5
The Canadian “Azusa”: The Hebden Mission in Toronto
Thomas William Miller*
Enthusiastic
city
Pentecostal
however, Baptism, (Ellen)
at the
Apostolic
that another
proponents
of Pentecostalism
Faith Mission in 1906 in Los
Angeles
referred to that
city
as “the American Jerusalem.” A similar
appellation
could be given to the
of Toronto,
Ontario,
where a powerful visitation of God
began late in the same
year.
For
decades,
Canadian Pentecostals have considered Robert E.
McAlister,
one of the founders of the
Assemblies of Canada, to have been the first Canadian to have received the
Baptism
in the
Spirit
and
spoken
in tongues in the twentieth
century.
A careful examination of the
documents,
has revealed that the first
person
to have
experienced
this
accompanied by tongues-speaking,
was Mrs. James
Hebden. There remains one faint
possibility
Canadian had the Pentecostal
experience
at an earlier
date,
for John
Loney, of Snowflake, Manitoba,
wrote to William
Seymour in
1906,
I am in sympathy with your
work, am baptized with the
Ghost and fire, and have received the gift of some as
unknown
tongue
or
tongues.
It first came two
years
and is proving more distinct and real. Believe God is
I me for some
special
work in some
part
of His
”
Holy yet ago, preparing vineyard
Loney
was
thousands, who,
.
citizen,
This account was
reprinted
in Seymour’s
Apostolic
Faith
paper in
December,
1906. There is no
way
of
ascertaining
whether Mr.
a Canadian or a recent American
emigrant.
Snowflake is near the U.S.
border,
and he
may
have been one of the
many
at the turn of the
century,
came north to take
up the offer of free homesteads on the Canadian
prairies.
His name does not
appear
in
any
available records of Canadian Pentecostalism. If he was indeed a Canadian then his experience
of the
Spirit’s Infilling
would antedate that of all other known Canadians and even that of
Seymour
and the “Azusa saints.” After a lapse of some
eighty years,
it is
unlikely
that this
can ever be solved, and it would seem safe to claim Mrs.
this century. Support
for this view has come from
Hebden Mission
by
an
eye-witness
to the
early
establishment
problem
Hebden as the first Canadian
Pentecostalism in Toronto.
recipient
of the
Baptism
in
an account of the
of
to Christ in the
The Reverend
George
C.
Slager
was converted
Hebden Mission in the summer of
1908, just
over a year after Mrs. Hebden’s
baptism
in the
Spirit.
He saw
many
others saved, filled
1
6
with the
Spirit
and
supernaturally
healed in the
meetings
that seemed to
go
on from
morning
to
midnight every day.
The Reverend and Mrs.
Slager
were familiar with other
newly- established Pentecostal missions in the
city
and also attended the first Pentecostal Convention in
Canada,
in Toronto
during
the autumn of 1908.
Slager
later wrote that “Mrs. Hebden was the first to receive the
baptism
in the
Holy Spirit accompanied by the initial evidence of speaking in other
tongues …
in fact,
they
claimed that she was the first to receive this
experience
in Toronto.”2
The Mission on
Queen
Street East became a focal
point
for the fledgling
Pentecostal movement in Canada and Mrs. Hebden was for some time the dominant
personality
in the Toronto work. She had been converted at the
age
of fifteen in
England and,
after marriage
to James
Hebden,
a contractor, came to Canada. In
May of 1904 they rented a three-story building in Toronto and
opened
a combined Rescue Mission-Faith
Healing
Home.
They
reserved the top
floor for their
private apartment. Despite
some initial successes in ministry, Ellen Hebden felt a lack of power in praying for the sick and
began
to intercede with God for more love and more faith. She was a woman of
strong
conviction and
was, according
to contemporaries,
much the better
preacher
in the
family.
On November
17, 1906,
while
engaged
in prayer, she sensed the
Spirit in an unusual
way.
Her account of what followed was
published later in her first
magazine,
The
Promise,
in
May,
1907.
Later,
she sent a similar account to
Seymour
in Los
Angeles,
who
reprinted
it in The
Apostolic
Faith. Mrs. Hebden’s
report
was
that,
without any expectation
of such an ecstatic
experience:
Suddenly,
the Holy Ghost fell upon
me, and I exclaimed
aloud,
“Oh Jesus! Thou art a real, living person! Thou art
.
lovely beyond description!” My
whole being seemed to be
filled with praise and adoration such as I had never realized
before…. I was praising Jesus all the time, and yet it did
not appear to be me, but the power within that was praising
Him….
my hands
were raised
by the power
of God and
pressed tightly
into
my right
cheek … I said to the Lord,
“What does this
mean?”,
and a very quiet, yet
distinct,
. voice said
“Tongues.”
I said
“No, Lord, not Tongues.”
Then followed a moment of deathlike stillness, when the
voice uttered the.word This time I felt .
again “Tongues.”
afraid of
grieving
the Lord and I said
“Tongues,
or
anything
that will
please
Thee and
bring glory
to
Thy
Name!”
One unknown word was
repeated
several times
and I thought that must be
Tongues….
On
Monday
morning (Nov. 19th)
I arose again to spend the day with the
.
Lord. I waited
patiently
for Him. At noon I took the word
of God, read a portion of it and spread it upon the floor. I
2
7
.
.
‘
.
‘
then knelt upon it and cried to the Lord to give me nothing
only
what corresponded with His word. Great
peace filled
my
soul and
I began
to
sing very quietly
but to
my
amazement I was
singing
in another
language.
I said
eagerly,
“Is this Tongues?”, and then another verse burst
from
my lips,
and for two or three hours I sang in an
unknown
language:
it was marvelous … Later on the Lord
gave
me
twenty-two languages,
one
night
in a
public
meeting;
and hundreds of verses of poetry have been given
by
the Spirit, also the interpretation of many. Sometimes
the Lord
gives
me the
interpretation
of what others are
saying;
also I have been able to write all the languages that
God has spoken through me … A month later my husband
received the
baptism
of the
Holy
Ghost and
spoke
in
tongues.3
Within five months there were between 70 and 80 who had received a similar
experience
and had
spoken
in tongues and four “workers”had
gone
out to
spread
the news. Some went to
Simcoe, Wingham,
Stratford and other Ontario communities. Other
people came to
Toronto,
drawn
by reports
of the unusual
meetings
and some
stayed
in the Hebden “Home” to “wait
upon
God for the baptism
in the
Holy
Ghost.” As she wrote in her first
report
to Seymour,
“This is the
power
of the
Holy
Ghost: this is the
day
of Pentecost.”4
Mrs. Hebden
appears
to have come into her
personal
Pente- costal
experience
without
any
contact
with,
or instruction
by, any other charismatic
group. Stanley
H.
Frodsham,
the author of the early
Pentecostal
history
With
Signs Following,
has
reported
this to be a characteristic of the
early days
of the Latter Rain outpouring,
and described the Hebden work in Toronto as one remarkable
example.5
Contacts were
quickly
made between Toronto and Los
Angeles, however,
in addition to occasional reports
sent in to
Seymour by
Mrs. Hebden.
By the
end of
1906,
a “Bro. O. Adams” went from Los
Angeles
to Ontario and told the saints in Toronto what God was
doing
in the south.
Though
Mr. Adams had not himself
yet
received the
Baptism,
his
report encouraged
others to
tarry
before the Lord and “three were filled with the
Holy
Ghost.”6 In December, 1906, A. S.
Copley
of Cambridge,
Ohio visited the Hebden Mission, and
published
his report
in an Ohio
religious journal,
an account
Seymour reprinted in his own
paper. According
to
Copley,
three services a day were held,
in addition to
special days
for Bible
reading, prayer
and divine
healing.
He added that “Pentecost has
begun
in Toronto”.?
7
About a month
later,
Ellen Hebden wrote to
Seymour
that her understanding
of Tongues had
grown:
3
8
About the middle of this month
(Feb., 1907), God gave
me a greater measure of power and now I have “the
gift of
tongues.”
