The Dixon Pentecostal Research Center recently purchased several items that belonged to F.J. Lee through his grandson, Joe Lee. Among the items is a desk made by Lee himself, a skilled craftsman, and used during his time as the second general overseer of the Church of God and president of the school that would later be named in his honor—Lee University. Also acquired are file and card cabinets from his office, as well as a clock believed to have served to set the time schedule for operations at the Church of God Publishing House during and after Lee’s tenure. Flavius J. Lee (1875–1928), the “best man in town” and worship leader at the Berry Street Baptist Church, joined the Church of God after experiencing Holy Spirit baptism during the town’s historic Pentecostal revival of 1908. Almost immediately ordained, a decade and a half later he served as a leader and stabilizing force in the wake of church controversy and disruption. After serving as pastor of the Cleveland church (now North Cleveland), and then state overseer of Tennessee and of Florida, he was elevated to the office of general overseer. During his tenure, he developed cancer, and although he lay on his deathbed, the 1928 General Assembly re-elected Lee as general overseer. At the same time, they also elected S.W. Latimer to the newly created office of assistant general overseer with a plan for succession. Lee died before the conclusion of the General Assembly. Lee left a lasting legacy as he guided the Church of God through what may have been its most difficult era. These items are currently on display in the reading room of the Dixon Pentecostal Research Center with the expectation of the future development of a Church of God Heritage Center. The Dixon Pentecostal Research Center is thankful for financial donors that made the purchase of the Lee furnishings possible.
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The Dixon Pentecostal Research Center honored Operation Compassion President David Lorency with the Spirit of Azusa Award and a reception on November 5, 2019. Church leaders, friends, community members, and family gathered in the North Cleveland Church of God Dixon Chapel to show appreciation for Lorency’s lifetime of ministry “unto the least of these.” In presenting the Award, DPRC Director David Roebuck praised Lorency for his exceptional ministry of networking that he so ably has used throughout his life to connect resources, transportation providers, and people in need. General Overseer Tim Hill thanked Lorency, his wife, Laura, their family, and co-labors for the positive acclaim Operation Compassion has brought to the Church of God. With five other members and former members of the Church of God International Executive Committee joining him, Hill spoke directly to Reverend Lorency, “The Church of God is blessed in more ways than one because of you and Laura. You and Operation Compassion make us look really good around this world.” Referring to the many hurricanes and other disasters to which Operation Compassion has responded, Hill continued about Lorency, “He has allowed the Executive Committee in behalf of the Church of God to be able to reach its arms around this world as one.” First Assistant General Overseer and Executive Director of the Church of God Division of Care Ministries Dr. Raymond Culpepper praised the work of Operation Compassion under Lorency’s leadership. Culpepper noted that of the 1.2 million charities, the international charity relief agency is consistently in the top 200. He also announced that a book is being written on the lives and ministries of the Lorencys. A native of Norfolk, Virginia, David Lorency’s parents and his childhood church, Glad Tidings Assembly of God, modeled serving those in need. Lorency later joined the ministry team at Virginia Beach’s Azalea Gardens Church of God and eventually was ordained as a bishop in the Church of God. He has served as youth minister, pastor, evangelist, church planter, and denominational leader. Lorency started Youth Challenge Outreach (YCO) as an umbrella agency for numerous coffee houses, servicemen’s centers, and beach outreach stations. YCO grew to reaching thousands of youth, employing nine full-time and 70 part-time staff members. YCO moved beyond Virginia Beach and into Mexico where Lorency and his young family reached out to children and youth across the nation. Lorency later transitioned to pastoral ministry and served congregations in Detroit, Michigan; Bakersfield, California; and Alabaster, Alabama. At each location, his ministry focused on meeting community needs as an integral part of sharing the gospel. The Church of God appointed Lorency to serve as metro evangelist in Northern New England. He continued to lead on the state and regional level as Evangelism Director of both Chicago Metro and California. More than 100 churches have been planted during his ministry. In 2000, the Church of God asked Lorency to serve as Executive Director of Operation Compassion, a non-profit international disaster relief charity. He guided and directed the growth and development of Operation Compassion from a small charity with a pickup truck and $200 to a charity handling 1,500 semis or more per year. Lorency became president of Operation Compassion in 2006. When Hurricane Dorian ravaged the Bahamas in September, Operation Compassion coordinated shipments of food, water, clothing, bedding, household items, hygiene products, medical supplies, and building materials. Still responding to the ongoing need, Operation Compassion expects to ship more than 54 semi-trucks of supplies to the islands. Among those shipments are five-gallon “disaster buckets” containing food, first aid, hygiene and paper products along with a New Testament. According to Roebuck, the Spirit of Azusa Award has since 2006 honored a person whose lifetime of ministry reflects the spirit of renewal that characterizes the Pentecostal Movement. The Azusa Lecture and Spirit of Azusa Award celebrate the rich heritage of this global renewal movement. The DPRC launched the annual lecture on the centennial of the renowned 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 J. Seymour preached a message of Spirit baptism following salvation and sanctification. What started as a home prayer meeting attracted throngs of seekers and was moved to an abandoned church 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.” Prior to the Spirit of Azusa Award presentation, Dr. Lisa P. Stephenson presented the Azusa Lecture entitled “Unto the Least of These: Biblical and Theological Foundations for Benevolence.” Stephenson is an ordained minister in the Church of God and Professor of Systematic Theology at Lee University. In addition to her teaching, Stephenson is director of the Graduate Studies Program in Bible and Theology, and director the university’s Benevolence Program, which provides the theological and biblical foundations for the service hours students must complete each semester they are at Lee. In introducing Stephenson, Roebuck noted her impressive list of conference presentations, chapters in edited books, and articles in journals such as Pneuma, Journal of Pentecostal Theology, Scottish Journal of Theology, and Journal of Church and State. Stephenson has served on editorial boards for Baker Academic Press, T&T Clark, and the Society for Pentecostal Studies. Her book, Dismantling the Dualisms for American Pentecostal Women in Ministry, won the Society for Pentecostal Studies’ 2013 Pneuma Book Award, and that same year Lee University honored her with their Excellence in Scholarship Award. The Dixon Pentecostal Research Center is home to one of the world’s significant collections of Pentecostal resources as well as the archives of the Church of God. In addition to students at Lee University and the Pentecostal Theological Seminary, numerous scholars use the center’s holdings related to the Pentecostal-Charismatic Movement. Barbara Schneider, the granddaughter of E.L. Simmons, former Assistant General Overseer, Editor-in-Chief, and Lee College President, took time to visit the research center to do some investigation into her family’s rich heritage in the Church of God and the history of the church in Florida. In the context of the family of the church, she is related to several of the prominent, early Church of God families, including the Caruthers and Tharp families. |
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