Click to join the conversation with over 500,000 Pentecostal believers and scholars
Click to get our FREE MOBILE APP and stay connected
| PentecostalTheology.com120
The
Significance
of A.H.
Argue for Pentecostal
Historiography
Thomas Wm. Miller*
I. The
Early
Years
Andrew
Harvey Argue
has been called “the
greatest
Pentecostal evangelist
Canada
produced
Born in 1868 at
Fitzroy Harbor, near
Ottawa, Ontario,
A. H. Argue was the
grandson
of a Methodist layman
who had
emigrated
from Ireland in 1821. His
grandfather, George Argue,
had been converted under the
preaching
of Gideon Ouseley,
a fiery Wesleyan evangelist. He set sail for the New
World, and
brought
with him five stalwart
sons,
all over six feet in
height. The
family
landed at
Quebec
and settled in the Ottawa
Valley
where they
built a
log
home.
Upon
its
completion,
the sons invited the neighbors
to what were to be the first Methodist services held in that
region
of Canada. One
son,
John Wilson
Argue,
was both a farmer and a Methodist
lay preacher
in Fitzroy Harbor
and, later, in North
Dakota,
where he moved with his
young family.
Among
John’s children his son Andrew
(A.H.),
was a talented violinist who
played
for the local school dances. John
disapproved of his son’s
participation
in these
dances,
and
prayed
for
him,
a fact which A.H. would never
forget.
The
turning point
in Andrew’s spiritual
state came
during
some revival services conducted in the community by
Salvation
Army
workers. There seemed to be little response
and the local dances went on unhindered. One
night,
as Andrew
prepared
to
play
his violin, there flashed into his mind the picture
of his father
praying
for his salvation.
Suddenly,
the decision was made-the violin was put in its case-and he rushed to the revival
meeting
where he went forward at the first invitation. Halfway
to the altar he received an assurance of sins
forgiven.2
As a young man,
A.H. married a Canadian
girl, Eva,
who had been converted
among
the Methodists and had ministered
briefly
with the Salvation
Army.
This
couple
moved to North Dakota where two of their
children, Harvey
and
Zelma,
were born. After a five year
stint at
farming,
the
Argues
returned to the Manitoba
capital where their other four
children, Beulah, Eva, Watson,
and Edwin were born.
It was an astute
move’
for
Winnipeg
was then at the heart of an economic boom that affected the entire Canadian West.
Together with two of his
brothers,
A.H.
began
a real estate business that proved
to be
very
successful.
Winnipeg
was the
gateway
to the virgin
lands which attracted millions
of European emigrant
home-
.
.
‘
‘
1
121
steaders. From 1901 to
1911,
the
Winnipeg population grew, reaching
a total
population
of
450,000. Housing
and land was in great
demand and the
Argue
firm
prospered,
not least of all because in boomtown
Winnipeg
it was said that “God and A.H.
Argue
are the
only
two
persons
that can be trusted.”3 At the same
time,
A.H. was
keenly
interested in
promoting
the work of the
Lord,
and he utilized his business acumen and
increasing
wealth to
support various local ministries.4
Andrew also became active in the support of Holiness causes and was well-known as an effective Methodist
“ranter,”
or lay exhorter, both in the West and in Ontario. He became a close friend of Dr. George Watson,
who came to
Winnipeg
to
proclaim
Holiness doctrines and to teach the
“deeper
truths” of the Second
Coming. So
highly
was this man
regarded by the Argues
that
they
named one son, Watson,
in his honor.
Many
other Holiness Movement workers were known
by A. H., including
Miss
Markle,
a Mennonite from Ontario who had come to conduct a mission in
Winnipeg. Markle was
among
the earliest in the
city
to receive a Pentecostal experience.
She later married A.G. Ward who came into the Pentecostal Movement via the Methodist and the Christian and Missionary
Alliance
groups.
His
son,
C.M.
Ward,
became a prominent
Assemblies of God
clergyman
whose work as a Pente- costal
evangelist
was to
carry
him
throughout
North America. Another was
Anglican clergyman
Archdeacon
Phair,
who at first opposed
the Pentecostal revival under the
leadership
of A.H. Argue, though
he was sympathetic to Holiness
teachings.
A. H. was also familiar with some of the American Holiness
leaders, among them
Bishop
J.H.
King
of the
Fire-Baptized
Holiness Church.5
It was also in
Winnipeg
that he became familiar with Divine Healing teachings,
for it was there that he was healed of a “chronic internal trouble” of some
years’ standing.
When Dr. A.B.
Simpson of the Christian and
Missionary
Alliance visited the
city
in
1906, A. H. went for
prayer;
but a
day passed
without
any sign
of improvement. Then, suddenly,
the
healing power
of God went through
him and the work was done. From that time
on,
the
Argue family
believed and
taught
Divine
Healing.
Eva
Argue
often
prayed for her children in the
years following
when her husband was an itinerant
evangelist,
and she saw them
miraculously
healed.6 No doubt this
religious background
made A.H. a
keenly
interested consumer of news about the Holiness Movement and the new “Latter Rain Movement” of the
early
twentieth
century.
Even before the Pentecostal
experience
arrived in
Winnipeg, news of
extraordinary
works of God in
many
other
places
had already
come. Information from the 1904 Welsh Revival stirred the
2
122
hearts of believers in Winnipeg. Missionaries
brought
back news of the
outpouring
of the
Spirit
in Pandita Ramabai’s Mission in India, and word of unusual
phenomena
at the Door of
Hope Mission,
in China,
followed.
Finally,
there came news of the Latter Rain outpouring
in Kansas and then of the
extraordinary
manifestations of the
Spirit
at William J.
Seymour’s
Azusa Street Mission in Los Angeles,
in the
Spring
of 1906.
The
Argues
were
just
one
family among
a
large
number of Canadians who were earnest seekers after more of God. In her 1923
,
‘
account of the start of the Latter Rain Movement in
Winnipeg, Zelma
Argue
stressed the fact that
many
believers
there,
as well as around the
world,
had
long
been
praying
for such a divine effusion of the
Spirit?
Similar evidence of local
hunger
for a mighty manifestation of the
Holy Spirit
came from the Reverend W.J.
Taylor,
a former Superintendent
of the Manitoba and Northwest Ontario District of the PAOC. In his
mimeographed history
of that
District, Taylor wrote:
This
hunger
seemed to be a world-wide
phenomenon.
Consequently
the
Spirit began
to fall almost simul-
taneously
in Los
Angeles, Topeka, Kansas, Norway,
and
Sunderland, England…. Groups
of people in Manitoba
had been in continuous
prayer
for revival, and for a mighty
visitation from God.8
An
anonymous correspondent
sent another
report
to Seymour in Los
Angeles describing
the
Spiritual hunger
that then existed among many
believers in
Winnipeg
at the turn of the
century.
The writer noted that:
For more than a year here some of the saints tarried
before God for an outpouring of His Spirit upon all flesh,
and
especially
for a revival of the Bible standard in
Winnipeg.9
A.H.
Argue
was
preaching
at a
campmeeting
at
Thornbury, Ontario,
in September,
1907, when he first became acquainted
with reports
of
speaking
in
tongues
at the Azusa Street Mission.
It . appears
that a copy of
Seymour’s paper,
The Apostolic
Faith,
had fallen into his
hands,
and he showed it to
Bishop
J.H.
King,
who also was
ministering
in the
camp. King’s response, concerning
the report
was
that,
“It
could
be
possible.”
Klaude Kendrick claimed that this was the first time that
King
had heard of the
phenomenon of speaking in tongues, though the tenets of the Los
Angeles group were similar to those of his own denominations
Argue
did not
go to Los
Angeles
at the
time, though according
to
Seymour, King planned
a visit for
May
of 1907.
Bishop King
was then the editor of
3
123
The
Apostolic Evangel,
and
Seymour evidently hoped
that
King’s forthcoming
visit would
ally him to the Latter Rain Movement
and perhaps
enlist his journal-like at least seven other
periodicals-in the
promotion
of the New Movement.” A.H. returned to his Manitoba home where he continued to
investigate
the
reports
of this
growing religious awakening.
No doubt his Methodist
heritage, his
support
of the Holiness
teachings
and his own
physical healing had inclined him to view those
reports favorably.
Most of them were
replete
with accounts of
supernatural incidents,
as well as tongues speaking.
He
finally
determined to seek for himself an outpouring
of the
Spirit.
So far as it may be ascertained, Mrs. Ellen G. Hebden was the first in Canada to receive the Pentecostal experience,
on November
17th, 1906, ?2 only
a short time after A. H. had been
intrigued by reports
of
tongues speaking
while he was ministering
near Toronto. Yet it is curious that there seemed to be no contact between the Methodist exhorter and the woman
evangelist
at the Hebden Mission in Toronto on Queen Street East. It is evident from Mrs. Hebden’s
publication
The Promise, in which she refers to the
Argue
Mission in Winnipeg, that
they
were soon to know,
and
appreciate
each other. 13
Mr.
Argue
turned his
steps
towards
Chicago,
where W.H. Durham had a remarkably successful Pentecostal mission. He may have been influenced to
go
to
Chicago
instead of Los
Angeles simply
because of distance. It is also
possible
that he made the choice because he was more familiar with
Chicago;
it had been closely
connected with
Winnipeg through
the commercial Great Lakes
grain
trade and
many
new settlers had come from the midwestern United States to take
up the offer of free homesteads
in Manitoba. In any case, the
reports
of the
outpouring
of the
Spirit
in Durham’s North Avenue Mission were sufficient in themselves to attract
spiritually hungry
seekers. Durham had been reared in the Arminian
Wesleyan tradition,
but he
sought
for a
personal Pentecost in
Seymour’s
Mission and received it
early
in 1907. Seymour
witnessed that
event,
for he
reported
in his
paper
that Durham,
whom he identified as a member of the “World’s Faith Missionary Association,”
had fallen backwards and
spoken
in tongues.14
When Durham returned to
Chicago,
a Pentecostal revival broke out which
replicated,
if it did not
exceed,
the supernatural
events of the Azusa Street Mission. The North Avenue Mission was so full of the
power
of
God, according
to eyewitnesses,
that “a thick haze … like blue smoke” filled its upper region.
When this haze was
present,
wrote
pioneer
Howard
Goss, the
people entering
the
building
would fall down in the aisles. Some never
got
to sit in the
pews. Many
came
through
to the
baptism
or
.
.
,
‘
4
124
received divine
healing.
Aimee
Semple,
for
example,
was
instantly healed of a broken
foot,
and was able to walk
immediately.
When the saints were enthralled in
worship
and
engaged
in
vociferous, concerted
prayer,
the noise level was very
great. But,
as Goss
noted, “The
heavenly escape
valve the
Spirit gave
us was
prayer, praise and
worship.”
In
any case,
A.H.
Argue
was
among
the
hundreds,
who there received the
baptism
of the
Spirit and
spoke
in
tongues.
He later described his
experience
in the
words:
perhaps thousands,
following
‘
Being hungry
for God’s best, I went to Chicago to witness what was taking place. Here I saw numbers
being filled with the Spirit, which continued to deepen my hunger. I waited on God for
twenty-one days. (Later
I remembered that Daniel had waited on God for
twenty-one days.) During this time I had a wonderful vision of Jesus. His counte- nance was so radiant that as I lifted my hand before
Him, it became
transparent.
At the end of the
twenty-one days
I was filled with the Holy Ghost, speaking with other tongues as the
Spirit gave utterance.
5
II. Penteocstal
embark evangelists
time, among them, and Andrew Urshan. Bell,
later to become Pentecostal
Chicago. They
experience
in
April, 1907, of that, he was
shortly
to
the
leading
Pentecostal
one of a number of
Howard A.
Goss,
N.
of
became Pentecostals
Beginnings
in
Winnipeg
When A.H. entered into a Pentecostal
he was
nearly forty years
of
age.
In
spite
on a twenty-year career as one of
in North America. He was
prominent pioneers
who attended the Durham Mission at that
Aimee
Semple McPherson,
A
Baptist pastor
from
Texas,
Eudorus
the first chairman of the
Fellowship
Ministers-the forerunner of the Assemblies of God, was also
present.6 Argue
and Bell may have become
acquainted
in
were
good
friends
later,
and in 1921 Argue sent Bell a
report
of his
early ministry
in
Winnipeg
and of his
subsequent Pentecostal
evangelistic ministry.
Not
only
was the North Avenue Mission a
magnet
for
many hundreds who
sought
the Pentecostal
experience,
but it also
a center of
theological controversy.
The issue
agitated
America for several
years.
W.J. Seymour
in Los
Angeles
maintained
of an
experience
of “entire sanctification”
Spirit baptism.
William
Durham, however,
took
particular a number of recent converts in his meetings who “came
through”
to Spirit baptism
with
tongues speaking
without
going through any
This led him to
reject
the former Holiness
throughout
North
sanctification
crisis.
his emphasis on the
necessity
as a
prelude
to
Holy
note of
5
125
Movement
emphasis
on the “second work of
grace”
and to propound
what came to be known as the “Finished Work of Calvary” teaching.
