
THE HISTORY OF THE PENTECOSTAL MOVEMENT
(Elements can be read by clicking on the dates)
18th-19th Century
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
The direct precursors to the modern Pentecostal movement are found in the evangelical and holiness movements of the 18th-19th centuries. Examples include: Nicholas von Zinzendorf in the Moravian Brethren at Herrnhut, the Wesley brothers and the Methodist Movement in England, Charles Finney, Phoebe Palmer, and others leading the holiness movements. Various healing movements also began during this period, including the ministries of Maria Woodworth-Etter and Dwight L. Moody.
Nikolaus Zinzendorf

John Wesley

Charles Wesley

Charles Finney

Phoebe Palmer

Maria Woodworth-Etter

Dwight L. Moody
1901.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
The direct precursors to the modern Pentecostal movement are found in the evangelical and holiness movements of the 18th-19th centuries. Examples include: Nicholas von Zinzendorf in the Moravian Brethren at Herrnhut, the Wesley brothers and the Methodist Movement in England, Charles Finney, Phoebe Palmer, and others leading the holiness movements. Various healing movements also began during this period, including the ministries of Maria Woodworth-Etter and Dwight L. Moody.

Charles F. Parham

Bethel Bible College
Topeka, Kansas
1906.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
William Seymour (1870-1922), an African American who studied at C. F. Parham’s Bible school, started the Pentecostal movement from his congregation in Los Angeles (312 Azusa Street). Many new missionaries received their call here and spread the gospel across the world. Their teachings and practices illustrate the early Pentecostal movement’s values and perspectives: they saw the baptism of the Holy Spirit as an event distinct from conversion, emphasized evangelism and church planting, and believed in the power of Jesus’ blood and the Holy Spirit to break ethnic barriers, while also allowing women to minister. They widely used written materials and contemporary media to spread the Pentecostal message.

William J. Seymour
Azusa str
In September 1906, Seymour’s congregation launched the “Apostolic Faith” magazine, which helped spread news, testimonies, and biblical teachings about the Azusa Street and similar revivals across the United States.

The Los Angeles Pentecostal revival was not the only one during this period. Independent Holy Spirit-inspired movements began worldwide, such as in Armenia in the 1880s, Korea around 1907, the Mukti women’s mission led by Pandita Ramabai in India from the late 1800s, and the Pentecostal revival led by missionary Willis Collins Hoover in Chile.


Thomas B. Barratt, a Norwegian pastor born in England, encountered the Pentecostal movement during a trip to New York and received the baptism of the Holy Spirit. His ministry sparked the Norwegian Pentecostal revival, influencing Europe.

1907.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
Through T. B. Barratt’s ministry, Swedish pastor Lewi Pethrus (1884-1974) was also filled with the Holy Spirit. He is considered the founder of one of Europe’s largest Pentecostal communities. Like Barratt, Pethrus traveled extensively, spreading the newly discovered Pentecostal message across Europe.

1910s
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
Hungarians who emigrated to America and Hungarian soldiers taken prisoner after World War I (e.g., István Sipos from Mórichida, István Sebestyén from Budapest, and János Horváth from Visznek) encountered the Pentecostal revival. Upon their return, they began preaching the Pentecostal message, leading to the formation of new Pentecostal congregations independently of each other.
1923.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
In 1911, József Szalai and his wife Lídia emigrated to Cleveland, USA, where they encountered Pentecostals. They returned to Hungary in 1921 to preach the gospel. Their work led to the establishment of a congregation, and in 1923, the first Pentecostal prayer house in Hungary was inaugurated in Darány.


1924.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
János Lerch also arrived from America for the Hungarian mission, holding revival meetings among the German population in Tolna. The Ministry of Religion and Public Education dealt with the Pentecostals as early as 1924, seeking the opinion of Reformed Church leaders about a booklet by a Pentecostal author.

1926.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
Imre Mihók (1881-1952), born in Bakonycsernye, emigrated to Detroit (USA) in 1907, where he met Pentecostal believers. He repeatedly returned to Hungary to preach the gospel in the Bakony and various parts of the country. His ministry also extended to neighboring countries, contributing to the Pentecostal movements in Slovenia and Croatia.

