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Peniel Mission

The Peniel Mission was an interdenominational holiness rescue mission that was started in Los Angeles, California, on 11 November 1886 by Theodore Pollock Ferguson (1853–1920) and Manie Payne Ferguson (born 1850; died 8 June 1932). It was dissolved in 1949.

History of the Peniel Mission edit

Origins and early days (1886–1894) edit

Manie Payne Ferguson, along with her husband, Theodore, founded the Los Angeles Mission on November 11, 1886, at the Masonic Hall on Spring Street (near 416 North Main Street) in downtown Los Angeles.[1] However, after three months they were forced to move to the basement of the Nadeau Hotel (opened 5 July 1886), located on the southwest corner of Spring and First Streets.[2] After a year, they were forced to rent the burnt-out Methodist Episcopal Church, South for six months until it could be demolished. The Mission then relocated to rented rooms at 107 North Main Street. In the first eight years, the Mission relocated six times, before establishing a permanent location.

The Mission was eventually renamed the Peniel Mission. Peniel means "Face of God",[3] and "was chosen from Genesis 32: 24–30, and is meant to connote spiritual triumph."[4]

Peniel Hall (1894) edit

From the outset, the Peniel Mission was non-denominational and nonsectarian. In 1894, the Fergusons received a significant anonymous financial donation (from former English cricketer George Studd). With this funding the Fergusons were able to plan to expand the ministry of the Peniel Mission. They invited former Methodist presiding elder Dr. Phineas Bresee to join them in their endeavour, and planned to construct a 900-seat auditorium and ministry centre at 227 South Main Street, Los Angeles. It was decided that there would be four superintendents: Theodore and Manie Ferguson, George Studd and Phineas Bresee.

On Sunday 21 October 1894 the 900-seat Peniel Hall was dedicated. University of Southern California president Dr. Joseph Pomeroy Widney led the 9:30 am Praise Service, while Bresee preached in the 11:00 am service "from the text, "And Jacob called the name of the place Peniel: for I have seen God face to face, and my life is preserved."(Smith, 40). In the initial issue of the Peniel Herald, the mission's official newspaper, it was announced

"Our first work is to try to reach the unchurched. The people from the homes and the street where the light from the churches does not reach, or penetrates but little. Especially to gather the poor to the cross, by bringing to bear upon them Christian sympathy and helpfulness.... It is also our work to preach and teach the gospel of full salvation; to show forth the blessed privilege of believers in Jesus Christ, to be made holy and thus perfect in love."[5]

As Timothy Smith explains:

Here were holiness and humanitarianism working hand in hand, as in the days of Wesley. And sectarian feeling was rejected: "Peniel Mission is thoroughly evangelical but entirely undenominational," the Herald declared. Its superintendents would welcome help from all "earnest souls . . . who have any time over and above the work in their churches that they desire to give."[5]

In October 1894 at the dedication of the Peniel Hall, Widney announced his intention to organize a Training Institute, in which Bible and practical nursing were to be the principal studies.[6] By December 1894 Bresee had urged in the Peniel Herald the creation of an organization to screen out undesirable workers, and to create a group for "those that are being gathered in, who have no church affiliation, who need care and fellowship, and a place to find a home and work." Bresee and the other three superintendents created a printed statement of belief to be required of all who wished to associate themselves with Peniel Hall. It was a broad one, "embracing in simplest statement… a few of those essential things which are the common inheritance of the children of God.":

"The Peniel Mission is an organization for Christian service and fellowship. It will be required that those who seek to become members of the Peniel Mission be sound in the faith on all the main points of Christian doctrine, which may be particularized as follows:
"1. The Divine inspiration of the Scriptures, the Old and New Testaments.
"2. The Trinity of the Godhead, Father, Son and Holy Ghost.
"3. The Fall of man, and his consequent need of Regeneration.
"4. The Atonement of the Lord Jesus Christ for all men.
"5. Justification by Faith in Him.
"6. Sanctification by Faith in the cleansing blood of Jesus Christ, and the Baptism of the Holy Ghost.
"7. The Resurrection of the dead.

"8. The eternity of Reward and Punishment."[7]

According to Smith, "What Bresee intended, apparently, was a combination of the interdenominational mission idea with that of an independent church, the former for the workers and sponsors who had no thought of forsaking their old allegiances, the latter for the converts and others who had no church home."[8]

Leadership difficulties (1895) edit

However, by early October 1895, Widney and Bresee were "frozen out" of the Peniel Mission. Frankiel indicates: "At first Bresee joined with the Fergusons at the Peniel Mission in Los Angeles, where he tried to persuade them to open a school and organize to receive members like a church. They refused, however, and other difficulties led to his parting with them after one year."[3] According to Smith,

[t]he immediate cause for the organization of the Church of the Nazarene … is not so much to be found in Bresee's differences with the Methodists as in those which developed between him and the proprietors of Peniel Hall. Certainly J. P. Widney must have been disillusioned when A. B. Simpson, leader of the Christian and Missionary Alliance and reportedly an extremist on divine healing, appeared as a special worker at the mission in May [1895]. Bresee on his part disagreed with Mr. and Mrs. Fergusons' insistence upon the use of young women in rescue work, and their growing interest in foreign missionary schemes.[9]

Another cause of disagreement was that Bresee became convinced that the best ministry for the urban poor was to create strong churches that ministered to entire families, whereas the Fergusons believed that the Peniel Mission should focus instead on the "down and outer" and remain non-denominational.

Subsequent developments and expansion (1895–1906) edit

 
Former Peniel Mission at 716–724 Washington Street in Oakland, California; now part of CityTeam

From the home base in Los Angeles, other missions were established as Peniel Missions, primarily on the west coast of the United States of America, but also in Memphis, New York, Alaska and Hawaii. "With a United States membership destined never to exceed a thousand (in 1906 a government report said 703), the ministry…had an impact on the larger [holiness] movement far in excess of that implied by numbers."[10] By the turn of the twentieth century, more than 25 missions and rescue homes had been started. Among the Peniel Missions established were those located at:

