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Robeck to Present Azusa Lecture on Evangelism at Azusa Street Mission

Dr. Cecil M. Robeck, Jr. will present the Twentieth Annual Azusa Lecture on Tuesday, November 11, at 7:00 p.m., in the Lee University Chapel. Robeck will present “Reaping the Harvest: Lessons from the Azusa Street Revival.” Following Robeck’s presentation, the Dixon Pentecostal Research Center will honor National Evangelist Jacqueline E. Smith, DD, with the Spirit of Azusa Award and a reception for her exemplary evangelistic ministry. Those unable to attend in person may view the lecture and award presentation livestream at leeu.live.

Cecil M. Robeck, Jr. is Senior Professor of Church History at Fuller Theological Seminary, where he has taught since 1974. Previously, Robeck served as an instructor in religion at Southern California College (now Vanguard University) and as a trustee for Bethany Bible College in Scotts Valley, California. At Fuller, he has served in numerous administrative positions including director of the David J. du Plessis Center for Christian Spirituality and associate dean for Academic Programs in the School of Theology. Robeck is an ordained minister in the Assemblies of God.

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Dr. Mel Robeck

Robeck has written more than 300 articles, and his long-term historical research centers on the Azusa Street Mission and Revival and its African American pastor, William Seymour. He has authored The Azusa Street Mission and Revival: The Birth of the Global Pentecostal Movement (recipient of the Society for Pentecostal Studies’ Pneuma Award) and Prophecy at Carthage: Perpetua, Tertullian, and Cyprian. He is editor of Witness to Pentecost: The Life of Frank Bartleman and Charismatic Experiences in History, and coeditor of The Azusa Street Revival and Its Legacy (with Harold D. Hunter) and The Suffering Body: Responding to the Persecution of Christians (with Harold D. Hunter). He also coedited the Cambridge Companion to Pentecostalism (with Amos Yong). For nine years, he was editor of Pneuma: The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal Studies. His recent publications have focused on the Holy Spirit, the Church, unity in the Pentecostal perspective, and potential contributions the Pentecostal Movement can make to the world Christian Movement.

Spirit of Azusa Award Recipient Evangelist Jacqueline E. Smith has been in full-time ministry for 45 years and is ordained in the Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee) having left a prominent position in the secular world to pursue the work of the Gospel. She has preached in 39 countries and 48 states and is a frequent keynote speaker in camp meetings, conferences, retreats, youth camps, revivals, and singles seminars. In 2001, the Church of God appointed Smith as the denomination’s first female National Evangelist. The Pentecostal Theological Seminary inducted her into their Hall of Prophets in 2018 and awarded her with the honorary Doctor of Divinity in 2025.

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Jacqui Smith

As an African American woman, Smith’s ministry has afforded her opportunities to cross racial, cultural, and gender barriers. As a content single woman, she has developed a distinctive ministry conducting singles seminars in local, regional, and national settings. Most recently she has been invited to speak numerous times with students on the campus of Lee University. Though preaching is her primary focus, she is an anointed soloist as well.

The purpose of the Azusa Lecture is to celebrate the rich heritage of the global Pentecostal Movement. The Dixon Pentecostal Research Center launched the annual lecture in 2006 in recognition of the centennial of the revival at the Azusa Street Mission in Los Angeles. Church of God Historian Charles W. Conn noted that the Los Angeles revival, which lasted from 1906 to 1909, “is universally regarded as the beginning of the modern Pentecostal Movement.”

The Los Angeles revival began when African American Pastor William Joseph Seymour preached a message of Spirit baptism following salvation and sanctification. What started as a home prayer meeting attracted crowds of seekers and was moved to an abandoned building at 312 Azusa Street. Hundreds traveled to the Azusa Street Mission, received a personal baptism of the Holy Spirit, and took that message to their homes, churches, and communities. The Pentecostal Movement quickly became a great missionary movement, and the twentieth century came to be called the “Century of the Holy Spirit.”

Founded by Charles W. Conn on the campus of Lee University, the Dixon Pentecostal Research Center is one of the world’s significant collections of Pentecostal and Charismatic resources as well as the archives of the Church of God. The center interprets the Pentecostal Movement through teaching, publications, and historical exhibits and is a resource for Church of God ministries throughout the world. In addition to students at Lee University and Pentecostal Theological Seminary, numerous scholars utilize the center’s holdings. Dr. David G. Roebuck serves as director, and the Reverend David “Gene” Mills, Jr. as archivist.

For more information about the Azusa Lecture contact the Dixon Pentecostal Research Center at 423-614-8576 or dixon¬_research@leeuniversity.edu