The
theory
was that all the
necessary cleansing from sin had been
accomplished
at the time of the sinner’s conversion,
and no
subsequent
“second work” was essential for Spirit baptism. Though controversy raged
for a
time,
Durham’s views were
adopted by many
of the
leading pioneers
There can be little doubt that A.H.
Argue
subscribed to the Finished Work doctrine. He never even alludes to the
necessity
of a sanctification
experience
as a prelude to
baptism
in the
Spirit.
It is reasonable to assume that
during
his 21 days of seeking in Chicago, he received some instruction from
Durham,
and that he
adopted the Durham
teaching. Thereafter,
he was an
exponent
of the four cardinal
teachings
that came to characterize the
great majority
of twentieth-century Pentecostals; Salvation,
Divine
Healing,
Second Coming and.Spirit Baptism including speaking
in
tongues.
After A.H. had his
personal “Pentecost,”
he wired a telegram to his wife, Eva, which read “Received
Baptism
in Holy
Spirit: coming home on first train.” Zelma later described the event:
.. . Mother has told me since how completely
awed she was by
that
message.
Filled with the Holy Ghost, and now coming
home! When the door
opened
in the early morning and in
walked
father,
she actually stood back at the other end of
the room, uncertain how to greet one who had received this
sacred
experience.
We have smiled over it since. 18
The
story
of A. H. Argue’s experience soon
spread
over
Winnipeg
and scores of
spiritually hungry
folk
began
to come to his
home,
seeking
advice and
help.
A. H. still had a business to
run,
but with
the increase in seekers in the
prayer meetings
he held in his home, he
soon realized that he had to make a decision either to abandon the
Pentecostal
meetings,
or to give up his business. He had been
keenly
interested in the
ministry
since his own conversion and after his
healing through prayer,
he had held revival
meetings
in North
Dakota in which over 50 were converted. But
now,
in Winnipeg, the
duties of both
pastor
and
evangelist
were
being
thrust
upon him,
and he chose to give
up
his lucrative real estate business.
According
to his daughter
Beulah,
A. H. settled matters with his two
brothers,
took the
proceeds
of his settlement and invested the
money
in
income-producing property.
In this
manner,
for the rest of his life
he was able to
provide
for the material needs of his
family,
and on .
occasion,
to
support
the Latter Rain work elsewhere.
Occasionally
where the local Pentecostal
pastor
had a severe financial
struggle,
A. H. would
give
him the entire “love
offering”
and take
nothing
for
himself. It was thus that this charismatic Methodist exhorter
began
6
126
a Pentecostal
and hundreds of conversions.
ministry
characterized
the first to
by many outstanding healings
The first
step
was taken in
Winnipeg,
where the
Holy Spirit
fell on the seekers in A.H.’s home. Within a few weeks, believers also gathered
at the home of a Mrs. Lockhart to seek the
baptism,
but
receive were in the
Argue
home about
May 2,
1907. Zelma was twelve when she attended the
prayer meeting
in which the first three
people
in the Manitoba
capitol
were filled with the
and
spoke
in
tongues.
that
they
were two women and a man, and that the man, A. E. Schwab, was the first to receive. A.H.’s account is as follows:
Spirit
Quickly
night
She
reported
lady evangelist. confirmed,
Returning
to Winnipeg, I started
tarrying meetings in my home. On the third
day, May 2, 1907, three were filled with the Spirit, speaking with tongues as in the Book of Acts….
the news
spread.
Soon we secured a hall for services.
People began
to come from far and near. One
I was preaching from Acts 10:44-46, … Like a flash from heaven the
Spirit
fell in like manner on two
people seated in the
congregation,
one of whom was a Holiness
When the
people
saw the Word thus
it greatly inspired their faith. 19
historic event
The “brother” mentioned
swamped by
sent in another account of this
in The
Apostolic
in the
Argue
home were soon
An
.anonymous correspondent
to
Seymour
which was
reprinted
Faith. It corroborates A.H.’s
account, noting
that:
The
Holy
Ghost first fell in a cottage meeting and three ‘
received their Pentecost with Bible evidence…. At the
‘
Pentecost
Mission,
while a brother was speaking from Acts
.
10:40-46, …
the Holy Ghost fell on two sisters. One started .
speaking right
off in tongues, and another who had come
about 100 miles to attend the meeting fell under the power
for a time and
began
to sing in tongues. It was heavenly.
Souls are
being saved,
believers sanctified, and
baptized
with the
Holy
Ghost while sitting in their seats.zo
in this article was A. H.
Argue.
The
cottage prayer meetings
hordes of inquirers and A.H. rented an empty
building
at 501 Alexander Avenue. As the crowds
increased,
the
rapidly
growing congregation
moved to the Liberal Hall on Notre Dame
and still later to
Langside
Hall. The old
Wesley
church was
eventually purchased,
renovated and became the chief center of
Pentecostalism in Manitoba. In fact, this church became the
largest
one in the Pentecostal Assemblies the
congregation 8,000
for a
single
service. The name was
later
years
to “Calvary Temple,” a title
suggested by Dr.
Price
during
one of his
salvation-healing campaigns
in
Street,
numbered
changed
in Charles S.
of Canada. At
times,
7
127
Winnipeg.
So far as it is
known,
this was the first Pentecostal congregation
in North America to
adopt
such a title for its sanctuary.2′
During
the first tumultous months of the
Spirit’s outpouring
in the
city,
the
Argue
Mission became the
magnet
for thousands of earnest seekers from other Manitoba
communities,
from the far northern Indian Reserves and from Western Canada.
Among
the first seekers were some who later became leaders of Pentecostalism in North
America, such
as
Harry Horton,
Franklin
Small,
A.G. Ward,
R.J. Scott and John McAlister. Mr.
Horton,
the father of Stanley Horton,
first heard of the Azusa
meetings
while on a trip to California.
Upon
his return home to
Winnipeg
he received his own Pentecost in a “home where the full
gospel
was
being pro- claimed. ‘?2
‘
Franklin Hall moved from eastern Canada to
Winnipeg
in 1900. After his
of 1907
conversion,
he wandered into the
Argue
Mission in
April
and there first heard
tongues
and
teaching
on the
baptism
of the
Spirit.
He was deeply
interested,
but before
committing himself, took his mother to the
Argue meetings.
She had
previously opposed the Latter Rain
people
on the basis of
reports,
but now she told Frank that services in the Mission were “the nearest
thing
to old- fashioned Methodism” she had seen since childhood.
Shortly afterwards,
both received the Pentecostal
experience
and
spoke
in tongues
in a
cottage prayer meeting
in Mrs. Lockhart’s home. Franklin Small was destined to become one of the most
prominent of early leaders: he was active in the United States in spreading the “full
gospel.”
He took a
leading
role in the
organization
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada and later, when that denomination rejected
the “Jesus
Only” doctrine,
he founded and directed the Apostolic
Church of Pentecost of Canada.23
A.G. Ward was the director of a Holiness Mission in the Manitoba
capitol
when he became
acquainted
with the
Argue work. He was later instrumental in
introducing
the Latter Rain message
to the New Brethren Mennonite Church in Ontario, out of which came G.A.
Chambers,
the first General
Superintendent
of the
PAOC,
and a number of other
early
Pentecostal
pioneers.
Ward also took the lead in establishing the Pentecostal
Missionary
Union in
1909,
which was the first
attempt
to
organize
the scattered and independent
Latter Rain churches in Canada.24
R.J.
Scott,
the
Superintendent
of the “Home and
Foreign Mission” in
Winnipeg,
was another Holiness Movement advocate who from the
beginning
took a keen interest in the
outpouring
of the
Spirit.
Scott became so enthusiastic that he moved his family to Los
Angeles
and worked in
Seymour’s
Mission. He was instru-
8
128
mental in
organizing
the first “Pentecostal
Camp Meeting”
in California in June, 1907. When members of his
family
returned to Winnipeg, they
continued to
report
to
Seymour
on the
spiritual blessings they
were
receiving.
Tom Anderson was another writer who
corresponded
with the Azusa Street leader
claiming
that he was
enjoying
the fruits of a Spirit-filled life in
Winnipeg.25
John McAlister was a farmer and harness-maker when he first heard of the
outpouring
of the
Spirit
in Manitoba. He moved his family
to Winnipeg and received his baptism with
tongues speaking, in
Argue’s “Apostolic
Faith Mission” in
July,
1907. His
son, Walter,
was also
baptized
in the
Spirit
there at the
age
of ten. Walter later became General
Superintendent
of the PAOC.26 John took the Latter Rain
message
to
Edmonton,
from where it radiated throughout
the
province
of Alberta.
The
Argue
Mission became the main center of the Latter Rain Movement in Western Canada within a few months of its un- planned beginning. Through pioneer
workers like
Small, Ward, McAlister and
Argue,
the Pentecostal
message
was
spread
with astonishing rapidity.
A host of lesser-known workers rose
up spontaneously
to share the full
gospel
with their
neighbors
and relatives. One old
gentleman
from
Poplar Point,
Manitoba visited the
Mission,
had a Pentecostal
baptism,
and took the news
home, where he held
“tarrying meetings.”
In a short
time,
about
twenty had received the same
experience.
From the northern Reserves came Indians
by
the
score, though they
had to travel in mid-winter by dog
team to the end of the
railroad,
then hundreds of miles south by
rail to the Manitoba
capitol.
After
they
received the Pentecostal experience
with
tongues, they
took the
message
back to the scattered
Reserves,
where revival broke out. At their earnest request,
A.H. went there to
preach.
A.G. Ward also ministered to the Indians.
Stanley
Frodsham
reports
an account of Reverend Ward’s
ministry
in which Ward
preached through
an interpreter to the natives of the Fisher River Reservation.2?
A.H.
Argue
became the
pastor
of a
swiftly-enlarging congre- gation
in the
city,
but he
began
an itinerant
evangelistic ministry throughout
Eastern Canada and the northern United States.
Early in 1908 he made a tour of such cities as Toronto
(where
there were at least five Pentecostal
missions), Ottawa, Athens,
New York
City, Washington, D.C., Chicago,
St. Paul and
Minneapolis.
His glowing
account of the work of the
Spirit
in these
places
was combined with a
report
of an
outpouring among
the Manitoba Indians which he sent in to
Seymour.
One of the most
noteworthy facts in the
Argue
record is that
Chicago
had thirteen or fourteen Latter Rain missions in
operation
at that
time, proof
of the effectiveness of the
ministry
of W.H. Durham.28
.
9
129
The
Argue Mission,
like
virtually
all
early twentieth-century Latter Rain
ministries,
came under intense
opposition
and
The
Winnipeg
Pentecostals were
persecution.
derisively
called “the
tongues people”
and
they
were said to be demon-inspired. From the first the gatherings
in the
Argue
home attracted both earnest seekers after the
Baptism,
and determined resistance. Rotten
eggs
and
garbage were thrown at the
worshippers
in an
attempt
to
disrupt
the meetings
in the rented halls. Such
persecution
was so common that the
pioneer
workers came to
expect
it as a matter of
course, wherever
they began
Pentecostal
meetings. Opposition
even came from the ranks of the Holiness Movement.
Despite
such
reactions, both official and
spontaneous,
the Latter Rain Movement was
irresistable in its
appeal
and its
apostolic power.
In the
early meetings
at
Winnipeg, participants
were convinced of such a marked
blessing
of God, as to make all opposition seem irrelevant.
Another
feature
of the local revival was that the Second
Coming of the Lord was understood to be imminent. A.H.
Argue
contended that the Parousia could even take
place
within the next five
years, though
he never set a date for the event. His
expectation
arose out of his
profound
conviction that he was
living
in “the last
days”
and was
witnessing
the last
great outpouring
of the
Spirit.
One of the remarkable features of the
Argue ministry
was the relatively large
number of upper-class
people
that were reached and brought
into the Pentecostal ranks. One of the most
prominent
was Archdeacon
Phair,
a
clergyman
for
forty years
in the
Anglican Church,
and
initially
a critic of the
Argue meetings.
His
personal testimony
was
published
in the autumn of
1908,
and
reprinted
in Zelma
Argue’s
What Meaneth This? in 1923.29
Others
brought
into the Pentecostal
experience
at that time included Professor Baker of St. John’s
College
in
Winnipeg,
Dr. Howard
Geddes, Capt. Stokes,
and a number of business and professional
men. That there were no racial or social barriers in the Argue
Mission is attested both
by the
conversion of these
socially elite individuals and
by
the inclusion of Cree Indians in the meetings.30
A. H.
Argue’s
zeal in promoting the Latter Rain
message,
and his fervent belief in the imminent return of Jesus Christ led him to publish,
at his own
expense,
a number of religious periodicals. He was
strengthened
in his
eschatological
convictions
by
a vision he received in the
early days
of the movement in Winnipeg. He saw, as it
seemed,
a number of wheat fields
heavy
with
grain.
