Living Waters 

Our History 

Resized Pastor Fred Smith

The Pentecostal movement began in Britain in 1907, originally in the Sunderland area. Men and women travelled across land and sea to attend the special conventions, which were marked by people receiving the baptism of the Holy Spirit and speaking in other tongues (Acts 2:4). By 1913, some of those present were from Cambridge.

 

By the late 1920s, a Cambridge Pentecostal group had begun meeting in a small wooden building on Newmarket Road. The first minister was Cecil Frederick Smith and he led Hebron Pentecostal Church for over three decades. Those early years knew much blessing and, although small in number, it was not unknown for those who spoke in tongues to speak in recognisable earthly languages. Many of the prominent leaders in this new movement, men like Donald Gee and John Carter, visited and spoke at Cambridge as they believed it to be a strategic place for the Gospel. The Pentecostal experience and testimony in Cambridge, which is now widespread among the churches of the city, owes much to the faithful work of Pastor Smith (left). He never retired and died while serving in the ministry.

 

HEBRON 1937

 

 

 

 

This is an advert for the church's Easter Convention from 1937, printed in The Cambridge Evening News. This  building in Newmarket Road no longer exists but was close to the new site of the Tesco Superstore and the building where City Church (New Frontiers) currently worship. The "Wooden Hut" is fondly remembered by Cambridge author F.T. Unwin in his book "Gentle Tales of Old Cambridge" where he speaks with great affection about Pastor Smith and describes the church venue as "a cosy little church, made of wood, with a tortoise-stove sweltering away in its centre; with small, straight-backed whicker chairs, rodded together..." (p.126). It was, nevertheless, the home for the Cambridge Pentecostal group for no less than four decades.

     

 

Resized ralph

 

 

In 1969, Mr Ralph Inskip (left) took on the work and within a few years had managed to secure a new and more permenant home for the fellowship in an old Baptist chapel in Tenison Road. The mortgage on the property was paid off very soon and the Assemblies of God has remained in the building to the present day. Ralph Inskip continued the strong Pentecostalism of the early days and many miracles were wrought through his prayerful hands. Pastor Inskip continues to minister for Jesus - now way passed retirement age, his current project is leading a small church in Gamlingay!   

 

 

Glenn BalfourThe leadership passed hands once again in 1993 when Dr. Glenn Balfour (right) and his wife Caroline moved to Cambridge from Newark to progress the ministry. Under Glenn's leadership, a much younger congregation began to gather to hear his inspiring teaching and the building began to be developed into a more flexible environment. After eight years of ministry at Cambridge, Glenn began to hear God's call to teach full time at Mattersey Hall Bible College. Seeking a successor, he contacted an old student of his, Peter Cavanna, who took on the central leadership role in 2001. church 

 

 

 

Today, Living Waters aspires to have that same supernatural dimension that was experienced in the early Pentecostalism of C.F. Smith and Ralph Inskip, combined with the inspiring teaching ministry and exuberance of Glenn Balfour. A wonderful balance of both the Word and the Spirit would seem to be what is both biblical and necessary in the twenty-first century.