John and Charles examine the Angelus Temple ecosystem in the 1930s and 1940s, focusing on how British Israelism circulated alongside Pentecostal networks and how certain figures repeatedly surface in the same orbit. The discussion tracks Wesley Swift’s influence in that milieu and why Angelus Temple matters as a crossroads for competing ideologies.
They also trace the thread into the careers and associations of names like Gordon Lindsay and Gerald B. Winrod, highlighting where the record is solid, where claims rely on interpretation, and why careful sourcing and precise language matter when describing extremist ties and political labels.
Chapters
- Introduction
- Los Angeles Political Undercurrents And Why They Matter
- Winrod At Angelus Temple And The Public Backlash
- Kansas Pentecostal Links And Where The Claims Turn Speculative
- Gerald Vs. Gordon Winrod Clarification
- Gordon Lindsay’s Denominational Role And Church-Planting Context

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