessions
within the Kansas
City
conference of
July
1977. Renewal was steadily spreading
in Mennonite and Brethren circles in the 1970s. A major
role was
played by
Nelson Litwiller
(1898-1986),
a retired missionary baptized
in the
Holy Spirit
in 1970.65 Litwiller
brought
to Anabaptist
renewal a wisdom and
serenity,
as well as a breadth of vision fed
by
over 40
years
of
missionary
service in Latin America and symbolized by
his
baptism
in the
Spirit through
the
ministry
of Catholic Charismatics from Notre Dame.
As in some other
traditions,
MRS
gave up
its annual conference in favor of 12
regional
conferences. But
by
the
mid-1980s,
the numbers supporting
such events and the finances of MRS were in decline.
Yet, in the
Anabaptist stream,
it would seem that this decline was more of a problem
of
servicing
the Lord’s work and a lack of over-all coherence than of a real diminution in the number of Mennonite Charismatics. A need was felt to
help congregations
in
renewal,
and a national consultation was called for 1987.? At this
meeting,
the renewal organization
of the Church of the Brethren was
integrated
with
MRS; membership
was
opened
to
congregations
as well as
individuals;
and attention was
paid
to the five-fold ministries
of Ephesians
4:11 and how to revitalize them in church life. 67
In
1989,
MRS was
changed
to become
Empowered
Ministries
(EM) “Fostering Renewal, Unity
and Mission in the
Anabaptist
Stream. ,18 Doug Fike, currently
executive director of
EM,
estimates that 50%-55% of those
associating
with EM are
Mennonites,
25%-30% are Brethren,
and 20% from Related Renewal
Congregations.69
With a new and coherent vision focused on
“Empowered
for Mission” with
emphasis
on
missions, evangelism
and
training
of
“For a
history of the Reba Place Fellowship up
to
1987, see Dave and Neta Jackson, 6S Glimpses of Glory (Elgin, IL: Brethren Press, 1987).
Litwiller’s witness is in Roy S. Koch, ed., My Personal Pentecost (Scottdale, PA: Herald Press,
1977),
106-117. Tributes
following Litwiller’s death are found
in Empowered
5 (Winter 1987).
66See Mahlon D. Miller, “A
Fellowship
of in
Renewal?,”
5 (Spring 1987): 9.
Congregations
Empowered
6′ See the
Policy Statement of MRS in Empowered 5 (Summer
5
1987): 15; and “MRS Projects Future Course,” Empowered
(Summer 1987): 14.
68 See the chair’s address by V.
Vogt, “Harvest Time,”
7 1989): 1-2, 9-10; and
the
reports by R.
Koch and H.
Empowered (Summer
Gingerich, Empowered 7 (Summer 1989): 13. An article that shows clearly the newly emerging direction is V. Vogt, “New Dimension of Renewal,” Empowered 6 8-9. 69Interview of author with D. Fike, 11 May 1994.
(Winter 1988):
15
206
ministry
to form vibrant church
fellowships,
EM has
gained increasing support
and is in
expansion. Many
renewed
congregations
within EM are now
pursuing
a cell
growth strategy.
A new Resource Center is being developed
in Warm
Springs, Virginia.
Charismatic Renewal in the
Anabaptist
streams has then
probably
had more
impact
on
general
church life than in
any
other traditions. The Renewal is taken
seriously by
denominational leaders.” Unlike its
early days, Anabaptist
Renewal in North America is now multi-racial.
Catholic Charismatic Renewal
For an
understanding
of the
development
of the Charismatic Renewal among
Roman Catholics in the United States, it
may
be
helpful
to divide
up
its
twenty-seven year history
into three
periods: (1)
the period
of
community leadership (1967-1976); (2)
the
period
of contestation of
community leadership (1976-1981); and, (3)
the
period from 1981 to the
present.”
The Period of Community Leadership
(1967-1976)
While the Charismatic
communities,
often called covenant communities,
did not all
begin
in the first
year
of neo-Pentecostal penetration
of the Catholic
Church,
there was a close link between the origins
of the movement and the formation of communities.’ The Catholic stream was marked in its
origins by
the close network of young
men and
women, many already
known to each
other,
who formed the first centers of influence at Notre
Dame, South Bend, Indiana and at East
Lansing
and then Ann
Arbor, Michigan.