The kernels were
dropping
onto the
ground
and were
being trampled
under foot. “Since
then,”
he wrote, “we have been
doing
our best to
“31′
gather in the
golden grain.
Publication was a logical means of
promo-
10
130
tion and he proved to
be just
as capable as an author and
publisher
as he had been a pastor and
evangelist.
As early as
1908,
A. H. wrote
a summary of the Latter Rain Movement which was the lead article
in a new
journal published
in
Egypt.
The little
paper,
titled The
Promise
of the Father,
recorded the
outpouring
of the
Spirit
on the
Day
of
Pentecost,
and included accounts of the renewed out-
pouring
in the twentieth
century. Copies
were
printed
both in
English
and in Arabic. Of still
greater
influence was The Apostolic
Messenger. Argue
sent it free to
anyone
he
thought
would be
interested in the “full
gospel. “In
one of the first editions of
1908,
he
wrote of its impact worldwide.32 He also drew from John
Wesley
to
explain why
the charismata had
departed
from the
church,
as well
as how
they
could be recovered.33
It is
impossible
to estimate the influence of this
journal
in the
spread
of Pentecostalism worldwide. John
McAlister,
for
example,
was in Eastern Canada when he first heard of the Latter
Rain,
but
he
questioned
the
validity
of
tongues speaking
since he recalled
Paul’s
question
in 1 Corinthians “Do all
speak
with
tongues?”
It
was an article in A.H.’s
magazine
which
changed
his mind:
Argue
had clarified the issue
by pointing
out a distinction between the
gift
of tongues in 1 Corinthians and
tongues speaking
as an evidence of
Spirit baptism
in Acts 2:4.34 This little
journal, then, brought
into
the Pentecostal Movement one of its most effective
pioneering
pastors,
as well as his son who was destined to become a leading
figure
in the PAOC. Some issues of The
Apostolic Messenger totaled over
40,000 copies,
all sent out free
by
A.H. In
1911,
additional
copies
of the
magazine
were
requested by a missionary
in
El
Salvador,
who translated the
articles, using
them in his mission
work.
By 1916,
A.H. had received letters from over
forty
countries
telling
of the
outpouring
of the
Spirit among
thousands of
believers. In later
years,
when he
began
a “full
gospel”
radio
program
in
Winnipeg,
the
journal
was re-named The Revival
Broadcast.3s
,
,
Another
way
in which the zealous Pentecostal
pastor sought
to
introduce
people
to the Latter Rain was through
campmeetings
and
conventions. The first Pentecostal Convention in Western Canada
was
organized by
A.H.
Argue
in the Autumn of 1907.
Flqrence
Crawford,
the
indefatigable
Azusa Street
evangelist
and the
founder of the
Apostolic
Faith of
Portland, Oregon,
came to
Winnipeg
with a group ‘ of
supporters.
she sent a to
Seymour:
.
Later, report
.
There was a great Pentecostal Convention in
Winnepeg
[sic.] beginning
November 15th. Preachers and workers
,
from all parts of Canada were present. A band of workers
.
f
11
131
‘
who were in Portland at the time received a call from God , to go to Winnipeg, and they were present at the convention: ,
Sister Crawford and Mildred, Sister Neal, Brother Conlee
and Brother Trotter. About
twenty
were baptized with the
Holy
Ghost and were
handkerchiefs and
many
healed. The
people brought
aprons
to be blessed as in Acts
19:12,
and the Lord did wonderful the simple faith
of the dear ones that
signs through
brought
them. The Lord saved and
healed one
young
man of the tobacco habit
through
an
anointed
handkerchief, taking
all the desire for the stuff
away
from him. Demons were cast out of those bound
by
them.36 ,
A
year later,
the Fall convention in
Winnipeg
was marked
by more “wonderful works of God.”
Nearly
150 were
baptized
in water,
“some of them
being
filled with the
Spirit
as they came
up
out of the water.”37 In
1908,
A.H. visited Toronto
during
one of his early evangelistic
tours where a convention of the workers and members of the five Missions then in that
city
attracted his notice. Little evidence
survives,
but he seems to have
participated
in the meetings.
He
stayed
in the home of two Christian and
Missionary Alliance
missionaries,
the
Murrays.
A.H. later
reported
that “we were in prayer when
suddenly
the
Holy Spirit
descended
upon
us in a special
way,
and I spoke in other
tongues. Quickly they
arose to their feet and said I had
spoken
in the Arabic
language.”
Back in Winnipeg,
another Convention was held in 1908 at which “a
great number received this wonderful
experience, including
a number of ministers and Christian workers.”38 The 1908 and 1909 Fall Conventions were held in a Lodge Hall on Isabel Street, but a large Baptist
Tabernacle was the venue for the 1910
gathering. People came from
many
areas of Canada and from the U.S.
Many
were baptized
in the
Spirit,
and took the
message
to their home communities,
with the result that new works were started in several places.
Among
those who came into the Latter Rain Movement at the time were members of the Elmer Cantelon
family.39
Elmer’s brothers and, children were well-known workers in the PAOC. Elmer Cantelon and E.A.
Schwab,
the first man to receive the baptism
in
Winnipeg,
were instrumental in
establishing
the first permanent
PAOC District
Camp
in Manitoba.4? In
1908,
the Pentecostal
message
had been embraced
by
a
young
woman at Weldon, Saskatchewan,
sixteen
year
old Christine Larson. This girl
was instrumental in bringing into the new Movement the
family of
George Upton,
whose later
ministry
as
long-time Foreign Missionary Secretary
for the PAOC is well-known. In
1910,
A.H. Argue preached
at a
camp meeting
at Weldon and this
greatly
‘
‘
12
132
encouraged
the small
congregation.41
Another small church had been established
by
R.E. McAlister in Ottawa, the nation’s
capitol, and he invited A. H. to hold a convention there in 1911. The Ottawa residents at first were uncertain how to treat the
evangelist,
but a number of remarkable
healings brought
a favorable
response.
Mrs.’ C.E.
Baker,
a businessman’s
wife,
who was dying of cancer, was one of those healed.
Through
her
healing
her husband was
brought
into the
church, gave up
his business and became a Pentecostal evangelist, launching
the first
meetings by the new sect in Quebec. After his ordination in
1914,
Baker moved to Montreal where he carried on an
aggressive evangelistic ministry
until his death in 1947. Thousands were converted in the
meetings, large
sums of money
were raised for
evangelism, many
new
congregations
were assisted or
encouraged
in
getting started,
and
many
effective workers and missionaries came out of the Montreal
assembly. These were
merely
some of the
consequences
of the
ministry
of A.H.
Argue.4z – ,.
,
III.
Ministry
from
Long
Beach
A.H.
Argue
was the
pastor
of the
Winnipeg congregation
for nearly
six
years,
but in 1912 he moved his
family
to
Long Beach, California. No reason is given for the
move,
but one
may
surmise the motivations behind that action. From the
beginning
of the outpouring
of the
Spirit
in
Winnipeg,
there had been an inter- change
of
correspondence
between the Latter Rain
people there, and those in Los
Angeles.
A. H. had called his local church the “Apostolic
Faith
Mission,”
a title identical to that which
Seymour had assumed for the Azusa Street
congregation.
In
addition,
A.H. had come into the Latter Rain Movement
through
the Durham Mission in
Chicago,
and Durham had received his
personal Pentecost in Los
Angeles.
As a keen
businessman,
A.H. had learned the value of
getting
accurate
information,
and his
pre- disposition
towards
evangelism,
rather than to a settled
pastorate, undoubtedly
influenced the move
strongly.
In the United
States, both Watson and Zelma continued their education while A.H. became
deeply
involved in evangelism. If he ever had
any personal contact with
Seymour
he left no record in his Memoirs nor in
any other of his
writings
or sermons.
He did
report
on his involvement with
Mary Woodworth-Etter, however,
in the 1913 World-Wide
Camp Meeting
at Los
Angeles. This woman
evangelist
had
begun
a salvation-healing ministry in the 1880’s which was most remarkable for the number and
variety of supernatural healings that occurred in it.43 It is indicative of A. H.
‘
‘
.
13
133
Argue’s reputation
at that
early
date that he worked with this
woman
evangelist,
first
by sharing
in the dedication of her
tabernacle in
Indianapolis,
and then in the 1913
Camp Meeting.44
In his
Memoirs, Argue
recalled that eventful
period
as follows:
The revival continued to spread over .
.
great pentecostal
various
parts
of the world. In 1913 a world wide
camp
.
meeting
was called in Los Angeles,
California,
in which I
..
had a
small’part
with Mrs. Woodworth
Etter,
a noted
evangelist. People
came from different
foreign lands,
from _ across Canada
and the U.S. Over 500 tents were on the
.
grounds
and many had rooms and other accommodations
in the city. Some most marvelous
healings
took and
‘
many
were filled with the spirit and the word of God was
place
mightily
confirmed. The spirit of revival kept increasing all
over the land.45
A.H. continued to labor in American
to Canada in 1916.
camp meetings,
conventions and
evangelistic
campaigns
until his return
Within a
year of his coming to the U.S., Argue had acquired recognition
as a leader
among
American
Pentecostals, and
in some of the
formative events that led to the
organization
of participated the Assemblies of God.
About this time, the term “Pentecostal”
began
to be used to distinguish
believers associated with E.N. Bell and H.G.
Rogers
from those who had
previously
used the name “Apostolic Faith.” The switch
apparently
came _
as a result of the “many
regretable things” which
had taken
place under the
“Apostolic
Faith” label.46
The Church
of
God was the first name chosen
by Rogers
and
about 50 other
early workers,
but this name was identical to the
name of another
previously existing organization,
so this
fledgling
body
met in. the summer of 1913 to draw
up a list of ministers which
by
then totaled over
350,
and to set up a new credentials committee.
In
1913,
at the Interstate
Camp Meeting
in Eureka
Springs,
Arkansas,
further
steps
were taken towards the establishment of an
organization, though
it was then advocated as a move towards
providing
Pentecostal workers with an
“association,””
rather than
a denomination. In a
publication
issued
by
E.N. Bell late that summer,
it was announced that a Bureau of Information had been established to
supply
“authentic information from the field.” This
Bureau was headed
by Bell,
several other well-known American
Pentecostals,
and “A.H.
Argue
of Long
Beach,
California.”4′ This particular group
of some 350 workers, with the
acknowledged
but informal
leadership
of men like Bell and
Argue,
was to have a profound
influence
upon
the
organization
of the Assemblies of God at its founding Convention in Hot
Springs,
Arkansas in 1914. Men like
Bell,
A.P.
Collins,
D.C.O.
Opperman
and J.R. Flower
emerged from these
organizational processes
to head
up
the
newly-formed AG,
but there is no further record of A. H.
Argue’s
involvement in
‘
.
14
134
any
administrative
capacity.
While A.H.
Argue
itinerated
throughout
the United
States,
he and his wife
prepared
the children for
possible
future roles in the ministry.
Watson was an avid lover of water
sports,
and the
family home in Long Beach was close
enough
to the ocean to enable him to swim
every day.
He won numerous awards and later in life, after he began assisting
his
father,
he was
styled by
the
press as,
“The Athlete
Evangelist.”
Eva
Argue
made the children
practice
their musical instruments before
they
could
go swimming,
with the result that both Watson and Zelma became
accomplished musicians,
and this
greatly
aided in the future
ministry
of the
Argue
“team.” Both Watson and Zelma, were
baptized
in the
Spirit
at the World-Wide Camp Meeting
of
1913, and,
while still in Long
Beach,
both
began to test their talents
by assisting
in revival
meetings
in small
ways. Their talents were not to be fully
developed, however,
until after the family returned
to
Winnipeg
in 1916. In the
meantime,
A.H. continued with his itinerant
evangelism
from his Long Beach home.
Argue
was
preaching
in the States when the so-called “New Issue”
emerged
in 1915.
Ironically,
the new doctrine was inad- vertently
launched
by
another
Canadian,
R.E.
McAlister,
when he preached
at the 1913 World-Wide
Camp Meeting.
McAlister noted in passing
comment,
that the
baptismal
formula which
appeared
in the Book of Acts referred
only
to the name of Jesus. A “revelation” received
by John G. Sheppe,
of the
power
in Jesus’ name, combined with McAlister’s
aside,
was all that was essential to
give
rise to the Oneness movement.48 What is significant
here,
is that A. H.
Argue was then in
California,
close to the scene of this
development,
was well-acquainted
with both R.E. McAlister and the
early
Assemblies of God
leaders,
and must have been
thoroughly
familiar with all aspects
of the situation.
Hollenweger
has
alleged
that A.H. was one of the
pioneer Pentecostals to be
baptized
a second
time,
as a result of the emergence
of the Jesus
Only teachings.49 Hollenweger’s
inclusion of A.H.
Argue
as one of “the leaders of the Pentecostal movement of the time” is
significant, however,
he was less than accurate in claiming
that “the whole McAlister
family
and almost all Canadian pastors”
were involved in the
re-baptism process. According
to PAOC
historian,
Gordon F.
