What is Pentecostal Writing?
As 90&9.com’s executive editor for content, I read endless articles from an Apostolic perspective. I also write more than my fair share. It was at the completion of a recent cover that I thought, “This is an important article.” That’s an intoxicating thought. It empties your head and lightens your heart and fills both with peculiar dreams of immortality and respect.
It didn’t take me long for me to realize it was the topic, not the essay, that was important. I had served only as the messenger. Oh well, it was an intoxicating thought.
For a piece of writing to be “Important” it’s not enough to be powerful and true. It must also be ground-breaking and insightful and forward-looking and forceful enough to make readers rethink themselves; often it reframes an argument for a generation, providing the template for future interpretation.
I had a knowledgeable Pentecostal argue to me that there were no important Apostolic writings to date. He felt our oral tradition interfered with this process, but added that even our valuable doctrinal writings are defensive in nature, so couldn’t be considered Important. I found that fascinating.
Cases in Point
Three non-Apostolic examples of Important:
* T.S. Eliot recast poetry with The Wasteland.
* George Keenan’s writings provided the intellectual framework for the
* In 1993, Samuel P. Huntington’s Clash of Civilizations posited that the world’s upcoming, post-Soviet conflicts would be over religious and cultural identities, not politics. It wasn’t an outright prediction of 9/11, but…
Speaking in New Tongues
Maybe it is finding someone brave enough to recreate the language to accommodate our experience.
Maybe we're at a similar starting point, awaiting direction.
What is Pentecostal Identity?
Maybe there’s no Important Apostolic writing because we don’t have a well-defined identity.
Many writing subcultures present distinct commonalities; for instance, Southern writing often features quirky characters, homespun sayings, racial tensions, and sweltering settings.
Maybe we are believers built around doctrinal ideas, with room for numerous amorphous characteristics, but few clear definitives. If true, that’s okay. The
Labels: Apostolic Writing, Literature, Pentecostal Writing, Voice