The majority
of those first involved became the leaders of the Word of God Community
at Ann
Arbor,
and of True House
Community
and
slightly later the
People
of Praise in South Bend.
Thus,
in its
early years,
the Charismatic Renewal
among
Catholics was led from Ann
Arbor, Michigan by
the leaders of the Word of God Community (especially Ralph
Martin and
Stephen Clark)
and from South
Bend,
Indiana
by
the leaders of the
People
of Praise
(especially
70 thus, there have been several meetings between Renewal leaders and Mennonite officers. See, for example, report “Apostolic & Conference Ministers’
Dialogue,” Empowered
Newsletter 8
(Winter 1990): 3. At the Mennonite World Conference in Winnipeg
in
July 1990,
that
reported
a
growth
of over 50% in Mennonite the Holy Spirit accounting
membership
worldwide since 1974, “frequent reference was made to the ministry of
for the explosion in the number of
converted”
persons becoming ”
[Empowered Newsletter 9 (Fall 1990-Winter 1991): 5].
In addition to the literature cited in note 1, there are interesting writings on the Catholic Charismatic Renewal by the sociologist Joseph Fichter: The Catholic Cult of the
Paraclete
(New York, NY: Sheed & Ward, 1975) and The
Works: Research in Catholic America
Sociology of Good
(Chicago, IL: “The Charismatic Press, 1993), especially chapter
5, Renewal,” 75-94. Loyola University
” On the Charismatic communities, see Theophane Rush, “Covenant Communities in the United States,” P,VEUk£4 : The Journal
of the Society for Pentecostal Theology 16
(Fall 1994): 233-245.
16
207
Kevin
Ranaghan).
The
greater structuring
that characterized the Catholic stream was the work of
these leaders and their communities: the formation of a national office,
of a National Service Committee (NSC),73
of a communications center, of New Covenant magazine,
of national
conferences,
of Life in the
Spirit
seminars to
prepare people for
baptism
in the
Holy Spirit,
and of Foundations courses for
people after
experiencing baptism
in the
Holy Spirit.
Besides
providing
most of the
teaching
materials for the wider movement in the Catholic Church, the covenant communities also
shaped
the vision for renewal. Catholic Renewal
began
with Charismatic
prayer groups, many
of which then aspired
to
develop
into communities.
The Period of Contestation of Community
Leadership (1976-1981)
The Charismatic Renewal
spread
with remarkable
rapidity among Catholics in the 1970s. The attendance
figures
for the annual conference at Notre Dame increased
dramatically through
the first half of the 1970s.’° As the movement
mushroomed,
there
were,
not surprisingly,
voices who
questioned
the
all-pervasive
influence of the major
communities.
Also,
not
surprisingly,
the
questioning
was particularly
led
by priests
and nuns. The communities were almost wholly lay organizations,
and
professional theology
and
qualifications played
a smaller role within the
community
world than the wider Church.
The
questioning
of
community-based leadership
was
spearheaded first
by
individual Charismatic leaders who were not invited to address the national
gatherings
at Notre Dame. The
strongest
forum for these leaders was the Eastern
Region, covering
the North Eastern Atlantic seaboard,
that held an annual conference at Atlantic
City,
New
Jersey, whose attendance
figures
rivaled Notre Dame. From these circles came Fr. John
Haughey,
a Jesuit
theologian,
who
directly challenged
the community
model in his address to the Eastern
Region
conference in 1977,75 and Fr. Joseph Lange,
who became the
managing
editor of a
“The National Service Committee (NSC) is, as the title implies, a service for the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in the nation. While it has no
agency
authority over Renewal
groups and it selects its own membership, it is seen as, and acts as, the national
leadership of the movement. The NSC organizes national conferences and its executive
arm, so to speak, is CharisCenter, the office that is the successor to the communications center.
