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Continuing on with discussion point #1:
The New Kind of Pentecostals are those who do not claim exclusivity of the Holy Spirit to a particular denomination or church.
Let’s talk pneumatology here. There’s no doubt that the Pentecostal movement revived a sense of charismatic pneumatology in the church. Throughout history there has always been a stream of charismatic experience running through the church. It was sometimes ignored or marginalized, but it was there. The global explosion of what we have come to label the Pentecostal movement was certainly unique. It has found expression in “classical Pentecostalism,” charismatic pentecostalism, and other waves and streams around the world that defy definition at the moment.
With the initial Pentecostal movement there was a great sense of excitement. The Spirit was doing something new! There was a new outpouring, and it looked a lot like the book of Acts. People wondered if this was a special outpouring for the “last days.” And it just wasn’t happening the same way in other denominations or traditions of Christianity.
So I think the exclusivity started with trying to make sense of this new movement of the Spirit. Because there was a way in which the Spirit was working that was different. And that made us feel special.
But somewhere along the way, we may have reduced the Spirit’s role to that of charismatic manifestations, and even more specifically, tongues. The pneumatology of Luke-Acts had been sorely neglected, and one of Pentecostalism’s gifts to the larger church has been to explicate Luke’s unique pneumatology. We should be grateful for the biblical scholarship done in this area by many brilliant Pentecostals. But Pentecostal pneumatology, as it has been expressed thus far, is by no means the be all and end all of Christian pneumatology. Believe it or not, the Spirit has been at work in the church between Constantine and Azuza Street!!
It’s time to take the pneumatology we have developed and put it in conversation with other aspects of pneumatology. We didn’t invent it. We have much to learn from many theologians of the church over time. It’s as we interact with the collective mind of the church that we can see some of the weak points in our own pneumatology and develop our own insights further. The Spirit is bigger than us, bigger than tongues, than Pentecostalism. I believe the Spirit speaks through Pentecostalism to the rest of the church, and that the Spirit also speaks TO Pentecostalism through the rest of the church.
What do you think?
In what ways has our pneumatology contributed to the larger picture of what the Spirit is up to in the world?
In what ways has it fallen short?
How can we better interact with the 1900 years of pneumatological thought that came before us?
Has anyone been reading any pneumatology lately (Pentecostal or other) that has inspired them to colour outside the traditional Pentecostal lines?