Holy Roller
English
Etymology
From the practice of some devout Pentecostals who would roll on the floor of the church in response to the infilling of the Holy Spirit.
Noun
Holy Roller (plural Holy Rollers)
- (informal, usually derogatory) A member of any Christian church characterized by ecstatic behaviour; especially of the Pentecostal Church.
- Coordinate term: Holy Jumper
- I attended a worship service where I was astounded to see holy rollers convulsing on the floor and speaking in tongues.
- 1911, Joe Hill (music), “The Preacher and the Slave”:
- Holy Rollers and Jumpers come out / And they holler, they jump and they shout / Give your money to Jesus, they say / He will cure all diseases today
- 1917, Upton Sinclair, The Profits of Religion […] :
- Also there are the "Holy Rollers" and "Holy Jumpers", ghastly sects which cultivate the religious hysterias, and have spread like a plague among the women of our lonely prairie farms and desert ranches.
- 1969 January 17, “Essay: Are the WASPS Coming Back? Have They Ever Been Away?”, in Time, ISSN 0040-781X:
- At the narrowest, Wasps form a select band of well-heeled, well-descended members of the Eastern Establishment; at the widest, they include Okies and Snopeses, "Holy Rollers" and hillbillies.
- 1989, Leon Capetanos, Fletch Lives, spoken by Hamilton Johnson (Hal Holbrook):
- They took advantage of her, these holy rollers. When she was at death's door, they preyed on her faith and her fear. When she was no longer able to make rational decisions, persuaded her to give away our land for that amusement park.
- (informal, derogatory) A devoutly religious Christian person.
- She's such a holy roller that she steers every conversation around to the joys of religion.
Translations
member of any Christian church characterized by ecstatic behaviour
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derogative: devoutly religious person
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