Fields White Unto Harvest

Charles F. Parham and the Missionary Origins of Pentecostalism

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Christianity, Denominations, Pentecostalism
Cover of the book Fields White Unto Harvest by James Goff, University of Arkansas Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: James Goff ISBN: 9781610751490
Publisher: University of Arkansas Press Publication: December 1, 1988
Imprint: University of Arkansas Press Language: English
Author: James Goff
ISBN: 9781610751490
Publisher: University of Arkansas Press
Publication: December 1, 1988
Imprint: University of Arkansas Press
Language: English

With fifty-one million people worldwide actively worshiping in Pentecostal circles, Pentecostalism is not only the single largest movement in Protestantism, but is arguably the single most important religious movement in modern times. But where did these Pentecostals come from? And how did a movement that began obscurely in turn-of-the-century Kansas come to have so much meaning for so many millions of people?

This biographical study of Charles Fox Parham offers a fascinating account of this movement’s origins in the American Midwest and of the one man most responsible for giving that movement its identity. An inspired itinerant preacher from the Kansas prairies, Parham pieced together the unique Pentecostal theology and dedicated his short life to spreading his message of divine hope—a message that was to strike a responsive chord in the hearts of a hard-working people discouraged by frequent economic depression. His story is one of both triumph and defeat, the saga of a sickly farm boy who by the age of thirty-three had converted almost ten thousand followers and yet, less than five years later, had fallen into obscurity, his name besmirched by scandal and his leadership repudiated by the very movement he had struggled so tirelessly to inspire.

Exhaustively researched, Fields White Unto Harvest is an in-depth study of the sociological significance of the Pentecostal movement, its roots in the evangelical thought of the late nineteenth century, and the several directions of its growth in the twentieth. Through Parham’s story, woven into a fascinating narrative by James Goff, we achieve a new understanding of the man behind the movement that would eventually alter the landscape of American religious history.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

With fifty-one million people worldwide actively worshiping in Pentecostal circles, Pentecostalism is not only the single largest movement in Protestantism, but is arguably the single most important religious movement in modern times. But where did these Pentecostals come from? And how did a movement that began obscurely in turn-of-the-century Kansas come to have so much meaning for so many millions of people?

This biographical study of Charles Fox Parham offers a fascinating account of this movement’s origins in the American Midwest and of the one man most responsible for giving that movement its identity. An inspired itinerant preacher from the Kansas prairies, Parham pieced together the unique Pentecostal theology and dedicated his short life to spreading his message of divine hope—a message that was to strike a responsive chord in the hearts of a hard-working people discouraged by frequent economic depression. His story is one of both triumph and defeat, the saga of a sickly farm boy who by the age of thirty-three had converted almost ten thousand followers and yet, less than five years later, had fallen into obscurity, his name besmirched by scandal and his leadership repudiated by the very movement he had struggled so tirelessly to inspire.

Exhaustively researched, Fields White Unto Harvest is an in-depth study of the sociological significance of the Pentecostal movement, its roots in the evangelical thought of the late nineteenth century, and the several directions of its growth in the twentieth. Through Parham’s story, woven into a fascinating narrative by James Goff, we achieve a new understanding of the man behind the movement that would eventually alter the landscape of American religious history.

More books from University of Arkansas Press

Cover of the book The Long Shadow of Little Rock by James Goff
Cover of the book Roads Less Traveled and Other Perspectives on Nationally Competitive Scholarships by James Goff
Cover of the book A Hurting Sport by James Goff
Cover of the book Chattahoochee by James Goff
Cover of the book Frank Merriwell and the Fiction of All-American Boyhood by James Goff
Cover of the book Democratic Sports by James Goff
Cover of the book Kaleidoscope by James Goff
Cover of the book Protect Yourself at All Times by James Goff
Cover of the book The Rumble of a Distant Drum by James Goff
Cover of the book Up Against the Wall by James Goff
Cover of the book King Me by James Goff
Cover of the book Arkansas Travelers by James Goff
Cover of the book Looking Back to See by James Goff
Cover of the book United States District Courts and Judges of Arkansas, 1836–1960 by James Goff
Cover of the book Ya Te Veo by James Goff
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy