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ALEXANDER A. BODDY
1854-1930

Alexander A. Boddy
A. A. Boddy was the main pioneer of Pentecostalism
in Britain during the early twentieth century. The son of
an Anglican rector, he was strongly influenced by Keswick
teaching and studied theology at Durham. Ordained by the godly
academic, Bishop J. B. Lightfoot, he became vicar at Elwick
before being appointed as vicar at All Saints' Parish Church,
Sunderland at the early age of thirty-two, in 1884.
He gained notoriety and membership of the
Royal Geographical Society reporting on his travels to western
Canada, Egypt, North Africa, Palestine and Russia. But his
real passion was the spread of the gospel. Being strongly
evangelical with a passionate zeal for revival, the Welsh
Revival of 1904 attracted his attention and he made a special
journey to the Rhondda to meet Evan Roberts and see things
first-hand. A year or two later he heard of a new Revival
in Norway, led by a fervent Methodist minister in Oslo (then
Christiania) who testified to a baptism in the Holy Spirit
he had received in New York. Boddy crossed the North Sea to
see things first hand. In an article to several English papers
Boddy wrote ‘My four days in Christiana can never be
forgotten. I stood with Evan Roberts in Tonypandy, but have
never witnessed such scenes as those in Norway.’ He
became so convinced that this new movement was of God, that
he pleaded with T.B. Barrett to hold a brief mission in his
church in Sunderland.
To the Keswick Convention in 1907 he took
a pamphlet he had written called ‘Pentecost for England’
and thousands were distributed. In it he claimed that 20,000
people had spoken in tongues (worldwide) but that only about
six persons of these were in Great Britain. The first person
to receive the gift of tongues at this time, New Year 1907,
was a Mrs. Price of Brixton, London. She opened her home for
prayer meetings that were, essentially, the first Pentecostal
meetings in England. Almost simultaneously other individuals
in Wales, the south coast and in the north of England, also
received the Baptism of the Holy Spirit with the sign of speaking
in tongues before the great outpouring in Sunderland in September
1907.

A. A. Boddy and his family
Barrett arrived in September 1907, and in
the first prayer meeting on Saturday, there was ‘great
blessing.’ On Sunday Barratt preached in All Saint’s
Parish Church after the regular evening service. In the vestry
prayer meeting afterwards ‘many received very marked
blessings, and a few came through to a scriptural baptism
of the Holy Spirit for we heard them speak with tongues and
magnify God.’ The meeting finished at 4.a.m. the next
morning! There commenced scenes at All Saints' that soon attracted
the attention of the Press. Besides prayer-meetings until
the small hours of the morning, there was speaking with tongues,
and testimonies to miracles of healing. So great was the effect
that Barratt said ‘the eyes of the religious millions
of Great Britain are now fixed on Sunderland.’ But the
religious periodicals were strangely silent! After Barrett
had returned home on October 18th the fire continued to fall.
The stone in the wall of the Parish Hall still carries the
inscription "WHEN THE FIRE OF THE LORD FELL IT BURNED
UP THE DEBT" (there had been a debt on the building).
All Saints' became a centre for hungry souls seeking a deeper
experience of the Holy Spirit. The Pentecostal revival had
begun.
Naturally there were many opposers of the
new move of the Spirit but the saintly Handley G. Moule was
then the Bishop of Durham and no ecclesiastical restrictions
were placed on Boddy.
At Whitsuntide, 1908 Boddy hosted an epoch-making
convention, and thenceforth the history of Boddy becomes merged
with the British Pentecostal Movement. Annual Conventions
were held at All Saints' until 1914, attended by young men
destined to become leaders of the Movement in years to come.
Boddy was God's man who presided over the
early British Pentecostal Conventions and for a few years
was the outstanding personality in the Movement. He had the
prestige, the poise, the culture, and the personal participation
in the Pentecostal experience that established him as the
figure-head.
'He soon tasted the undisciplined character
of many who went to Sunderland with very mixed motives and
great desires for self-expression. Admission to the 1908 Convention
was by ticket, freely given to all who would sign a declaration.
One item was significant— "The Chairman's ruling
should be promptly and willingly obeyed in cases of difficulty".
There were those who rebelled and talked thickly of "liberty",
but on the whole it was freely admitted that his chairmanship
of these early Conventions was truly under the touch of God.
There was heavenly singing in the Spirit as by an angelic
choir; there were prophecies and interpretations of tongues
that were very impressive, there was a Pentecostal atmosphere
charged with Divine power. Apart from All Saints' and the
Convention the vicarage became hallowed ground where many
were baptised in the Holy Spirit. Mrs. Boddy though an invalid,
was a woman of strong personality, and helped her husband
greatly. The Pentecostal Missionary Union was born in the
vicarage early in 1909, and Boddy's great friend Cecil Polhill
became the first chairman. Another important step was the
publication by A. A. Boddy of a magazine called "CONFIDENCE"
that did much to spread and stabilise the young Movement until
1926.'
In 1922 he resigned from All Saints', and
died in the pastorate of the little village church of Pittington,
near Durham, in 1930. He was seventy-six.

Mrs Boddy
Donald Gee states, ‘It must always
remain a moot point whether the subsequent floundering of
the Pentecostal Movement in the British Isles without God-anointed
national leadership, such as God manifestly gave in Norway
and Sweden, was due to failure on the part of Brother Boddy
to fully recognise the Divine call, and throw himself wholeheartedly
into leading the young Movement which he had done so much
to bring to birth. In those days it would have necessitated
a break with the Anglican Church. The interposition of the
First World War was undoubtedly a factor. A sadness fills
the mind at the memory of the pale winter sunshine that marked
the later years of Mr. Boddy's life and ministry in contrast
to the full blaze of glorious summer of the early Sunderland
days. But speculation on what might have been should never
make us ungrateful for the vital part he played, under God,
in the beginning of the Movement in the British Isles.’
Bibliography: Donald Gee, 'These Men
I Knew,' 1965 and 'Wind and Flame,' 1941 and 1967; D.D.Bundy
art. 'International Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic
Movements' 2002.
Tony Cauchi

Book by Gavin Wakefield
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