Atter, Argue
was one of the first to perceive
the
theological dangers
inherent in the Jesus
Only doctrines,
and he
resolutely rejected
it.5° When the New Issue teachings
did
spread throughout
North
America,
A.H.
adopted
a baptismal
formula which
incorporated
the trinitarian
position
with the then-current
emphasis
on the
primacy
of the Son. He
baptized with the
formula,
“In the Name of the Lord Jesus
Christ,
I
baptize you
into the
Father,
Son and
Holy
Ghost.
“5 1
_
.
‘
.
–
.
.
.
15
135
As an itinerant
evangelist,
A. H.
obviously
wished to continue in an orthodox manner
(recall
his Methodist
heritage)
in
baptizing new
converts, yet
he wished to avoid
unnecessary controversy
in working among
those who had
espoused
the Oneness
position.
The controversy
over the Oneness doctrine was
present
in the formative stages
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of
Canada,
from
1917-1919, and it is true, as
Hollenweger
has
noted,
that a number of the
early leaders of that
period
were
supporters
of the doctrine. in the Canadian
West, however,
there was firm resistance to it especially by
A.H.
Argue
and John
McAlister,
who was a
prominent Pentecostal
pastor
in Alberta.12
.
‘
IV.
Winnipeg
and the
Evangelistic
Period
In
1916,
the
Argue family
returned to
Winnipeg,
where A.H. was
asked
again
to take
leadership
of the work. In his remi- niscences,
he referred
only briefly
to the
“problems”
that had arisen during
his absence in California.
Though
he did not
elaborate,
the “problems”
surrounded the
propagation
of the Oneness
teachings in the local
congregation.
Franklin Small had started a Pentecostal Mission in the
city
and had made the New Issue the dominant feature of his
ministry.
Small had been
present
at the 1913 World Wide
Camp Meeting
and returned that same
year
to hold the “eighth
annual Pentecostal Convention” with R.E. McAlister of Ottawa as chief
speaker.
It was at that time
according
to Small’s biographer,
that McAlister
ably
defended the New Issue doctrine. Two
years later,
R.E. McAlister and
evangelist Harvey
McAlister were
re-baptized.
In
July,
of
1916,
the “FIRST PENTECOSTAL CAMP MEETING EVER HELD IN WINNIPEG” was advertized,
with Black
Pentecostal, G.T. Haywood
of Indian- apolis,
L.C. Hall of Chicago, and Frank Ewart of Los
Angeles,
as the main
speakers.
All of these men were zealous Oneness advocates.53
After A. H. took over
leadership
of a somewhat reduced
congre- gation
in the Liberal
Hall,
the
membership steadily
increased. In the first few months of
1917,
about 75 received the
baptism
in the Spirit,
and the
congregation
moved to
larger quarters
in the Langside
Hall. Here Pastor
Argue brought
in several well-known evangelists
for
special meetings, among
them Andrew
Ursham, C.O.
Benham,
and J.H.
King.
J. Rutherford
Spence
is one of the notable converts of that
period.
He was a recent
emigrant
from Scotland and later became a long-time
missionary
to China.
A
rapidly growing congregation required
another
move,
this time into the old
Wesley
Church. The
Langside
Hall had been rented,
but the lease was sold to a business firm for $2,300, which
16
136
sum became the down
payment
for the church.
Though
the congregation meeting
in the
Wesley
Church was destined to become the
largest
in the
PAOC,
it continued to be troubled over the
years by
Oneness
proponents.
The
principal
of the first Canadian Pentecostal Bible
school,
J.E. Purdie,
described in his Memoirs how the New Issue affected the students of his college. Frank Small had
opened up “The Apostolic Temple”
across the road from
Calvary Temple (formerly Wesley Church)
in
1926,
where the students had their classes. Tracts were given
to the students
claiming
that Jesus was the
totality
of the Godhead. Reverend Purdie noted that he vigorously opposed that teaching
with several
carefully-prepared
lectures and the students were convinced of the biblical
support
for the
Trinity.
Purdie was later told
by prominent
PAOC leader Tom Johnstone that if he hadn’t
given
that series of lectures, the entire Canadian Movement might
have been lost to the New Issue.54
A
significant
factor in the retention of hosts of
people
in the PAOC at this
time,
was also the
extraordinary
1920
campaign
of Aimee
Semple McPherson,
in
Winnipeg.
When Aimee found the old
Wesley
Church
“half-filled,” she
announced that she would visit the local dance halls to invite
people
to the
meetings.
The Chief of Police
provided
her with official
protection.
Aimee received enormous
publicity
from the
city’s newspapers
after she addressed more than
2,000
in the dance halls. In a short time the
Wesley Church was
packed
out.
Though
A.H. had
by
that time
given
the leadership
of the
congregation
to C.O. Benham and had become a full-time
evangelist again,
he was
present
for the McPherson meetings.55
The four-week McPherson
campaign
of 1920 consoli- dated the work which A. H. had
begun
in 1907.
However,
the
Argue association with the
congregation
was to be close and blessed for years
to come. A.H. made
Winnipeg
his
permanent headquarters, and his son Watson became
pastor
of the church there in 1924.
Between 1916 and
1920,
A.H.
Argue’s
chief contribution to the fledgling
Pentecostal Movement
lay
in
making Winnipeg
a center for
evangelism
and
discipleship
for all of Western Canada. He acted primarily
as an
evangelist,
and
engaged
in itinerant
evangelism whenever he could. In
1917,
for
example,
he
joined
with W.L. Draffin,
then
pastor
of a Pentecostal Mission in
Toronto,
for a campaign
in the YMCA. Andrew Urshan
helped
for the first three weeks, holding
two services a day for most of that time. Reverend Draffin assisted in the
prayer
room.
Many
were converted and about 200 received the Pentecostal
experience.
Willard and Christine Pierce were then
beginning
their
evangel- istic
ministry,
and
they helped
with the
young people’s
work and
17
137
took
charge
of the music. One of the notable recruits to Pente- costalism at that time was Beatrice
Sims,
who later became a prominent
woman
evangelist.
From this endeavor came a body of people
who
eventually
moved into
Evangel Temple
in Toronto, and helped
to make that church one of the most
prominent
Pentecostal missions in the
city.
The Willard Pierces were its first
pastors.56 Though
he had
frequently
visited Toronto in his role as Pentecostal evangelist,
A.H. does not
appear
to have had
any
close contacts with the Hebden Mission. His ministry was known to Mrs.
Hebden, and she was well aware that a number of workers had
gone
to the foreign
field from the
Winnipeg assembly.
One would
expect
that these two
prominent
and successful
pioneer
Canadian Pentecostal leaders
might
have
cooperated
in
evangelizing
Toronto. As it happened,
A.H. worked with W.L.
Draffin,
without
any apparent support
from Ellen Hebden. The reason for this lack of cooperation, no doubt, is to be found in Mrs. Hebden’s
independent spirit
and in her
rejection
of
any
form of
organization.
She resisted
vigorously even the most
rudimentary
of
organizations
which A.G. Ward sought
to establish in
1909,
the Pentecostal
Missionary
Union
By
the time A.H.
Argue
held his successful
campaign
in Toronto in
1917,
he had become associated with
another, ultimately successful
attempt,
to
organize
the scattered Latter Rain
groups
in Canada. Howard Goss came to Canada in 1915 and
organized
a branch of the Pentecostal Assemblies of the
World,
in Canada. Initially,
Goss met with little
response
from the Canadian
leaders, for their attitude was that God had taken them out of
organ- izations,
and
they
asked
“Why
should we bind ourselves
up?” Among
his chief
opponents
were
George
A.
Chambers,
Arthur H. Atter,
Albert E. Adams and Andrew H.
Argue.
But the
relatively rapid growth
of the new sect
required
some form of
organization: unprincipled
con men were
presenting
themselves as “Pentecostal evangelists”
to
unsuspecting congregations.
Some means had to be found to
identify
“sound
men,”
and the overseas
missionary
funds needed to be handled in an efficient and accountable manner. Eventually,
these leaders reversed their
positions
and met in 1917 at a camp
meeting
site near
Lansdowne,
Ontario. There were
only
six men
present,
and
they rejected
formal
organization.
Another
meeting
was called for
November, 1918,
at which a larger
number of preachers were
present, including
A.H.
Argue.58 It was
agreed that “Fellowship,
not
doctrine,”
would be the basis for the
organization.59
R.E. McAlister added that as
long
as the members believed in the
baptism
in the
Holy Spirit
with
tongues
as the initial
evidence, they
could
acquire
credentials.6° The Pente- costal Assemblies of the World in Canada was the first name
,
, ‘ .
.
.
.
18
138
proposed
for the
organization.
This was
shortened,
and the new sect
acquired
a federal
government
charter in 1919 as The Pente- costal Assemblies of Canada.
Though
this new denomination had taken no official
position
on Oneness
teaching,
Franklin Small continually sought
to have it do so.
Early
in 1920 he gave the PAOC an ultimatum,
threatening
to leave unless the PAOC was amenable to his own views on “eternal
security”
and “the fulness of God in Christ.” Sentiment in the infant
PAOC, however,
had turned against him,
and he withdrew and founded a rival denomination. In the next
publication
of the
PAOC,
Small’s name was absent from the list of ministers.61
Despite
these shifts from
openness
to the Oneness
doctrines,
to outright rejection
of
them,
A.H.
Argue
and John McAlister remained outside the PAOC.
Instead, they joined
a newly-formed Western Canadian Council of the Assemblies of God. As time passed,
those Canadian leaders who had for a time
enthusiastically espoused
the New
Issue,
found it to be
unsatisfactory,
and eventually
concluded it to be unbiblical.
Among
them was Robert E. McAlister. As Walter E. McAlister
noted,
it was
embarrasing
for them,
but
“one by one they came
back to a position on the
Trinity.” Robert
E. McAlister wrote an article titled
“Confessedly,
Great is the
Mystery
of
Godliness,”
in which he acknowledged that he had mistakenly thought
the Godhead could be
adequately
defined in human terms. There
is, he noted,
“a mystery in the Godhead that we must confess.”
Gradually
the bulk of the
young
Pentecostal congregations
in Canada reaffirmed their Trinitarian
stand,
and the
way
was
paved
for a later
amalgamation
of the Eastern and the Western leaders under the
aegis
of the PAOC.62
It
is, nonetheless,
as an
evangelist,
that A.H.
Argue
is best remembered. When he launched out into full-time
evangelism
in 1920,
he took with
him,
his
daughter, Zelma,
and his
son,
Watson. The
youthful Argues
had assisted their father in numerous
meetings before,
but
mainly
as song
leaders, musicians,
and
youth
workers. When
he judged
that
they
had
acquired
sufficient
experience,
A. H. began
to
employ
them in more
demanding spheres
of service. Zelma’s first
evangelistic trip
was with A.H. to
Montreal,
where in 1920
they
held a
campaign
in Charles E. Baker’s church. Pastor Baker
reported
that:
In the large St. Andrews Church,
many were saved, healed,
baptized.
Some had
striking
visions and God’s
mighty
power
was manifested in a wonderful
way.63
In
July,
the team went to the
Arnprior Camp Meeting
and the local
pastor, George
A.
Chambers,
wrote a glowing account of the services.64 A short
campaign
followed in Ottawa, the nation’s
‘
‘ _
.
.
.
19
139
capitol.
Watson
had itinerated in Western Canada for some
.
months,
but
joined
with Zelma and A.H. for
evangelistic meetings in Kingston, and then in Ottawa. It was there that their
minstry
was abundantly
blessed in the
saving
and
healing
of
many people.
In 1920,
the
pastor
of the Ottawa Mission was Robert E.
McAlister, and he
rejoiced
in the numerous
healings
and their effect
upon
the community.
He
reported
on the
evangelistic campaign
as a time of “Great Visitation.” from God.65
,
‘
A.H.
Argue
considered the Ottawa
meetings
to have been the most remarkable in his
experience
to that date because of the supernatural healings
which
accompanied
it.
Though
his hand- written Memoirs were
very
brief and
unorganized
in
content,
the Ottawa
campaign
was recalled with evident
pleasure.
He
quoted
a communication from R.E. McAlister: .
God has caused us at times to stand in wonder and
.
‘
.
”
adoration.
Evangelist
A.H.
Argue …
has been with us to
bring
the
message
of the
outpouring
of the Latter Rain.
After three
days
it became evident divine
healing
was in
God’s
thought
at this time.
Every day
was crowded with
signs
and wonders. Souls were being saved and
baptized
‘. daily. One afternoon four received the baptism while sitting
in their seats. While the sick were being prayed
for, a young
woman who had severe operations and [was] still ill was not
only
healed but received the
baptism.
A woman with
tuberculosis of the nose and face suffered for nine years was ‘
healed. Another woman was healed of leakage of the heart
and received the baptism
sitting
in her seat….