  • 1. San Pedro, Los Angeles, California, the first branch mission, established 20 November 1891;[11]
  • 2. Grant Avenue, San Francisco (11 November 1893)
  • 3. San Diego, California on 3 March 1895
  • 4. Juneau, Alaska, on June 1, 1895
  • 5. Douglas, Alaska, in October 1895
  • 6. San Bernardino, California, in February 1896
  • 7. Stockton, California, on May 6, 1896
  • 8. Eureka, California, on August 11, 1896
  • 9. 325 Kay Street, Sacramento, California, on August 15, 1896
  • 10. a second mission in San Francisco, California at Third Avenue was also opened in August 1896
  • 11. Memphis, Tennessee, in December 1896 (although it only lasted a few years)
  • 12. 14th Street, New York City, started by Miss Ella Shaw (later Melody) in spring of 1897, but relocated to 39 Bowery in December 1897 and subsequently known as the Peniel Josephine Mission;[12]
  • 13. a third mission in San Francisco was originally started on May 14, 1897, on Sacramento Street, but later relocated to Pacific Street (within two blocks of 49 saloons), and later still to the corner of Kearney and Montgomery Streets
  • 14. 407 Broadway, Oakland, California, opened on June 29, 1897, but later moved to the Oriental Block at 716–724 Washington Street
  • 15. Pasadena, California, on October 30, 1897
  • 16. the Victor, Colorado, mission in the mining camps was opened on 20 November 1897
  • 17. Fresno, California, opened on December 18, 1897
  • 18. Vallejo, California (near the naval station) was opened on 16 March 1898 by three women from San Francisco
  • 19. Long Beach, California, mission was opened on 6 May 1898
  • 20. a rescue home was established in San Francisco in August 1898 to minister to women
  • 21. Hawaii was opened on March 25, 1899, and by 1904 was meeting in a hall on the corner of Hotel and Fort Streets in Honolulu
  • 22. a rescue home was opened in Sacramento on April 1, 1899. Wealthy socialite Margaret Eleanor Rhodes Crocker (1822–1901) donated her Sacramento mansion to the Peniel Rescue Mission in 1900[13] for the care of "erring young women.";[14]
  • 23. Wrangell, Alaska, opened May 7, 1899
  • 24. Skagway, Alaska, opened on May 16, 1899, by Victorine Tooley (or Yorba) and her daughter Roberta Yorba, who were members of the Peniel Mission in Sacramento. They decided to establish a mission in Skagway and when they moved up, brought both Justina M Dickinson and Victorine's step-sister, Gusta Carnahan with them. "The Peniel Missions were dedicated to helping the "soiled doves" or prostitutes. There is no record of any of them after 1900, so they may have found better areas to take the Mission (once the gold rush was over, the population of men and consequently prostitutes dropped).[15]
  • 25. 502 Pike Street, Seattle, Washington in 1902.[16] On 21 July 1913 sailors of the US Reserve Fleet destroyed the chapel in the mistaken belief that it was the headquarters of the Industrial Workers. When they realised their mistake, the sailors took an offering to compensate the Peniel Mission, and then destroyed the headquarters of the Radical Socialists.[17]
  • 26. 247 NW Couch Street, Portland Oregon (1904),[18] later 5 more locations including Jefferson and 1st Streets

Other Peniel missions were established, including:

Decline and demise (1906–1949) edit

Azusa Street and the rise of Pentecostalism edit

The Azusa Street Revival of April 1906 had a negative effect on the Peniel Mission. Among those defecting from Peniel Hall was an Owen "Irish" Lee, a former Irish-American Catholic converted through Peniel Hall, who hosted William Seymour in 1906 and allowed meetings in his home. The Lees informed other members of Peniel about the meetings (later held at 214 North Bonnie Brae Street). On 9 April 1906 Lee received the Baptism of the Holy Spirit and spoke in tongues in his home when Seymour laid hands on him and prayed. This precipitated other manifestations of tongues-speaking (including Seymour for the first time) later that day. Among those affected were Jennie Moore and Ruth Asberry who went to the Peniel Mission and spoke in tongues there. This resulted in the entire congregation of the Peniel Mission following them to the Azusa Street Mission.[19] "Most of the churches, mission and tent meetings in the area were effected immediately. Some lost so many people to the Azusa Street Mission that they closed."[19]

Among those who also defected to the Pentecostal movement was their primary financial supporter, George Studd, former English cricketer and one of the primary benefactors of the Peniel Mission since its inception in 1886, who defected to the Apostolic Faith Mission in September 1907;[20] and Frank Bartleman (1871–1936), pioneer Pentecostal preacher and the chronicler of the Azusa Street Revival, who was appointed director of the Peniel Mission in Stockton, California, in early 1904,[21] and later preached regularly at the Peniel Mission in Pasadena, California, immediately prior to his involvement in the nascent Pentecostal movement.[22]

Highlights edit

About 15 October 1906 there was a fire at the Peniel Hall in Los Angeles which caused the death of one elderly female worker, injury to two male workers, and the total destruction of the building.[23]

Deaths of Theodore and Manie Ferguson edit

After her husband's death in 1920, “Mother Ferguson” continued to direct the work until her own death. Upon the death of Manie Ferguson on 8 June 1932,[24] control of the Peniel Mission passed to an all-female self-perpetuating board.[10]

Changes edit

In 1947 the Peniel Mission became a part of the present-day World Gospel Mission. In 1998, all but two of the former West Coast USA Peniel Missions missionaries resigned from Peniel Missions, Inc. / World Gospel Missions and went to work for CityTeam Ministries. Peniel Missions in Seattle, Portland, San Francisco and Oakland were closed and the buildings and small fixed assets were sold to the ministry of CityTeam in a transaction that allowed those being ministered to continue receiving the services they needed. Missionaries and Pastor's Bob and Lisa Margaron continue the work at Peniel Missions, Inc. at 1500 and 1508 S. Sutter Street, Stockton, California today. This is the only remaining American Peniel Missions affiliated with World Gospel Mission.

Methods edit

"The Peniel Mission used some of the same methods as the Salvation Army, including street-corner meetings followed by parades back to the mission hall".[25] According to Schwanz,

"Manie Ferguson was more outgoing than Theodore and was the guiding force for the expansion of the ministry. … Under Manie’s direction, the Peniel Missions sought to provide a ministry for single women. This appears to have been a primary motivation in the growth of the movement. The women usually lived in rented rooms near the rented hall where they conducted evangelistic services. They boldly testified on street corners and in bars and houses of prostitution. All workers were unsalaried, but the local mission paid for most of their expenses. Even the Fergusons were not paid by the mission, but lived on the rental income from three small houses they owned."[26]

According to Sandra Frankiel,

"Together with his wife Manie, he offered street-corner meetings in the afternoons and evangelistic services nightly, with a meal afterwards. Their entire work, like that of most of the city holiness missions, was oriented toward soul saving and the promotion of holiness. The mission was not a church, however; converts were supposed to join one of the regular denominations. It was, rather, a holiness revival station spreading the message of Christian perfection".[27]

The Peniel Missionary Society (1895–1949) edit

In addition to the expansion of the Peniel Mission in the United States of America, and its overseas territories: Alaska and Hawaii, eventually Peniel Missions were established overseas in Africa, Bolivia (1911); China (1909); Egypt, Guatemala, India, Mexico, and the Philippines. A separate organisation, The Peniel Missionary Society, under the control of Manie and Theodore Ferguson, was formed in 1895. The objective of the organisation was: "Mission work, as God shall lead, and as means shall be provided." (Dennis). The Mission operated on the faith mission model, with workers unsalaried, and guaranteed no financial support. Despite this, by 1911, the Peniel Missionary Society was operating in the following fields: India, North Africa (Egypt), Mexico, Central America (Guatemala), South America (Argentine Republic, and Bolivia), West Indies (Puerto Rico), Alaska, and Hawaii. (Dennis)

Prominent members and supporters edit

Prominent members of the Peniel Mission included

  • Haldor Lillenas (1885–1959), "the most influential Wesleyan/ Holiness songwriter and publisher in the 20th century",[28] who was converted at the Peniel Mission in Astoria, Oregon, in 1906;[29] and
  • R.G. LeTourneau, wealthy pioneer of the earth-moving industry who was active in the Peniel Mission at Stockton, California.[30]