“The attendance
figures were: 1970: 1,279; 1971: nearly 5,000;
1972: 11,500; 1973: 20,000; 1974: 30,000; 1976: nearly 30,000. In
1975,
1977 and
1978, the Notre Dame conference gave way to Rome (international-Catholic), Kansas
and Dublin
City (national-inter-confessional) (international-Catholic) respectively.
In 1979, the Notre Dame conference was restricted to leaders and attended by
approximately 10,000. “Fr.
Haughey’s talk was subsequently published under the title “Salt or New
Covenant 7
Leaven?,”
(June 1978):
14-17.
Many
of Fr.
Haughey’s
concerns are illustrated in his
article,
“The Domestication of the
Holy Spirit,”
Catholic Charismatic 1 (March/April 1976): 8-11.
17
208
suggests,
than New Covenant,
called Catholic Charismatic.76 The
and concerns
parish
rival
publication
to New Covenant
new
magazine deliberately
catered for the interests
ignored
or
opposed by
the dominant communities. As the title
perhaps
it stressed a
stronger
identification with Catholic distinctives
it
encouraged
renewal
through parochial prayer groups;
and it gave more
prominence
to women in opposition to the male
headship policies
of the covenant communities.
Also at this time
appeared Josephine
Pentecostals?
at Notre
Dame,
had
quarreled
vision was Los
Angeles,
where Fr. Ralph Tichenor, SJ,
was
prominent
Renewal Communities.”
Which
Way , for
Catholic professor
Another center for an alternative
establishing
Southern California
While the
theological
contestation just outlined,
greater
influence
of official
relationships
diocesan
Charismatic Renewal were
priests,
but some people. Initially,
the role communication
movement,
Over the next
decade,
diocesan
own
newsletter,
Massyngberde
Ford’s book (1976). Ford,
who was a with the
community
there.
in
advocating parish
renewal and
was
taking place
in the milieux was
beginning
that was to have
was the
forming
participants
and
began
their
another
development
in the
long-term.
This
development
between the Charismatic Renewal and the Catholic
bishops. During
the
mid-1970s,
the
bishops began
to
appoint
“liaisons” to serve as
bishops’ representatives
for the
in their dioceses. The
majority
of the liaisons
were deacons or
nuns,
and a few were
lay
of liaison was
primarily
seen in terms of
between the
bishop
and the
rapidly spreading Charismatic movement. Some liaisons were in the
while some were
not,
the latter
invariably being priests.
centers for renewal
sprang up
in many places, organized
and
developed by
the diocesan liaisons. 78
In
1978,
the liaisons formed a national
association,
as well as two conferences a
year,
one for all the liaisons,
the other a theological
symposium organized by the
liaisons on a chosen
theme,
with the results
being
fed into the next
general conference. With the
organization
of the diocesan
liaisons,
the Charismatic Renewal
among
Catholics had a national framework and voice that was
very
different
from,
and contrasted
with,
the role and influence of the covenant communities. The liaisons were
part
of the church
structure,
and
high
on their
agenda
was the renewal of
parish
life.
demise of the Association
A serious blow to the influence of the covenant communities was the
of
Communities,
“Ralph Tichenor,
formed in 1975. Most of
76 Catholic Charismatic published 27 issues from its beginning (March-April 1976) until its demise (August-September 1980).
“Renewal in L.A.,” Catholic Charismatic 2 (April/May 1978): 37-39. notation of this 1978 issue was identified as 2/7 and
(The April/May mistakenly
78 should have been 3/1, the next issue
3/2.)
See “Diocesan Centers for
being
Renewal,” NSC Newsletter
8 (November-December
4.