I can speak and preach at will in three
languages
with
great fluency any length
of time. At first I find that I
had
tongues
as a sign, now as one of the gifts. God also
gives
the interpretation as He wills.8
Large
numbers of
people
came to the Mission to
inquire
and to receive for themselves the charismatic
experience
and there soon were six Pentecostal “missions” scattered
throughout
Toronto.
Pastor
George
Fisher had a work on
College
Street: Mr. and Mrs.
Murray (Mrs. Murray
was known as the “blind
missionary from
India”)
had a mission in the West End of the
city,
and a “Pastor
Craig” opened
a work in the center of Toronto. A Christian and
Missionary
Alliance
pastor
of a church on
Yonge Street attended a
camp meeting
at Old Orchard Beach in the U.S.A. and there received his
Baptism.
He
immediately began holding
Pentecostal services in his home church. In addition to all these new
missions,
a godly woman named Mrs. Builder
opened
a Pentecostal Workers Home on Borden Avenue. Here
many
came to tarry and to receive the
Holy Spirit. George Chambers,
who was present
in the
city
at the
time,
and
personally
knew the workers in each of these
missions,
was himself led later to establish still
. another Pentecostal work in the
city.9
Mr. Chambers
preached
in that mission about one
year,
and
proclaimed
the doctrine of Spirit baptism
with
tongues speaking, though
he had not himself then received the
experience.
Chambers was destined in the
providence
of God to become the first General
Superintendent
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada,
but his
entry
into the Movement was
hampered by
his great
caution. He
began hearing
in 1906 of the Los
Angeles
revival and received tracts and
papers describing supernatural healings and accounts of people
speaking
in languages he had never heard. He was then a
clergyman
with the New Mennonite Brethren in Christ
Church,
with
headquarters
in Berlin
(now Kitchener), Ontario. His little mission hall was
only
six blocks from the Hebden
hall,
and he has described in his Memoirs the fears he then felt lest members of his congregation should be “infected” with the Hebden “errors.” He wrote:
.
.
We were spending much time in prayer, seeking God for a revival, but had no
particular type
of revival in mind. Papers
and tracts
began
to sift through from Los Angeles, telling
of the wonderful
things that
were taking
place there, emphasizing especially
the
strange phenomenon
of speaking
in
languages
never learned, but
breaking
out spontaneously
as the Spirit would come upon the different
4
9
individuals. This, I remember,
put a damper
on our ardent
praying
for revival. When we heard of such strange
doings,
we asked the Lord not to allow such to come to us in
Toronto …. How terrified we were when we heard that the ‘
thing
we had feared had come to Toronto, but not upon us.
God took for granted that we meant just what we had asked
Him,
“not to allow it to come on us.”‘0
The result was that “The cloud of blessing lifted from our church, as we
rejected
this
moving
of God’s
Spirit.
It settled down over the Hebden Mission…. The revival which broke out there
brought blessing throughout
Toronto and the
surrounding
area.”
Despite
his
personal fears,
and
warnings
to his
congregation, man,
of Chambers’ people
began
to visit the Hebden Mission and there receive the
Baptism
in the
Spirit.
About that time, the Reverend Chambers attended his denomination’s annual conference at Berlin and there heard an old friend, the
special conference speaker, preach
on the
Baptism
of the
Spirit.
His friend, A. G. Ward,
formerly
a Christian and
Missionary
Alliance field worker in Western
Canada,
had come into the Pentecostal experience
and now was
proclaiming
it. His
message initially
was given
a fair
hearing,
but sentiment turned
against
him
and, despite the fact that a number of clergy present were filled with the
Spirit and
spoke
in tongues, there was a negative reaction and those so identified were
obliged
to leave their denomination.
George
Chambers had not
yet
received his
Baptism,
but
began attending
the Hebden Mission
along
with members of his own congregation.
One of his first actions was “to
apologize
to Mrs. Hebden for the unkind
things
I had said about
them,
and about the work of the
Spirit
that I had
previously opposed.”
He and his wife then became seekers for the
experience
but did not receive it until several
months later,
while
they
were
pastoring
in Elkland, Pennsylvania. They
were invited to the American
city by folks
who had come to Ontario in response to reports about the
outpouring
of the
Spirit.
After much
fasting
and
prayer,
the Chambers found themselves in the midst of a powerful revival of
religion.
It
began when a
lady preacher
was filled with the
Spirit,
and a mood of conviction for sin settled down on the
people. Despite
vehement opposition
in the
community,
the revival
spread
and
many
were converted,
healed and
baptized
in the
Holy Spirit.
One of the notable answers to
prayer
came as a result of bitter persecution.
The volunteer fire
brigade plotted
to rush one
night into the
meeting
and hose down all the
gathering.
A man was posted
at the window to give the word when the hall was full, but he became so fascinated
by the events underway
that he forgot to give the
signal!
5
10
From
Elkland,
the Chambers’ were called to
pastor
a
growing congregation
at
Vineland,
Ontario. This
fledgling
Pentecostal church
began
as a result of the visit of some members of Chambers’ former denomination to the Hebden Mission in 1908. Two of these people
received the
Baptism
in the
Spirit
in Toronto and soon several others were
seeking
for a similar
experience.
The services at the East End Mission continued to be characterized
by manifestations of divine
power. George Slager regularly
attended the
meetings
that
year
and wrote:
One felt the Presence of God as soon as one entered the
place.
There was such
variety
in the meetings.
Something happened
in every meeting. Sinners were convicted and prayed through
to
salvation;
and it seemed so
easy
to receive the baptism of the Spirit. The reason
being that folk were
really spiritually hungry.
There were also remarkable healings…. Sundays
were spiritual feast days. One hardly knew when one
meeting
ended and another
began…. There was always a group praying or tarrying before God between
meetings…. Many brought
their lunch and stayed
all day, sometimes far into the nights
Such services were irresistable to
many
in southern Ontario who thirsted for renewal and
reality
in religion. The first in Vineland to receive were Mrs.
Henry Snyder
and Mrs.
George
Stewart. Others joined
them in cottage
prayer meetings
in the home of Mr. David Fretz. His
sister,
Mrs. James
Troupe
came into the Pentecostal experience
and received “the
ministry
of discernment and prophecy.
“Mrs.
Troupe’s
husband was a prosperous fruit
grower and
gave large
sums of
money
to
support
several of the earliest workers in missions overseas. The
opposition
to Pentecostalism that arose in Vineland forced the Pentecostals out of their old church,
so an old school owned
by
Mr.
Fretz,
was donated to the group
and used for
meetings.
It was here that Reverend Chambers began
a
ministry
that was anointed
by
God. A
community-wide revival broke out in which:
The entire
village
and
surrounding countryside
were
stirred. Over twenty entire families,
parents, young people
and
children,
were
brought
into the church.
They
were
either saved,
reclaimed,
healed or filled with the
Holy
.
Ghost.
Every church for miles around
was affected
The first summer after his
arrival,
a
campmeeting
was held at nearby
Jordan Station. Dr. Yoakum of Los
Angeles
was the main speaker,
and
supernatural
occurrences were manifested. One of the most notable event was a “visitation of angels, who seemed to hover over the
camp
while
singing
and
playing heavenly
music.”
Many were
praying
and
seeking
God at the
time,
and were
deeply
moved
6
both
Chambers had
arranged mattresses for the Jordan
with
dead,
Many “Latter
its
genuineness. Ontario, including
was established
Wortman,
of the Pentecostal Assemblies congregations
. fledgling
the same
time,
denomination because result was
visited
11
reveals
and these were
a
was
to South
camp
and other fresh
inspiration.
At to attract scores of
Caistor
Township,
when his uncle,
by
the
experience.
Another incident at the
campmeeting
the
opposition
of many individuals
and,
at the same
time,
their realization that miracles were
possible among
the Pentecostals.
a firm in Toronto to rent cots and
Station
campmeeting,
shipped
to the
camp grounds
in twelve casket boxes.