References edit

  1. ^ Ferguson, Love Slave, 221–222. .The 1858 Masonic Hall, which housed the First Masonic Temple, Lodge No. 42, is the oldest building south of the Plaza, and displays Masonic artifacts. . Archived from the original on 2006-04-18. Retrieved 2006-10-12. See modern photo: [1]
  2. ^ Ferguson, Love Slave, 223. The hotel was named in honour of its owner, a wealthy French Canadian named Remi Nadeau. See photographs of the hotel in Hinshilwood, p.14. [2]; "A Visit to Old Los Angeles: Spring Street (Part 1) by Brent C. Dickerson: [3]; and also at: [4] 2008-08-28 at the Wayback Machine The hotel was a "four-story business block, with a passenger elevator, the first of its kind in Los Angeles. … Los Angeles gossiped of "Nadeau's Folly". Nadeau's folly, and original plans for stores, professional offices and private residences, however, turned into the Nadeau Hotel, when a local hotelier leased the entire building in May 1886. On July 5th, the hotel opened with a magnificent banquet and ball. Through the turn of the century, Nadeau's hotel was the place to be for Los Angelinos. The Nadeau Hotel stood at the site of the present day Los Angeles Times building." (Cecile Page Vargo, "From Freight Wagons to Fine Hotels".)
  3. ^ a b Frankiel, 107.
  4. ^ Piepkorn 27.
  5. ^ a b Smith, 40.
  6. ^ Smith, 40; History LA County 201.
  7. ^ Peniel Herald (December 1894).
  8. ^ Smith, 41.
  9. ^ Smith, Called, 84.
  10. ^ a b Jones, WHM 1:734.
  11. ^ Love Slave, 226.
  12. ^ See "Killed in a Bowery 'Mission' Restaurant, The New York Times (3 March 1901) for an account of a homicide at the Peniel Mission: [5]
  13. ^ http://www.crockerartmuseum.org/about/history_crockers.htm 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine; "GALLERY FOCUS HAS PLENTY OF CONNECTIONS", Sacramento Bee (16 September 1989):CL24, http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=SB&p_theme=sb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB0D90291EA9961&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM
  14. ^ Avella, 71.
  15. ^ http://boards.ancestry.co.uk/surnames.carle/103.2/mb.ashx
  16. ^ http://www.seattlepi.com/archives/1987/8701210605.asp; http://www.seattlepi.com/archives/1998/9807290255.asp
  17. ^ "Socialists Ask Damages for Sailors' Fun", The Journal Miner Prescott, Arizona (22 July 1913):1, https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=eyQLAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rFEDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5802,3631598&dq=peniel+mission
  18. ^ Martha Gies, Up All Night (Oregon State University Press, 2004):76.
  19. ^ a b Owens, 66.
  20. ^ Wacker, 204.
  21. ^ Bartleman, 170.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-03-28. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
  23. ^ "FIRE ENDS LIFE OF AGED WOMAN. WORKER IN PENIEL MISSION PERISHES FROM BURNS; Explosion of Oil Lamp Starts Blaze That Menaces Other Members of Institute and Totally Destroys the Building—Two Male Missionaries Injured Before Making Escape", The Los Angeles Times (15 October 1906):I17.
  24. ^ "CO-FOUNDER OF PENIEL MISSIONS DIES OF ILLNESS", Los Angeles Times (9 June 1932):a16.
  25. ^ Taiz, 185.
  26. ^ Keith Schwanz, Satisfied, http://www.whwomenclergy.org/booklets/satisfied.php 2012-02-13 at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ Frankiel, 106–107.
  28. ^ Schwanz.
  29. ^ Osbeck, 314–315.
  30. ^ LeTourneau 87–88, 91, 194–195.