1983):
18
209
the
major
communities
belonged
to this
Association,”
with the
greatest influence
being
wielded
by
the Word of God from Ann Arbor, Michigan,
and the
People
of Praise from South Bend, Indiana. In 1981, this Association was disbanded as a result of differences between
Ann Arbor and South Bend. Not
only
was the
possibility
of a coherent influence
thereby lost,
but the
credibility
of their
leadership
was weakened. While their means and instruments of communication
were divided between Ann Arbor and South Bend, neither
had the same impact
in separation as in the earlier united
years. 80
The Period from 1981 to the Present
The
structuring
of Catholic Charismatic Renewal
according
to dioceses,
each
having
its own
liaison,
involved a
degree
of official recognition
that had been
sought by many
Charismatic Catholics. However,
this formal
organizational
tie
may
have
appeared
to
represent a
greater penetration
of the Roman Catholic Church
by
the Renewal movement than was
actually
the case. The
years
that saw the loss of community
influence and the
growth
of the diocesan liaisons as a national framework were the same
years
that saw the
beginnings
of a decline in the numbers of active Catholic Charismatics.”‘
A
variety
of reasons for this decline can be identified. One was the difficulty
of
establishing
renewed
parishes, given
the
authority
of the pastors
and their
system
of appointment in which there is no mechanism to ensure the continuation of a Renewal vision
by
a priest’s successor. Another was the inherent limitation of
prayer groups.
Unless
prayer groups develop
into
something
more structured and less
casual, they cannot
adequately
meet the
spiritual
needs of
those-especially young couples-seeking
a vibrant
congregational
life for themselves and their families. The
ephemeral
character of most
prayer groups
is all the greater
in a highly mobile
society. Thus,
the 1980s saw a big rise in the number of Catholic “ex-Charismatics.”$2
With the loss of influence
by
the covenant
communities,
the National Service Committee
(NSC) sought
to become a more
representative body,
both
geographically
and in terms of the trends and
emphases 79 One exception was Mother of God Community from Potomac and Gaithersburg,
Maryland. “New Covenant
magazine stayed
at Ann Arbor under the Word of God
and the National Communications Office at South Bend, continued to be staffed 81
Community,
by the People of Praise. Attendance at the national conferences at Notre Dame
were 1982: 12,000; 1983: 9,154;
1984: nearly 8,000; 1985: 8,000; 1986: 8,000.
82 The extent and the influence of “ex-Charismatics” in the Catholic Church in the
United States is a subject awaiting detailed study. Impressions suggest that their
presence
in
parish
and diocesan life is
extensive,
and that
they
have
with them. Whether a
brought
something positive person
is
rightly
called an
“ex-Charismatic” should depend on their self-understanding of their spiritual walk;
some, who are not attending Charismatic
Christians.
groups,
still understand themselves , as
may
“Spirit-filled”
19
210
.
included.83 “The
period
of 1984-1987 could best be characterized as
a time of
healing.
The NSC
began
to build
bridges
with
liaisons,
ethnic groups,
renewal
centers,
itinerant
healing
and
preaching ministries,
and with areas of the
country long estranged
from the covenant
community network of
relationships.””
In the same
way,
New Covenant
magazine no
longer
articulated the
emphases
of the covenant communities, but included authors from various tendencies in the Renewal.
Though
the covenant communities were no
longer
at the
center, they still made an
important
contribution to the Charismatic Renewal. The FIRE teams from Ann
Arbor, Michigan,
and Steubenville,
Ohio,
held regular
rallies in
nurturing
renewal.” In
addition, Ralph
Martin’s television
program
“The Choices We
Face,”
the conferences held each summer at
Steubenville,86
and the
monthly magazine
The
Word Among Us from Mother of God
Community, Gaithersburg, Maryland functioned as an informal network which
provided
Charismatics with an opportunity
to
keep
in touch with
developments
in the movement. 87
With the
change
in role of the
NSC,
strenuous efforts were made both to ascertain the needs of the
prayer groups
and to
develop
some kind of national
strategy. First,
a “Back to Basics” formula was adopted,88
that reflected in itself an awareness that some focus had been lost and needed to be recovered.
Secondly, by 1986, evangelization was
emerging
as almost a
defining
task for the Catholic Charismatic Renewal.89 This
emphasis
was
initially brought
to the fore
by
the New Orleans conferences of 1986 and 1987 on
Evangelization organized by the North American Renewal Services Committee. It was also
the of the NSC took place in January 1984. For a description, see Walter restructuring
Matthews, “Through
the Basement Window: A
History of the National Service
Committee,” CharisCenter
USA 17 (March-April 1992): 3, 15.
84 matthew, “Through the Basement Window,” 15.
