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Apostles

Ignatius of Antioch

Polycarp

Irenaeus

Clement of Rome

Justin Martyr

Clement of Alexandria

Perpetua

Origen

Cyprian of Carthage

Pachomius, Anthony and Athanasius

Basil the Great

Gregory of Nyssa

Macrina

Gregory of Nazianzus

John Chrysostom

Jerome

Ambrose

Augustine of Hippo

Leo the Great

Cyril of Alexandria

Patrick

Gregory the Great

Eastern Orthodox

Columba, Aidan, Bede

John Climacus

Symeon the New Theologian

John of Damascus

Alcuin, Anskar and others

Cyril and Methodius

Boniface

Anselm

Peter Abelard

Bernard of Clairvoix

Hildegard of Bingen

The Rarely Heard History of the Waldensians

Francis

Thomas Aquinas

John Wyclif

Jan Hus

Julian of Norwich

The German Mystics

Martin Luther

Philip Melanchthon

Additional Reformers

William Tyndale

John Calvin

Francis Xavier, Ignatius Loyola

Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross

Cranmer, Ridley, Latimer

John Donne

George Herbert

Johann Arndt, Philipp Jakob Spener, A. H. Franke and the Churchly Pietists

Philipp Jakob Spener

17 C English Divines

Paschal, Fenelon, Guyon: Quietists, Theosophists,

The Practice of the Presence of God by Brother Lawrence

Isaac Watts

Jonathan Edwards

William Law

The Wesleys

George Whitefield

Henry Melchior Muhlenberg

John Newton

Francis Asbury

Absolom Jones, Richard Allen. William White

Hans Nielsen Hauge

George Mueller

Modern Missionary Movement

Christmas Evans

Griffith Jones

Billy Bray

Robert Raikes

Charles G. Finney & His Intercessors

Soren Kierkegaard and other early 19 C European Theologians

J.C. Ryle

Groundbreakers of the 19 C

J. Hudson Taylor

D. L. Moody

William Booth

C.T. Studd

A. B. Simpson

E.M. Bounds

Andrew Murray

F. B. Meyer

A. T. Pierson

Oswald Chambers

Evan Roberts

R. A. Torrey

Minnie Abrams

Jonathan Goforth

Early Twentieth Century Revivals

William Joseph Seymour

A. G. Garr

Pandita Ramabai

Amy Carmicael

Marie Monsen

Charles Mason

Billy Sunday

John Mott

Ludwig Nommensen

Toyohiko Kagawa

Lars Olsen Skrefsrud

Nathan Söderblom

G.K. Chesterton

Onesimos Nesib

Samuel Isaac Joseph Schereschewsky

David Livingstone

Albert Schweitzer

Apolo Kivebulaya

Karl Barth

C. S. Lewis

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Martin Niemoeller

Paul Tillich

Franz Jägerstätter

Maximilian Kolbe

Gladys Aylward

Roland Allen

Eric Liddell

The Hebrides Revival of 1949

The Martyrs of the Ecuador Mission

Pope John XXIII (Angelo Roncalli)

A. W. Tozer

Leonard Ravenhill

Jonathan Myrick Daniels

Martin Luther King, Jr.

Dag Hammarskjöld

Thomas Merton

Janani Luwum, Archbishop of Uganda, Martyr

Corrie ten Boom

Agnes Sanford

Watchman Nee

T. Austin Sparks

Roland Allen

SADHU SUNDAR SINGH

Francis Schaeffer

Henri J.M. Nouwen

Pope John Paul II




David du Plessis


             "That they may be one as we are one."   
         
            The General Secretary of the Apostolic Faith Mission (AFM) was in his office in Johannesburg. As it was before 7.00 am he was surprised when Smith Wigglesworth burst into his office. "Come out here," he boomed. Pushing David firmly against the wall he  prophesied that a revival would come through the old-line denominations eclipsing anything previously known throughout history. Many of the leaders would change from strong opposition to accept the message and the blessing of the Pentecostal experience.
            David too would have a very prominent part in this movement providing he remained humble and faithful. Smith bowed his head, asked God to prepare David and to keep him in good health, and he left his office.
            Wigglesworth was in South Africa for the annual conference of the AFM (December 1936). David was his interpreter and Wigglesworth was 
staying in David's home. Ten minutes later Smith returned to David's office as though for the first time and inquired how he was. "Very puzzled," was David's reply. Smith explained he had seen a vision   well before dawn. He had argued with the Lord about it saying, "This is not what my brethren expect."        Smith told David that he should wait for confirmation from God and added, "It will not begin during my lifetime. When I pass away, then you can begin to think about it." Smith also told David that he would travel more than most men.


            David the Donkey
            In the Missionary Meeting of the Annual Conference of the AFM a missionary asked for some donkeys. One man gave two, another, one. Then, David's father was on the platform wanting to give his donkey which surprised David who knew he had no donkey to give. Then his father called him to the platform only to find out that he was the "donkey." David senior told the congregation that he and his wife promised to give their first born son to serve the Lord even before his birth. Subsequently, he was often known as "David the Donkey."


