Well, I am a little bit late to the party. My "personal experience" with the pentecostal/Charismatic Movement (since they value experience over the Bible) was that in 15 years, always waiting for a "new word from God," I never learned anything about theology, discipleship, caring for the poor, the fruits of the Spirit, and on and on.
I wish I had a quarter for every time I heard this verse quoted, as "the" definitive theology on everything.
"So then, exalted to the right hand of God, and having received the promise of the Holy Spirit from the Father, he has poured out what you both see and hear." Acts 2:32.
It is a doctrinal statement in some Pentecostal churches I attended. And the context is the birth of the church on the Day of Pentecost. But enough of silly exegesis!
But fortunately, I kept reading my Bible while I was in these churches, and I gradually realized I was starving for lack of good teaching. And I wasn't hearing in these churches what I was reading over and over in my Bible. I was also starving for lack of fellowship. Relationships were both trite and cliquey. I had better friends in hockey, and some of those hockey people were -well, not nice! But better friends!
Then, in a big Pentecostal church with 10 pastors, I asked for help. A church I had attended for years, taught Sunday School, played in the orchestra, my husband helped with the children's ministry and the school bus ministry. Where we faithfully tithed. Not one person was available, not now, and not in the future. So big, mistake number 2, I switched to a Vineyard Church, where I was lied to. Where I don't think I once heard the Bible preached. Oh, but the worship was crazy-crazy!
Next stop, and Evangelical Free church. For the first time in my Christian walk, I heard the Bible preached. I heard a pastor do good exegesis. (Maybe that he had an MDiv and a Ph.D, not just some experiences and a year of Bible school?) Wow! It was amazing!
We moved provinces and eventually ended up in a SBC church. The pastor also knew the Word and preached. And then, he didn't! He got off track. So please understand that I am not saying all non-charismatic churches are the best. But as for actually learning the Bible, Bible studies that studied the Bible, not topics, and good fellowship, that place was awesome. To say nothing of God calling me to seminary, where I learned the tools to correctly read the Bible.
Before anyone suggests I am putting down charismatics, perhaps there are churches where people really do preach the Word, and not just "revelations" and "experiences." And not all cessationist churches do this either.
But my experience was that lip service is paid to the Bible, and charismatic experiences are exalted. I could never attend a church again where the Bible was looked upon as secondary to "revelations." (I am not saying these revelations are true, just that they are touted as such!)
The Bible has to be the source of our faith. Not a few verses in 1 Corinthians or Acts. But the whole counsel of God. And how to correctly read the Bible context, would stop half the defenses and/or heresies that pass as "Biblical" in this forum.
I guess to me, sola scriptura is more important than sola charismania!