
This Week in AG History — October 15, 1949
By Ruthie Edgerly Oberg
Originally published on AG News, 16 October 2025
Pentecostalism was born in revival fire. From Azusa Street onward, Assemblies of God believers have celebrated the Spirit’s power to transform lives and empower the Church for witness. Yet as the Fellowship grew in size and structure, a recurring tension emerged: How can the church remain open to the Spirit’s freedom while maintaining biblical order and sound doctrine?
That question came into sharp focus in the late 1940s with the rise of the New Order of the Latter Rain — a movement that swept through North America, promising a restoration of all the gifts and ministries of the New Testament church. Its brief but intense impact tested the Assemblies of God’s discernment, unity, and commitment to Scripture.
By the mid-1940s, the Assemblies of God had matured into a well-organized fellowship. Headquarters, credentialing, and educational systems had brought structure to a once-scattered movement. Yet some Pentecostals began to worry that institutional organization might be restricting the moving and leading of the Holy Spirit. They feared that Pentecostal zeal and power had declined and longed for a fresh revival — a restoration of the supernatural life of the New Testament Church. That hunger found expression when revival broke out in Saskatchewan, Canada, in early 1948.
At the Sharon Orphanage and Schools in North Battleford, students and teachers entered extended fasting and prayer. In February 1948, they reported an outpouring of the Holy Spirit marked by prophecy and the laying on of hands to “impart” spiritual gifts.
Revival meetings spread quickly to the United States, where many Pentecostals attended both to seek refreshing and to discern whether this new movement was truly of God.
As the revival gained attention, troubling trends began to emerge. Alongside an elitism that was developing among the movement’s leadership, erroneous teachings brought concern:
• The modern church must be built on present-day apostles and prophets
• An overemphasis on identifying and imparting spiritual gifts through human hands and prophecy
• Tongues as a special gift for missionary service
• “Personal words” of knowledge or wisdom used to dictate life decisions
• Confessing sins to, and receiving deliverance from, men rather than directly from God
While many were sincere in seeking renewal, these excesses threatened both doctrinal soundness and fellowship unity.
The General Presbytery of the Assemblies of God investigated the movement and brought its findings to the 1949 General Council in Seattle, Washington. The resulting document, Resolution No. 7, titled, The New Order of the Latter Rain, became a defining statement in Pentecostal history.
Adopted in September 1949, the resolution reaffirmed the Fellowship’s belief in the gifts and ministries of the Spirit but rejected the movement’s doctrines as unscriptural because they “serve only to break fellowship of like precious faith and tend to confusion and division among the members of the body of Christ.” It addressed six areas:
1. Affirmation that spiritual gifts are distributed by the Holy Spirit, not imparted by human hands or prophecy.
2. Rejection of the claim that modern apostles and prophets hold authoritative foundational office in the universal Church.
3. Confession of sin to man and the need for a human agent for spiritual deliverance claims prerogatives which belong only to Christ.
4. The gift of tongues is not a gift that negates the study of language for missionary service.
5. Personal prophecy should not be used as directive revelation for ministry assignment or life decisions.
6. Rejection of the divisive spirit against established churches.
This decisive action preserved the unity and doctrinal integrity of the Fellowship. A report of the adoption of Resolution 7 appeared in the Oct. 15, 1949, issue of the Pentecostal Evangel.
The Assemblies of God’s response in 1949 sought to protect doctrinal truth without extinguishing spiritual passion. The Fellowship’s leaders did not deny the possibility of fresh outpourings of the Spirit — they simply insisted that every move be tested by the unchanging Word of God. More than 75 years later, the Assemblies of God continues to live in the creative tension between the freedom of the Spirit and the order of Scripture. The events of 1949 remind us that spiritual hunger must be guided by Scripture and that discernment requires humility and love.
Read, “Diary of a Delegate,” on page 2 of the Oct. 15, 1949, issue of the Pentecostal Evangel.
Also featured in this issue:
• “In Appreciation of the Retiring Editor”
• “Our Divine Task” by E. Elsworth Krogstad
And many more!
Click here to read this issue now.
Pentecostal Evangel archived editions courtesy of the Flower Pentecostal Heritage Center.
Do you have Pentecostal historical materials that should be preserved? Please consider depositing these materials at the Flower Pentecostal Heritage Center (FPHC). The FPHC, located in the Assemblies of God national offices, is the largest Pentecostal archive in the world. We would like to preserve and make your treasures accessible to those who write the history books.
Flower Pentecostal Heritage Center
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Springfield, Missouri 65802 USA
Phone: 417.862.1447 ext. 4400
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Email: archives@ag.org
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