“…José Casanova notes that Pentecostalism in general is ‘leading an unabashed and uncompromising onslaught against their local cultures’; their ‘attitude is neither compromise nor denial but frontal hand‐to‐hand combat, what they call “spiritual warfare”’ (Casanova, 2001, p. 437; see also Robbins, 2003, p. 222; Meyer, 1999, p. 171). The expression ‘make a complete break with the past’, first used by Birgit Meyer (1998) in reference to Pentecostals in Ghana, is now reported for many ethnographic contexts, including the Pacific (Lohmann, 2003; Macdonald, 2019, p. 527; Robbins, 2003, p. 226, Robbins, 2007, p. 11), Africa (Daswani, 2013, p. 467, 2015, p. 4; Engelke, 2010, p. 177; Maxwell, 1998, p. 354; Meyer, 1998; van Dijk, 1995) and elsewhere (Lindhardt, 2014, p. 95; Marshall, 2016; Vilaça, 2016). Recognising this, but also to reject the anthropological predilection for finding persistence beneath seemingly radical change, Joel Robbins has advocated a focus on rupture and discontinuity in the anthropology of Christianity (2003, p. 230, 2007).…”