A significant moment in the development of the Pentecostal movement was the conference organized by existing Pentecostal congregations in Csetény in December 1926.
Pentecostals launched the “Apostolic Faith” publication, initially a periodic leaflet.

1927.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
Dezső Rároha (1884-1947), born in Miskolc, emigrated to the United States in 1905, where he adopted the name David for convenience. He joined the Pentecostal movement in 1918, becoming an ordained evangelist and pastor in the Assemblies of God. In 1927, he moved to Hungary as an Assemblies of God missionary.

1928.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
Dezső Rároha and his wife began uniting the independently operating Pentecostal congregations. They took over the editing and publishing of the “Apostolic Faith” Pentecostal magazine, translated the beliefs and organizational regulations of the American denomination, visited Pentecostal congregations across the country, and pastored the Kispest Congregation. Their work led to the establishment of the first Hungarian Pentecostal denomination under the name “Alliance of God’s Congregations in Hungary.”

1935.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
The Pentecostal movement experienced a crisis, resulting in a split. Alongside the existing organization, an independent Pentecostal group called “Mission of God’s Congregations in Hungary” was formed.
1939.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
The first Pentecostal Europe Conference was organized in Stockholm, Sweden, with Hungarian Pentecostals represented by József Tomi, István Siroki, and Jakab Forster.


HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
On December 2, Minister of the Interior Ferenc Keresztes-Fischer, citing defense interests, banned the activities of all minor religious communities, except for Methodists and Baptists, including both Pentecostal denominations. Some Pentecostal congregations received legal protection for worship from the Lutheran Church in Hungary, while others were protected by Baptists and Methodists. In many parts of the country, especially rural areas, Pentecostals gathered illegally for worship.

1939-1949.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
Under the shadow of war and denominational bans, the Pentecostal movement was also divided by internal conflicts. Between 1939 and 1949, multiple splits occurred due to theological and personal differences: the Alliance of Early Christian Congregations led by Zoltán Sárkány and his brothers, the Alliance of God’s Congregations (formerly Mission of God’s Congregations) led by Mihály Holzmann, the Evangelical Pentecostal Church led by József Tomi, and the Apostolic Christian Congregations led by István Siroki went their separate ways. Between 1947 and 1949, efforts for unity emerged within the movement, leading to the formation of the “Evangelical Christians” denomination in 1949, encompassing all Pentecostal directions. However, this unity was short-lived as some groups left the organization.
1944.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
To achieve more effective representation, the minor churches – illegally – formed the Alliance of Free Churches, which was recognized by the state in 1950 as the Council of Free Churches in Hungary (SZET).
1946.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
From July 4, the decree banning the activities of minor churches was lifted, but this did not ease their lives as the emerging communist dictatorship sought to suppress all churches.
1947.
1951.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
The communist regime restricted the number of prayer houses, and pastors could only serve with a permit, tied to a specific location. Believers and pastors were constantly harassed, even imprisoned, and while free churches became part of the state-recognized SZET, Pentecostals did not enjoy full freedom.
1960s
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
From the early 1960s onwards, primarily in the USA and Western Europe, Pentecostal-charismatic renewals began within major churches. Dennis Bennett’s work in the Anglican Church and Cardinal Leo Jozef Suenens’ service in the Catholic Church initiated the charismatic renewal.
1961.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
Through David du Plessis’ ecumenical service, Pentecostals began reaching out to other churches. As a result, Du Plessis was invited to the World Council of Churches’ congress in New Delhi, and from 1963, he participated as an external observer at the sessions of the Second Vatican Council. He maintained an active relationship with one of the leaders of the Catholic charismatic movement, Belgian Cardinal Leo Joseph Suenens.


