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Stanley H. Frodsham

Stanley Howard Frodsham (1882–1969). Born in 1882 in Bournemouth, England, to a Congregational Christian family, Stanley H. Frodsham became a pivotal figure in the early Pentecostal movement as a pastor, editor, and author. Inspired by Hudson Taylor’s biography as a young man, he converted at a London YMCA, quitting smoking and swearing, and pursued faith-driven work. After serving as a YMCA secretary in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1906, he visited Canada, returning to England in 1908 to receive the baptism in the Holy Spirit at Alexander Boddy’s Sunderland revival, speaking in tongues. That year, he launched Victory, a Pentecostal newsletter, and joined Bournemouth’s first Pentecostal church. In 1910, he married Alice Rowlands in Canada, with Smith Wigglesworth officiating, and they settled in the U.S. by 1916, where Frodsham pastored with the Assemblies of God (AOG). Elected AOG general secretary in 1916 and editor of The Pentecostal Evangel in 1921, he shaped Pentecostal literature for nearly 30 years, writing 15 books, including With Signs Following (1926), Ever Increasing Faith (1924, compiling Wigglesworth’s sermons), and Smith Wigglesworth: Apostle of Faith (1948). His involvement in the controversial Latter Rain Movement in the 1940s led to tensions with the AOG, prompting his 1949 retirement and resignation from their ministerial list, though he continued preaching in Latter Rain circles, teaching at Elim Bible Institute. Frodsham died in 1969, leaving a legacy as “God’s prophet with a pen.” He said, “The mightiest factor in this great Pentecostal Revival has been the wonderful missionary spirit that has characterized it.”
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Stanley H. Frodsham preaches on the importance of meekness, highlighting the journey of Moses and David in learning to find their all in the Lord and expect nothing from themselves. He emphasizes the need to seek meekness as instructed by God, as it is a phase of righteousness and leads to increased joy in the Lord. Frodsham contrasts the false philosophy of seeking wealth and fame with finding true joy only in God, as demonstrated by the humble and content heart of believers like Paul and the wizened old woman in the slums.
Scriptures
Ever Increasing Joy
There is a promise in Isaiah 29:19: “The meek... shall increase their joy in the Lord.” What class? The meek. Who are the meek? Those who find nothing in themselves and their all in the Lord. Moses was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians. With his exceptional ability and power, surely, he could deliver the enslaved Israelites from their great oppression. He tried. He failed. So we have tried many things. So have we failed. Then forty years of humiliation in the backside of the desert. Forty years of being emptied of all confidence in his own fleshly efforts. Forty years of education to learn of great truth – to expect nothing from himself, to expect all from God. David later learned this wholesome truth when he said, “My soul, wait thou only upon God; for my expectation is from Him.” Psalm 62:5. The Lord is a wonderful educator. He says, “Learn of Me.” Matthew 11:29. Remember His Word: “They shall be all taught of God.” John 6:45. That all includes you and me. From Him we shall learn meekness. Our colleges are full of those who desire to acquire knowledge. The ambition of most could be expressed in the language of Ter Steegen: "To learn, and yet to learn, while life goes by, So pass the student's days; And thus be great, and do great things and die, And lie embalmed with praise." Thus was Moses, those first forty years. But in those second forty years he learned the truth expressed by Ter Steegen when he further wrote: "My work is but to lose and to forget, Thus small, despised to be; All to unlearn – this task before me set; Unlearn all else but Thee." The result? We read that after those forty years of learning meekness from our very humble God, “Now the man Moses was very meek, above all the men which were upon the face of the earth.” Numbers 12:3. We find David learning the same lesson. Meditate much on those three precious verses of Psalm 131. We see him free from all confidence in himself. And for us too there is deliverance from the haughty heart, from the lofty eyes, from exercising ourselves in great matters and in things too high for us. We too can be instructed how to become still and quiet, weaned from all on which we formerly relied. Then we learn to hope in the Lord, to expect all from Him. Like Job we are brought to the place where we abhor ourselves. Like Job we begin to get a right estimate of ourselves and confess, “I am vile.” Job 40:4. But we turn from ourselves to the Lord, from whom is all our expectation, and we know as we expect all from Him out expectations will not be cut off. That is meekness. We are bidden, “Seek ye the Lord... seek meekness.” Zephaniah 2:3. Says the inspired prophet, “In the Lord have I righteousness and strength.” Isaiah 45:24. Meekness is one phase of righteousness. In