85 The FIRE
(Faith, Intercession, Repentance, Evangelization) team of Ralph Martin, Fr. Michael Scanlan, Fr. John Bertolucci, and Ann Shields was formed in 1983.
“The influence of the Franciscan University at Steubenville, Ohio, as a Renewal center for
teaching
has continued,
though
with less vigor since the
troubles of the
community
early
1990s. The difficulties linked with an
committee the local led to a less
investigation
close
by
a
appointed by bishop
association between the Steubenville Covenant Community and the activities on the university campus. On Steubenville, see Michael Scanlan,
Let the Fire Fall
(Ann Arbor, MI: Servant Books, Ir7 1986).
The Word Among Us is
and the
produced to be an aid to a daily prayer life based on the Scriptures
NSC Newsletter 7
using readings from the Catholic “See Lectionary.
(December 1982): 1; 8 (February 1983): 1-2, 5; 8 (March 1983): 1-2. The “basics” are the basics of Charismatic Renewal.
“The Mission Statement adopted by the NSC in 1986 has as its first commitment: “Serve God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, by serving the Catholic Church in its primary
mission of evangelization through the
power of the
Newsletter 11
Holy Spirit” [NSC
(June 1986): 8].
20
211
highlighted through
the influence of Fr. Tom Forrest, and
subsequently sustained
by
the 1990s
being
made a “Decade of Evangelization.”9°
The efforts of the NSC to
develop
a fresh vision to fill the void resulting
from the relative
marginalization
of the covenant communities eventually crystallized
around the
concept
of bringing “the Renewal to the heart of the
[Catholic]
Church.” An NSC-sponsored consultation of leaders and
theologians produced
the booklet
Fanning
the
Flame, 91 which
is,
in
many ways,
a manifesto for the
pastoral application
of the key concepts
in the book
by
Kilian McDonnell and
George Montague 92 entitled Christian Initiation and
Baptism
in the
Holy Spirit.
The
picture
of Catholic Charismatic Renewal is a
complex
one to assess. There has been an undoubted loss of numbers and
dynamism from the
heyday
of the 1970s. There has been a
development
of structures,
but not a
corresponding blossoming
of new life. On the other
hand,
not all has been decline and loss.93 In
many ways,
the last period,
for which I could not find an
appropriate label,94 has involved the search for a vision to
replace
that
coming
from the communities in the first
period.
It would be too
optimistic
to describe this search as a success and too
pessimistic
to describe it as a failure. There does seem to be a widespread sense that
something
has been lost
beyond
numbers since the earlier
days.95
The overall
picture suggests
that the Catholic Charismatic Renewal can
only fully
recover its
dynamism
and vision when it comes to terms with the
original
work of the
Holy Spirit
in the covenant communities. The covenant communities were a distinctive feature of the movement among Catholics,
and were an
integral part
in the movement’s initial dynamism,
its ecumenical vision and its
prophetic
character. The process by
which the communities moved and were moved
away
from the
leadership
of the Renewal movement
represents
weakness on both
.
“Also
important for Catholics here has been the emphasis of Pope John Paul II on “the New
Evangelization.”
“Kilian McDonnell and
George
T.
Montague, eds.,
MN: The
Fanning
the Flame (Collegeville, Liturgical Press, 1991). See Chris Aridas, “New Document Tool for
Moving Renewal to Heart of the Church,” CharisCenter
USA Newsletter 16 (May-June 1991): 1, 4-5.
‘Kilian McDonnell and George Montague, Christian Initiation and Baptism in the Holy Spirit (Collegeville,
MN: The Liturgical Press, 1991).
9′ The greatest vitality and growth has probably been among ethnic for example,
the the Koreans, the
minorities, been considerable Hispanics,
Filipinos
and the Haitians. There has also
impact from the “cell concept” from Pastor David Yonggi Cho of Seoul, Korea, particularly
mediated to Catholic circles through the work of Fr. Michael Eivers, of St. Boniface parish near Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
941 I thought of
calling
it the
“post-community” period. However, this would not be accurate, as the communities have continued to exist and sometimes to grow. Not all have been enveloped in the difficulties experienced at Ann Arbor, Michigan. See Rush, “Covenant Communities in the United States,” 233-245.