Sources and further reading edit

  • Anderson, Donald Firth. ""We Have Here a Different Civilization": Protestant Identity in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1906–1909." The Western Historical Quarterly 23:2 (May, 1992), 199–221. See reference to Peniel Missions.
  • Avella, Steven. Sacramento: Indomitable City. Sacramento, CA: Arcadia, 2003. See page 71 for reference to the Peniel Mission at Sacramento.
  • Bangs, Carl. Phineas F. Bresee: His Life in Methodism, the Holiness Movement, and the Church of the Nazarene (1995). Includes a chapter that discusses Bresee's involvement in the Peniel Mission in Los Angeles and profiles other principal leaders involved in the mission's founding and development, including the Fergusons and G. B. Studd.
  • Bartleman, Frank. How Pentecost Came to Los Angeles. Los Angeles, CA: 1925. Republished as Azusa Street. [8]
  • Beach, Harlan Page. India and Christian Opportunity. Student volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions, 1904. Page 297 gives statistics for the Peniel work in India.
  • Besse, Henry True. Church History. Holzapfel Publishing Co., 1980. See page 232 for article on the Peniel Missions.
  • California Historical Society. "Peniel Mission". California History 74:388.
  • Cary, William Walter. Story of the National Holiness Missionary Society. Chicago, IL: National Holiness Missionary Society, 1940.
  • Carroll, Henry King. The Religious Forces of the United States Enumerated, Classified, and Described. C. Scribner's Sons, 1912. Page 470 Enumerates the statistics for the Peniel Mission at 703 members in 1910.
  • Case, Jay R. "And Ever the Twain Shall Meet: The Holiness Missionary Movement and the Birth of World Pentecostalism, 1870–1920." Religion and American Culture 16: 2 (Summer 2006):125–160.[9] "Case moves the study of Holiness/Pentecostal origins to a new level of sophistication by framing the story within a global process, paying special heed to notions of modernization and resistance to modernization. The article makes clear that Pentecostalism did not start in the United States but came here as part of an international movement."[10]
  • Clark, Elmer Talmage. The Small Sects in America: Their Historical, Theological, and Psychological Background. Revised Edition. Nashville: Abingdon-Cokesbury Press, 1949. See pages 79–80 for discussion of the Peniel Mission and TP and Manie P Ferguson.
  • Cox, Mabel Holmes. The Lady Pioneer: Pioneer Missionary Work in Alaska and the Northwest. Roseburg, OR: n.p., 1968. Autobiography of Peniel Mission missionary who served at several different sites. Includes photographs, including ones of Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Ferguson, founders of the Peniel Mission.
  • Darling, Olive M., compiler. Converts of Peniel Missions. n.p., n.d.
  • Dennis, James S. and Charles H. Fahs, eds. World Atlas of Christian Missions: Containing a Directory of Missionary Societies, a Classified Summary of Statistics, an Index of Mission Stations, and Maps Showing the Location of Mission Stations Throughout the World. Rev. ed. New York: Student Volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions, 1911. Online edition: [11] Gives details of Peniel Missionary Society.
  • Ferguson, Manie Payne. Echoes From Beulah. Los Angeles: T. P. & M. P. Ferguson, 1913. Musical Score. 268 pp.
  • Ferguson, Manie Payne. "Peniel Missionary Work" in Faith Tonic: 1 and 2 Combined; being a series of articles by different writers, exemplifying God's dealings with those who trust Him, 3–35. Compiled by Leander Lycurgus Pickett. Louisville, KY: Pentecostal Publishing Company, c.1920s. 102 pp.
  • Ferguson, Manie Payne. T.P. Ferguson: The Love Slave of Jesus Christ and His People and Founder of Peniel Missions (c.1920). 240 pages. Includes 39 poems by Ferguson, a photo of T.P. Ferguson (page 17), biography of the life of T.P. Ferguson, notes from T.P. Ferguson's diary for 1881–1882 (pages 95–103), Bible readings and notes by T.P. Ferguson (pages 107–219), Peniel Missionary Work (pages 220–238), and an update of "Peniel Missionary Work" (page 239).
  • Frankiel, Sandra Sizer. California's Spiritual Frontiers: Religious Alternatives in Anglo-Protestantism, 1850–1910. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988. [12] See pages 106–107 for Peniel Mission and the ministry of the Fergusons.
  • Henry, Helga Bender. Mission on Main Street. W. A. Wilde Company, 1955. See page 105 for reference to Mrs Ferguson and the Peniel Mission.
  • Hinshilwood, C. Milton and Elena Irish Zimmerman. Old Los Angeles and Pasadena in Vintage Postcards (Postcard History Series). Arcadia Publishing: 2001. Features photographs of the Nadeau Hotel (page 14).
  • Hittson, Paul A. History of Peniel Missions. Homeland, CA: Paul A. Hittson, 1975.
  • Holland, Clifton L., comp. An Overview of Religion in Los Angeles from 1850 to 1930. [13]
  • Hunt, William Chamberlin, ed. United States. Bureau of the Census. Religious Bodies: 1906. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1910. See page 285 for good description of the Peniel Mission.
  • Hustad, Donald Paul. Dictionary-Handbook to Hymns for the Living Church. Carol Stream, Illinois: Hope Publishing Company, 1978. See pages 239–240 regarding Manie Ferguson.
  • Jones, Charles Edwin. A Guide to the Study of the Holiness Movement . Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1974.
  • Jones, Charles Edwin. Perfectionist Persuasion: The Holiness Movement and American Methodism, 1867–1936. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1974. Section on the Peniel Mission: 243–244.
  • Jones, Charles Edwin. The Wesleyan Holiness Movement: A Comprehensive Guide. Volume One: Parts I-III. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 2005. See pages 734–735 for article on the Peniel Missions.
  • LeTourneau, R.G. Mover of Men and Mountains. Chicago: Moody, 1967. See pages 87–88, 91, 194–195 for LeTourneau's involvement in and support of the Peniel Mission at Stockton, California.
  • Lewis, James R., editor. The Encyclopedia of Cults, Sects, and New Religions. 2nd ed. Prometheus Books, 2001. See page 561 for encyclopedic article about the Peniel Missions and the Fergusons.
  • Lillenas, Haldor. Down Melody Lane: An Autobiography. Kansas City: Beacon Hill Press, 1953. See page 77 regarding MP Ferguson. Lillenas was converted through the Peniel Mission in Astoria, Washington in 1906.
  • Lillenas, Haldor. Modern Gospel Song Stories. Kansas City, MO: Lillenas Publishing, 1952. See page 67 regarding Manie Ferguson.
  • Melton, J. Gordon, editor. The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books, 1991. Chapter: Holiness Family; section: 19th Century Holiness; pg. 214 for article regarding the Peniel Missions and the Fergusons.
  • Nickel, Thomas R. Azusa Street Outpouring: As Told to Me by Those who were There. Hartford, CT: Great Commission, 1979. Page 8 refers to the effect of the 1906 Azusa Pentecostal Revival on attendances at local churches and missions, including large numbers leaving the Peniel Mission in Los Angeles.
  • Osbeck, Kenneth W. 101 More Hymn Stories: The Inspiring True Stories Behind 101 Favorite Hymns. Kregel, 1985. See pages 314–315 for biography of Haldor Lillenas and his conversion through the Peniel Mission in Portland, Oregon.
  • Osbeck, Kenneth W. Amazing Grace: 366 Inspiring Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions (2nd Edition). Kregel, 2002. See entry for May 22 for reflections on "Blessed Quietness".
  • Owens, Robert R. Speak to the Rock: The Azusa Street Revival: Its Roots and Its Message. University Press of America, 1998; Xulon, 2005. See pages 58–66 for effect of Azusa Street on the Peniel Mission in Los Angeles. Among those defecting was a former Irish-American Catholic converted through Peniel Hall, Owen "Irish" Lee who hosted William Seymour and allowed meetings in his home. The Lees advised other members of Peniel about the meetings (now being held at 214 North Bonnie Brae Street). On 9 April 1906 Lee received the Baptism of the Holy Spirit in his home when Seymour laid hands on him and prayed. This precipitated other manifestations of tongues-speaking (including Seymour for the first time). Among those affected were Jennie Moore and Ruth Asberry who went to the Peniel Mission and spoke in tongues there. This resulted in the entire congregation of the Peniel Mission following them to the Asuza Street Mission (66). "Most of the churches, mission and tent meetings in the area were effected immediately. Some lost so many people to the Azusa Street Mission that they closed." (Owens, 66).
  • Phillips, Jim and Rosemary Gartner. Murdering Holiness: The Trials of Franz Creffield and George Mitchell. Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 2003. Franz Creffield briefly headed the Peniel Mission in The Dalles, Oregon before forming his own controversial group.
  • Pickett, Leander Lycurgus, comp. Faith Tonic: 1 and 2 Combined; being a series of articles by different writers, exemplifying God's dealings with those who trust Him. Louisville, KY: Pentecostal Publishing Company, c.1920s. 102 pp. Includes article entitled: "Peniel Missionary Work" by Manie Payne Ferguson, pp. 3–35.
  • Piepkorn, Arthur Carl. Profiles in Belief: The Religious Bodies of the United States and Canada. Harper Collins, 1978. See page 7 for Bresee's involvement in the Peniel Mission.
  • Pounds, Michael E. “The Beginning Days.” Peniel Herald, Number 5, 1986. Concerns the Peniel Missions and the work of T. P. and Manie Ferguson. Reference to Haldor Lillenas.
  • Schwanz, Keith. Satisfied: Women Hymn Writers of the 19th-century Wesleyan/Holiness movement. Wesleyan/Holiness Women Clergy, Inc, 1998. Gives a brief biography of Manie Ferguson.
  • Smith, Timothy. Called Unto Holiness: The Story of the Nazarenes. Kansas City, Missouri: Nazarene, 1962. See pages 49 and following for involvement of Bresee and Widney in the Peniel Mission.
  • Taiz, Lillian. Hallelujah Lads and Lasses: Remaking the Salvation Army in America, 1880–1930. University of North Carolina Press, 2000.
  • "The History of Urban Ministry." http://www.urbanministry.org/book/export/html/18982 (accessed 2 July 2008) Website of resources, including reference to Peniel Missions and CityTeam Ministries.
  • The Year in Review at the Los Angeles Mission, 1990. The Los Angeles Mission is the reorganized Peniel Mission.
  • Trachsel, Laura. "Kindled Fires in Peniel Missions". In Kindled fires in the U.S.A., 33–47. Marion, IN: World Gospel Mission, 1988.
  • Wacker, Grant. Heaven Below: Early Pentecostals and American Culture. Harvard University Press, 2003. See page 204 for GB Studd's contribution to the Peniel Hall.
  • Wood, John Windell. Pasadena, California, historical and personal;: A complete history of the organization of the Indiana colony, its establishment on the Rancho San Pascual … Churches, societies, homes, etc.. John W Wood, 1917. See page 326 for description of the Peniel Mission.