Many
other
healings
took
including
Mrs.
Stephens,
wife of
Commander R.M.T.
place,
of the Canadian
Navy,
Ottawa. His
Stephens
high position placed
them
among
Canada’s
highest
officials. She had been under four doctors for
months. The Ottawa Citizen reported her healing as given
‘
by
her. She and the Commander received the baptism of the
Spirit.
This caused intense interests. 66
Zelma
Argue’s
account of the
campaign
credited the extra- ordinary healings
both to the
ministry
of the Word
by
A. H. and to “A
spirit
of
intercessory prayer”
which settled
upon
the
people. “Strong
men would rise in service and tell of being awakened in the night
to
prayer.
No wonder we saw such results!” The
high
social status of Commander and Mrs.
Stephens
was noted
by
all who reported
on the Ottawa
meetings,
but without
any
evidence of self-congratulation
at
having
reached into the
city’s “upper
crust.” Argue’s ministry
had
long
been marked
by
his
ability
to reach converts in all classes of society. As for the
Stephens, they zealously witnessed
among
their friends both in Canada and
England,
and reported,
in letters to
A.H.,
that
they
had been ridiculed and
.
‘
‘
.
.
.
‘
–
‘
‘
‘
20
140
ostracized for their efforts.
Still, they
vowed to remain true to their convictions.
.
When the
Argue
team visited Montreal for a second
campaign
in December, 1920, healings
were once more in evidence. A
26-year- old
man,
deaf and dumb from the
age
of four, was
prayed
for and healed. The
validity
of that event was vouched for
by
a medical doctor who was present. In Owen
Sound,
another series of meetings in late 1920 were more remarkable for the number who were “baptized
in the
Spirit,”
rather than for
healings, though
some of those also occurred.6′
In January
1921, following
a brief rest in
Winnipeg,
the
Argues began
a series of
meetings
in
Seattle, Washington. One night, during
the second
week,
A. H.
Argue preached
from Numbers
9, on the “Cloud of
Glory.”
Almost before he concluded his
sermon, people
rushed to the altar to
pray
and seek God. Pastor William H. Offiler
wrote a glowing
account of these
meetings.68
From
Seattle,
the
evangelists
moved to nearby
Vancouver, B.C., where an old
friend,
C. Orville
Benham,
was a pastor. Benham had opened
a mission in August of
1920, and
the
Argue meetings put
his work on a’solid
footing.
He estimated the number of converts at more than
200,
and noted that in the first three weeks over 100 had received the Pentecostal
experience.
Some of these
recipients
were prominent
businessmen: three were
gospel preachers.
Even a group of musicians from a cruise
ship,
the S.S.
Empress of Russia,
were converted,
and for a few nights before
sailing, they provided
music for the
meetings.
In Benham’s
opinion,
it was “the
largest
revival yet
witnessed in the
history
of Vancouver.” He credited its success to the
Argue ministry
and to weeks of “intercessory
prayer”
before the
campaign began.69
In
April, 1921,
the team went to
Calgary,
to assist
Harvey McAlister. A new auditorium was filled to overflowing, and over 80 received the Pentecostal
experience.
A.H.’s
ministry
focused on prophetic
events
capturing
the
public’s attention,
while Watson and Zelma
provided
the bulk of the music. A little
later,
a short campaign
with Pastor John McAlister in
Lethbridge
resulted in a number of
conversions,
with over 20
receiving
the
baptism
of the Spirit.
In June of
1921,
the
Argue Evangelistic
Team
began
to itinerate throughout
the United
States,
and thereafter the
majority
of its meetings
were held in American communities. Watson was to leave the team in 1924 to become the
pastor
of the
Winnipeg assembly, but Zelma continued to assist A.H. until his retirement from active ministry. Thereafter,
she carried on as an
evangelist
in her own right.
A
campaign
was held in
Findlay, Ohio,
which was
highly
–
21
141
gratifying
to the local
pastor,
T.K.
Leonard,
and the
people.71 Indeed,
the entire Ohio
community benefited,
for it is believed that a disastrous
drought
was alleviated
by the prayers
of the
evangelist and
people.
The
drought
ended when the believers
prayed
for
rain, and so remarkable was the answer to
prayer,
that the local newspaper,
the
Courier, gave
an account which Zelma later
in her book
.
reprinted
From
Findlay,
the team went to
Oberlin, Ohio,
for a short rest. Zelma noted in her book that Oberlin was the
community
in which Charles G. Finney had been
president
of the
college.
This reference is
only
one of
many
which
may
be found
among
the works of pioneer
Canadian
Pentecostals,
to the life and
ministry
of the famed revivalist.
By July, meetings
were
begun
in
Cleveland,
but these
meetings proved
a difficult
campaign,
because of the
weather, it was the hottest
July
in 40 years. In
spite
of the
weather,
a revival broke
out,
as the local
pastor,
J. Narver Gortner attested.’3
More
meetings
followed in Seattle, then in the midwest.
Following the 1921
meeting
of the’General Council of the Assemblies of God held in St.
Louis, Missouri,
A.H. and his
helpers began meetings just
across the
Mississippi
River in Granite
City.
Pastor C.M. O’Guin had a small
congregation,
but the Lord sent a
gracious outpouring
of the
Spirit
to consolidate and
enlarge
the
asserribly. The team drove about in an old
flag-draped Ford, played
their musical instruments on the streets and thus created considerable
.
interest. The
meetings began well,
but it was in the third week that the “cloud of God’s
glory
settled down over hearts” and multitudes were
baptized
in the
Spirit,
as many as thirteen in a single
day.
Even
. in the homes and the
schools, people
and children
gathered
to pray and seek God. Entire families were
brought
into the church and
by the end of the
campaign,
over 130 were
“Spirit-baptized.”
In a
“. second
campaign
in Granite
City
the next
summer,
similar scenes were recorded
The first
evangelistic campaign
in 1922 was held in
May,
in New
‘ York
City,
in the
newly-purchased
Glad
Tidings
Tabernacle. It was the fifteenth
anniversary
of the establishment of that Pentecostal
Mission,
and the
Argues
were the
special guests
of Pastors Robert . A. and Marie
(Burgess) Brown,
founders of the mission. Members of some 30 local Missions sent
representatives,
and the
2,000
seat Tabernacle was
quickly
filled. Over
fifty
received the
baptism
of the Spirit
and a number were saved. Later in the
month,
the
Argue team traveled to
Lancaster, Pennsylvania. There,
numbers were saved and
baptized,
and a man who had stammered for 28 years was healed. Then followed a
long trip
across the western
plains
to
difficulties
attended the
‘ Dallas, Texas,
where
special meetings.
‘
22
142
A huge tent was
rented,
but because of a series of storms it could not be erected. The Coliseum was then
secured,
but a very hot
spell made the interior of the
building
an inferno.
Finally,
the tent was set
up
in a
park,
surrounded
by
the
city’s largest
dance
hall,
an outdoor vaudeville show, and a baseball diamond. In the midst of this discouraging
prospect, they experienced
what could be described as a
“glorious outpouring”
of the
Holy Spirit.
The weather remained warm and
dry
for the balance of the crusade. H.E.
Alford, the
supporting
Dallas
pastor,
was ecstatic over the results.
Among
those who were
baptized
in the
Spirit
were a prominent Dallas
attorney,
a Baptist
minister,
and a Jewish brother.
Although the
evangelists
had a
special
interest in “the
negroes,”
a
“Strong racial
feeling
would not
permit
the
mingling
of colored
people
in this,
a white folks’
meeting.” Consequently
a special service was arranged
for
them,
to which the whites
begged
to be admitted also. The result was a meeting attended
by approximately 3,000 people. Yet,
“”Care was taken that each side should
keep
on its own side of the line.”
Though
the
Argues
were
keenly
aware of local
prejudices, they prayed
for the black believers until the last one had been helped, though
it took until late the
following morning.
It was a fitting.conclusion
to the
great
Dallas crusades
The next
stop
on their
itinerary
was
Alton, Illinois,
where the Argues
were so successful in their ministries and so
warmly welcomed
by the
saints that
they
made Alton their “second home.” Their
publications, thereafter,
listed both
Winnipeg
and Alton as . their
headquarter
cities. Both
daily newspapers gave
excellent publicity
to the Alton
meetings, including
front
page coverage
of the revival’s
progress.
Zelma collected a number of
eye-witness accounts of the work of God and testimonies to
healing.?6
For the remainder of
1922,
the
Argue Evangelistic
Team held campaigns
in Granite
City, Tacoma,
and
Minneapolis.
The latter meetings
ended on Christmas
Eve,
in the midst of a severe cold snap,
but numbers were
saved,
and
twenty-five
were
“baptized
in the
Spirit.”
After a rest in
Winnipeg, they
set out for
Fresno, stopping
in Los
Angeles
to share in a service with Aimee
Semple McPherson in her new,
Angelus Temple.
In
Fresno,
A.H. was especially
effective in
convincing many
of the “biblical” nature of baptism
in the
Spirit,
and over
eighty enjoyed
the
experience.
Although
a series of meetings had been
planned
for
California,
a call from Alton led them to retrace their
steps
to minister at the opening
service of the new
Gospel
Tabernacle erected
by
the Pentecostals in the heart of that
city.
The new church seated
1,000 people,
but was crowded out with over 1,200 in attendance and some 300-400 were unable to
gain
admission. Fifteen were con-
‘
23
143
verted the first
night,
and
many
others followed in the
meetings each
night.
The services were remarkable for the number of families that were
brought
to
Christ,
for the number of
extraordinary healings
that took
place,
and for the unusual
spirit
of conviction that
gripped
the
impenitent. Many
cried out in their seats for mercy,
knelt on the
floor,
and found Christ as Savior.
Many
were baptized
in the
Holy Spirit
and more than two hundred
gave
their names as converts
by
the time the crusade ended.
At this
point
in his
career,
A.H. was over
fifty years
of
age,
but was as active and
energetic
in his
pulpit
as ever. As historian Gordon Atter has
noted, early
Pentecostal
preachers
were
judged both for the content of their sermons and for the
vitality
of their deliveries. In his
opinion,
A.H.
Argue
was
preeminent among Canadian
evangelists
in the
vigor
and
energy
of his sermon
style.77 ‘
An Argue publication, The Revival
Broadcast,
of 1923-24 has on its cover three characteristic
poses
of the
evangelist.
All of them suggest
a human
dynamo
in action. Gordon Atter recalls an occasion in the 1920’s when A.H. was home in Winnipeg for a rest. He was
present
in a service in which a well-known
preacher
was abysmally failing
to
keep
the attention of the
people.
As Atter
put it,
“A. H. was invited to speak, and in 30 minutes had a crowd at the altar
In
1923, meetings
were held
by
the
evangelist
and his
daughter, Zelma,
in
Denver, Colorado,
and in Byesville, Ohio. The
highlight of the
summer, however,
was the
campaign
in
Binghamton,
New York. The
report by
Pastor John Kellner was
published
in the Canadian Pentecostal
Testimony,
which at that time was issued monthly by the PAOC from its London,
Ontario
headquarters.
As Kellner
noted,
the
“Argue Campaign
in Binghamton” was remark- able for the number of
outstanding
miracles of
healing
that took place.’9
A former
Congressman
from Delaware
publicly
declared his conversion at that time, while a prominent professional man in Binghamton
became
deeply
convicted over his ownership of liquor worth some
$12,000.
He testified that if he broke the bottles he would lose his money, but if he sold the stuff he would lose his soul. His decision was to smash the bottles. There were
many
such accounts,
but Divine
Healing
was the chief characteristic of the meetings.
Those who were
healed,
in all cases, were identified in the published
accounts. A prominent graduate of the Boston Conser- vatory
of Music was healed of an
open
wound in her side. Three children from one
family,
two of whom were deaf and dumb and the other
paralyzed,
were all healed after
prayer.
A woman
crippled with infantile
paralysis
was able to move her
limbs,
and another woman,
unable to walk for
years,
after several
prayers by
the
‘ . ;
‘
.
.
‘
‘
.
,
‘
24
144
poisoning,
tuberculosis,
goiter,
together
in
Kitchener, Spirit.
Ontario,
messages leader,
1930’s. A large
_
sang,
the
Spirit
and even to climb stairs
and
evangelists,
was able to walk
around,
unaided. Other claims to healings included
healing
of tumors, brass
crossed
eyes,
liver
disease,
swollen tonsils, eye problems, rheumatism,
a deformed foot. Most of these accounts were
personally
examined and verified as genuine
by Dr.
Mary Snowe,
a Chicago
specialist
who vouched for the truth of these
claims, according
to Kellner’s
report.
In the months and
years
that
followed,
numerous
campaigns were conducted
by the intrepid evangelists, though
the “team” was
less often. Watson and Zelma had their own individual meetings,
and Zelma for a time teamed
up
with her
younger
sister Beulah.