Him too is our meekness, and as we partake of His meekness, our joy will be constantly increased. There is a false philosophy preached everywhere, which is specially shown forth in our modern literature. Wealth and fame are set forth as the all-desirable goal in life. But God's thoughts are different. He loved Paul, and so He brought him to a place in prison where he had nothing. Yet, having nothing visible, he possessed all – every spiritual blessing in Christ. And these unseen things to him were very real. He was perfectly content and always rejoicing. Ever singing like Habakkuk when all visible blessings were dried up: “Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation.” Habakkuk 3:18. We too shall not find our true joy in the things of the earth, but only in Him. Like the Psalmist we should learn to cry: “O send out thy light and thy truth: let them lead me; let them bring me unto thy holy hill, and to thy tabernacles. Then will I go unto the altar of God, unto God my exceeding joy: yea, upon the harp I will praise thee, O God my God.” Psalm 43:3-4. I heard this story from a Spirit-filled Salvationist. One time she was visiting the slums. Climbing a rickety staircase she suddenly heard a sound that her ears could hardly believe. Someone was praising the Lord. She was used to hearing the worst of oaths in the slums so it was something entirely new to her to hear a voice saying, “O thank you, Jesus. I love you, Lord. I praise you for your kindness. You are so very good to me. O Hallelujah!” She knocked at the door, opened it and peeked in. Before her eyes was a very bare room. In a corner, huddled up on a pile of rags, was a wizened old woman. She was eating something out of a bowl, but with almost every mouthful she was expressing her thanksgiving to God. "Granny," said the Salvationist, “it surely does my heart good to hear you praising my Lord. Has someone brought you something very nice?” "Yes, praise the Lord," said the feeble old soul. “The Lord is sure good to me. You see, I has the rheumatis' some, and so I can't go out and work no more. But my little granddaughter lives with me, and she sure is a treasure. Every mornin' she goes out around the neighborhood a searchin' in the garbage cans, and sometimes she finds some awful good things to eat. At times she finds some bacon rind and fries it and it sure does taste fine. Sometimes she finds some tea leaves and she brings them home and puts some hot water on them, and I has a nice cup o' tea. Somehow or other, the last few days she ain't found much in the garbage cans. But today she come across a big lump o' bread. She cut the mold off and has put some hot water on it and brought it to me in this bowl. I am enjoyin' it wonderfully, and thankin' the dear Lord for His kindness in givin' it to me. Ain't He precious?” Edison, answering a reporter who questioned him on his eightieth birthday (at a time when Ford and Firestone were his honored guests at his beautiful Florida home), said, “No, I am not happy, and I do not know any one that is.” The sister in the slums, of whom my Salvationist friend told me, did not happen to be one of his acquaintances. We shall never find joy in fame or in wealth – but only in the Lord. And the meek, the lowly ones, who possess nothing in themselves, they it is who learn to increase their joy in the Lord, and to offer daily in His tabernacle the sacrifice of joy.
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Stanley Howard Frodsham (1882–1969). Born in 1882 in Bournemouth, England, to a Congregational Christian family, Stanley H. Frodsham became a pivotal figure in the early Pentecostal movement as a pastor, editor, and author. Inspired by Hudson Taylor’s biography as a young man, he converted at a London YMCA, quitting smoking and swearing, and pursued faith-driven work. After serving as a YMCA secretary in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1906, he visited Canada, returning to England in 1908 to receive the baptism in the Holy Spirit at Alexander Boddy’s Sunderland revival, speaking in tongues. That year, he launched Victory, a Pentecostal newsletter, and joined Bournemouth’s first Pentecostal church. In 1910, he married Alice Rowlands in Canada, with Smith Wigglesworth officiating, and they settled in the U.S. by 1916, where Frodsham pastored with the Assemblies of God (AOG). Elected AOG general secretary in 1916 and editor of The Pentecostal Evangel in 1921, he shaped Pentecostal literature for nearly 30 years, writing 15 books, including With Signs Following (1926), Ever Increasing Faith (1924, compiling Wigglesworth’s sermons), and Smith Wigglesworth: Apostle of Faith (1948). His involvement in the controversial Latter Rain Movement in the 1940s led to tensions with the AOG, prompting his 1949 retirement and resignation from their ministerial list, though he continued preaching in Latter Rain circles, teaching at Elim Bible Institute. Frodsham died in 1969, leaving a legacy as “God’s prophet with a pen.” He said, “The mightiest factor in this great Pentecostal Revival has been the wonderful missionary spirit that has characterized it.”