Periodicals edit

  • Chandler, Russell. "L.A.'s Quake-Stricken Peniel Mission Plagued by Constant Financial Difficulties" Los Angeles Times (27 November 1976):A31.
  • The Los Angeles Peniel Transformer 7:10 (October 1978).
  • The Oakland Peniel Transformer [Oakland Peniel Mission] 12:9 (October 1978)
  • Peniel Herald. Official organ of the Peniel Mission. 59:1&2 (January & February 1957)
  • "Story of Peniel Mission: Local Institution Observes Date of Founding in 1886 and Occupancy of Present Home: Peniel Mission Story is Told", The Los Angeles Times (18 November 1923):II1-2.[16]

Archival material edit

  • "Papers of Charles Henry Troutman, Jr. Collection III". Billy Graham Center Archives, Wheaton, Illinois. The IVCF-USA folders are letters and reports from other Christian organizations about evangelism and mission activities around the world. For example, Folder 5–34 has letters and critiques of the Peniel movement.
  • "Records of the Peniel Missions, 1917". Yale University Library, New Haven, CT.

External links edit

peniel, mission, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, a. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message The Peniel Mission was an interdenominational holiness rescue mission that was started in Los Angeles California on 11 November 1886 by Theodore Pollock Ferguson 1853 1920 and Manie Payne Ferguson born 1850 died 8 June 1932 It was dissolved in 1949 Contents 1 History of the Peniel Mission 1 1 Origins and early days 1886 1894 1 2 Peniel Hall 1894 1 3 Leadership difficulties 1895 1 4 Subsequent developments and expansion 1895 1906 1 5 Decline and demise 1906 1949 1 5 1 Azusa Street and the rise of Pentecostalism 1 5 2 Highlights 1 5 3 Deaths of Theodore and Manie Ferguson 1 5 4 Changes 2 Methods 3 The Peniel Missionary Society 1895 1949 4 Prominent members and supporters 5 References 6 Sources and further reading 7 Periodicals 8 Archival material 9 External linksHistory of the Peniel Mission editOrigins and early days 1886 1894 edit Manie Payne Ferguson along with her husband Theodore founded the Los Angeles Mission on November 11 1886 at the Masonic Hall on Spring Street near 416 North Main Street in downtown Los Angeles 1 However after three months they were forced to move to the basement of the Nadeau Hotel opened 5 July 1886 located on the southwest corner of Spring and First Streets 2 After a year they were forced to rent the burnt out Methodist Episcopal Church South for six months until it could be demolished The Mission then relocated to rented rooms at 107 North Main Street In the first eight years the Mission relocated six times before establishing a permanent location The Mission was eventually renamed the Peniel Mission Peniel means Face of God 3 and was chosen from Genesis 32 24 30 and is meant to connote spiritual triumph 4 Peniel Hall 1894 edit From the outset the Peniel Mission was non denominational and nonsectarian In 1894 the Fergusons received a significant anonymous financial donation from former English cricketer George Studd With this funding the Fergusons were able to plan to expand the ministry of the Peniel Mission They invited former Methodist presiding elder Dr Phineas Bresee to join them in their endeavour and planned to construct a 900 seat auditorium and ministry centre at 227 South Main Street Los Angeles It was decided that there would be four superintendents Theodore and Manie Ferguson George Studd and Phineas Bresee On Sunday 21 October 1894 the 900 seat Peniel Hall was dedicated University of Southern California president Dr Joseph Pomeroy Widney led the 9 30 am Praise Service while Bresee preached in the 11 00 am service from the text And Jacob called the name of the place Peniel for I have seen God face to face and my life is preserved Smith 40 In the initial issue of the Peniel Herald the mission s official newspaper it was announced Our first work is to try to reach the unchurched The people from the homes and the street where the light from the churches does not reach or penetrates but little Especially to gather the poor to the cross by bringing to bear upon them Christian sympathy and helpfulness It is also our work to preach and teach the gospel of full salvation to show forth the blessed privilege of believers in Jesus Christ to be made holy and thus perfect in love 5 As Timothy Smith explains Here were holiness and humanitarianism working hand in hand as in the days of Wesley And sectarian feeling was rejected Peniel Mission is thoroughly evangelical but entirely undenominational the Herald declared Its superintendents would welcome help from all earnest souls who have any time over and above the work in their churches that they desire to give 5 In October 1894 at the dedication of the Peniel Hall Widney announced his intention to organize a Training Institute in which Bible and practical nursing were to be the principal studies 6 By December 1894 Bresee had urged in the Peniel Herald the creation of an organization to screen out undesirable workers and to create a group for those that are being gathered in who have no church affiliation who need care and fellowship and a place to find a home and work Bresee and the other three superintendents created a printed statement of belief to be required of all who wished to associate themselves with Peniel Hall It was a broad one embracing in simplest statement a few of those essential things which are the common inheritance of the children of God The Peniel Mission is an organization for Christian service and fellowship It will be required that those who seek to become members of the Peniel Mission be sound in the faith on all the main points of Christian doctrine which may be particularized as follows 1 The Divine inspiration of the Scriptures the Old and New Testaments 2 The Trinity of the Godhead Father Son and Holy Ghost 3 The Fall of man and his consequent need of Regeneration 4 The Atonement of the Lord Jesus Christ for all men 5 Justification by Faith in Him 6 Sanctification by Faith in the cleansing blood of Jesus Christ and the Baptism of the Holy Ghost 7 The Resurrection of the dead 8 The eternity of Reward and Punishment 7 According to Smith What Bresee intended apparently was a combination of the interdenominational mission idea with that of an independent church the former for the workers and sponsors who had no thought of forsaking their old allegiances the latter for the converts and others who had no church home 8 Leadership difficulties 1895 editHowever by early October 1895 Widney and Bresee were frozen out of the Peniel Mission Frankiel indicates At first Bresee joined with the Fergusons at the Peniel Mission in Los Angeles where he tried to persuade them to open a school and organize to receive members like a church They refused however and other difficulties led to his parting with them after one year 3 According to Smith t he immediate cause for the organization of the Church of the Nazarene is not so much to be found in Bresee s differences with the Methodists as in those which developed between him and the proprietors of Peniel Hall Certainly J P Widney must have been disillusioned when A B Simpson leader of the Christian and Missionary Alliance and reportedly an extremist on divine healing appeared as a special worker at the mission in May 1895 Bresee on his part disagreed with Mr and Mrs Fergusons insistence upon the use of young women in rescue work and their growing interest in foreign missionary schemes 9 Another cause of disagreement was that Bresee became convinced that the best ministry for the urban poor was to create strong churches that ministered to entire families whereas the Fergusons believed that the Peniel Mission should focus instead on the down and outer and remain non denominational Subsequent developments and expansion 1895 1906 edit nbsp Former Peniel Mission at 716 724 Washington Street in Oakland California now part of CityTeam From the home base in Los Angeles other missions were established as Peniel Missions