Early
in
1932, however,
Zelma and A. H. shared in services
in which about
forty
were
baptized
in the
A
healing
service each
Thursday evening
resulted in some definite
healings
and
large
crowds
gathered
to hear
Argue’s
on
prophecy.
Zelma assisted as trombonist and
song
and the
Pastor,
William L. Draffin, wrote that
delegations that had come from other communities to attend the
meetings “carried the revival fires back with them” and since that time
many more had been filled with the
Spirit
in his Church.8°
Zelma
reported
“a
heavenly
visitation” when the
Argue
team ministered at the Ebenezer
Camp Meeting
near
Buffalo,
N.Y. in the
number had received the
baptism
in the
Spirit,
and on the
closing night,
as an anointed
layman played
his
guitar
and
of the Lord came
upon
the
congregation.
“Wave after wave of glory” swept the
people
and more
healings
took
place
that remarkable event. Others were saved and still more were
baptized
in the
Spirit
and
spoke
in
tongues.81
When the famous Braeside
Camp Meeting,
at Paris, Ontario, was begun
in
1935,
A. H. was invited to be the first
evangelist.
Pioneer Canadian Pentecostal J.H. Blair had
purchased
the
camp grounds the
year
before and was anxious that “Braeside”
get
off to the best possible
start. A. H. was assisted, as usual,
by Zelma,
while the Bible Teacher was Asa Miller of
Kalamazoo,
advertising
the
meetings
were described in the
following
manner:
during
and brochures I I th,
the
Argue’s
Evangelists
Daughter
Internationally
Michigan.
In
pamphlets from
July
28th to
August
A. H.
Argue and
Zelma Known Preachers
25
145
Rev.
Argue
is one of the pioneers of our
Movement,
with messages
that are soul stirring, his soul being ablaze with a prophetic message
to a dying world. He is ably assisted
by his daughter Zelma.82.
‘
‘
When Andrew
Harvey Argue preached
at Braeside, he came with a well-earned
reputation
as one of the foremost
evangelists
in North America. He was in his late
sixties,
and
beginning
to manifest the results of three decades of intense,
unsparing
and
self-denying ministry.
Zelma’s admiration for her father is understandable,
given
her natural
respect
for him and her
opportunities
to witness his effectiveness as an
evangelist;
nonetheless she was no
sycophant, and her
pen portraits
of the
“grand
old man” have been validated
by other observers. In her comments
upon
his
personal approach
to the awesome
responsibilities
of the
evangelist,
she wrote that:
The pattern for all his ministry was to first wait much upon
God in confident faith and
expectation,
then declare the
Word and believe God then to act. Out of much
with God in the
wrestling
secret
places,
came the
unpredictable
works of God in the public services.83
Walter E. McAlister met A.H. while just a youth attending the
Argue Mission,
but a half-century later he wrote:
I can still remember how I sat in the services and looked
upon
the shining face of this man of God … He seemed to
me that he was the most
saintly
man that I had ever seen.
His face reflected the glory of God.84
McAlister and Atter both remember the
priority
which A. H.
gave to the altar service.
During
the
1940’s,
A.H.
Argue
continued a fruitful
personal ministry
of
encouragement,
but he could not
longer engage
in an evangelistic ministry.
In fact, the
evangelist
became ill at that
time, no doubt the result of his enormous
outlay
of
energy
for several decades,
and was forced to retire: At the
age
of 79 he had a
leg amputated,
and the other at the
age
of 83. Thus the last fourteen years
of his life were
spent
in a wheelchair. For a time he lived with his
daughter
Beulah and her
husband,
the Reverend
Campbell
B. Smith,
and the last
period,
before his death on January
24, 1959,
he spent
with his daughter,
Eva,
and her husband Fulton
Robinson,
in Winnipeg.
He was then in his 91st
year,
but his wise real estate investment decisions of the
past provided
him with an income sufficient for his needs until his death.
Despite
these limitations on his
physical
activities and his confinement to his
home,
A.H. continued to exercise a great influence on the next
generation
of Canadian Pentecostals. As Beulah
recalled,
he spent his whole time
,
.
.
–
‘
26
146
in
reading
the Bible and
praying,
and often he would talk in tongues. Religious
broadcasts on the radio and his keen interest in worldwide
events,
which he considered to be fulfillments of prophecy, kept
him alert and involved. He was much in prayer for the next
group
of Pentecostal leaders and
greatly encouraged many young
men who came to him for advice and
help. He urged
them to aim at holiness of life and to exercise what he called “Active Faith” in the Lord. One of his most
frequently
used
phrases
with which he challenged young
ministers was “Be
Strong
in the Faith.”85 Zelma reported
a similar
emphasis by
the
evangelist:
On certain
challenges my father stood unwavering.
One
was ‘Have
your
faith backed
up by action!’-that is, have
.
an active faith. In
praying
for the
sick,
he
strongly
emphasized,
with unction, active scriptures such as `Stretch
forth thine
hand!’, ‘Lay
hands on the sick and
they
shall
recover’.86
Having
had this
emphasis throughout
his own
long
and successful career as pastor and
evangelist,
A.H.
Argue prayed fervently, right up
to the time of his
death, for its continuation by the next
generation
of Pentecostal believers.
V.
Argue’s
Contribution to
Historiography
A.H.
Argue’s
contribution to the establishment of North American Pentecostalism is difficult to
assess,
not because it was inconsequential
but because it was so extensive and so effective. He was a pioneering Pentecostal
pastor, publisher, author, evangelist, and denominational
organizer.
His
integrity
as a businessman and a clergyman was unblemished. All who knew
him
were aware of the quality
of his
spiritual
life. His doctrinal
stability
was a great asset to the
fledgling
Movement in both Canada and the United States. As an evangelist, his chief themes were so remarkably confirmed
by divine
healings
as to make then
universally acceptable.
A natural consequence
of this was the elevation of those
evangelistic
themes to the status of official Pentecostal doctrine. Of course, A.H. did not
by
his sole efforts achieve this
result,
but he was one of a select number of people whose ministries led directly to the establishment of numerous Pentecostal
denominations, (e.g.,
A.G.
Ward, William
Seymour,
W.H.
Durham,
Ellen
Hebden,
Aimee
Semple McPherson,
G.B.
Cashwell, C.H. Mason,
E.N. Bell and Howard Goss).
The first
major
contribution which
Argue
made towards that end came with his
founding
of the first Pentecostal work in Western Canada. When he
opened up
his home in
early
1907 for
“tarrying
27
147
‘
meetings”
he
began
what would
eventually emerge
as the
largest Pentecostal
congregation
in the Dominion. There are now
nearly
a dozen similar churches in the Manitoba
capitol.
The
only
other pioneer assembly
to rival A. H.’s
“Apostolic
Faith Mission” for its impact
and outreach was the Hebden Mission in Toronto, and that assembly gradually
faded into
obscurity. By contrast,
the
Winnipeg group expanded
both in numbers and influence under the leader- ship
of
Argue.
Even at an.
early date,
some of the “Pentecostal Conventions” which A. H. organized each autumn in Winnipeg had over
8,000 people
in attendance. No other Canadian Latter Rain assembly
could boast of such a response to its
message.
And the Argue ministry
attracted
people
from all social
levels, including some of the most
respectable
of Winnipeg society-doctors,
college professors, prominent businessmen,
and
clergymen.
From the
beginning,
the
Winnipeg assembly
was a missionary- minded
one, and
a relatively large number of workers went from it to overseas fields. Miss Mariam
Vey was sent out to China as early as 1908. The Reverend John Reid and Martha
Hisey
of Winnipeg were
among
a
group
of Pentecostal missionaries who landed in Liberia in 1908. The African
country
was known then as “the white man’s
grave,”
and it took its toll on most of that first
group
of soul-winners. Reid died within a year and others were forced home by
serious illnesses, but Miss
Hisey,
with an American
co-worker, opened
a mission
station,
in the
interior,
at
Gropaka.
In
1913,
the mission stations in Liberia
experienced
a revival of
religion
that continued until 1916. Among the converts were a Chief and a Witch Doctor and the
practice
of witchcraft was
largely
ended in the region.
This was
accomplished
in an area not
yet brought
under the control of the central
government
in Monrovia.
After her
furlough,
Martha
Hisey
returned in 1915 with several assistants, among
them Ethel
Bingeman
of
Winnipeg. Bingeman was an R.N. who both nursed and
taught
in Liberia until illness forced her return to Canada. After her recovery, she became the national
secretary
of the Pentecostal Women’s
Missionary
Council for 10 years,
then,
as the wife of Robert
Jamieson,
she went to the West Indies for further
missionary
labor.
In
1919, Sophie Nygaard
went to Liberia where she served the Lord for
nearly
40
years.
Christina McLeod and Paul Anderson were two other workers who went overseas from the
Argue
Mission at a very
early
date. But no details of their ministries can be found in the extant sources. J. Rutherford
Spence
of
Winnipeg,
is another who,
in
1919,
went to work for
many years,
in China.8?
According to a very early
source,
several missionaries went from the Manitoba capitol
to
Mongolia,
but information on them is limited to a
.
.
‘
28
148
.
reference in The Promise
( 1 9 1 0), a journal published by the Hebden Mission in Toronto. Mrs. Hebden noted in the article that five Pentecostal workers had
gone
to
Mongolia,
three from Toronto “and two from Brother
Argue’s
Mission in
Winnipeg.”88
It is possible
that the two unidentified missionaries were Christina McLeod and Mr. Anderson.
,
.
Though
A. H.
Argue’s ministry
was primarily evangelistic, he had a concept of his work which included the
foreign
mission field as well as North America. His first
publication
was
designed
for distribution in Egypt, and
copies
of his later
magazines
were
widely distributed around the world. At one
time,
he had
correspondence from over 40 countries
concerning
the Pentecostal
awakening,
and his articles reveal information on the worldwide
growth
of the “Latter Rain” Movement.
The
publications
written
by Argue
also
played
an important role in spreading news of the Latter Rain to multitudes in Canada and the United
States,
and were the means of
bringing
numerous
lay people
and
preachers
into the movement. R.E. McAlister
reported the
experience
of a man in
London, Ontario,
who was healed of cancer after reading a tract A. H. had written titled, “Jesus the
Great Physician.” Though given up by
doctors to
die,
the man was delivered
through
faith in Christ.89 Another
Argue tract,
this one on the
subject
of baptism in the
Spirit,
led John McAlister to seek and
experience
it for himself, and it resulted in his
entering
the Pentecostal
ministry.
The
Argue publications
and the
Argue
Mission made
Winnipeg the focal
point
for the Latter Rain Movement in Western Canada. After John McAlister’s
baptism
in the
Spirit,
he spent a short time in
Winnipeg,
then he
began
a Pentecostal mission in
Edmonton, Alberta. Two men from northern Saskatchewan visited the little mission hall, and asked the
pastor
to hold
meetings
at Emmaville. John
agreed, began services,
and then left his
young
son Walter in charge.
From this
youthful
worker’s
ministry
came a local revival of religion, and a lifetime of fruitful labors. Walter had received the baptism
in the
Holy Spirit
as a boy, while in the
Argue Mission,
and years
later was ordained to the
ministry by
A.H.90
The
spread
of
early
Pentecostalism to the Indian Reserves of northern Manitoba has been recounted
already.
Roland was one of the first towns in that
province
to be affected
by
the new
doctrine, where it was introduced
through
one of the
Argue
sisters who had been married in the town. A rural church was established in the St. Marks district of Manitoba through the
preaching
of A.H. around 1909. From this
congregation
came two
pastors
for the
movement, David A.
Taylor
and W.J.
Taylor,
who would become a
Super-
29
149
intendent for the Manitoba District of the PAOC. Pentecost
reached Altamont
through
the
ministry
of Violet
Graham,
who
went to
Winnipeg
for
employment
and
subsequently
attended the
Argue
Mission. A local church was established in the town
by
1913.
By 1918,
Pentecostal believers were to be found in Fairford,
Myler,
Dauphin
and Gilbert Plains in
Manitoba,
and workers had
begun
to evangelize scattered communities in Saskatchewan,
Alberta,
and
British Columbia.91
It was to be expected that A. H. would have a profound influence
on the first Pentecostal
workers, especially
in Western Canada. His
friend and
colleague
in the Holiness
Movement,
A.G.
Ward,
was
involved in the
Winnipeg meetings
and for a time served as the
pastor
of
Calvary Temple.
R.E. McAlister was
imported
from the
East to
preach
in the
Argue Mission,
and C.O. Benham served as
A.H.’s assistant before he took
up pastoral
duties in Western
Canada. His influence over John McAlister and his son Walter has
been described
already.
A ministerial student of the
Presbyterian
Church,
Thomas T. Latto, attended
Argue’s meetings
in Winnipeg,
accepted
the Pentecostal
doctrine,
and
subsequently
was
obliged
to
leave that denomination. It was he who
began meetings
in Gilbert
Plains, through
which came Ian
Presley,
another Pentecostal cleric.
Indeed,
the number of missionaries and
preachers
who owe their conversion and
Spirit baptism
to the ministries of workers who were touched
by
the life of A. H.