93 This sense was particularly evident at the Pittsburgh celebration for 25 years of Catholic Charismatic Renewal at Pentecost, 1992.
21
212
sides.’ This
pattern
is somewhat
particular
to the United
States,
and has not
generally
been
repeated
in other continents.
Some Final
Reflections
Are there
any patterns
common to the
development
of the Charismatic Renewal in all the mainline North American Churches? While accurate statistics are not available for each denomination or for each confessional
family,
the numerical
growth
of the 1970s has not generally
been maintained.
However,
the
patterns vary
here between a definite decline in the Catholic Renewal and a clear increase in the Anabaptist stream;
the
Episcopalians
seem to have
grown slowly,
while the
Presbyterians
have been
picking up
after a
falling away.
Most mainline churches have lost some Charismatics to Pentecostal and independent
Charismatic
churches,
but the losses were
probably greatest among
the
Presbyterians
and the Methodists. 97
All streams have
developed
renewal structures or service
agencies
to promote
renewal in the
Spirit.
Most of these have been
developing
their own
programs
for
renewal, teaching
and
leadership
formation. The Presbyterians
have done the most
here,
followed
apparently by
the Mennonites
(Anabaptists),
and
Episcopalians,
with the Lutherans and the Catholics
doing
less.98
They
also
vary
in terms of their
political impact
on their Churches. The
Presbyterian
is
heavily
involved in resisting
erosion of traditional standards of faith and
morals;
the Lutheran is
becoming
more involved in this defense of
values; among the
Episcopalian,
this role is
primarily played by
other
agencies.
The Catholic CharisCenter is hardly involved in apologetic
activity
at all.99
An
identity question
has faced all the different Church traditions. What is this renewal movement? How does it relate to other currents of renewal in the Church? With this
question,
the attitude to the term “Charismatic” comes to the forefront.
Only
the Catholic Charismatics
“This
comparative “sidelining” of the covenant communities was partly their own choice
to focus on of the of the
less
(either deeper penetration grace Spirit
or out of a
sanguine evaluation of the Catholic Renewal apart from the communities) and a
alternative
partly distancing
from the communities by the other leaders (either out of an
vision,
for
example,
for
parish renewal,
or from a resistance to community
”
“control”).
See the section above on Renewal among Presbyterians and Reformed, and the small field survey which will appear in the forthcoming second issue of PNEUMA on the Charismatic Renewal and will
give
data on Charismatic defectors to nondenominational churches.
“This decline among Catholics is also a result of the reduced role of the covenant communities, which had been responsible for an abundance of teaching materials in the first decade.
99 this lack of involvement is partly because, at the highest level of the Vatican and the Pope, there have been few concessions to and “liberal sentiment.” It is also because the defense of traditional
“modernity”
morality and faith has been undertaken by
others within the Renewal. See, for example, Ralph Martin, The Crisis of Truth (Ann Arbor, MI: Servant Books, 1982).
22
213
in their
self-description.
Others
have retained the term “Charismatic”
who
began
with “Charismatic” in their title later
dropped
it in the
and collaboration in the
interests of
modesty Church.’°°
The Charismatic Renewal
with other
groups
Obviously,
some
within the mainline churches is
clearly concerned both to be
authentically part
of its own church tradition and
for its renewal and reform.
and
maybe
more
independent
Charismatics have doubts as
combination is
possible.
In this
view,
the Renewal
its
prophetic
and ultimately
leave or be thrown out of the mainline churches, or it will
dynamic
and become “domesticated” within those
to be an instrument Pentecostals
to whether this movement will either
follow
lose its
prophetic traditions.
Charismatic
Protestant
speak
out more
clearly.
Christians who
the efforts of the
Presbyterian
challenging
role
the
progress
of the
is
forcing
some Renewal bodies to
of those
the ecumenical
I do
It is then an
important
factor in
assessing
movement within the mainline churches to ask whether it is truly holding
these two
imperatives
in a creative
tension,
or whether it is
heading
for exit or domestication. The tendencies in mainline
churches toward doctrinal and moral
positions
at variance with historic biblical
orthodoxy
But the
question
here is whether the
speaking out is authentic
prophetic upholding
of God’s
Word,
or whether it is a defensive conservatism no different from the
rigidities
are
undoubtedly
orthodox in doctrine, but for whom the life and
power
of the
Holy Spirit
is not a distinguishing feature.