1962.
1966.
1967.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
The Council of Free Churches launched a Theological Training Institute for the training of pastors and preachers of its member churches. President József Fábián was particularly dedicated to the training of preachers, seeing it as the key to addressing young people and the changing society. In 1972, the Reformed Theological Academy of Debrecen established a fraternal agreement with the Training Institute of the Free Church Council, allowing outstanding students to obtain college-level diplomas. In 1980, a similar agreement was reached with the Evangelical Academy of Budapest.

1969.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
Other European Pentecostal organizations founded the Pentecostal European Conference in Nyhem, Sweden.
1972.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
David du Plessis’ work initiated the Catholic-Pentecostal dialogue, which enabled ongoing theological and relationship-building discussions. Later, Pope John Paul II awarded David du Plessis with a gold medal, making him the first non-Roman Catholic to receive such an honor.
1974.
1980s
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
The easing of the communist dictatorship was indicated by the fact that, with the help of American and Swedish donations, many Pentecostal congregations across the country built new prayer houses or expanded and renovated their existing churches.
1985.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
Through the work of Attila Fábián and his wife, Erzsébet Simonfalvi, the Morning Star Rehabilitation Institute was established in Dunaharaszti, which also became the country’s first drug rehabilitation center. The intellectual and methodological foundations were laid with the help of the Swedish Lewi Pethrus Institute and the American Teen Challenge mission. The institution became a founding member of the Hungarian Association of Drug Therapy Institutes (MADRISZ).

Dunaharaszti
1987.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT:
The two largest European Pentecostal organizations (European Pentecostal Fellowship and Pentecostal European Conference) merged in Lisbon, Portugal, under the name Pentecostal European Fellowship (PEF), and today counts 55 member organizations across Europe.

HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
In 1984, the EPC purchased the Somssich Castle in Kadarkút (Vótapuszta), which was renovated through community effort. On October 31, 1987, under the direction of László Gyánó, the Kadarkút Home of Love for the elderly opened its doors. In the following years, the community organized children and youth camps as well as national conferences in the castle park.

1989.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
As a result of the political changes, the two institutions through which the party-state tried to control churches, including the Pentecostal movement – the State Office for Church Affairs and the Council of Free Churches – ceased to exist.
Pastor Sándor Bereczki, together with his congregation, carried out intensive mental health and social services in the 1980s and founded the Emberbarát Foundation in 1989. The foundation purchased the former synagogue complex in Kőbánya. After 11 months of renovation, with much volunteer work and Swedish financial assistance, the Emberbarát Foundation’s Alcohol and Drug Rehabilitation Institute opened in April 1991.

1991.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
Pentecostals took advantage of the freedom brought by the political changes and founded the Biblical College in 1991. Since 1999, the institution has been called the Pentecostal Theological College, with the primary mission of preparing pastors and ministers for various church and social services.


1994.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
The largest evangelistic campaign of the 1990s was the Tent Mission. Pentecostal congregations held evangelistic weeks across the country under the name “Tent Festival.” Many people came to faith, renewed their practice of faith, and joined church services through the high-quality cultural and spiritual programs.

1996.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
A new mission among the Roma community started in the late 1970s. In 1996, the National Roma Mission was officially established, led by Pastor Albert Durkó, who had been evangelizing and organizing children’s activities in the Roma settlements around Békés since his youth.

Gypsy children’s Bible circle
1986.

2006.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
Due to disagreements and personal tensions among the waves of piety, the Omega Churches, a network of about 250 members led by Imre Süveges, left the church. The specific reason was the teaching and practice of “supplementary baptism in the name of the Lord Jesus.”
2009.
2011.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
On April 9, the national assembly of the Evangelical Pentecostal Community decided to rename the denomination to the Hungarian Pentecostal Church and applied for membership in the Ecumenical Council of Churches in Hungary.
2012.
HUNGARIAN CONTEXT:
With the entry into force of the new church law, the Hungarian Pentecostal Church was also recognized as an established church. This gave the church a new opportunity to organize official religious education in schools and to operate new educational and social institutions. At the General Assembly held on March 3, 2012, Pentecostals offered an opportunity for charismatic and evangelical congregations that lost their church status due to the new church law to continue their ministry under the auspices of the Pentecostal Church in the “Associated Communities” church district.







