William J. Seymour: The One-Eyed Preacher Who Helped Ignite a Global Revival
Before councils were organized.
Before doctrinal debates hardened.
Before denominational lines formed.
There was a prayer meeting on Azusa Street.
And at the center of it stood a humble, soft-spoken Black preacher named William J. Seymour.
If Garfield Thomas Haywood helped structure the movement, Seymour helped ignite it.
Early Life: Born Into Reconstruction America
William Joseph Seymour was born in 1870 in Centerville, Louisiana, just five years after the end of the Civil War. His parents were formerly enslaved. He grew up in the fragile, uncertain climate of Reconstruction-era America — a period marked by racial hostility, economic hardship, and systemic discrimination.
He did not grow up with institutional privilege.
He grew up with survival faith.
As a young man, Seymour contracted smallpox, which left him blind in one eye. That physical mark would later become symbolic. The man who had limited natural sight would become a vessel for global spiritual vision.