Immediately rumor
swept
the
region
that the Pentecostals were
going
to raise the
and a public
protest
was
begun
to
stop
them!
came to the
camp
to decide for themselves whether this
Rain” movement was of God, and most were convinced of
Among
the visitors were residents from
London,
the Wortman
family,
and a very strong Pente- costal
congregation
in that
city
as a result. One of the indirect results of this
campmeeting
that Charles
a medical
doctor,
later went as a missionary
America, and still later became head of the Missions Department
of Canada. Other Pentecostal
were the fruit of the Jordan
churches,
like
Vineland,
were
given
the Hebden Mission continued
earnest seekers after the
Baptism,
and its influence continued to spread
to a number of Ontario communities.
Among
the
early visitors were the Arthur Atters of
Abingdon,
near Hamilton. Mr. Atter was dying of tuberculosis
William
Manley,
a Free Methodist
clergyman, prayed
for
him,
and he was healed. The Reverend
Manley
had been
expelled
from his
he had been
baptized
in the
Holy Spirit.
The .
a keen interest
among
the members of the Kerr church in Abingdon
in the claims of the Pentecostals. Numbers of them
the Hebden
Mission,
and there
many
received the
Holy Spirit baptism
and
spoke
in tongues. Others were healed and some were converted.
Meetings
were held in the local church
but the
praying
saints were forced to leave.
Eventually, over 40 former church members formed a new Pentecostal congregation
and asked Arthur Atter to be their
pastor. According to the Pentecostal Assemblies of
Canada,
Gordon F. Atter,
author of The Third Force, this
process
was
frequently repeated
Pentecostalism in Canada, and accounted in large
part
for the
rapid
formation
assemblies. ?4
of visitors to the Hebden Mission and
ministry by some of the Toronto workers in Abingdon helped
to expand and consolidate the work. Mrs. Hebden
printed
in her
magazine
girl,
Edna
Manley,
who
reported
her
Abingdon,
in the
early days
of
An
interchange
testimony
of an
Abingdon
in
historian
of new Latter Rain
the
7
12
years
General
Baptism
of the
Spirit
27, 1909,
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of
and
baptism
in the
Spirit
with
tongues speaking
late in 1908.
Young Edna later became the first wife of W. E. McAlister-for some
Superintendent
Canada. W. J.
Brown,
a lay worker at the Hebden
Mission,
held meetings
in Abingdon and
reported
on services held in the summer of 1908 by Pastor Atter. There were two services on weeknights more on
Sundays.
Charles W.
Chawner,
who had received the
at Hebden’s
Mission,
also visited
Abingdon and
gave
a missionary address to about 35 people. Mr. Chawner was soon to become the first Canadian Pentecostal overseas missionary.
A letter from Mrs. Arthur Atter to Mrs.
Hebden,
dated
January
recounted the former’s salvation a few months
earlier, and her
struggle against tongues speaking
Pentecostal Convention in Toronto in October 1908. Her letter ended with
praise
to God who had
patiently
filled her with His
Spirit.
Another letter from
Abingdon
from Pearl
told a similar
tale, 15 and
reflects the close
relationship
that then existed between the Latter Rain saints in the two
Snyder
communities.
The Hebden
Mission,
many
while
attending
the
dealt with her and
“the
American
of others.”
At the
like its
counterpart
Jerusalem” in Los
Angeles,
was a mecca for
many
of the
early Pentecostal
evangelists
and itinerant workers. Toronto became a key stopping point,
for
George
Chambers
reported
that he had met
“workers from all over the world who had come to see and experience
what God was
doing
for hundreds
Hebden Mission he met the returned missionaries Herbert Randall and H. L.
Lawler,
and Thomas Hindle who later went overseas as
stopped
off in Toronto
during
one of his
and Daniel
Awrey,
who had received the
Baptism
also visited the East End Mission.’ The Hebdens
leaders of the Latter Rain Movement Toronto for
nearly
a
decade, though
their influence
declined for reasons to be discussed later.
well. Frank Bartleman worldwide
tours, in 1890 in Ohio, were the
acknowledged
.
One of the chief
by-products Mission was that missionaries the Pentecostal
to their overseas
fields, Egypt
in gradually
of the
outpouring
of the
Spirit
at the Randall and Lawler both came into
who had
11,
experience
there. These two
men,
before
returning
and China
respectively,
went to Canada’s
capitol city
and introduced the Pentecostal doctrines to its inhabitants.
They were joined by Robert E. McAlister,
earlier received the
Baptism
at Los
Angeles,
on December
He was to become one of the
leading figures
in Canadian
that
followed;
he
helped
establish the
a number of
others,
was founder of
the
1906.17
Pentecostalism in the
years Ottawa
church, pastored
8
13
Pentecostal
Testimony,
the official
publication
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada, was a founder of and administrator for the organization,
and was renowned as a Bible teacher. He had been converted in a Holiness Movement church near
Cobden, Ontario, and thus found much in common with the Hebdens and those who gathered
at their Mission. One cannot be certain at this
point,
but it seems reasonable to assume that
“R.E.,”
as he was
affectionately called,
was in contact with Randall and Lawler in Toronto, for he obviously planned
at one time to
go
to some overseas field at the same time the other two men left. In his first
report
of the outpouring
of the
Holy Spirit
in the Ottawa
vicinity,
R. E. identified himself as one of the missionaries enroute to the
foreign fiend.” K
Herbert Randall had received the
Baptism
of the
Spirit
at the Hebden’s
meetings
in March of
1907,
while home on
furlough. Before
going
to
Ottawa,
he
began
Pentecostal works in
Wingham and Stratford. 19 After a short visit in
Portland, Oregon,
he went to Ottawa in
December, 1910,
and became the leader of a local
Pentecostal revival in the
nearby
hamlet of Kinburn, about 30 miles from the
capitol.
R.E. arrived
shortly
afterwards and
immediately became active both at Kinburn and then at Ottawa.
By May, 1911, he reported that over 70 had been
baptized
in the
Spirit
at
Kinburn, and that some had received miraculous
healings.
In later
meetings over 20 more had a Pentecostal
experience
and a church
building was soon erected in Kinburn. It was the first such structure erected in Canada
specifically
for a Pentecostal
congregation.
The Randalls and the Lawlers moved on to other fields of service, but Reverend McAlister remained to pastor in Ottawa. A few residents of the
capitol
had received the
Baptism
in the autumn of
1908,
and the Hebden’s
magazine
contained an account from William Watt of Ottawa,
in
March, 1910, reporting
his Pentecostal
baptism.
Watt added that he had left the Holiness Movement church in the
city because of its criticism of the Pentecostal
experience
as a “delusion.”20
.
.
R. E. rented a hall in Ottawa and held
meetings
which were attended
by large crowds, including
some of the
highest ranking members of the
city’s
middle class. C. E. Baker came into the Movement as a result of the
supernatural healing
of his wife. She had suffered
long
with cancer and was
facing
another
operation when she asked to have “hands laid on” her at the Pentecostal meetings.
The result was an instantaneous
healing.
Mr. Baker
gave up
his business in the
city
and became a Pentecostal
evangelist, working
first in the Eastern
Townships,
and then
moving
into Quebec.
His first
meetings
at McBean were marked
by many
9
14
conversions,
and thus
encouraged
he launched a new work in Montreal. Until his death in
1947, “Daddy”
Baker directed an evangelistic
thrust in Montreal and
encouraged
outreach to other parts
of the
province.
He invited Aimee
Semple
McPherson to the city
in 1920 and her
meetings
that
year
have been described as the greatest
revival in the
history
of Quebec. The
largest
church in the city
could not hold the crowds and
supernatural healings
con- firmed the word of God in so marked a manner as to lead
many hundreds to seek salvation.
One miraculous
healing
was that of a Mrs. L. R. Dutaud. This lady
was the wife of a Baptist
preacher
and had been
given up to die because of tuberculosis
of the throat,
cancer and other infections. At her insistence she was taken to the Pentecostal
meetings,
and there was
completely
healed. Her husband became an assistant to Reverend Baker and then assumed
responsibility
for all of the French-speaking
Pentecostal work in the
province.21
The work in Montreal also
expanded
to include
Italian-speaking residents and
eventually
there arose an all-Italian
organization affiliated with the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada. This
long, tenuous arm- of the Hebden Mission’s influence can be traced still further: in the 1920’s a young Methodist
pastor,
disillusioned with what he perceived as creeping Modernism in his denomination, left Newfoundland to attend
Moody
Bible Institute.
