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  1. Christianity • Protestantism. Christianity portal. v. t. e. Charles Fox Parham (June 4, 1873 – January 29, 1929) was an American preacher and evangelist. Together with William J. Seymour, Parham was one of the two central figures in the development and early spread of American Pentecostalism.

  2. Mar 10, 2023 · Charles Fox Parham (1873–1929) was an American preacher and evangelist and one of the central figures in the emergence of American Pentecostalism. It was Parham who first claimed that speaking in tongues was the inevitable evidence of the baptism of the Holy Spirit.

  3. Charles Fox Parham (1873-1929) is often referred to as the "Father of Modern Day Pentecostalism." Rising from a nineteenth century frontier background, he emerged as the early leader of a major religious revivalist movement. He emphasized the role of the Holy Spirit and the restoration of apostolic faith. With his evangelistic zeal, he also ...

  4. Parham, Charles Fox (1873-1929) American Pentecostal Pioneer and Founder of the Apostolic Faith Movement. Born in Muscatine, Iowa, Parham was converted in 1886 and enrolled to prepare for ministry at Southwestern Kansas College, a Methodist institution.

  5. Apr 20, 2011 · Charles Fox Parham (4 June 1873 – 29 January 1929) was an American preacher originally from a Methodist and the Wesleyan Holiness Movement back ground. Together with William J. Seymour, Parham was one of the two central figures in the development and early spread of Pentecostalism (which initially emphasized personal faith and proper living ...

  6. Charles Fox Parham: Father of the Twentieth Century Pentecostal Movement. Charles F. Parham was born June 4, 1873 in Muscatine County, Iowa. When he was five, his family moved to Kansas where Parham spent most of his life. As a child, Parham experienced many debilitating illnesses including encephalitis and rheumatic fever.

  7. In Pentecostalism: The origins of Pentecostalism. The college’s director, Charles Fox Parham, one of many ministers who was influenced by the Holiness movement, believed that the complacent, worldly, and coldly formalistic church needed to be revived by another outpouring of the Holy Spirit.

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