The vast majority of Pentecostals and Charismatics are Dispensationalists.
The "date setters" are all Dispensationalists.
The vast majority of people who claim to be able to give prophecies are Dispensationalists.
The vast majority of Preterists believe the sign gifts ceased in 70AD.
mysteryboy makes up stuff, and ignores the facts.
Wrong! Dispensationalism and the Charismatic Movement tend to be antithetical to each other, especially the Mid Acts brand.
"Dispensationalists debate the doctrine of the baptism of the Holy Spirit on at least three fronts. First, they have generally been non-Pentecostaland have dismissed as unbiblical the teaching that Spirit baptism 30 produces speaking in tongues.1 Second, they have debated other non-Pentecostal 1 See, for example, John Walvoord, The Holy Spirit (Wheaton, Ill.: Van Kampen, 1954)180-88. Douglas A. Oss, an Associate Professor of Hermeneutics and New Testament atCentral Bible College in Springfield, Missouri, a Pentecostal school, brought a helpful paper to the Dispensational Study Group of ETS in November, 1991. Oss writes that"while a `Pentecostalized' version of dispensationalism has been part of the Pentecostal framework from the beginning, the rigid dualism of Scofieldism has never been part of mainstream Pentecostal scholarship" (Oss, "The Hermeneutics of Dispensationalism with the Pentecostal Tradition" 3-4). John Wimber writes, "Of all theologies, dispensationalism is probably the most antagonistic toward the charismatic gifts and Pentecostalism" (John Wimber, Power Evangelism [San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1986] 143).fundamentalists and evangelicals who believe that Spirit baptism was a second experience after conversion which greatly enhanced power for Christian service. "
Source:--->https://www.tms.edu/m/tmsj8b.pdf