primarily on the west coast of the United States of America but also in Memphis New York Alaska and Hawaii With a United States membership destined never to exceed a thousand in 1906 a government report said 703 the ministry had an impact on the larger holiness movement far in excess of that implied by numbers 10 By the turn of the twentieth century more than 25 missions and rescue homes had been started Among the Peniel Missions established were those located at 1 San Pedro Los Angeles California the first branch mission established 20 November 1891 11 2 Grant Avenue San Francisco 11 November 1893 3 San Diego California on 3 March 1895 4 Juneau Alaska on June 1 1895 5 Douglas Alaska in October 1895 6 San Bernardino California in February 1896 7 Stockton California on May 6 1896 8 Eureka California on August 11 1896 9 325 Kay Street Sacramento California on August 15 1896 10 a second mission in San Francisco California at Third Avenue was also opened in August 1896 11 Memphis Tennessee in December 1896 although it only lasted a few years 12 14th Street New York City started by Miss Ella Shaw later Melody in spring of 1897 but relocated to 39 Bowery in December 1897 and subsequently known as the Peniel Josephine Mission 12 13 a third mission in San Francisco was originally started on May 14 1897 on Sacramento Street but later relocated to Pacific Street within two blocks of 49 saloons and later still to the corner of Kearney and Montgomery Streets 14 407 Broadway Oakland California opened on June 29 1897 but later moved to the Oriental Block at 716 724 Washington Street 15 Pasadena California on October 30 1897 16 the Victor Colorado mission in the mining camps was opened on 20 November 1897 17 Fresno California opened on December 18 1897 18 Vallejo California near the naval station was opened on 16 March 1898 by three women from San Francisco 19 Long Beach California mission was opened on 6 May 1898 20 a rescue home was established in San Francisco in August 1898 to minister to women 21 Hawaii was opened on March 25 1899 and by 1904 was meeting in a hall on the corner of Hotel and Fort Streets in Honolulu 22 a rescue home was opened in Sacramento on April 1 1899 Wealthy socialite Margaret Eleanor Rhodes Crocker 1822 1901 donated her Sacramento mansion to the Peniel Rescue Mission in 1900 13 for the care of erring young women 14 23 Wrangell Alaska opened May 7 1899 24 Skagway Alaska opened on May 16 1899 by Victorine Tooley or Yorba and her daughter Roberta Yorba who were members of the Peniel Mission in Sacramento They decided to establish a mission in Skagway and when they moved up brought both Justina M Dickinson and Victorine s step sister Gusta Carnahan with them The Peniel Missions were dedicated to helping the soiled doves or prostitutes There is no record of any of them after 1900 so they may have found better areas to take the Mission once the gold rush was over the population of men and consequently prostitutes dropped 15 25 502 Pike Street Seattle Washington in 1902 16 On 21 July 1913 sailors of the US Reserve Fleet destroyed the chapel in the mistaken belief that it was the headquarters of the Industrial Workers When they realised their mistake the sailors took an offering to compensate the Peniel Mission and then destroyed the headquarters of the Radical Socialists 17 26 247 NW Couch Street Portland Oregon 1904 18 later 5 more locations including Jefferson and 1st Streets Other Peniel missions were established including 12th Street and Pacific Avenue Tacoma Washington Astoria Oregon Bakersfield California W 11th St and N Senate Ave Indianapolis Indiana eventually leased to the Christ Temple Pentecostal denomination from 1912 and sold in 1915 DuPree African American Holiness Pentecostal Movement 269 270 Santa Cruz California Decline and demise 1906 1949 edit Azusa Street and the rise of Pentecostalism edit The Azusa Street Revival of April 1906 had a negative effect on the Peniel Mission Among those defecting from Peniel Hall was an Owen Irish Lee a former Irish American Catholic converted through Peniel Hall who hosted William Seymour in 1906 and allowed meetings in his home The Lees informed other members of Peniel about the meetings later held at 214 North Bonnie Brae Street On 9 April 1906 Lee received the Baptism of the Holy Spirit and spoke in tongues in his home when Seymour laid hands on him and prayed This precipitated other manifestations of tongues speaking including Seymour for the first time later that day Among those affected were Jennie Moore and Ruth Asberry who went to the Peniel Mission and spoke in tongues there This resulted in the entire congregation of the Peniel Mission following them to the Azusa Street Mission 19 Most of the churches mission and tent meetings in the area were effected immediately Some lost so many people to the Azusa Street Mission that they closed 19 Among those who also defected to the Pentecostal movement was their primary financial supporter George Studd former English cricketer and one of the primary benefactors of the Peniel Mission since its inception in 1886 who defected to the Apostolic Faith Mission in September 1907 20 and Frank Bartleman 1871 1936 pioneer Pentecostal preacher and the chronicler of the Azusa Street Revival who was appointed director of the Peniel Mission in Stockton California in early 1904 21 and later preached regularly at the Peniel Mission in Pasadena California immediately prior to his involvement in the nascent Pentecostal movement 22 Highlights edit About 15 October 1906 there was a fire at the Peniel Hall in Los Angeles which caused the death of one elderly female worker injury to two male workers and the total destruction of the building 23 Deaths of Theodore and Manie Ferguson edit After her husband s death in 1920 Mother Ferguson continued to direct the work until her own death Upon the death of Manie Ferguson on 8 June 1932 24 control of the Peniel Mission passed to an all female self perpetuating board 10 Changes edit In 1947 the Peniel Mission became a part of the present day World Gospel Mission 6 In 1998 all but two of the former West Coast USA Peniel Missions missionaries resigned from Peniel Missions Inc World Gospel Missions and went to work for CityTeam Ministries Peniel Missions in Seattle Portland San Francisco and Oakland were closed and the buildings and small fixed assets were sold to the ministry of CityTeam in a transaction that allowed those being ministered to continue receiving the services they needed Missionaries and Pastor s Bob and Lisa Margaron continue the work at Peniel Missions Inc at 1500 and 1508 S Sutter Street Stockton California today This is the only remaining American Peniel Missions affiliated with World Gospel Mission Methods edit The Peniel Mission used some of the same methods as the Salvation Army including street corner meetings followed by parades back to the mission hall 25 According to Schwanz Manie Ferguson was more outgoing than Theodore and was the guiding force for the expansion of the ministry Under Manie s direction the Peniel Missions sought to provide a ministry for single women This appears to have been a primary motivation in the growth of the movement The women usually lived in rented rooms near the rented hall where they conducted evangelistic services They boldly testified on street corners and in bars and houses of prostitution All workers were unsalaried but the local mission paid for most of their expenses Even the Fergusons were not paid by the mission but lived on the rental income from three small houses they owned 26 According to Sandra Frankiel Together with his wife Manie he offered street corner meetings in the afternoons and evangelistic services nightly with a meal afterwards Their entire work like that of most of the city holiness missions was oriented toward soul saving and the promotion of holiness The mission was not a church however converts were supposed to join one of the regular denominations It was rather a holiness revival station spreading