Page 59 - History of Christianity II- Textbook
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Study Section 11:  Neo-orthodox Ideas


               11.1 Connect
                          As we move through the church ages, a new concept was introduced to the churches which
                          lead many churches astray.  It was called Neo-orthodoxy.  Basically the foundation of the
                          new thought was that the Bible was not actually the words of God, but it became the word
                          of God to individuals as they experienced it.  It could mean different things to different
                          people, depending on their own experience.  Instead of an objective book, the Bible became
                          subjective to the whims of its readers.

               This type of thinking has crept into our churches today.  In a Bible study you might hear the teacher ask,
               “What does this verse mean to you?”   Various people give their views on what the verse means, then
               everyone thinks about it, and it is left at that (It’s basically a sharing of common ignorance).  The teacher
               does not share the objective facts about what God wrote.  Rather, everyone’s views are equally valid.
               This is a very dangerous philosophy that prevails within the church.  Let’s see how it came into being….

               11.2 Objectives
                          1.  The student should be able to identify the main proponents of New-orthodoxy and define
                          the errant views of the philosophy.

                          2.  The student should be able to see how God moves to counter false philosophies in
                          various parts of the world.

               11.3 Charles Fox Parham, 1873-1929

                       Born in Muscatine, Iowa, Parham was converted in 1886 and enrolled to
                       prepare for ministry at Southwestern Kansas College, a Methodist
                       institution. After three years of study and bouts of ill health, he left school
                       to serve as a supply pastor for the Methodist Church (1893-1895). His
                       longing for the restoration of New Testament Christianity led him into an
                       independent ministry. Enamored with holiness theology and faith healing,
               he opened the Beth-el Healing Home in 1898 and the Bethel Bible School two years
               later in Topeka, Kansas.

               Along with his students in January 1901, Parham prayed to receive this baptism in
               the Holy Spirit (a work of grace separate from conversion). In the ensuing revival,
               Parham and many of the students reported being baptized in the Spirit, thus forming
               an elite band of end time missionaries (“the bride of Christ”), equipped with the
               “Bible evidence” of speaking in tongues (not languages), and empowered to evangelize the world before
               the imminent premillennial return of Christ.

               As his “Apostolic Faith” movement grew in the Midwest, he opened a Bible school in Houston, Texas, in
               1905. There he influenced William J. Seymour, future leader of the significant 1906 Azusa Street revival
               in Los Angeles, California.

               His linkage of tongues (later considered by most Pentecostals to be “unknown” tongues rather than
               foreign languages) with baptism in the Spirit became a hallmark of much Pentecostal theology and a



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