DAVID du PLESSIS
1905-1987

David du Plessis
His birth and family
David Johannes du Plessis was a South African-born (but naturalised
American) ecumenical and international Pentecostal spokesman
whose influence amongst international denominations earned
him the nickname ‘Mr. Pentecost.’ He was born
on February 7, 1905in a small town called Twenty-Four Rivers
near Cape Town, at the far south-western tip of South Africa.
His parents became Pentecostal Christians in 1914 through
the ministries of John G. Lake and Thomas Hezmalhalch, who
had come out of the ministry of John Alexander Dowie in Zion,
Illinois.
In 1916, David’s family moved to Basutoland
(renamed Lesotho in 1966) as missionaries, then a year later
to Ladybrand where David’s father applied his carpentry
skills to aid the missionaries. It was here that David became
impressed with the joyfulness of the black believers and was
converted during a thunderstorm, aged 12 years .
His conversion
He decided to try to outrun the storm, but soon he found himself
in the midst of a downpour. He was about a third of the eleven
miles home when a lightning bolt struck the ground no more
than twenty feet in front of him and his horse, followed by
a deafening thunderclap. Half thrown from his horse already,
he slid off the rest of the way and called out, ‘Jesus!
Save me! Save me!’ Assurance of salvation was immediate.
When home his mother asked how he managed to get through the
storm. His answer was simple, ‘Well, Jesus saved me.’
Baptised in the Spirit
In 1918 at about of thirteen years of age, David was baptised
in the Holy Spirit at meetings held by Charles Heatley in
the storehouse of a coffin maker! The waiting was spread over
two days and he realised that a long-time secret sin was restricting
the Spirit’s flow. After he confessed he had a vision.
He saw a book being held by two hands whose pages were totally
white and clean. Then he heard a voice say, ‘There is
nothing recorded against you. The blood of Jesus Christ, the
Son of God has cleansed you from all unrighteousness.’
His heart was filled with joy at this, and he broke forth
in holy laughter which soon gave way to a flow of speaking
in tongues.
After this David began preaching in his church’s
the weekly outdoor evangelistic ministry. With increasingly
bold and persuasive voice, whenever he told his testimony
he received strong responses from all of his hearers.
David’s Early Years in Ministry
When David’s funds ran short for continuing at university,
he moved to Pretoria to find work with the South African Railways
engineering department. While in Pretoria, he became a regular
minister in the Upper Room, a series of rooms and a meeting
hall above a chemist’s shop a block from the largest
Dutch Reformed Church in Pretoria. Since Pentecostals were
still looked upon in those times as false prophets, it was
always interesting on Sundays to see the two churches emptying
into the streets where the city’s and nation’s
highest officials and business leaders mingled with the poor,
outrageous “apostolics.”
As a young pastor of the ‘Upper Room’
he was asked David to speak to Anna Cornelia Jacobs, who had
left the church because her ‘word from the Lord’
given to one of the more distinguished women in the congregation
had not been received. David asked about the genuineness of
her conversion, and in telling him about it she began weeping.
Clearly she was wrong in leaving the church but she also clearly
loved Jesus. She was soon estored to the faith, and David
received her a word from the Lord about her which shocked
him. The Lord told him, ‘That’s your wife.’
After an eighteen month courtship they married on August 13,
1927, later having seven children! Their marriage lasted almost
sixty years.
David was ordained in 1932 at the age of
twenty-five, and was elected as the general secretary of the
Apostolic Faith Mission (AFM, the strongest Pentecostal church
in S.A.) in 1936, a post he held until he resigned in 1947.
It in his first year as general secretary of the AFM that
David organised Smith Wigglesworth’s itinery and acted
as the interpreter in Afrikaans congregations. David was still
a young man of thirty at the time.
Smith Wigglesworth’s Visit to South Africa
During the visit Smith Wigglesworth shared a prophecy that
was destined to redirect his life. The prophecy was that this
young man from South Africa would be chosen of God to travel
to the United States and be a major catalyst of the Charismatic
Renewal in the traditional denominations. Wigglesworth pinned
this young man to the wall of his AFM office in 1936 and told
him where God would lead him for decades to follow. All he
had to do was to remain obedient and faithful to the Lord.
His first trip outside of South Africa was
in 1937 when he addressed the General Counsel of the Assemblies
of God in Memphis, Tennessee. Ten years later, in May 1947,
the first Pentecostal World Conference was held in Zurich,
Switzerland. David gave the keynote address entitled “Gather
the Wheat—Burn the Chaff,” about coming into the
maturity Christ has for all of us. Soon after this, God spoke
to David about a worldwide ministry, and he resigned as secretary
of the AFM and moved his family to Basel, Switzerland, moving
to America the following year.