Argue
is legion. What
might
be called the “second
generation”
of Canadian Pentecostals was powerfully impacted by
the
Winnipeg pioneer’s ministry, including his own
children,
three of whom became
preachers
and
evangelists. Another was his
.
nephew
Robert
Argue,
a pastor and Bible school principal,
and
many
of the students who attended the Bible school in
Winnipeg,
such as Gordon F. Atter.
The Bible school was founded
by J. Eustace Purdie in 1925,
and used the facilities of
Calvary Temple
for its classrooms. R.E. McAlister and G.A.
Chambers,
both of whom were friends of A.H. requested
the Reverend
Purdie,
a Spirit-baptized Anglican, to set up
the school. A. H. was a supporter of Bible schools
though
he had only
a sixth
grade
formal education. His
daughter
Beulah entered the first class of 1925 in the
Winnipeg
institution and Watson attended a similar school in
Newark,
New
Jersey.
No
doubt, principal
Purdie
got
much
encouragement
from
A.H.,
for the evangelist
made his home
‘ in Winnipeg
and
frequently
ministered in Calvary Temple.
It is
likely
that he also had a considerable influence on D.N. Buntain,
a Methodist cleric, who took a charge in
Winnipeg
and then
investigated
the claims of the Pentecostals.
Buntain joined
the
‘
,
.
‘
.
,
.
.
30
150
new
group, pastored
the local Pentecostal
congregation,
and in 1926, by
General Conference
vote,
was made first
Superintendent of the Manitoba District.
When,
in
1928,
Manitoban Pentecostals set
up
their own
organization, independent of,
but
cooperating with,
the national PAOC
headquarters
in
Ontario,
some of the Argue
clan were
present
for the vote.
A. H. showed a keen interest in such
organizational procedures, including
those that led to the establishment of the Assemblies of God in 1914 and the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada in 1919. He remained the
evangelist par excellence, however,
and never became an ecclesiastical administrator. He valued the benefits that a religious organization
could confer on a fledgling movement such as his
own,
but as his
daughter
Beulah
put it,
he “remained an evangelist
to the end.
“92 Contrary
to the
practices
of some itinerant evangelists
of the
time,
A.H. did not
castigate
the
developing Pentecostal
denominations
as evidence of a decline in
early twentieth-century pentecostal spirituality.
To the end of his
long life,
he
prayed fervently
for the
younger
leaders of those
organ- izations and
recognized
that
they
would have to deal with
problems that were unknown to him and his
pioneering colleagues.
His support
of the denomination is seen
by his willingness
to
attend,
in his 90th
year,
the 1958 Pentecostal World Conference in Toronto. That
meeting,
attended
by
some
6,000
Pentecostal leaders from around the
world,
must have thrilled the heart of the old veteran whose vision from the first had been for a
global
charismatic
‘
awakening.
One further area of
inquiry
into the life and
ministry
of A.H. Argue remains,
the doctrinal distinctives that
figured
most
prominently in his
preaching
and
writing.
Divine
Healing
was one doctrine that emerged early
in his
preaching.
A.H. was
personally acquainted with A.B.
Simpson
and
Mary Woodworth-Etter,
two of the best- known
exponents
of that distinctive. Dr.
Simpson
had
given
much prominence
to
healing
at the turn of the
century, especially
in Winnipeg,
where he
spent
much time in local
pulpits
and in conventions.
Through Simpson’s prayers,
while at
Winnipeg,
A. H. was healed of a chronic illness.
Subsequently,
the doctrine was featured in his
writings
and
preaching,
and his
long ministry included innumerable claims to
supernatural healings.
He
pro- claimed
by
tract and sermon “Jesus the Great
Physician”
and he declared that “There is no doubt the
Scriptures
teach Jesus has made
provision
for
Healing
for our Bodies.93
During
his sojourn in California,
A.H. ministered with Mrs. Woodworth-Etter in campaigns in which
extraordinary
miracles of
healing
took
place.
It is not surprising, then,
that the doctrine of Divine
Healing
should
figure
_
.
31
151
so largely in his sermons,
tracts,
and articles.
Regretably,
few of his sermons survive. “Jesus the Great
Physician”
was one
message which he seems to have
preached
often. A selection of statements from this sermon indicates the nature of A. H.’s
presen-tation
of the doctrine. He
stated,
in part:
To secure
healing,
we see how necessary it is to diligently
hearken to the voice of the Lord
God, and to do that which
is right in His sight;
All
through
the
Scripture,
both in
prophecy
and
types,
healing
for the body is connected with healing for the soul;
The great atonement not
only covers all our sins, but also
‘
our sicknesses. Even in olden
times,
an atonement was
made for sickness
_ ‘
(Nu. 16:41-48);
‘
.
..
‘
One obstacle that often hinders the sick from
being
healed is the lack of active faith.
Many
have a passive faith that does not
oppose healing,
but does not act as
the Lord to heal
though they expect them;
There are some who do not know that there is a difference
between miracles and
healings,
and often when
they
are
” .
prayed
for and an instantaneous miracle is not performed,
‘
they
cease
trusting
and
begin at once to doubt God,
even
when the source of the trouble
may really
be smitten;
.
God often uses some humble servant of His to
even today
bring
the
good
news that Jesus heals the sick;
Note different
Scriptural ways
of
praying
for the sick:
Direct
prayer
of faith, United
prayer
of faith,
Anointing
with oil, They shall
lay hands on the sick;
God
truly
has placed gifts of healing in the church.94
These statements were
amplified
in the sermon with numerous examples, exhortations,
and biblical
quotations
to make the evangelist’s point
that “James has made
provision
for
healing
our bodies.”
A second of A.H.’s characteristic themes was
naturally
evident in his
sermons,
for he had
experienced
conversion to Christ and had become a Methodist exhorter
(lay preacher)
some time before his Pentecostal
baptism.
Thus the
necessity
for a “Born
again” experience
was a cardinal doctrine, and one which evoked little criticism, except
from some in the more traditional denominations. More
objections
had arisen to the Latter Rain
teachings
on supernatural healings,
but where these
proved
to be genuine, as was the case with A.H.’s
ministry,
those who
objected
made little headway.
In any
case, evangelical preaching
on Divine
Healing
and the New Birth were
fairly
well-known in the last
quarter
of the
.
‘
.
‘
‘
‘
.
‘
.
.
‘
‘
32
152
nineteenth
century.
The
emphasis upon
the
Baptism
in the
Holy Spirit
with the evidence of
speaking
in
tongues,
and a
prophetic emphasis upon
the Second
Coming
of Christ,
brought considerably more resistance in the
early
twentieth
century.
The truth of a third
theme,
the Second
Coming,
was a
present reality
to the first
generation
of Latter Rain saints. Numerous references to the
teaching may
be found in
Seymour’s Apostolic Faith,
and in other
early publications.
One of the common phenomena
of the new Movement was the
repeated
occurrence of messages (by tongues
and
interpretation,
or by the
gift
of prophecy) of the nearness of Christ’s Return. This theme was one of the most prominent
in the
Winnipeg evangelist’s repertoire
of sermons. Like so
many early
Pentecostal
believers,
A.H. saw the twentieth- century
Latter Rain Movement as a fulfillment of
prophetic scripture.
In one
published article,
titled
“Closing
Scenes of Prophecy,” he
wrote:
This
generation
has witnessed an almost unbelievable
fulfillment of the
end-of-the-age prophecies.
It is evident
that the coming of the Lord is near, and that this world is
facing
a time of trouble such as was not since the
beginning.
Other facts he adduced in
support
of his views were these: the
‘
closing
of the Gentile
Age;
Daniel’s
1335-day Sign;
the
Airplane
in prophecy;
the Automobile in
Prophecy; Capital
and Labor
(in conflict);
Radio and
Television;
False Christs in the Last
Days;
the Atom and
Hydrogen Bombs;
and Russia in Prophecy.96 His zeal for some 50 years of ministry, three decades of which were in itinerant evangelism,
was motivated
by the fact that he expected
the
Rapture of the Church at
any
moment.
His
daughters
Beulah and Eva recall that A.H. felt so
strongly persuaded
of this
teaching
that he often said the Lord could come within his own
lifetime,
and
perhaps
even within the next five years.9′
Next to his
Bible,
A. H. held an edition of Michael
Paget
Baxter’s Forty Prophetic
Wonders as his favorite book. This volume, eschatological
in nature and first
published
in the nineteenth century,
was based on alleged predictions in Daniel and Revelation. Baxter
suggested
that the Second Advent
might
occur in
1929,
or 1931.
According
to his
grandson
the Reverend Robert Smith of London, Ontario,
the
copy
which A. H. had in his
possession was, “his constant
companion.” “Rarely,”
stated Smith did he see “Grandfather
Argue without
his Bible and his manual on prophecy.
“98 Even
though
the Baxter
prediction
of the
Rapture
in 1929 or 1931 1 went
unfulfilled,
this
proved
to be no
problem
for
A.H.,
for he was
33
153
able to utilize the author’s data and
insights,
and to reject the
setting of dates. In his own
long ministry,
A.H. refused to name a specific date for Christ’s
Return,
but
always
lived and worked as if it were imminent.
The fourth and final doctrine which was cardinal to the evangelist’s theology was, inevitably, given
his
personal
Pente- costal
experience,
the
baptism
in the
Spirit,
with the evidence of tongues speaking.
The
emphasis
he
gave
to this
teaching
was so great
that it was said
by
his
contemporaries
and
admirers,
such as G.A.
Chamber,
Gordon F. Atter and Walter E. McAlister, that “no matter where A.H.
Argue began
in the
Bible,
he always finished
up in Acts 2:4.”This was easily
accomplished,
for he was
not,
in Atter’s estimation,
an
evangelist
with
strong expository skills,
but rather an
evangelist
of charismatic
qualities
and anointed
delivery.99
From the start of his
ministry
with home
prayer meetings
in Winnipeg, Argue
insisted
dogmatically upon
the absolute
necessity of a baptism in the
Spirit,
evidenced
by tongues,
for all born
again believers,
and most
especially,
for those called to a public ministry. This
emphasis
on
Spirit baptism
with
tongues speaking
as its evidence was the distinctive doctrine of
early
Pentecostals. The other three
emphases
described above were
acceptable
to a considerable
segment
of the
evangelical
world at the turn of the century.
The
promotion
of the Latter Rain distinctive
by
men like Argue
and others
was,
as Bloch-Hoell has
noted,
a biblicism based on an
unrelenting
fundamentalism.
100
Argue
and his
colleagues rejected
all
charges
that
they
were introducing
new doctrines to the
body
of Christian
divinity, rather, they
claimed
merely
to have recovered the lost
apostolic
doctrine of the
baptism
in the
Holy Spirit.
In this
proclamation,
A.H.
Argue
of Winnipeg
was
preeminent among
his
brethren,
and
justly
deserves the accolade
given
him
by
the Canadian Pentecostal historian Gordon Atter.
A.H.,
he
noted,
was
probably
the
greatest
Pente- costal
evangelist produced by
Canada.
_
In one final
respect,
A.H.
Argue’s
life is worthy of further
study. His
ministry
in
Winnipeg
and
throughout
North America has amply
called into
question
the thesis advanced
by
Robert
Mapes Anderson in his
book,
Vision
of
the
Disinherited,
that Pente- costalism is merely a small
part
of a long-term
protest against
the urban-industrial-capitalist society
of the
early
twentieth
century.
It was the exclusion of some elements of society from the benefits of industrialization that caused social
disequilibrium
and the cultural despair
in which
early
Pentecostalism flourished.101 Without engaging
in
any
extensive rebuttal of Anderson’s
views,
I would suggest
that the evidence adduced from the life and
ministry
of
.
.
.
‘
.
34
154
A.H. Argue is demonstrative of the universal
appeal
of the new Movement to all Social Classes. It is
noteworthy
that A.H. was already
a successful businessman and
prominent
citizen when he came into the Movement.
Among
his earliest converts were Dr. A. Baker,
a winner of the coveted Governor-General’s medal for
Modern
Languages
and
History
and a Ph.D. instructor for
years
in St. John’s
Anglican College, Winnipeg.
Another was Archdeacon Phair of the
Anglican
Church. Others included
prominent Winnipeggers such as Dr. Howard
Geddes, Captain
Stokes and several
leading community
businessmen.
By the 1920’s,
the Pentecostal ranks were
enlarged by such men as Dr. H.C. Sweet,
the Reverend J.E.
Purdie, a
Wycliffe College [Toronto] graduate,
and
Anglican clergyman; D.N.
Buntain,
a graduate of Wesley Methodist
Theological College in
Winnipeg;
and the Reverend T.T.
Latto,
a
Presbyterian
cleric. Many
other well-educated individuals were available at that
period for
employment
in the
Winnipeg
Bible school. 102 Nor should we overlook the wide
range
of A. H.’s
acquaintances among
the first group
of
pioneer
Pentecostal clerics.