Enroute,
he stopped
off at Baker’s church in Montreal to
investigate Pentecostalism. Four
years later, having
received his own Latter Rain
experience, Eugene
Vaters felt called
by God to take the “full gospel”
to his homeland.
Again,
he and his wife visited
Montreal, and for a time assisted in a suburban mission hall. He also visited fledgling
Pentecostal works in the
Maritimes,
and then
began
a life-time of
ministry
in Newfoundland. In a few
years
he had become General
Superintendent
of the Newfoundland
churches, and invited Pastor Baker to St. John’s for
meetings.
As a result, the Pentecostal church in the
city
was
“greatly strengthened. “22
The ties between the Montreal church and the Pentecostals of the island,
which came into the Canadian Confederation in
1949, always
have been
especially
close. The Hebden influence
naturally declined with the
passing
of years and the
spread
of the Latter Rain to the farthest reaches of the
Dominion,
but it was
unquestionably very strong
in the first decade of the Movement in Canada.
The East End Mission in Toronto can be credited with .. influencing
the
development
of Pentecostalism in Canada indirectly through
the life of Robert
Semple
and his
widely
known wife,
Aimee. Robert
Semple
had
immigrated
to Canada from Britain and somehow had declined in his
degree
of commitment to
10
Christ.
George
15
Slager
met him at the Hebden Mission and reported:
Robert
Semple
renewed his consecration to preach the
Gospel,
after the Lord healed him of TB He also tarried
and received the
baptism
in the
Spirit during
the earliest
of the outpouring in the East End Mission.23
days
young
‘
and
go
with
100 received
in western
Ontario,
where he met
Semple
went to
Ingersoll,
Aimee. She had been converted and filled with the
Spirit
in some local
meetings
in
1908,
and
agreed
to become
Semple’s
wife
him into the
ministry. They
held
meetings
in
London, in the home of Dr.
Wortman, during
the winter of 1909-10. Over
the
baptism
of the
Spirit, many
others were saved and there were several remarkable
healings.
Robert and Aimee were
William H. Durham of Chicago at the
time,
where Aimee
and an altar worker.
They helped
Durham in his
in Ohio and
Chicago,
then returned with him to London where still more were saved and filled with the
Spirit.
Then the three of them attended the Pentecostal Convention in Toronto in
assisting was
pianist meetings
1910. The
Promise,
meetings
in
reporting
on the Convention,
January,
noted that:
‘
Brother and
Sister Semple
broke away from the London
with Bro. Durham, who remained in London …
and as they came we enjoyed another season of refreshing
and another wave of baptisms. Brother
Semple
was so led
of the Spirit that he always spoke to edification; … and
Sister Semple’s
gift of interpretation
was such a blessing in
to us the very words in given tongues, that it made
the
presence
of God
very
manifest to all.
They
left for
China
shortly
after.24
‘
giving
.
McPherson, She
following
Alberta;
ministry
married Harold
It is a well-known fact that Mrs.
Semple
Robert
Semple’s untimely
death in China.
later returned to evangelism in Canada,
preaching
in a number of Ontario centres. Besides her remarkable
campaign
in Montreal in
1920,
she held
city-wide meetings
in
Winnipeg, Manitoba; Lethbridge,
and
Vancouver,
British Columbia. Her
led to the United States and a career as an
evangelist
that made her one of the best-known
preachers
of the time.
Ultimately she founded
Angelus Temple
in Los
Angeles,
LIFE Bible
College, and the International Church of the
Foursquare Gospel.
So
great was the
impact
of her
personality
and her
preaching
that she was
remembered in Montreal and
Winnipeg
decades later. Her meteoric career
spanned
the formative
years
of the twentieth
Pentecostal Movement.
Though
the
ministry
of “Sister Aimee” was carried out
mainly
in America, the Hebden Mission in
fondly
century
11
16
Toronto farm
girl
played
no small
part
in
shaping
the
destiny
of the little
from
Ingersoll.
Another visitor to the 1910 Convention was a “Bro. McAlister
whose
preaching
Hebden’s probably
report
visits
Winnipeg, Angeles glowing
movement.
was considered
most
accept-
the
greatest
Pentecostal
that reached
‘
I was filled with the
from
Winnipeg,”
able.25 No other identification of this
person
was
given
in Mrs.
of the
Convention,
but the
Winnipeg
visitor
was R. E.
McAlister,
for he had held
meetings
about that time in the Manitoba
city.
That there were close
relationships between the Toronto and the
Winnipeg
saints is evident from the
to the former
city by
A. H.
Argue (1868-1959),
a man described
by
Gordon Atter as
“probably
evangelist
Canada
produced.1126
From the first news of the Azusa Street
outpouring
there had been an
interchange
of
people going
to Los
to participate in the revival
there,
and
returning
north with
testimonies.2′ A. H.
Argue
was a Winnipeg businessman and a Methodist “exhorter” when he first heard of the Latter Rain
He went to Durham’s Mission in
Chicago
and there “waited on God for
twenty-one days (until) …
in other
tongues
as the
Spirit gave
utter- ance. “28
Following personal Pentecost, Argue
returned to
and
began
to hold
“tarrying meetings”
in his home. A local revival
began
which
brought hundreds, perhaps thousands,
of people
under the influence of the Pentecostal Movement.29 One of those to receive “a
mighty baptism”
that time was
Harry Horton,
Holy Ghost, speaking
Winnipeg
meetings Horton.3o
at
family
evangelist, ministering United States. A son
Watson,
time,
A. H. pastored that Walter
McAlister,
spoke
in
tongues.31
and he made
Toronto;
of the
Spirit
in the
Argue
father of
Stanley
M.
in
throughout
the
Mr.
Argue arranged
his financial affairs so as to
provide
his
with a regular income and became a full-time Pentecostal
for
many years throughout
Canada and the
and a
daughter, Zelma,
travelled with him and later became
evangelists
their own
right.
For a
in Winnipeg and it was in one of his
meetings
later to be a General
Superintendent
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of
Canada,
was filled with the
Spirit
and
But Pastor
Argue’s
chief
ministry
was evangelism many early trips
Dominion to
preach
the “full
gospel.”
One of his first
trips
was to
from there he went to
Ottawa,
then down to the north- eastern
States,
back to
Chicago
and
finally
on to
Winnipeg.
that he chose Toronto as his first
stop.
In a
report
to Seymour,
he wrote:
The first place I visited was Toronto, at which place I did
the fellowship of the saints. Pentecost has fallen in at
least five missions there …;2
significant
enjoy
It is
12
Another Mission
17
evidence of the
widespread
is found in a letter from a small Saskatchewan
named Brownlee. It was addressed to Mrs. Hebden. The
writer,
into reality
‘
early
Pentecostal
congregation
an influence
Though
August, fledgling in Ontario, Toronto. they
‘
through
influence of the East End
community,
a
to its size.
Hartford and
Ottawa,
Mr. S. T.
Odegard,
outlined the events in his life which had led him
the Latter Rain Movement. He
reported
that his
hunger
for
in religion had led him to read his Bible. From a tract, he got the address of the Hebden
Mission,
and in July,
1907,
he went to Toronto. There he was instructed
by James Hebden,
was
baptized in water and then received the
Holy Spirit infilling,
and
spoke
in new
tongues.
On his return to
Saskatchewan,
he wrote to
express thanks to God. Mr.
Odegard opened
a Pentecostal
“philanthropic mission” in Moose
Jaw, Saskatchewan,
in 1913 and
personally financed that work until 1950. When he was 84 years of age, he sold the
building
but left the sum of
$3,000
in a local bank for the establishment of a new Pentecostal church. The nucleus of this
eventually joined
with the Pente- costal Assemblies of Canada.33 Scattered references such as these make it abundantly clear that the Hebden Mission in Toronto had
in Canada which was out of all
proportion
the Hebdens did not itinerate like other
early
Pente- costal leaders,
they appear
to have made a few visits to Ontario towns to
promote
the revival: for
example, they
visited Sarnia in
1908.
