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David du Plesis - Du Plesis - Mr. Pentecost

David du Plesis: Building unity among the Body of Christ and preaching the Baptism of the Holy Spirit.


The General Secretary of the Apostolic Faith Mission (AFM) was in his Johannesburg office. Since it was before 7:00 a.m. he was surprised when Smith Wigglesworth burst in. “Come out here!” he boomed.

Pushing David du Plessis firmly against the wall, Wigglesworth prophesied that a revival would come through the old-line denominations. It would eclipse anything previously known throughout history. Many leaders would not only stop opposing the message of Pentecost but would accept the blessed experience. Du Plessis, Wigglesworth continued, would play a prominent role in this movement – provided he remained humble and faithful.

That was December 1936. Wigglesworth was in South Africa attending the annual AFM conference at the time. Du Plessis was hosting Wigglesworth in his home. After delivering the prophetic utterance, Wigglesworth bowed his head and asked God to prepare du Plessis and to keep him in good health. With his message delivered, Wigglesworth left the office of the General Secretary of the AFM only to return 10 minutes later, as though for the first time. Wigglesworth asked du Plessis how he was. “Very puzzled,” du Plessis replied.

Wigglesworth tried to help du Plessis understand. He explained that he had seen a vision well before dawn and apparently been somewhat puzzled himself. Wigglesworth even argued with the Lord about it saying, “This is not what my brethren expect.” Wigglesworth told du Plessis that he should wait for confirmation from God, then added, “It will not begin during my lifetime. When I pass away, then you can begin to think about it.” Wigglesworth also told du Plessis he would travel more than most men.

Uniting the Pentecostals Three weeks after Wigglesworth’s prophecy the wheels were set in motion. Du Plessis was invited to minister at the 1937 General Council of Assemblies of God in Memphis, Tenn. At the council, the leaders discussed the benefits of holding a meeting of Pentecostal leaders in Europe in 1938 or 1939. By the end of the conversation, Donald Gee suggested du Plessis as a candidate to serve as secretary for the proposed meeting. The Assemblies of God followed through with its plans, and held a European conference in Stockholm in 1938. It was during that conference that T.B. Barratt prophesied the coming of World War II.

The Second Great War delayed the first World Pentecostal Conference until 1947. That was the same year Wigglesworth went on to be with the Lord and, as he suggested, his passing opened the door for what he prophesied to du Plessis in December 1936 to come to pass. The First World Pentecostal Conference was held in Zurich, Switzerland. Swiss Pastor Leonard Steiner organized the conference – with the help of du Plessis.

Du Plessis also ministered at the conference. His message came from the words of John the 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” (Matthew 3:11-12 NIV). God had shown du Plessis 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 The glory would soon be followed by a near tragedy. One foggy night in 1948 Paul Walker, head of the Missions Department of the Church of God, was driving du Plessis back to Beckley, W.V. At 3:00 a.m. they crashed into a shunting locomotive that was stopped on a rail crossing.

God worked it together for good. This accident led to the birth of the Pentecostal Fellowship of North America. The organization’s first action was to send du Plessis $400. The group of Pentecostal believers also agreed to send him $250 a month until he recovered from the accident. Du Plessis sent his wife, Anna, more than $1,000 so she could come to America.

Du Plessis’ family came to Beckley just in time for Thanksgiving, and the man of God organized the 1949 World Pentecostal Conference 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 doctors told Du Plessis it would take two years to recover from the wreck, he nonetheless attended the conference on crutches.

The next turning point in Du Plessis’ life came when the Church of God offered him a professorship at Lee College in Cleveland, Tenn. This made way for the family to obtain a residence visa in the United States. While teaching and with help from the students, the 1952 World Pentecostal Conference was organized in London.

The Charismatic Renewal God showed du Plessis he needed to be near the centers of power of the established churches. So he resigned from teaching at Lee College and moved to Stamford, Conn. There du Plessis developed a friendship with Dr. John A. Mackay, who was the president of Princeton Theological Seminary at the time. At the end of the 1952 World Pentecostal Conference du Plessis made yet another move: He resigned as secretary and traveled to Germany to attend the World Conference of the International Missionary Council at Mackay’s suggestion.

At the conference he talked with 110 of the 210 delegates, including Dr. Willem Visser ‘t Hooft, secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC). Dr. Hooft arranged for du Plessis to speak at the second assembly of the WCC in Evanston Illinois in 1954. Du Plessis changed his main message in two ways. First, he started to emphasize Jesus as the Baptizer in the Holy Spirit. Second, he 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, du Plessis met Professor Bernard Leeming, a Catholic priest from Oxford, England, who asked for the baptism in the Holy Spirit. This request marked the start of du Plessis’ ministry to Roman Catholics. Leeming knew Pope John personally and arranged for du Plessis to visit Rome. God gave him 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 du Plessis was the one.

Strandsky’s boss was Cardinal Bea, who asked du Plessis’, “What do the Pentecostals want to say to Rome?” Du Plessis’ hesitant response: “I have to say, the Pentecostals have no intention of talking to Rome.” Betraying no emotion, Bea asked once again: “What do you want to say to Rome?” Du Plessis offered a different reply this time: “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 to his secretary, “That is what the Holy Father wants to know, write it down.”

In 1964 du Plessis was an observer at the historic Vatican Council originated by Pope John XXIII and completed by Paul VI. At Horgen in Switzerland in 1972, du Plessis represented the Pentecostals as co-chairman with Fr. Kilian McDonnell at the first of 10 “Dialogues” between Catholics and Pentecostals, including Charismatics. Then, 10 years later in 1974, a group of Catholic and Protestant editors issued a list of 11 ‘shapers and shakers’ of the Christian faith. 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.

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