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Oneness Pentecostalism: Race, Gender, and Culture (Studies in the Holiness and Pentecostal Movements)

Oneness Pentecostalism: Race, Gender, and Culture (Studies in the Holiness and Pentecostal Movements)

Current price: $39.95
Publication Date: October 15th, 2024
Publisher:
Penn State University Press
ISBN:
9780271094557
Pages:
282
Available for Preorder

Description

This volume traces the history of Oneness Pentecostalism in North America. It maps the major ideas, arguments, periodization, and historical figures; corrects long-standing misinterpretations; and draws attention to how race and gender impacted the growth and trajectories of this movement.

Oneness Pentecostalism emerged in the aftermath of the Azusa Street Revival (1906-9), baptizing its members in the name of Jesus Christ rather than the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and splintering from trinitarian Pentecostals. With its rapid growth throughout the twentieth century, especially among ethnic minorities, Oneness Pentecostalism assumed a diversity of theological, ethnic, and cultural expressions. This book reckons with the multiculturalism of the movement over the course of the twentieth century. While common interpretations tend to emphasize the restorationist impulse of Oneness Pentecostalism, leading to notions of a static, unchanging movement, the contributors to this work demonstrate that the movement is much more fluid and that the interpretation of its history and theology should be grounded in the variegated North American contexts in which Oneness Pentecostalism has taken root and dynamically developed.

Groundbreaking and interdisciplinary, this volume presents diverse perspectives on a significant religious movement whose modern origins are embedded within the larger Pentecostal story. It will be welcomed by religious studies scholars and by practitioners of Oneness Pentecostalism.

In addition to the editors, the contributors to this volume are Daniel Chiquete, Dara Coleby Delgado, Patricia Fortuny-Loret de Mola, Manuel Gaxiola, David Reed, Rosa Sailes, and Daniel Segraves.

About the Author

Lloyd Barba is Assistant Professor of Religion at Amherst College. He is the author of Sowing the Sacred: Mexican Pentecostal Farmworkers in California. Andrea Shan Johnson is Associate Professor of History at California State University, Dominguez Hills. Her research has appeared in edited collections and journals including Pneuma: The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal Studies and Religion Compass. Daniel Ramírez is Associate Professor of Religion at Claremont Graduate University. He is the author of Migrating Faith: Pentecostalism in the United States and Mexico in the Twentieth Century.