Nope. And I still don't. Is there anyone who agrees with you?
short answer:
United Pentecostal Church International,reports a membership of over 5.75 million.
[47] But they may differ from Truther's private brand of "Jesus onlyism", a man made tradition started in 1913 in California.
long answer:
The first Pentecostals were
Holiness Pentecostals, who teach three works of grace (the
new birth,
entire sanctification, and Spirit baptism accompanied by glossolalia);
Finished Work Pentecostals broke off and became partitioned into Trinitarian and nontrinitarian branches, the latter being known as Oneness Pentecostalism.
[19][22] The Oneness Pentecostal movement began in 1913 as the result of doctrinal disputes within the nascent Pentecostal movement,
[7][23] specifically within the Assemblies of God, the first Finished Work Pentecostal denomination.
[3][22]
Beginnings of the Oneness movement
In April 1913, at the Apostolic Faith Worldwide Camp Meeting held in
Arroyo Seco, CA, conducted by
Maria Woodworth-Etter, organizers promised that God would "deal with them, giving them a unity and power that we have not yet known."
[24][25] Canadian
R. E. McAlister preached a "new revelation" that a baptismal formula in the name of Jesus only was to be preferred over the three-part formula "Father, Son, and Holy Ghost" found in
Matthew 28:19, pointing to
Acts 2:38.
[26][27] This revelation immediately caused controversy when Frank Denny—a Pentecostal missionary to China—jumped on the platform and tried to censor McAlister.
[28]
A young minister named John G. Schaepe was so moved by McAlister's new revelation that, after praying and reading the Bible all night, he ran through the camp the following morning shouting that he'd received a revelation against Trinitarian baptism.
[29][30][31][32] This conclusion was accepted by several others in the camp and given further theological development by a minister named
Frank Ewart.
[33] On April 15, 1914, Frank Ewart and Glenn Cook publicly baptized each other specifically in "the name of the Lord Jesus Christ" in a tank set up in Ewart's Crusade tent.
[34][35] This is considered to be the historical point when Oneness Pentecostalism emerged as a distinct movement.
[4]
A number of ministers claimed they were baptized in Jesus' name before 1914, including Frank Small and
Andrew D. Urshan. Urshan claimed to have baptized others in Jesus Christ's name as early as 1910.
[36][37][38][39] In addition,
Charles Parham, the founder of the modern Pentecostal movement, was recorded baptizing using a
Christological formula during the Azusa Street revival;
[40] and until 1914, both Parham and
William J. Seymour baptized in this Christological formula but repudiated the new movement's nontrinitarian teachings amidst the controversy as they baptized as Christocentric Trinitarians.
[41]
It's like watching a baseball game where all the players are umpires.