Early Ecumenical Influence
One day as he was reading the newspaper David came across
a statement by Dr. John A. MacKay, who was president of Princeton
Theological Seminary and a major Presbyterian leader. Previously,
David had read that he had called the Pentecostal missionaries
in Latin and South America “the fly in the ointment
of Protestantism.” But in this article Dr. MacKay said
that the Pentecostal Movement was the greatest blessing to
the church in the twentieth century. David was curious about
such a change of heart. Could this be his open door?
He telephoned Dr. MacKay at Princeton and
asked him about his quote. He found that Dr. MacKay had had
a change of heart about the Pentecostals and he invited David
to lunch. David went to Princeton, met Dr. MacKay and, as
David himself described, “It was one of those rare and
precious relationships in which both parties fully perceive
the truth about the other—differences and all—and
are in a twinkling of an eye united forever in the Spirit.”
McKay was du Plessis’ gate into organised ecumenism
and from this point he became increasingly involved in the
ecumenical movement.
As his influence grew amongst global ecclesiastical
representatives denominational leaders were surprised to meet
an impressive and ‘rational Pentecostal,’ while
the Pentecostals became very uneasy about his apparent ‘compromises.’
In 1962 David the Assemblies of God revoked his ministerial
credentials, which he received shortly after moving to the
United States. There were no reasons given, just notice that
he was no longer ordained by their body. Nevertheless, if
Pentecostal’s didn’t want his ministry there were
many who did.
Increasing Influence
The 1960s and 1970s were years of spreading the Gospel wherever
the doors were opened—he averaged over 100,000 miles
of travel each year, ministering to the broadest group of
people imaginable, including Anglicans, Presbyterians and
Catholics. David’s work was slowly accepted by most
Pentecostals, although his credentials as a minister were
not reinstated until 1979.
In 1972, and as a result of Vatican II’s
desire to understand the growing Charismatic Renewal going
on around the world in Catholic churches, David was crucial
in initiating a series of dialogues between the Roman Catholic
Church and a team of Pentecostals led by himself. Because
he did not belong to any of the formal Pentecostal denominations,
he became the ideal person for the job, as there were strained
relationships between mainline Pentecostal denominational
churches and Catholic churches around the world, especially
in South America. These dialogues spanned four- or five-year
periods continuing into the 1990s, but David served as the
chairman of the Pentecostal side in the first two, which spanned
1972-1976 and 1977-1982. It is easy to say that these dialogues
would never have happened except for the constant efforts
of David and his counterpart on the Catholic side, Father
Kilian McDonnell.
David even ministered in St. Peter’s
Basilica as part of the 1975 Congress on Charismatic Renewal
in the Catholic Church. The one frustration was that, despite
the impact this had on the Catholic Church in paving the way
for the Charismatic Catholic Movement, none of the Pentecostal
denominations would be involved officially, despite the best
efforts of both sides. But the work went on. Pentecost had
invaded the denominations. The charismatic Movement had been
born in 1960 when Dennis Bennett had been baptised in the
Spirit in Van Nuys, California and a major influence on its
growth was ‘Mr. Pentecost.’
The Scope of His Ministry
David was a significant leader of the three most noteworthy
Christian movements of the twentieth century: the Pentecostal
Movement, the Charismatic Renewal, and the Ecumenical Movement.
In the September 9, 1974, issue of Time magazine, David was
mentioned alongside such people as Billy Graham, Hans Küng,
Jürgen Moltmann, and Rosemary Ruether as one of the eleven
greatest “shapers and shakers” of Christianity
in the twentieth century. On May 23, 1976, St. John’s
University in Collegeville, Minnesota, presented him with
the Pax Christi award. Kilian McDonnell spoke of him as a
‘national treasure.’
In May 1978, he finally received a D.D. that
honestly gave him the title of “Dr. du Plessis,”
at Bethany Bible College in Santa Cruz, California, awarded
him an honorary doctorate. As a result of these things and
a growing acknowledgement that David had been following God
throughout his ecumenical involvement, his Assemblies of God
ordination papers were reissued in 1979. Then on November
9, 1983, David was honoured with the Benemerenti Medal by
Pope John Paul II, an award for outstanding service to all
of Christianity. It was the first time this award had been
given by the Roman Catholic Church to someone who was not
a Catholic.
He died on February 7th 1987. Well done,
good and faithful servant!
Bibliography: R. P. Spittler art. 'International
Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements'
2002.; David du Plessis ‘A Man called Mr. Pentecost,’
1977 and ‘The Spirit Bade Me Go’1970.
Tony Cauchi
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