They
maintained close contact
too,
with the
Latter Rain
groups
at
Abingdon,
as well as with the six or more Pentecostal Missions in
They probably
were well-known to R. E.
McAlister,
and
most
certainly
had cordial relations with A. H.
Argue.
In fact, it would
appear
that some workers from
Winnipeg
were channeled
the Hebden Mission enroute to their
respective
fields. The Promise of March, 1910 contained a report on the
progress
made to that date in sending out missionaries. It noted that there were then five Pentecostal workers in
Mongolia-“three
from 651
Queen
and two from Brother
Argue’s
Mission in Winnipeg.”34
Thus there
developed
within a few
years
a tripartite axis of Canadian Pentecostals who looked towards Los
Angeles,
and
Winnipeg
as the chief centres of the Movement.
the
Apostolic
Faith Mission of William
Seymour
in Los
lost its
overwhelming importance
for the Canadian
and the Hebden
Mission,
for reasons to be described
suit.
Eventually,
Pentecostalism was to flow east and
west,
rather than north and south,
but the Hebden Mission was instrumental in bringing about
Street
East, Toronto,
Toronto Gradually, Angeles believers, later,
followed
this
change.
the broad stream
of Canadian
13
18
Before it lost its distinctive
position
as the earliest Pentecostal centre in Canada, the Hebden Mission
helped
launch a world-wide missionary
outreach which in
large
measure
shaped
the
program later
developed by
the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada.
Two, whose work has
already
been
noted,
were Herbert Randall and H. L.
Lawler,
missionaries on
furlough
who received the
Baptism
of the
Spirit
in the Mission. Another was Kin
Wong,
an
emigrant from China who was coverted in Toronto and in
February, 1907, attended the
Queen
Street
meetings.
There he heard a woman address
him, although
he knew that she could not
speak
Chinese. He was later
baptized
in the
Spirit
and made
plans
to return as a missionary
to China.
By February
of
1909,
Mrs. Hebden could write in The Promise that:
In all, from this little Mission, there have sailed to the
following
fields one
missionary
to South
Africa,
one to
India,
two more sail for China in a few days, and there are
five others who have received calls who are waiting orders,
amongst
the
rest,
Bro. Kin
Wong
to China. Now no
collections are taken
up except
for Missions. Faith in God
is
the greatest
inspiration,
and God, so far, has supplied all
needs. Some of the missionaries have refused aid, selling all
they had,
and paying their own way out, waiting on God to
supply
the rest. Others have
nothing
to go with, but the
prayers
still go up almost
daily in the name of Jesus and by
the
Holy Spirit
to send forth more laborers and to equip
them for the journey.35
That the missions
policy
was one of entire faith was confirmed
by George Slager,
who noted that soon after the start of the work in Toronto, baptized
believers were called
by God
and sent to various mission fields. “The work was
unorganized
in those
days,
so these went out without financial
backing
other than God’s
promises.
“36 George
Chambers once made
up a list of all those
who had
gone
out from the Hebden Mission in the decade before
1919,
when the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada was
incorporated.
It is an impressive document, given
that few of the missionaries named had any
financial
backing
and none of them had
any religious organization
behind them. The list included:
Bro. & Sis. Charles Chawner Africa
Bro. & Sis. Arthur Atter China
Bro. & Sis. Hindle & Grace Fordham
Mongolia
Bro.
Edgar
Scurrah S. Africa
Bro. & Sis.
George
C.
Slager
China
Bro. & Sis. Robert
Semple Hong Kong
Bro. & Sis. Herbert Lawlor N. China
Bro. H.L. Randall .
°
Egypt
.
‘
14
19
In addition, a number of Pentecostals from other communities went out to Africa before
1919,
two from Kitchener and five from
Parry
Sound.3′ Charles Chawner was a saintly man who
gave up
his trade as
painter
in Toronto after his call to Africa. Gordon
Atter described him as “a
great
man … his
prayers
were the ‘
simplest things
in the world …
just
like a child
addressing
a
father.”38 Brother Chawner was
baptized
in the
Spirit
at the
Hebden Mission in February,
1907, and given
a vision of his future
sphere
of labor in Zululand. His
revealing
account of that call and
the
steps
taken to fulfill it were included in a letter sent back from
South Africa and
reprinted
in The Promise:
He made it plain that I should leave all and follow Him
to Zululand, and
having
drawn me aside one day He told
me it was time to go. He led Bro. Hebden in such a way that
he secured the ticket much more reasonable than we
expected,
and so laid it on the hearts of the friends of the
Mission that sufficient
money was contributed,
most of it
in one night, all of it within about one month, to
needed the
supply
me
with some clothes,
pay passage
over the water,
and
railways right to Weenen, Natal,
S.A.39
The wonderful provision
of the Lord for the new
missionary
was
recounted in the rest of his rather
long letter,
and need not be
repeated
here. After
scouting
the
unevangelized portions
of the
country,
and
finding
Zululand to be exactly the
place
shown him in
his vision, Mr. Chawner returned to Toronto.
Again
the Hebden’s
supporied
his work
by publicizing
it in their
magazine
and
announcing
that the entire Chawner
family
would return to Africa
within a few weeks.4° The career of Charles Chawner in South
Africa was so remarkable over a thirty-year span that Pentecostal
Assemblies of Canada historian Gloria Kulbeck called him “the
Apostle
to the Zulus.”4? His son,
Austin,
continued his father’s
work in Africa and these two men laid a basis for modern
Pentecostal missions which has continued to the
present.
Another of the earliest Canadian missionaries connected with
the East End Mission was Arthur Atter, the
prosperous
Caistor
Township
farmer who had become
pastor
of the
Abingdon
congregation.
His name
appears
several times in The Promise and
he played a prominent role in the establishment of Pentecostalism
in southwestern Ontario. The Atters left from Toronto for China in
1908 and
helped
to establish the foundation for a strong national
church centered in
Shanghai.
Ill health forced them to return to
Canada and after 1911
they
became
pastors
of a number of
Pentecostal
congregations.
Besides those names on the list drawn
up by George
Chambers,
there were others at the Hebden Mission who went overseas and
‘
.
‘
15
20
they
were listed in a late 1909 issue of The Promise. Their
names, and
places
of
service,
were listed as: James
Chapman,
South Africa;
Edwin and
Margaret Hill, China;
and Samuel
Grier,
South Africa.42 The individuals in the list were said to have
gone already, or to be
going soon,
to the field.
Some,
it
seems, may
not have finally gotten
to the land of their call, for W. H. Burns is reported the next
year
to be ministering to the saints at
Abingdon.43
On the other
hand,
at least two more workers did leave the Hebden Mission for overseas work. A native of Holland, a “Bro.
Lak,”
left in February, 1909 for South
Africa,
and James Hebden himself left about the same time for North Africa. As Mrs. Hebden noted:
Missionaries are still
going
forth and God still
keeps
providing
for them. It is now two years since our first one –
went out, and since that time some one has always been on
the way to the foreign field.44
The Hebden Mission had the
potential
to become the main centre of Pentecostalism in Canada. Mrs. Hebden was the first to receive the
Baptism
in the
Spirit
with
speaking
in
tongues.
Her husband’s
experience
followed
shortly
thereafter. A host of earnest seekers came to share
personally
in the remarkable
outpouring,
the healings
and the other
phenomena
that characterized that first decade in the Mission in Toronto. A number of
congregations arose which looked to the Hebdens for
spiritual leadership.
A relatively large
number of missionaries went out with the
prayers, and with at least an initial financial contribution if desired, of the
.
.
East End Mission saints. The Hebdens also had what was
probably the
largest
of the Toronto Latter Rain mission
groups,
and were active in the
holding
of the first Pentecostal Convention in the
city. Why then,
did their work
gradually
decline in importance and
why was their Mission
by-passed
in the
development
of a distinctively Canadian form of Pentecostalism? The answer lies in the attitude of Mrs. Hebden to
any
form of
organization
or structure for the fledgling
Movement.
The first
steps
to this end were taken in 1909 at a June campmeeting
at
Markham,
near Toronto. The
meetings
were a blessing
to all who
attended,
and the camp’s organizer, A. G. Ward, led the
way
in
trying
to introduce a very simple form of structure for the infant Movement. He was joined in this endeavor
by one
of the
key camp speakers,
Vicar A. A.