the message of Christian perfection 27 The Peniel Missionary Society 1895 1949 editMain article Peniel Missionary Society In addition to the expansion of the Peniel Mission in the United States of America and its overseas territories Alaska and Hawaii eventually Peniel Missions were established overseas in Africa Bolivia 1911 China 1909 7 Egypt Guatemala India Mexico and the Philippines A separate organisation The Peniel Missionary Society under the control of Manie and Theodore Ferguson was formed in 1895 The objective of the organisation was Mission work as God shall lead and as means shall be provided Dennis The Mission operated on the faith mission model with workers unsalaried and guaranteed no financial support Despite this by 1911 the Peniel Missionary Society was operating in the following fields India North Africa Egypt Mexico Central America Guatemala South America Argentine Republic and Bolivia West Indies Puerto Rico Alaska and Hawaii Dennis Prominent members and supporters editProminent members of the Peniel Mission included Haldor Lillenas 1885 1959 the most influential Wesleyan Holiness songwriter and publisher in the 20th century 28 who was converted at the Peniel Mission in Astoria Oregon in 1906 29 and R G LeTourneau wealthy pioneer of the earth moving industry who was active in the Peniel Mission at Stockton California 30 References edit Ferguson Love Slave 221 222 The 1858 Masonic Hall which housed the First Masonic Temple Lodge No 42 is the oldest building south of the Plaza and displays Masonic artifacts El Pueblo The City s Birthplace Archived from the original on 2006 04 18 Retrieved 2006 10 12 See modern photo 1 Ferguson Love Slave 223 The hotel was named in honour of its owner a wealthy French Canadian named Remi Nadeau See photographs of the hotel in Hinshilwood p 14 2 A Visit to Old Los Angeles Spring Street Part 1 by Brent C Dickerson 3 and also at 4 Archived 2008 08 28 at the Wayback Machine The hotel was a four story business block with a passenger elevator the first of its kind in Los Angeles Los Angeles gossiped of Nadeau s Folly Nadeau s folly and original plans for stores professional offices and private residences however turned into the Nadeau Hotel when a local hotelier leased the entire building in May 1886 On July 5th the hotel opened with a magnificent banquet and ball Through the turn of the century Nadeau s hotel was the place to be for Los Angelinos The Nadeau Hotel stood at the site of the present day Los Angeles Times building Cecile Page Vargo From Freight Wagons to Fine Hotels a b Frankiel 107 Piepkorn 27 a b Smith 40 Smith 40 History LA County 201 Peniel Herald December 1894 Smith 41 Smith Called 84 a b Jones WHM 1 734 Love Slave 226 See Killed in a Bowery Mission Restaurant The New York Times 3 March 1901 for an account of a homicide at the Peniel Mission 5 http www crockerartmuseum org about history crockers htm Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine GALLERY FOCUS HAS PLENTY OF CONNECTIONS Sacramento Bee 16 September 1989 CL24 http nl newsbank com nl search we Archives p product SB amp p theme sb amp p action search amp p maxdocs 200 amp p topdoc 1 amp p text direct 0 0EB0D90291EA9961 amp p field direct 0 document id amp p perpage 10 amp p sort YMD date D amp s trackval GooglePM Avella 71 http boards ancestry co uk surnames carle 103 2 mb ashx http www seattlepi com archives 1987 8701210605 asp http www seattlepi com archives 1998 9807290255 asp Socialists Ask Damages for Sailors Fun The Journal Miner Prescott Arizona 22 July 1913 1 https news google com newspapers id eyQLAAAAIBAJ amp sjid rFEDAAAAIBAJ amp pg 5802 3631598 amp dq peniel mission Martha Gies Up All Night Oregon State University Press 2004 76 a b Owens 66 Wacker 204 Bartleman 170 Frank Bartleman Archived from the original on 2009 03 28 Retrieved 2008 06 25 FIRE ENDS LIFE OF AGED WOMAN WORKER IN PENIEL MISSION PERISHES FROM BURNS Explosion of Oil Lamp Starts Blaze That Menaces Other Members of Institute and Totally Destroys the Building Two Male Missionaries Injured Before Making Escape The Los Angeles Times 15 October 1906 I17 CO FOUNDER OF PENIEL MISSIONS DIES OF ILLNESS Los Angeles Times 9 June 1932 a16 Taiz 185 Keith Schwanz Satisfied http www whwomenclergy org booklets satisfied php Archived 2012 02 13 at the Wayback Machine Frankiel 106 107 Schwanz Osbeck 314 315 LeTourneau 87 88 91 194 195 Sources and further reading editAnderson Donald Firth We Have Here a Different Civilization Protestant Identity in the San Francisco Bay Area 1906 1909 The Western Historical Quarterly 23 2 May 1992 199 221 See reference to Peniel Missions Avella Steven Sacramento Indomitable City Sacramento CA Arcadia 2003 See page 71 for reference to the Peniel Mission at Sacramento Bangs Carl Phineas F Bresee His Life in Methodism the Holiness Movement and the Church of the Nazarene 1995 Includes a chapter that discusses Bresee s involvement in the Peniel Mission in Los Angeles and profiles other principal leaders involved in the mission s founding and development including the Fergusons and G B Studd Bartleman Frank How Pentecost Came to Los Angeles Los Angeles CA 1925 Republished as Azusa Street 8 Beach Harlan Page India and Christian Opportunity Student volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions 1904 Page 297 gives statistics for the Peniel work in India Besse Henry True Church History Holzapfel Publishing Co 1980 See page 232 for article on the Peniel Missions California Historical Society Peniel Mission California History 74 388 Cary William Walter Story of the National Holiness Missionary Society Chicago IL National Holiness Missionary Society 1940 Carroll Henry King The Religious Forces of the United States Enumerated Classified and Described C Scribner s Sons 1912 Page 470 Enumerates the statistics for the Peniel Mission at 703 members in 1910 Case Jay R And Ever the Twain Shall Meet The Holiness Missionary Movement and the Birth of World Pentecostalism 1870 1920 Religion and American Culture 16 2 Summer 2006 125 160 9 Case moves the study of Holiness Pentecostal origins to a new level of sophistication by framing the story within a global process paying special heed to notions of modernization and resistance to modernization The article makes clear that Pentecostalism did not start in the United States but came here as part of an international movement 10 Clark Elmer Talmage The Small Sects in America Their Historical Theological and Psychological Background Revised Edition Nashville Abingdon Cokesbury Press 1949 See pages 79 80 for discussion of the Peniel Mission and TP and Manie P Ferguson Cox Mabel Holmes The Lady Pioneer Pioneer Missionary Work in Alaska and the Northwest Roseburg OR n p 1968 Autobiography of Peniel Mission missionary who served at several different sites Includes photographs including ones of Mr and Mrs T P Ferguson founders of the Peniel Mission Darling Olive M compiler Converts of Peniel Missions n p n d Dennis James S and Charles H Fahs eds World Atlas of Christian Missions Containing a Directory of Missionary Societies a Classified Summary of Statistics an Index of Mission Stations and Maps Showing the Location of Mission Stations Throughout the World Rev ed New York Student Volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions 1911 Online edition 11 Gives details of Peniel Missionary Society Ferguson Manie Payne Echoes From Beulah Los Angeles T P amp M P Ferguson 1913 Musical Score 268 pp Ferguson Manie Payne Peniel Missionary Work in Faith Tonic 1 and 2 Combined being a series of articles by different writers exemplifying God s dealings with those who trust Him 3 35 Compiled by Leander Lycurgus Pickett Louisville KY Pentecostal Publishing Company c 1920s 102 pp Ferguson Manie Payne T P Ferguson The Love Slave of Jesus Christ and His People and Founder of Peniel Missions c 1920 240 pages Includes 39 poems by Ferguson a photo of T P Ferguson page 17 biography of the life of T P Ferguson notes from T P Ferguson s diary for 1881 1882 