Schweizer Pfingstmission
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The Swiss Pentecostal Mission (german: Schweizerische Pfingstmission, abbreviated SPM) is the largest
Pentecostal Pentecostalism or classical Pentecostalism is a Protestant Charismatic Christian movement
Christian denomination in Switzerland. Officially known in English as the Pentecostal Assemblies of Switzerland, it is the Swiss branch of the Assemblies of God, the largest Pentecostal denomination in the world.: "The ''Swiss Pentecostal Mission''—or the ''Pentecostal Assemblies of Switzerland'', as they now call themselves in English..."World Assemblies of God Fellowship
Switzerland
Accessed December 14, 2010.
In 2013, the denomination had 10,000 adherents in 66 churches, and it operated a conference center in Emmetten.


History

Pentecostalism was brought to Switzerland in 1907 by two women missionaries from Norway, A. Telle and D. Gregersen. They came into contact with a small group, the Zion Fellowship of Zurich, which became the first Pentecostal congregation in the country. Its first pastor, former Anglican clergyman C.E.D. de Labilliere, became a pioneer of the movement. In 1909, he started publishing the periodical ''Die Verheissung des Vaters'', which would become the official publication of the SPM. During this time period, prominent Pentecostal leaders visited Switzerland, including Thomas Ball Barratt, Alexander Boddy, Jonathan Paul, and Geritt Polman, the Pentecostal pastor from Amsterdam who had been a member of the Salvation Army. In 1920,
Smith Wigglesworth Smith Wigglesworth (10 June 1859 – 12 March 1947) was a British evangelist who was influential in the early history of Pentecostalism. Early life Smith Wigglesworth was born on 10 June 1859 in Menston, Yorkshire, England, to an impoverished ...
held meetings in Switzerland in which "remarkable healings" were reported. The Berlin Declaration, issued by German evangelicals in 1909, caused hardships for the Swiss Pentecostals as it contributed to a rift between them and the Swiss Evangelical Alliance. Nevertheless, Pentecostalism continued to spread. In 1921, the Swiss Pentecostal Mission Society (''Schweizerische Pfingstmissionsgesellschaft'') was organized to provide training and support for
mission Mission (from Latin ''missio'' "the act of sending out") may refer to: Organised activities Religion *Christian mission, an organized effort to spread Christianity *Mission (LDS Church), an administrative area of The Church of Jesus Christ of ...
work. The first missionary was sent to Lesotho. In 1935, the churches in partnership with the mission society decided to establish a formal denomination, the Swiss Pentecostal Mission. The leader of the SPM, Leonhard Steiner, in 1947 initiated the
Pentecostal World Conference The Pentecostal World Fellowship is a fellowship of Evangelical Pentecostal churches and denominations from across the world. The headquarters is in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Its leader is William Wilson (Tulsa, OK). History The Pentecostal World Fell ...
in Zürich. Another Pentecostal denomination, ''Freie Christengemeinden der Schweiz'' (FCGS), went bankrupt in 1993, and many of its congregations joined the SPM.


Notes


References

* . * * *


Further reading

*Burgess, Stanley M. und McGee, Gary B. (ed.): ''Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements'', Grand Rapids, 7th ed., 1995


External links


Official website
{{Authority control Evangelicalism in Switzerland Pentecostalism in Europe Assemblies of God National Fellowships