Boddy,
of
Sunderland, England.
The Vicar toured Canada and the United States at an early date, promoting
Pentecostalism. It was
probably Boddy
who suggested
the name for the
proposed organization,
the Pentecostal Missionary Union,
for such a body had but
recently
been set
up by Pentecostals in
England.
In A. G. Ward’s account of this
event,
16
2-1
they
also were influenced
by
the actions taken Pentecostals towards some form of
organization.
by
American He wrote:
.
.
‘
At this camp meeting it was thought
wise, and to be the mind of the
Lord,
to form the
simplest
kind of an Organization possible,
for we felt as the work grew it would be difficult to
carry on
either at home or on the mission field without some
headquarters
to which workers
might refer their
problems,
and seek counsel.
During
the
Camp, we formed what was to be known as the
“P.M.U.”,-the Pentecostal
Missionary
Union. We chose this name in order to conform with a similar
organization
formed the same year by some of the American brethren in a Camp at Alliance, Ohio,
and also with a British organization which had taken the same name.
Perhaps
we were premature in this
undertaking.
In
any case,
it soon met with
great opposition
from some Canadian workers,
particularly
the Hebdens, who seemed to feel that God had called us away fro.m all organizations and that we ought never
again
to become identified with anything “man-made.” Rather than engage
in a controversy and thus
endanger
the
spiritual state of this new Movement, we decided not to
lay any stress
upon
the infant
organization.’*”
That Mrs. Hebden
rejected totally any
form of structure for the new Movement is beyond
doubt,
but her
opposition
seems to have gone
even
deeper.
She
ridiculed,
for
example,
the use of the designation
“Reverend” for
gospel
workers.46 Her
early background
was
“high
church” and she
apparently
never held
any type
of ecclesiastical
designation (such
as Methodist
deaconness), whereas both Ward and
Boddy
had been ordained in the
regular manner. Mrs. Hebden also feared the
negative impact
that
any form of organization might have on the level of spirituality
among the
early
Pentecostals. She issued a
strong
denunciation of the P.M.U. in the autumn of
1909,
in an article titled “ORGANIZATION”. In that article she wrote:
.
We desire to state most emphatically that in the Lord’s
work at 651 Queen St. and at 191 George St., Toronto, we
have no connection whatever with
any general
organization
of the Pentecostal
people
in Canada. As a
“missionary
church” we stand alone in God’s divine
order,
and extend the right hand of fellowship to every member of
the
body
of Christ … and we decline
absolutely
all
responsibility
for
any
so-called
representatives
of the
Pentecostal work in Canada.47
In the next issue of The
Promise,
she also noted that “of the fourteen Pentecostal Missions in Canada, there are
only
about two which are
yet
in the P.M.U.”. She added that she
rejoiced
at
17
22
.
had come “out of it.”48
Loon’s wrote:
in-coming reports
that other Pentecostals
One of the
fledgling
Pentecostal
groups
that withdrew from the P.M.U. was led
by Harry
Van
Loon,
of
Hartford,
who had a work among
the Indians of the Six Nations Reserve near Brantford. Van
letter to Mrs. Hebden was
published
same, believing
separating
“organization” recognized leadership Seymour’s
spokesman
opposed any who had formed promote
in her
paper.
In it he
to
After a time, when a union was formed, we endorsed the
it to be beneficial to our work:
but, on the
other
hand,
found it was
bringing
us into
bondage
and
us to a
great
extent from God’s
people
and
missions that did not affiliate themselves with the union.49
Van Loon’s letter
provides
evidence both for the
great
fear of
that then existed
among
Pentecostals and of the
of Mrs. Hebden. It
appears
from articles in
Apostolic
Faith that she was the
acknowledged
of the Latter Rain in Canada.
Though
she
vehemently
structure for the
Movement,
she at least credited those
the P.M.U. with
“endeavoring honestly
the cause so dear to their
hearts,” but, she added, some “who
organize
do so with the
prospect
men.”50
Nonetheless,
she made clear her firm conviction
intensifies and
perpetuates
of the
day
as
proof.
In her
view,
there was “no room for
incorporated
costal
Missionary Unions,”
and she insisted that the local
Church, “with Jesus
presiding”
was the
only proper
Christian
“organization the denominations
Presbyteries,
organization.51
True to her
convictions,
Pentecostal believers.
of
receiving
honors from
that division,”
and
pointed
to
Boards,
Synods
or Pente-
Mrs. Hebden avoided
any
form or structure that would result in the formation of a united
body
of
Both the
Abingdon congregation,
and her own
group
at Toronto, were identified in her
magazine
at times as the “Church of
God,”
but this was a title
adopted
“because that’s what
they
read in the New
Testament,”
and
they
made
“fellowship, not doctrine” the basis of their
gatherings,52
of which there were several at an
early
date. The earliest was a convention of the saints in Toronto in the autumn of 1908. Present were most of the leaders of the local
missions,
as well as A. G. Ward and G. A. Chambers. The venue was a mission hall on Concord Avenue where the work was directed
by Mr. and Mrs. George Murray.53
This
suggests
that the
Hebdens,
while
being
the best-known of the local
workers,
were not so
predominant
as to have all Pentecostal work in Toronto
their
aegis.
A second
convention,
of 13 days
duration,
was
the late summer of 1909 at the East End Mission. This was so
under
held in
successful that another year.
convocation
.
was set for November that
18
possibly Foreign Seymour
systematic
‘
23
.
It is clear from the
reports
in The Promise that Mr. and Mrs. Hebden were in charge of these
gatherings.54
Another convention in their Mission in
January
of 1910
brought together
a number of well-known Pentecostal
leaders, including
“Brother
Scott”,
the R. J. Scott who was the
Superintendent
of Home and
Missions for
Winnipeg,
and who had
spent
some time with
at Azusa
Street,55 Brother
McAlister of
Winnipeg, Robert and Aimee
Semple
and William H. Durham.56 It was after this last convention that Mrs. Hebden
began publishing
more
statements of the doctrinal distinctives of her Mission. Previously
the bulk of The Promise had been devoted to
reports
of the
Spirit’s outpouring
in Toronto and elsewhere. She
began
with a brief statement of faith entitled “The
Gospel
Plan” and then
gave each short statement an extensive treatment. Thus the Hebden Mission, though firmly rejecting
church
organization
formulated an
early
Pentecostal
theology
within four
years
of the first
outpouring
of the
Holy Spirit
in Canada. It is outlined below:
The
Gospel
Plan
God Commands
.
.
Faith
.
Baptism
Commanded
John’s
Baptism
Baptism:
Water and the
Spirit Healing: Healing through
Faith Second
Coming
of Christ Breaking
of Bread
Baptism
of the
Holy
Ghost
with
Tongues
Spake
Mission
magazine
,
Movement. the Hebden
teachings
of
any kind,
Repentance
.
‘
.
upon
in the
Each of these
pithy
statements was elaborated
and must have had a wide influence in shaping
and further
defining
the
theological
stance of the infant Pentecostal
While the doctrine of the Second
Coming
was listed in
statement
of faith,
it does not
appear
as prominently in the
published reports
and letters sent in to Mrs. Hebden as did the
about
Holy Spirit baptism
with
tongues speaking
and
Divine
Healing. Perhaps
this was the case because the latter two .
doctrines resulted in immediate and
spectacular changes
in the lives of the mission attendants. One other theme, however, in manifestations of the Gift of
Prophecy began
to assume a more
in later issues of The
Promise,
and it was this
to Mrs. Hebden’s
which
eventually
led to the demise
_
prominent place feature,
in addition organization, Mission.
rejection
of church
of her East End
19
24
At
first,
she warned that “There is a tendency with the
people
to be seeking to speak with
Tongues
rather than seek the
Baptism,
and the
Baptism
rather than the
Baptizer.” Later,
she claimed to have sung
with
tongues,
to have
quoted
much
poetry
under the inspiration
of the
Spirit and,
in one
meeting,
to have
spoken
in 22 languages.
