William J. Seymour
Source:   Oral Roberts University
Library


Azusa Street Mission
It was not until 1906, however, that pentecostalism achieved worldwide attention through the Azusa
Street revival in Los Angeles led by the African-American preacher William Joseph Seymour. He
learned about the tongues-attested baptism in a Bible School that Parham conducted in Houston,
Texas in 1905. Invited to pastor a Black holiness church in Los Angeles in 1906. Seymour opened the
historic meeting in April, 1906 in a former African Methodist Episcopal (AME) church building at 312
Azusa Street in downtown Los Angeles.
What happened at Azusa Street has fascinated church historians for decades and has yet to
be fully understood and explained. For over three years, the Azusa Street "Apostolic Faith
mission" conducted three services a day, seven days a week, where thousands of seekers
received the tongues baptism. Word of the revival was spread abroad through The Apostolic
Faith, a paper that Seymour sent free of charge to some 50,000 subscribers. From Azusa
Street pentecostalism spread rapidly around the world and began it s advance toward
becoming a major force in Christendom.
The Azusa Street movement seems to have been a merger of White American Holiness
religion with worship styles derived from the African-American Christian tradition which had
developed since the days of chattel slavery in the South. The expressive worship and praise
at Azusa Street, which included shouting and dancing, had been common among Appalachian
Whites as well as Southern Blacks. The admixture of tongues and other charisms with Black
music and worship styles created a new and indigenous form of pentecostalism that was to
prove extremely attractive to disinherited and deprived people, both in America and other
nations of the world.
The interracial aspects of the movement in Los Angeles was a striking exception to the
racism and segregation of the times. The phenomenon of Blacks and Whites worshipping
together under a Black pastor seemed incredible to many observers. The ethos of the
meeting was captured by Frank Bartleman, a White Azusa participant, when he said of
Azusa Street, "The color line was washed away in the blood." Indeed, people from all the
ethnic minorities of Los Angeles, a city which Bartleman called "the American Jerusalem,"
were represented at Azusa Steet.
The place of William Seymour as an important religious leader now seems to be assured.
As early as 1972 Sidney Ahlstrom, the noted church historian from Yale University, said
that Seymour was "the most influential black leader in American religious history."
Seymour, along with Charles Parham, could well be called the "co-founders" of world
pentecostalism.