Belief overview

Expectation of Christ's imminent return

Many Pentecostals cultivate strong eschatological expectation and a sense of historical urgency.

73%
Confidence
3
Supportive
0
Contrary
0
Neutral

What it is: The belief expresses a living expectation that Christ will return and that history is moving toward decisive consummation.

How the tradition understands it: In many Pentecostal settings, this expectation stimulates vigilance, holiness, mission, and intense reading of prophetic themes. In certain contexts, it takes a premillennial and dispensational form; in others, it remains more general.

Textual or traditional basis: 1 Thessalonians 4, Matthew 24, and Revelation are texts frequently cited.

Historical context: Pentecostalism was born in a strongly eschatological environment, which shaped its early missionary dynamism.

Common objections: Critics point to speculation about dates, alarmism, and prophetic readings that are overly tied to current events.

Internal variations: Not all Pentecostal denominations hold the same eschatological model, although expectation of Christ's return is widely shared.

Supportive

1 Thessalonians 4:16-17

bible,eschatology,return-of-christ,pentecostalism

Meeting the Lord at his coming.

Reference: 1 Thessalonians 4:16-17.

Content: Paul describes the coming of the Lord and the meeting of believers with him.

Use in debate: It is one of the most frequently used eschatological texts in Pentecostal settings.

Assemblies of God, Statement of Fundamental Truths

pentecostalism,assemblies-of-god,doctrine,holy-spirit

Classic Pentecostal formulation on the Holy Spirit, tongues, healing, and eschatology.

Reference: The Assemblies of God Statement of Fundamental Truths.

Content: The document presents classic formulations on biblical inspiration, salvation, baptism in the Holy Spirit, initial evidence of tongues, divine healing, and the second coming of Christ.

Use in debate: It is one of the most influential Pentecostal confessional sources internationally.

Matthew 24:42-44

bible,eschatology,watchfulness,pentecostalism

Watchfulness in view of the Lord's coming.

Reference: Matthew 24:42-44.

Content: Jesus calls for watchfulness because the hour is not known.

Use in debate: It supports the Pentecostal emphasis on spiritual readiness and a sense of eschatological urgency.