In addition, she was able to interpret what others said in tongues
and to draw “sketches” under divine
power.58
On November
27, 1908,
Mrs. Hebden, in a prayer
meeting,
and
“again in the
Spirit …
declared God was
looking
into three hearts and that one was called to
China,” and
two others to
unspecified
fields.59 A letter from an unidentified
correspondent
at Sarnia described the writer’s reaction in first
meeting
Mrs. Hebden while the latter was holding meetings
in the southwestern Ontario
city.
Wrote the
correspondent:
Mrs. Hebden was lying on the couch
talking
in tongues
and
interpreting.
She was saying
“they
are calling, calling
for thee=calling from over the sea-the time
And
of separation
is very near to thee.” then she spoke of India. I felt God
was speaking but did not think it would come to pass soon,
but I am on my way to India and the Lord is leading all the
way.6″
When the Hebden work
expanded, they
moved their
place
of residence to 191 George Street in Toronto and made the house a place
where sincere seekers could
gather
to
pray
for the
baptism
of the
Holy Spirit.
The name “Lama Gersha” was
given
the house as a result of a message in tongues, the
interpretation
of which was said to be “a
place
of
spiritual teaching..”61
That was in October, 1909. About the same time a thirteen-day series of
meetings
was
signally blessed
by God,
and Mrs. Hebden
reported
that:
In one
meeting
the
Spirit
fell upon me, and took such
control of
my
hands that I played the
organ
under the
power
of the
Spirit.
This occurred several times.,12
Classical Pentecostals will not encounter much
difficulty
in accepting
these
reported
charismatic
experiences
as
genuine; however it is clear that such manifestations included
“prophetic” designations
of certain individuals as called
by
the
Holy Spirit
to overseas mission fields. That the “call” was often
genuine
is evident from the
subsequent history
of men such as Charles W. Chawner and Arthur
Atter,
but there
appears
to have
developed
an undue emphasis
on this
gift
in the
ministry
of Mrs. Hebden.
According
to Gordon
Atter,
some of the first Pentecostal leaders
perceived
a great danger
in this area and Mrs. Hebden
gradually
lost her influence with Canadian Pentecostals.
Though
services at her Mission continued at least until 1914, the moral and
legislative leadership
had devolved
upon
those men who united to establish the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada, in 1919.
20
25
had become so obvious
The need for some form of organization
after the first decade of Pentecostalism in Canada that even some of
Mrs. Hebden’s associates favored the idea. Arthur Atter,
money
and had China, Reverend
for
example,
had met charlatans who had conned
many
believers out of
taken
advantage
of their
credulity.
Before
going
to
Atter met a man in Toronto who was
collecting funds for a leper
colony
near
Shanghai.
When the Atters arrived in China and made
inquiry, they
found the
leper colony
was non- existent. The man, with information
supplied by
Mr.
Atter,
was later arrested and
imprisoned
in the United States. Such fraudulent schemes were made easier
by
the vastness of Canada and the slowness of communications. Thus Arthur Atter was one of those
in.tendent McAlister,
was one of
of the Latter Rain
congregations
protect
means
.
who favored
organization.63
Another admirer of Mrs. Hebden,
George Chambers,
the seven
signatories
to the
application
for a Dominion Charter from the
federal government.
And another of the
applicants
was R. E. McAlister,64 who was well-acquainted with the Hebden Mission and
probably
attended some of the
early
conventions of the saints in Toronto. Chambers became first Chairman and General
Super-
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada. Walter
who held the same office at a later date, noted that the impulse
behind the
organization
was the same in Canada as in the United States–“to
It was
finally
realized that there was no
practical
overseas missions without a Canadian
headquarters.
noted, Canadian Pentecostals had looked to their American brethren for
leadership,
example by
the formation of the Assemblies
further reason for
organization
was
given by Tom
Johnstone as the need to avoid fanaticism and to prohibit individuals from
using
the Movement to advance their own careers. In
addition,
Johnstone
doctrine.” of furthering Besides, McAlister
said,
The
relatively Central
growth
total
and
they
had set an
of God in 19l4.ó5 A
‘
of Pentecostalism
throughout
Movement
expanded and Pembroke, and eastwards
We had to have some form of organization to insure we
remained a coherent, viable fellowship of churches
capable
of moving toward desirable
goals.66
rapid
and Western Canada further
emphasized
the need for some form of structure. The Dominion Census of 19 l reported only 5 l3 Pentecostals in the
country,
whereas the 1921 Census showed a
of more than 7,000. The centres of Canadian
by then included
Ottawa, Winnipeg, Edmonton
addition to the Hebden Mission in Toronto. From Ottawa,
along
the Ottawa River
Valley
to
Arnprior
to Montreal and the
province
of
Pentecostalism and Vancouver, in
the
21
26
Quebec.
From
Winnipeg,
the work
spread
in all directions. The Pentecostal leaders in Alberta were
closely
associated with A. H. Argue
in
Winnipeg,
and the work in Vancouver had its chief impulses
from the American Pacific Northwest.6′ Thus the
regional development
of Canadian
Pentecostalism,
and the
emergence
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada
gradually relegated
the Hebden Mission to status of non-influence.
So far as it may be determined, the Hebdens remained
indepen- dent of the P.A.C. and were
by-passed by the stirring development of mainstream Pentecostalism.
Nonetheless,
their contribution to the Movement in Canada cannot be over-estimated. Ellen K. Hebden was the first known Canadian to receive the
baptism
of the Holy Spirit accompanied by speaking
with
tongues. Though
it has been claimed that she received this
experience
after
reading accounts of the Los
Angeles revival,68
there is little doubt that “it was
totally independent.
She heard of the Los
Angeles outpouring following
her own
experience.”69
Her work at 651
Queen
Street East attracted a host of
gospel workers,
such as
Randall, Lawler, Chambers and
Slager.
It also was the means of
bringing
into the Pentecostal Movement a number of
people
who later became leaders and missionaries, such as C. W. Chawner, A. Atter and Robert
Semple.
The East End Mission touched the lives of numerous sincere. seekers for more of God from other denominations: for
example, William Watt of the Holiness Movement in
Ottawa,
Arthur Watson,
a Salvation
Army
officer in Toronto, and S. T. Odegard, a Lutheran in Saskatchewan. Besides that, the Hebden Mission was a gathering place
for Free Methodists from
Abingdon
and Vineland, and for New Mennonites from the Kitchener area.
Although
Mrs. Hebden had no social status, her
meetings
were attended
by people from
every
class of
society-doctors, lawyers, professors
and schoolteachers,
in addition to the common folk.’°
The East End Mission was the
predominant
Pentecostal centre in Toronto for several
years,
and its
membership
is believed afterwards to have formed the nucleus for one of the
largest congregations
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada in that city-Evangel Temple-which
was housed for some
years
in one of the architectural landmarks of Toronto.71 The doctrinal tenets of the Mission were not
markedly
different from those of many other Holiness-Revivalist sects in North America at the time, but
they have a
particular significance
for the
history
of Canadian Pente- costalism. The four chief themes of Salvation,
Holy Spirit Baptism, Divine
Healing
and the Second
Coming
were
adopted
whole- heartedly by those
who attended their Mission. To these doctrines
.
22
27
were
appended,
in varying degrees of perceived importance, those denominational teachings
that the new Pentecostals
brought
with them. In the
process,
as Gordon Atter has
observed, “their theology largely shaped
the
theology
of the
early
Pentecostals in Ontario. “12
Yet the Hebden Mission had no
part
in the
rapid
advance of the Pentecostal Movement
throughout
Canada and their Mission apparently
was closed about the
beginning
of the First World War. James
Hebden,
who was a veteran of the
English military,
became an instructor of
troops
and is believed to have died about 1919. Mrs. Hebden seems to have lived in obscurity in Toronto after the demise of the East End Mission. It is
regretable
that their contribution to the Movement has been so
long neglected,
due no doubt to the lack of source materials available to the researcher. In his Guide to the
Study of
the Pentecostal Movement, Jones included
only
a very few references to James
Hebden,
and none at all for
Ellen
K.”