Many
of them were not college-trained men,
but were far
superior
to their
colleagues
in attainments and status. John
McAlister,
for
example,
was a prosperous
harness-maker when A. H.’s
ministry brought
him into the Movement. A.G. Ward had been trained
by both the
Methodists and the Christian and
Missionary
Alliance
groups prior
to his involvement with Pentecostalism in
Winnipeg.
These individuals were enlisted in the Latter Rain Movement
primarily through
the ministry
of A.H.
Argue.
If one were to broaden the list to include influential
pioneers
elsewhere in
Canada,
it would be a
long
one indeed. Suffice it to say here that
pioneer
Pentecostalism cannot be attributed
merely
to social
discontent,
cultural
despair,
or industri- alization. Its
origins
are to be sought,
instead,
in what A.H.
Argue called “a
spirit
of revival all over the land. 103
.
*Thomas William Miller has
recently
moved from Canada to the United States where he chairs the Biblical Studies
Department
of the
Jimmy Swaggart
Bible
College
in Baton
Rouge,
Louisiana.
‘Thomas Wm. Miller,
Taped
Interview with Gordon F.
Atter, Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada, April 30,
1984. Resources for this
study include, but are not limited to,
original
materials located in the Archives of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada in Toronto, sermons, articles, and evangelistic reports printed
in the Pentecostal
Testimony,
a series of personal
interviews conducted
by the author,
various local church and District histories, and Zelma
Argue’s
What Meaneth This? (Winnipeg: privately published, 1923), reprinted
in a
slightly
revised version as
35
155
‘
Contending for
the Faith
(Winnipeg:
The
Messenger
of God
Publishing House, 1928).
2Zelma Argue, What Meaneth
This?, 10.
3C.M.
Ward,
“Yet Once More,” Pentecostal
Testimony (May, 1956),
4-5, 13.
40ne
example
was the aid he provided to Mrs. Laura B. Crouch and her “Woman’s Home.” In a report written
by Mrs. Crouch, acknowledgement is made of the fact that from 1904 to 1923, the “Woman’s Home”
occupied a three-story
building
obtained from A. H. on a rent free basis. She suggests that his contribution amounted to over $20,000, and that 3,000 women and girls
had been rescued from “white slavery,” hundreds had been converted, and a large number had entered the Lord’s work. She described him “as true a friend … to the work among the friendless as the loving Lord could have brought into our lives.” Zelma
Argue,
What Meaneth This?” 10. 5For a brief biographical sketch of Bishop King, see the article
by David Alexander in this volume.
6 What Meaneth This? 14-16.
7Zelma
Argue,
“Memories of
Fifty
Years
Ago,”
Pentecostal
Evangel
(April 22, 1956), 6-7, 29.
8W.J.
Taylor, History
of the First 50 Years of the Manitoba & N.W. Ontario
District,
1927-1977. Mimeographed. No date.
9 The Apostolic Faith 1:9 (June-September,
1907), 1. The first
thirteen issues of The Apostolic Faith have been
Fred reprinted
in Fred T. Corum, ed. Like As
Of Fire (Wilmington,
Mass.: T. Corum,
1981).
10KIaude Kendrick, The Promise
Fulfilled : A History of
the
Modern Pentecostal Movement
(Springfield,
MO:
Gospel Publishing House,
1959), 176.
11 The Apostolic Faith 1 :8 (May, 1907, 1-2.
12Thomas Wm. Miller, “The Canadian ‘Azusa’: The Hebden Mission in
Toronto,”
Pneuma 8: I (Spring,
1986), 5-29.
‘
‘3 The Promise 15 (March,
1910), 2.
14The Apostolic Faith 1:6 (February-March,
1907), 1-2.
‘5A. H. Argue, “Azusa Street Revival Reaches
Winnipeg,”
Pentecostal
Testimony (May, 1956), 9.
‘
16Frank Ewart, The Phenomenon
of Pentecost (1947, Hazelwood,
MO:
Word Aflame
Press, 1975), 97.
17Robert A.
Larden,
Our Apostolic
Heritage (Calgary: Kyle Printing,
1971), 36. 18
What Meaneth
This?, 10.
19See above, note 15.
20The Apostolic Faith 1:9 (June-September,
1907), 1.
‘
2’Thomas Wm.
Miller,
Interview with H.H.
Barber, pastor
of Calvary Temple
and a keen student of local Pentecostal
history,
1984.
22Stanley
M.
Horton,
“Twentieth
Century
Acts of the
Holy Spirit,” Pentecostal
Evangel (October 21, 1962), 19.
23Larden,
Our Apostolic
Heritage,
36.
24″The Canadian
‘Azusa’,”
20-22.
25Cf. The Apostolic
Faith,
1:6 (February-March,
1907), 7;
1:8 (May, 1907), 1;
1:12 (January,
1908), 4.
36
156
26Thomas Wm.
Miller, Taped
Interview with Walter E.
McAlister, Agincourt, Ontario, May 3,
1984.
27Stanley
H.
Frodsham,
With
Signs Following:
The
Story of
the Pentecostal Revival in the Twentieth
Century, (Springfield,
MO:
Gospel Publishing House,
rev. ed.,
1946) 56-57.
28For a full account of this tour see “Italians and Indians Receive the
Holy 29 Ghost,”
The Apostolic Faith 2:13 [sic.] (May, 1908), 4.
What Meaneth This?, 27-28.
3oJeremiah Rundle, a Cree, gave his testimony which was also included in
31 What Meaneth
This?, 27-28.
32 What Meaneth
This?, 12.
33 What Meaneth
This?, 17.
What Meaneth
This?, 27.
34W.E. McAlister, “A.H.
Argue With The Lord,”
Pentecosta.l
Testimony, (March, 1959), 7,
3?
15, 26.
What Meaneth
This?, 27-28.
36 The Apostolic
Faith,
2:13 [sic.] (May,
1908), 1.
37A.H.
Argue,
Memoirs. Handwritten MSS
copy,
PAOC
Archives, dated
February 21,
1954.
38See above, note 15.
Memoirs.
4°Elmer J. 39Argue, Cantelon, Harvester
of the North,
Toronto:
PAOC,
1969. 4’Paul
Hawkes, compiler, .Songs of
the
Reaper:
The
Story of
the Pentecostal Assemblies
of Canada
in Saskatchewan.
(Saskatoon: PAOC, Sask.
District, 1985), 140.
4zGloria G.
Kulbeck,
What God Hath
Wrought:
A
History of
the Pentecostal Assemblies
of Canada (Toronto: PAOC, 1958), I 14. See also Gordon F. Atter, The Third Force,
(Peterborough,
Ontario
College Press, 1970) 3rd cd. rev., 69.
43The work of Mrs. Woodworth-Etter has
recently
been assessed in Wayne
E. Warner, The Woman
Evangelist:
The
Life
and Times
of Charismatic Woman
Evangelist
Maria B. Woodworth-Etter
(Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow
Press, Inc., 1986).
Her older
autobiographical
works include Acts
of the Holy
Ghost or
Life, and Experience of
Mrs. M. B. Woodworth- Etter, (Dallis:
John F.
Worley Printing Co.,
no
date),
and Signs
and Wonders God
Wrought
in the
Ministry for Forty Years, (Indianapolis,
Ind.: Mrs. M.B.Woodworth-Etter,
1916).
44Zelma
Argue,
“This Is
My Dad,”
TEAM
—
(AG
Men’s
Fellowship magazine)
3:3 (July-September,
1956), 3-6.
45Argue,
Memoirs.
4Ethel E. Goss, The Winds of God: The Story
of the Early
Pentecostal Days (1901-1914)
in the Life of Howard A. Goss (New York: Comet Press, 1958),
167-168.
47Brumback, Suddenly,
156-157.
48William W. Menzies, Anointed To Serve: the Story of the Assemblies of God, (Springfield,
MO: Gospel Publishing House, 1971), 106ff. 49WalterJ.
Hollenweger,
The Pentecostals: The Charismatic Movement in the Churches, trans. R.A. Wilson,
(Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1971) 32 and 43, n. 21.
.
37
157
SO Miller, Taped
Interview with Gordon F. Atter,
April 30,
1984. 3’Miller, Taped Interview
with Gordon F. Atter,
April 30,
1984. 52Miller, Taped Interview
with Walter E. McAlister,
May 3, 1984. S3 Larden, 32-33, 50, 86-87.
s4Gordon Franklin,
Taped
Interview with J. Eustace Purdie, over a period of
several
days,
1973. Used by permission.
55A brief account
of
this
meeting,
written
by A.H. Argue, appears
in Aimee
Semple
McPherson This Is That: Personal
Experiences, Sermons, and
Writings (1919,
rev.
1921,
Los
Angeles:
Echo Park
Evangelistic Association, Inc.,
rev.
1923), 195.
56Argue, Memoirs; Kulbeck,
What God Hath
Wrought, 120; Zelma Argue, Contending,
50.
5’Miller,
“The Canadian ‘Azusa’,” 5-29.
‘
58Miller, Taped
Interview with Gordon F. Atter,
April 30, 1984.
59Miller, Taped
Interview with Walter E. McAlister,
May 3,
1984.
–
6oMiller, Taped
Interview with Gordon F. Atter,
April 30, 1984.
6?Larden,
Our Apostolic Heritage, 90.
62Miller, Taped
Interview with Walter E. McAlister,
May 3,
1984.
63Zelma Argue, What Meaneth This?, 30.
64Zelma Argue, What Meaneth This?, 31.
6sZelma Argue, What Meaneth This?, 32.
‘
6′
66Argue,
Memoirs.
What Meaneth This?, 36. 68
39-40.
69
What Meaneth This?,
70 What Meaneth
This?, 40-41. ..
What Meaneth This?, 41. 71
What Meaneth This?, 42.
‘ ‘
72 What Meaneth
This?, 60. 73
What Meaneth This? 43.
” .
74
75 What Meaneth
This?, 52.
What Meaneth
This?, 51.
‘6 What Meaneth This?, 51-52.
“Miller, Taped
Interview with Gordon F. Atter,
April 30,
1984.
78Miller, Taped
Interview with Gordon F. Atter,
April 30,
1984.
79″Argues Campaign
in Binghamton,” Canadian Pentecostal
Testimony (October, 1923), n.p.
BoW.L. Draffin, “Kitchener, Ontario,” Pentecostal
Testimony, (April, 1932),
12..
81″This Is My Dad,” 3-6.
82″Braeside’s Year of Jubilee, 1935-1985,”Souvenir Booklet,
(Burlington: Western Ontario District, PAOC, 1985).
83Zelma Argue
(with
A.H.
Argue)
“More Than Half a
Century
of Pentecostal
Grace
and Glory,” Pentecostal
Testimony (October, 1958), 8, 36.
84″A. H . Argue with the Lord,” 7, 15, 26.
85Miller, Taped
Interview with Beulah
Argue
and Eva Robinson,
July 29, 1984.
86″This Is My Dad,” 3-6.
_ ‘
,
‘
38
158
B?Kulbeck, 146, 231-233, 318; see also “A Brief History, Outlining
the Early Days
of the Pentecostal Movement in the
City
of
Winnipeg,” Booklet.
(Winnipeg: Calvary Temple,
n.d. [1955?]).
88E. Hebden, “Good News,” The Promise 15 (March, 1910), 2.
89A.H. Argue, “Jesus The Great
Physician,”
The Revival
Broadcast,
I (Midwinter, 1923-1924), n.p.
9oSee Note 30 above.
Miller, Taped
Interview with Walter E. McAlister, May 3,
1984.
9’See above, note 9.
92Miller, Taped
Interview with Beulah
Argue
and Eva Robinson,
July 29,
1984.
93See above, note 90.
94A.H.
Argue,
“Jesus The Great
Physician,”
Pentecostal
Testimony (August, 1957), 5, 28.
9sA.H.
Argue, “Closing
Scenes in
Prophecy,”
Pentecostal
Testimony, (October, 1955), 7,
26.
96Argue, “Closing Scenes,” 7, 26.
97Miller, Taped
Interview with Beulah
Argue
and Eva Robinson,
July 29, 1984.
98Thomas Wm. Miller, Interview with Reverend Robert Smith of London, Ontario, 1983. The Argue
“manual” was
by M. Baxter, Forty Future Wonders: Predicted in Daniel and Revelation. (London,
England: author, 1 1 th ed., 1903).
99Miller, Taped
Interview with Gordon F. Atter,
April 30,
1984.
10ONils Bloch-Hoell, The Pentecostal Movement: Its Origin, Development and Distinctive Character.
(New York:
Humanities
Press, 1964); see also, A.H.
Argue,
“The
Baptism
of the
Holy Ghost,”
Pentecostal
Testimony, (April, 1931 ), 8-10,
16.
101 Roberts Mapes Anderson, Vision ofthe Disinherited: The Making of American Pentecostalism
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1979).
“”Kulbeck. 52-56.
I03A.H. Argue, Memoirs..
.
39