Here,
Charismatics in PRRMI with a
strong commitment to
repentance
and intercession
may
offer a more
prophetic model.
In this tension between tradition and
renewal,
of Charismatic Renewal is central.
By
“ecumenical”
to inter-Church
agencies
like Councils of
Churches, but to the
original inspiration
of the
Holy Spirit
for the realization of the Lord’s
prayer
“that all
may
be one.” It is
only
as the Renewal
within the different churches hold on to the
unity
of this whole move of God that
they
will be able to retain the
prophetic cutting edge of the
Spirit.
The moves to
“integrate”
the Renewal into “the Church” can result in the diminution of the movement’s ecumenical
dimension,
component not refer
primarily
groups
might
great
Anglo-Catholics-were parachurch leadership. They
‘°°The Episcopalian, Kevin Martin, has well grasped the dangers in this process: “It
be good strategy to say to non-Charismatics, ‘we are not a movement but rather the heritage of all Episcopalians.’ It is foolish to believe it ourselves. The
movements of our church-the
Reformers, the Evangelicals, and the
all aware of the need to organize, plan and build.
structures to
They built
bypass
church
bureaucracy. They developed
local
took control of or built congregations. ERM has resisted this kind of
giving
leadership, I believe into an intentional movement with wrongly. Today’s need is to make the Charismatic ‘experience’
national and local strategies for promoting Spirit-filled life both for individuals and for congregations” [Acts 29 (Feb. 1987): 2].
23
214
in which case what is being “integrated” of God in the Renewal.
becomes less than the true
gift
24
Anonymous
is something else Link Hudson Peter Vandever
Anonymous
Paul King J.D. King Angel Bonilla Αγγελος Ρουίζ Ricky Grimsley While researching the modern New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) movement that is infiltrating many churches today, I came across the following information:
The New Apostolic Church,
also known as the Universal Catholic Church
was organized in Germany in 1863 as the Universal Catholic Church by members of the Catholic Apostolic Church who believed that new apostles must be appointed to replace deceased apostles and rule the church until the Second Coming of Christ. The present name was adopted in 1906. Its doctrines are similar to the parent church, but the new church was influenced by continental Protestantism, and over time its worship services and tendencies became less Catholic and more Protestant.
The church emphasizes the gifts of the Holy Spirit, which include prophecy, speaking in tongues, and miraculous healing. Sacraments are baptism, Holy Communion, and holy sealing (the “dispensing and reception of the Holy Spirit”). Sealing can only be conferred by the laying on of hands on the head of a member by an apostle, and it assures the member of participation in Christ’s rule on Earth for 1,000 years after he returns. Like the Latter-day Saints, the New Apostolic Church teaches that the sacraments can be received by a living member for a dead person.
The church is ruled by a hierarchy composed of the chief apostle and the other apostles. The apostles appoint bishops, district elders, pastors, and evangelists. By the late 20th century the New Apostolic Church had more than 2,000,000 members, most of them in Germany. The church’s headquarters are in Zürich, Switz.
Anonymous
Oscar Valdez Sometimes the terms cesationist and continuist, do not help much nowadays, because lately we are seeing variations in the cesationist position, some believe that miracles continue today, but not so tongues or the gift of healing, and others are hard cesationists that even the miracles bearing God have ceased, apart from we also have diversity among continuists, it’s complicated.
Perhaps we should mention and distinguish between “reformed/hard cesationist” and “reformed cesationist/cautious baptist”, “reformed/continuous baptist” and “continuous charismatic” and “continue pentecostal”, and lastly “continuous neopentecostal”, although even these can be sometimes grim caricatures of postures that are well nuanced lately.
Anonymous
Troy Day Cessationists want to argue for cessationism, but sometimes the bases for their arguments are contradictory.
Anonymous
I do not believe Duane L Burgess is Cessationists per se