            Uniting the Pentecostals
            Three weeks after Wigglesworth's prophecy David was invited to minister the following year (1937), at the General Council of Assemblies of God (AOG) in Memphis Tennessee. They discussed the       benefits of a meeting of Pentecostal leaders in 1938/9 in London or some other European centre. Near the end of the conversation Donald Gee said it would be wonderful if David could be secretary for such a meeting.
            A European conference was held in Stockholm in 1938 primarily to resist any formation of an International Pentecostal Movement. It was at that conference that T. B. Barratt prophesied the coming of World War 2.


            The First World Pentecostal Conference 
            Due to the war, the First World Pentecostal Conference (PWC) was not held until 1947. This was the year that Smith Wigglesworth died. The 
conference was held in Zurich Switzerland and organized by the Swiss pastor Leonard Steiner and assisted by David du Plessis.
            David ministered on the words of John Baptist, "I baptize you with water for repentance. But after me will come one who is more powerful than I . . . He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and           with fire. His winnowing fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing-floor, gathering his wheat into the barn and burning up the chaff with unquenchable fire."  (Mt 3:11-12 NIV) God had shown David that one cannot grow wheat without chaff and that God would remove and burn it with the refining fire of the Holy Spirit.


            A Severe Accident
            One foggy night in 1948 Paul Walker, who was head of the Missions Department of the Church of God, was driving David back to Beckley, West Virginia. At 3.00 am they crashed into a shunting locomotive which had stopped on a rail crossing.
            It was at this time that the Pentecostal Fellowship of North America was born. Their first action was to send David $400 and they also agreed to send $250 a month until he recovered from the accident.
            David was now able to send his wife Anna more than $1,000 because he wanted her to come to America.
            The family came to Beckley in time for their first Thanksgiving. David organized the 1949 PWC from his hospital bed. While he was in the hospital God told him the time of the fulfillment of         Wigglesworth's prophecy had arrived. Although David was told that it would take two years to recover he attended the conference on crutches.
            The Church of God offered him a professorship at Lee College in Cleveland, Tennessee. This enabled the family to obtain a residence visa in the United States. While teaching and with help from the students, the 1952 PWC was organized in London.


            The Charismatic Renewal
            God showed David he needed to be near the centers of power of the established churches. He resigned from teaching at Lee College and moved to Stamford, Connecticut. Here David developed a friendship with Dr. John A. Mackay who was the president of Princeton Theological Seminary. At the end of the 1952 PWC David resigned as  secretary and traveled to Germany to attend the World Conference of the International Missionary Council at the suggestion of Mackay. At the conference he talked with 110 of the 210 delegates including Dr.     Willem Visser 't Hooft the secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC). Dr. Hooft arranged for David to speak at the second assembly of the WCC in Evanston Illinois in 1954.
            David changed his main message in two ways. First, he started to emphasize Jesus as the Baptizer in the Holy Spirit. He also started to confess his wrong attitudes and how he overcame them. This helped people to acknowledge their own prejudices.


            Pentecostal Catholics
            At a meeting of the WCC in St. Andrews Scotland,  David met Professor Bernard Leeming, a Catholic priest from Oxford England, who asked for the baptism in the Holy Spirit. This was the start of    David's ministry to Roman Catholics.
            Leeming knew Pope John personally and he arranged for David to visit Rome. God gave David a love for Catholics. First he met Dr. Robert Murray and then Dr. Thomas Strandsky, the secretary for Promoting Christian Unity. Strandsky had searched for a Pentecostal to talk to him and was told David was the only one.
            Strandsky's boss was Cardinal Bea who asked David, "What do the Pentecostals want to say to Rome?" David's hesitating response, "I have to say, the Pentecostals have no intention of talking to Rome."
            Betraying no emotion Bea asked, "What do you want to say to Rome?"
            David replies, "Make the Bible available to every Catholic in the world in his own language. The Holy Spirit will make that book come alive and that will change lives and renew the church." Bea was       taken in and said, "That is what the Holy Father wants to know, write it down," he said to his secretary.
            In 1964 David was an observer at the historic Vatican Council originated by Pope John XXIII and completed by Paul VI. At Horgen in Switzerland in 1972, David represented the Pentecostals as co-chairman with Fr. Kilian McDonnell at the first of ten   "Dialogues" between Catholics and Pentecostals including Charismatics.
            In 1974 a group of Catholic and Protestant editors issued a list of eleven 'shapers and shakers' of the Christian faith. David du Plessis was included alongside Rosemary Ruether, Don Helder Camara, 
Billy Graham, Hans Küng, Bernard Lonergan and Jürgen Moltman.
            "On 31 January 1987 after many years of service building unity among the body of Christ and preaching the Baptism of the Holy Spirit, David du Plessis went on to be with the Lord. May his life be an example and inspiration to the body of Christ in our generation."


            Copyright © by Jonas Clark, Spirit of Life Ministries, 27 Hallandale Beach Blvd. Hallandale Beach, Florida 33009 (954) 456-4420.

            Many thanks to Assemblies of God minister Rev Mike Johnson. Brother Johnson is on the active retired list yet he is continuing to encourage and inspire another generation. He is currently studying
 at the AOG Bible College in Mattersey England for a part time M.A. in Pentecostal and Charismatic studies.
           
 used by permission, Spirit of Life Ministries,