Hollenweger’s
monumental
study
of Pente- costalism contains no reference to either of the Hebdens.’4 It is to be hoped,
now that some
documentary
materials have been discovered and treated in this article, that further studies will be made on this fascinating early period
in Canadian Pentecostal
History.
*Thomas Miller received his M.S.T. from the Lutheran
Theological Seminary, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan,
the M.A. and the Ph.D. from the University
of Saskatchewan. He currently is on the
faculty
of Eastern Pentecostal Bible College in Peterborough, Ontario.
‘ The Apostoli(- Faith, 1 :4 (December, 1906), p. 3.
2George
C. Slager, Letter to W. E. McAlister, Vancouver, B.C., March 24, 1954.
Typed copy
in Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada
(PAC) Archives, Toronto, Files 13-15. Hereafter, such documents will be identified
simply
as PAC Archives.
3Ellen Hebden, “How Pentecost Came to Toronto,” The Promise I (May, 1907), pp.
I-3. Cf. the similar account in The Apostolic Faith 1 :6 (February-March, 1907), p.
4.
4 The Apostolic Faith, 1:6 (February-March, 1907), p. 4.
-‘Stanley
H. Frodsham, With
Signs Following, (Springfield: Gospel Publishing House, 1946), p. 53.
6 The Apostolic- Faith, 1:6 (January, 1907), p.l.
7 A. S.
Copley,
“Pentecost in Toronto,” The
Apostolic
Faith 1:5 (January, 1907), p.
4.
$The Apostolic Faith, 1:6 (February-March,
1907), p. 4.
George
A. Chambers,
“History
of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada.”
Typed copy
of letter to W. E. McAlister, ca. 1954, PAC Archives.
“)George A. Chambers,
50 Years in the Service of the
King: 1907-1957, (Toronto:
Full
Gospel Publishing
House, 1960) pp. 10-18.
.
‘
°
23
28
‘ ‘ Slager, op.
cit.
12Chambers, 50 Years, pp. 18-20; See also “Memories:
The
Story
of 75 Years in Vineland, 1908-1983,” (Vineland, Ontario: Vineland Pentecostal Church, 1983) Mimeographed.
131bid., p.
19.
14Thomas Wm.
Miller, Taped
Interview with Gordon F. Atter,
Niagara Falls, Ont., April 30, 1984.
‘5 The Promise, 12 (February,
1909), pp. l, 3,
and 6. PAC Archives.
16George
A. Chambers,
“Fifty
Years Ago,” Pentecostal
cited as PT; See also The Apostolic
Testimon v, 37:5 (May, 1956), p. 6,
hereafter Faith, 1.:2 (October, 1906), p.
4.
‘7A. G. Ward, “Tributes of Fellow Ministers to R. E. McAlister,” PT (November, 1953), p. 12;
Letter to T. W. Miller from W. E. McAlister,
‘
Agincourt, Ont., August 16, 1983.
‘sR. E. McAlister (ed.), The Good
Report,
I (May,
19l 1).
19The Promise, I (May,
1907) and 2 (June, 1907).
20Letter of Wm. Watt in The Promise, 15 (March,
1910), pp. 6-7. 2’Gloria K. ?Culbeck, What God hath
Wrought:
A
History of
the Pentecostal Assemblies
of Canada, (Toronto:
The Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada,
1958), pp. 93, 100-(02;
and Aimee Semple
McPherson, This Is That, Los Angeles: Echo Park Evangelistic Association, 1923, pp. 240-242. 22Eugene Vaters,
Reminiscence, St. John’s: Good
Tidings
Press, 1983, pp.
57-62.
z3Slager, op. cit.
24 The Promise, 25 (March,
1910), p. 1; See also McPherson, op. cit., pp.
57-58, 192-195; and Aimee: Life Story of Aimee Semple McPherson,
Los
Angeles: Foursquare Publications, 1979), pp.
250-254.
Quotations
from
Mrs. McPherson’s books used
by permission.
?77? Pro/n?, 15 (March, 1910), p. 1.
26Atter Interview, see note 14 above.
27 The Apostolic Faith, 1:6 (February-March,
1907), p. 3; also 1:9 (June-
September, 1907), p. 1;
and 1:12 (January,
1908), p. 4.
28A. H. Argue “Azusa Street”,
PT (May, 1956), p. 9.
29A. G.
Ward,
“How the Pentecostal
Experience
Came to Canada,”
Typed copy
of Letter, ca. 1954, PAC Archives.
3?Stanley
M.
Horton,
“Twentieth
Century
Acts of the
Holy Ghost,”
Pentecostal
Evangel, (October 21, 1962), p.
19. Stanley Horton has served , in a variety of professorial roles with the Assemblies of God. He is currently
on the
faculty
of the Assemblies of God
Theological Seminary in
Missouri.
‘
Springfield
3[Thomas Wm. Miller,
Taped
Interview with W. E. McAlister,
Agincourt, Ont., May 3,
1984.
32 The Apostolic Faith, 2:13 (May, 1908), p. 4.
33 The Promise, !5 (March, 1910), p. 8; See also Songs of the Reaper:
The
Story of the
Pentecostal Assemblies
of Saskatchewan. Saskatoon:PAOC,
Sask. Dist., 1985, p. 75.
‘
.
34/bid.. p.
2.
3sThe Promise, 12 (February,
1909), pp. 1, 3.
36Slager, op.
cit.
24
29
37 Data derived from a summary of early Pentecostal missions, located in PAC Archives, undated, but probably ca. 1956 and from G. A. Chambers. 3xAtter Interview, see note 14.
39The Promise, 12 (February, 1909), pp. 4-5.
4°/hid., p. 8; see also The Promise, 15 (March, 1910), pp. 2, 6. 41GIoria G. Kulbeck, “C. W. Chawner:
Apostle
to the Zulus,” PT
‘
(December, 1959), pp. 9-10.
42 The Promise, 14 (October, 1909), p. I .
cit., 15 (March, 19 10), p. 2.
44/hid.. p. 5.
G. Ward,
op. cit., see note 29 above.
4/1The Promise, 2 (June, 1907), p. 2.
47Ihid., 14 (October 1909), p. 1.
4K/hid., 15 (March, 1910), p. 2.
49/hid., p. 6.
sO/hid., p. I. …
51 Ibid.
5?Atter Interview, note 14.
S3Slager, vn.
cit..
s’The Promise, 14 (October, 1909), pp. 1-2.
55The Apostolic Faith, 1:6 (February-March, 1907), p. 7 and 1:8 (May, 1907)..
‘5/1The Promise, 15 (March, 1910), pp. 1-2.
57/hid., p. 3..
581bid., I (May, 1907), p. 1.
s9/hid., 12 (February, 1909), p. 2.
6°Ibid. , p. 7.
t’llbid., 15 (March, 1910), p.’ I.
/l2/hid.
63Atter Interview, note 14.
,14.Chambers, 50 Years, p. 38.
“5McAlister Interview, note 31 above.
6(,Thomas Wm. M iller, taped interview with Tom Johnstone,
Agincourt, Ont., April 29,
1984. The Reverend Tom Johnstone is a former official with the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada.
67Donald T. Klan, “Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada Church Growth in British Columbia From
Origins
until 1953,” M.C.S. thesis,
Regent College,
Vancouver, B.C., March, 1979. Used by permission.
(18Cornelius J. Jaenen, “The Pentecostaic:lfc]Movement,” Unpublished M.A. thesis,
Winnipeg: University
of Manitoba, 1950, p. 32.
MAtter Interview.
7(‘Frodsham,
With Signs
Following, pp. 53-54.
“”Historic Church Burns in Downtown Toronto,” PT (December, 1981 ), p.
12.
72Gordon F. Atter, The Third Force, rev. ed.,
Peterborough: College Press, 1962, p. 36.
73Charles E. Jones, A Guide to the Study of the Pentecostal Movement (Metuchen,
N.J.: Scarecrow Press,
1983) 2:846.
74Walter J. Holienweger, The Pentecostals: The Charismatic Movement in the Churches, trans. R. A. Wilson,
(Minneapolis: Augsburg,
1972.
25
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