This study analyses the impacts promoted by classical Pentecostal spirituality in relation to citizenship, identifying Pentecostalism as an ascendant phenomenon that follows guidelines for social change, encouraging citizenship attitudes, reproducing values in force in society, but symbolically rejecting them, moulding its followers. The sociological approach was based on the existence of social movements, transformation and citizenship with the state of spirituality developed in classic Pentecostal communities, enabling concepts used by the social sciences that address religious phenomena.