pages 95 103 Bible readings and notes by T P Ferguson pages 107 219 Peniel Missionary Work pages 220 238 and an update of Peniel Missionary Work page 239 Frankiel Sandra Sizer California s Spiritual Frontiers Religious Alternatives in Anglo Protestantism 1850 1910 Berkeley University of California Press 1988 12 See pages 106 107 for Peniel Mission and the ministry of the Fergusons Henry Helga Bender Mission on Main Street W A Wilde Company 1955 See page 105 for reference to Mrs Ferguson and the Peniel Mission Hinshilwood C Milton and Elena Irish Zimmerman Old Los Angeles and Pasadena in Vintage Postcards Postcard History Series Arcadia Publishing 2001 Features photographs of the Nadeau Hotel page 14 Hittson Paul A History of Peniel Missions Homeland CA Paul A Hittson 1975 Holland Clifton L comp An Overview of Religion in Los Angeles from 1850 to 1930 13 Hunt William Chamberlin ed United States Bureau of the Census Religious Bodies 1906 Washington D C Government Printing Office 1910 See page 285 for good description of the Peniel Mission Hustad Donald Paul Dictionary Handbook to Hymns for the Living Church Carol Stream Illinois Hope Publishing Company 1978 See pages 239 240 regarding Manie Ferguson Jones Charles Edwin A Guide to the Study of the Holiness Movement Metuchen NJ Scarecrow Press 1974 Jones Charles Edwin Perfectionist Persuasion The Holiness Movement and American Methodism 1867 1936 Metuchen NJ Scarecrow Press 1974 Section on the Peniel Mission 243 244 Jones Charles Edwin The Wesleyan Holiness Movement A Comprehensive Guide Volume One Parts I III Lanham MD Scarecrow Press 2005 See pages 734 735 for article on the Peniel Missions LeTourneau R G Mover of Men and Mountains Chicago Moody 1967 See pages 87 88 91 194 195 for LeTourneau s involvement in and support of the Peniel Mission at Stockton California Lewis James R editor The Encyclopedia of Cults Sects and New Religions 2nd ed Prometheus Books 2001 See page 561 for encyclopedic article about the Peniel Missions and the Fergusons Lillenas Haldor Down Melody Lane An Autobiography Kansas City Beacon Hill Press 1953 See page 77 regarding MP Ferguson Lillenas was converted through the Peniel Mission in Astoria Washington in 1906 Lillenas Haldor Modern Gospel Song Stories Kansas City MO Lillenas Publishing 1952 See page 67 regarding Manie Ferguson Melton J Gordon editor The Encyclopedia of American Religions Vol 1 Tarrytown NY Triumph Books 1991 Chapter Holiness Family section 19th Century Holiness pg 214 for article regarding the Peniel Missions and the Fergusons Nickel Thomas R Azusa Street Outpouring As Told to Me by Those who were There Hartford CT Great Commission 1979 Page 8 refers to the effect of the 1906 Azusa Pentecostal Revival on attendances at local churches and missions including large numbers leaving the Peniel Mission in Los Angeles Osbeck Kenneth W 101 More Hymn Stories The Inspiring True Stories Behind 101 Favorite Hymns Kregel 1985 See pages 314 315 for biography of Haldor Lillenas and his conversion through the Peniel Mission in Portland Oregon Osbeck Kenneth W Amazing Grace 366 Inspiring Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions 2nd Edition Kregel 2002 See entry for May 22 for reflections on Blessed Quietness Owens Robert R Speak to the Rock The Azusa Street Revival Its Roots and Its Message University Press of America 1998 Xulon 2005 See pages 58 66 for effect of Azusa Street on the Peniel Mission in Los Angeles Among those defecting was a former Irish American Catholic converted through Peniel Hall Owen Irish Lee who hosted William Seymour and allowed meetings in his home The Lees advised other members of Peniel about the meetings now being held at 214 North Bonnie Brae Street On 9 April 1906 Lee received the Baptism of the Holy Spirit in his home when Seymour laid hands on him and prayed This precipitated other manifestations of tongues speaking including Seymour for the first time Among those affected were Jennie Moore and Ruth Asberry who went to the Peniel Mission and spoke in tongues there This resulted in the entire congregation of the Peniel Mission following them to the Asuza Street Mission 66 Most of the churches mission and tent meetings in the area were effected immediately Some lost so many people to the Azusa Street Mission that they closed Owens 66 Phillips Jim and Rosemary Gartner Murdering Holiness The Trials of Franz Creffield and George Mitchell Seattle WA University of Washington Press 2003 Franz Creffield briefly headed the Peniel Mission in The Dalles Oregon before forming his own controversial group 14 Pickett Leander Lycurgus comp Faith Tonic 1 and 2 Combined being a series of articles by different writers exemplifying God s dealings with those who trust Him Louisville KY Pentecostal Publishing Company c 1920s 102 pp Includes article entitled Peniel Missionary Work by Manie Payne Ferguson pp 3 35 Piepkorn Arthur Carl Profiles in Belief The Religious Bodies of the United States and Canada Harper Collins 1978 See page 7 for Bresee s involvement in the Peniel Mission Pounds Michael E The Beginning Days Peniel Herald Number 5 1986 Concerns the Peniel Missions and the work of T P and Manie Ferguson Reference to Haldor Lillenas Schwanz Keith Satisfied Women Hymn Writers of the 19th century Wesleyan Holiness movement Wesleyan Holiness Women Clergy Inc 1998 15 Gives a brief biography of Manie Ferguson Smith Timothy Called Unto Holiness The Story of the Nazarenes Kansas City Missouri Nazarene 1962 See pages 49 and following for involvement of Bresee and Widney in the Peniel Mission Taiz Lillian Hallelujah Lads and Lasses Remaking the Salvation Army in America 1880 1930 University of North Carolina Press 2000 The History of Urban Ministry http www urbanministry org book export html 18982 accessed 2 July 2008 Website of resources including reference to Peniel Missions and CityTeam Ministries The Year in Review at the Los Angeles Mission 1990 The Los Angeles Mission is the reorganized Peniel Mission Trachsel Laura Kindled Fires in Peniel Missions In Kindled fires in the U S A 33 47 Marion IN World Gospel Mission 1988 Wacker Grant Heaven Below Early Pentecostals and American Culture Harvard University Press 2003 See page 204 for GB Studd s contribution to the Peniel Hall Wood John Windell Pasadena California historical and personal A complete history of the organization of the Indiana colony its establishment on the Rancho San Pascual Churches societies homes etc John W Wood 1917 See page 326 for description of the Peniel Mission Periodicals editChandler Russell L A s Quake Stricken Peniel Mission Plagued by Constant Financial Difficulties Los Angeles Times 27 November 1976 A31 The Los Angeles Peniel Transformer 7 10 October 1978 The Oakland Peniel Transformer Oakland Peniel Mission 12 9 October 1978 Peniel Herald Official organ of the Peniel Mission 59 1 amp 2 January amp February 1957 Story of Peniel Mission Local Institution Observes Date of Founding in 1886 and Occupancy of Present Home Peniel Mission Story is Told The Los Angeles Times 18 November 1923 II1 2 16 Archival material edit Papers of Charles Henry Troutman Jr Collection III Billy Graham Center Archives Wheaton Illinois The IVCF USA folders are letters and reports from other Christian organizations about evangelism and mission activities around the world For example Folder 5 34 has letters and critiques of the Peniel movement 17 Records of the Peniel Missions 1917 Yale University Library New Haven CT External links editBiographical Sketch of Manie Payne Ferguson Frank Bartleman and the Peniel Mission Genealogy of Thomas Pollock Ferguson Blessed Quietness and Ferguson s spiritual background Peniel Mission Peniel Mission Stockton permanent dead link http www stocktonpeniel org permanent dead link http www notonemoredeadchild org Los Angeles Mission Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peniel Mission amp oldid 1173509057, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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