In this groundbreaking book, William Kostlevy presents a fascinating study of the Metropolitan Church Association (MCA), a religious community founded in Chicago in the early 1890s. The MCA was one of the most controversial societies of the era. Its members were called "jumpers" because of their acrobatic worship style, and "Burning Bushers" after their caustic periodical, the Burning Bush. They objected to the concept of private property, rejected "elite" denominations, and professed an alternative, radical vision of Christianity, using modern music and folk art to spread their message.
A product of the holiness revival of the late nineteenth century and a catalyst for Pentecostalism, the MCA played a vital role in the twentieth century growth of evangelical Christianity, yet it has long been ignored in studies of American radicalism, of communal societies, and even of holiness and Pentecostal Christianity. Kostlevy rectifies this omission, providing a valuable new context for understanding the origins of Pentecostalism. He investigates the internal struggles of the Holiness Movement, showing how radically divergent theological currents came to dominate a major segment of the American evangelical community. He also shows how deeply the MCA impacted the lives of twentieth century evangelists Bud Robinson and Seth C. Rees, self-designated first woman bishop Alma White, and Pentecostal evangelists A. G. Garr and Glenn Cook. As Holy Jumpers demonstrates, Holiness Christians, and the MCA in particular, played a profoundly formative role in the development of modern evangelical and Pentecostal Christianity.
William Kostlevy is Associate Professor of History and Political Science, Tabor College.
Table of Contents
Illustrations
Introduction Variations of Holiness Radicalism in Progressive Era America
Chapter 1 Martin Wells Knapp and the Origins of the Radical Holiness Movement
Chapter 2 Marching the Pearly White City: The Birth of the Metropolitan Methodist Mission
Chapter 3 Pentecost Comes to the White City: The Chicago Revival and the General Holiness Assembly of 1901
Chapter 4 The Pentecostal Dancers Invade Boston
Chapter 5 "A Standard for the People": The Burning Bush Movement and the Organization of Mission in the MCA
Chapter 6 "Forsaking All for Jesus:" F. M. Messenger and Burning Bush Communalism
Chapter 7 The MCA and the Making of Modern American Religious Culture
Chapter 8 The Fire Wanes and Is Rekindled: The Burning Bush Movement, 1913-1931
Afterword
End Notes
Works Cited