Andy Stanton-Henry’s “All the Way Back to George Fox” looks at the legacy of John Wimber, a rock musician turned Quaker pastor turned charismatic church founder. Yes, that’s a lot of turns. Yes, it’s quite a story.
One of the impulses that drove Wimber’s ministry was a desire to “do the stuff” he read about in the Bible, not just talk and sing about it. This is not so very different from early Friends. Founder George Fox brought people back to life, his miracles edited out of most accounts until Henry Cadbury collected them back together in the 1940s. James Nayler, another Quaker co-founder, developed a full-on messiah complex, eventually re-enacting Jesus’s Palm Sunday entry into Jerusalem. Wimber’s wife talked about their reaction when they finally got around to reading Fox’s Journal:
Reading it later, we wondered what our contemporaries were so upset about! A movement of the Spirit happened in our group — for which generations of Quakers had prayed for years, but had no idea how it would look when it came — and when it did happen, it didn’t really fit with Quaker theology at that time.
Wimber’s ministries got too enthusiastic for even California Evangelical Friends and he left to co-found the Vineyard Churches. In our author chat, Andy and I discuss some of the lessons we might learn from these relatively modern-day seekers wanting to “do the stuff.”
Also of interest: the 2018 post from an anonymous member of the Friendly Fire Collective: The Making of a Charismatic Quaker.
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