Constructive Pneumatological Hermeneutics in Pentecostal Christianity

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govern their respective self-generated worlds. Lunatics often clash with

the authorities throughout society for failing to follow the rules of society

and the customs of the culture. Is the interracial group of Pentecostal men

in the photograph lunatics? Does the photograph of these men refl ect

Pentecostalism as lunacy? Is their racial misbehavior a defi ant act of racial

lunacy? 10

Since the Pentecostal behavior was described as insane in a few cases,

and Pentecostal demonstrative worship was deemed crazy in a number of

circles, lunacy was already a trope utilized to read Pentecostals by outsid-

ers. Especially mad was the bizarre interracial customs of Pentecostals,

customs which went against the racial social codes and the law in many

southern states. As a photograph of lunacy, of the uncanny, this 1917

picture communicates racial danger and threat. These Pentecostals acted

out of place; they exhibited racially ecstatic behavior. Elements of early

Pentecostal distinctives were unintelligible, ranging from glossolalia to

grapholalia (writing in tongues). 11

How might one construe where an interracial Pentecostal photograph

of the uncanny fi ts within the narrative arc of early Pentecostalism? The

narrative of Pentecostalism birthed by the Azusa Street Revival includes a

cartoon of interracial Pentecostalism with its leader, William J. Seymour,

an African American, seated front and center fl anked by eight whites and

one other African American. There are cartoons that mock the interracial

beginnings of Pentecostalism, such as the one that presents “Our God

Appointed Leader” as Charles Parham in September of 1906 and William

Seymour in December of 1906. The drawing of Seymour is the head of a

crazed black man with a scruffy beard, mustache, and hair and the drawing

of Parham’s head as well groomed; Seymour and Parham are both depicted

as the heads of different “jack-in-the-box” pop-up toys. Early newspaper

headlines of interracial Pentecostalism announced “Whites and Black Mix

in a Religious Frenzy” and “Crazed Girls in Arms of Black Men.” The

mocking cartoons and jeering headlines of interracial Pentecostal pioneers

in 1906 could be read as the backdrop to the interracial Pentecostal pho-

tograph of 1917 with lunacy as a common trope. A historical narrative

that ties together the two works of visual art and headlines could chronicle

the move from interracialism as the center to the margins of the early

movement. This narrative would highlight, then, the exodus of white

Pentecostals from the lunacy of Pentecostal interracialism, a lunacy ini-

tially denounced by Charles Parham. Interestingly, other expressions of

lunacy such as what most other Christians would name as the lunacy of

VINTAGE PHOTO, VISUAL EXEGESIS, AND 1917 INTERRACIAL... 217
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