New Thought History
New Thought History
New Thought History
New Thought,
Ancient Wisdom
the history and future of the
new thought movement
Glenn R. Mosley
philadelphia london
Contents
ix
xi
xiii
3
33
43
75
87
101
105
113
121
131
140
143
149
155
Foreword
x Foreword
and hospitals. Such research efforts are encouraged and often receive
grants from the John Templeton Foundation.
It seems to me that for a serious student of Truth as presented through
NewThought,AncientWisdom,this volume will inevitably become an essential part of a working library.
Sir John Templeton
Acknowledgments
Introduction
xiv Introduction
of the growth of some one thousand Unity ministries and the Association
of Unity Churches, International.
Besides the volumes of Fillmores works, the biographical treatises
about Fillmore, and the histories of Unity already cited, chapters and
large sections of many other articles and books are concerned with Fillmore and Unity. Such works include those by religious researcher and
psychologist Frank S. Mead, Dr. Gina Cerminara, and two works by
Charles S. Braden, professor of religious history at Southern Methodist
University. Considerable assistance is also derived from A Complete Concordance to the Published Writings of Charles Fillmore, compiled by Jeffrey
Fischer.2
In addition to the foregoing volumes, Fillmore devoted considerable
attention to the spoken word tradition in the other eight books published
during his life, in the three books compiled and published posthumously,
and in innumerable signed articles published in seven periodicals from
1889 to 1948. Other Unity pioneers, as well as modern Unity writers,
also offer considerable insight into the spoken word tradition: foremost
among them being H. Emilie Cady, Myrtle Fillmore, and Clara May
Rowland.
Authenticity is a problem when evaluating speech texts in history.3
Even though verbatim manuscripts exist, the way a word is spoken and
emphasized often is as important as the word itself; for example, the
Oh! of surprise and the Oh! of disappointment are not always clearly
discernable in speech manuscripts.Two of Fillmores thirteen books do
much to obviate the problem of who said what. Talks on Truth is an editedfor-print version of fourteen talks he gave prior to 1926. In another,
larger volume, the Metaphysical Bible Dictionary,Fillmore wrote his principles for the students use in interpreting Scriptures.4
The first section of this book is directed toward the description and
evaluation of the theories and methods of biblical interpretation Charles
Fillmore developed.We will investigate Unitys unique approach to the
interpretation of biblical literature,both through silent and spoken reading. In addition, illumination on the effect of speaking words of prayer
aloud and in a specified manner will be offered.5
We will also consider additional pioneers in the New Thought movement, many of whom were contemporaries of Charles and Myrtle Fillmore.These great souls, such as Ernest Holmes, founder of the Science
Introduction xv
xvi Introduction
her son. Since she liked her sons companion, she taught Charles as well.
Of Caroline Taylors influence, DAndrade reports:
[S]he introduced Charles to advanced ideas which were raising eyebrows in New England. Bronson Alcott was questioning old theological beliefs. Ralph Waldo Emerson had retired from his
pastorate because he could not agree with some of the theological
ideas he was expected to promulgate from the pulpit. In New England, transcendentalism was coming to birth; agnosticism was
gaining ground. Robert Ingersoll was delivering lectures deemed
heretical by churchgoers. Caroline Taylor did not conceal such
original ideas from her young pupil, so Charles Fillmore learned to
ask searching questions about orthodox theology when he was still
in his teens.5
It was also under Mrs. Taylors tutelage that Charles came to love the
writings of Tennyson, Shelley, Shakespeare, the Brownings, James Russell Lowell, and Ralph Waldo Emerson.6
Mrs. Taylors influence, his friendship with Edgar, and his job as a
printers devil served as diversion and instruction, but Charles grew
restless and wanted other surroundings.At age nineteen, he traveled to
Caddo, a small town in Indian Territory just north of the Texas border.
He stayed for only a short time before moving on to Denison, Texas,
where he obtained a job as a freight clerk with the Missouri, Kansas, and
Texas Railway.Charles sent for his mother and they built a home in Denison, where he lived for five years. His mother lived with him for the rest
of her life.
While still in Denison,it was at a literary and philosophic group meeting, which met in private homes and where poetry was often read aloud,
that Charles Fillmores life changed. It was there that he met a red-haired
schoolteacher from Clinton, Missouri, named Myrtle Page.7 In 1881,
five years after their meeting, they were married.
During the time he was courting Myrtle, Fillmore moved from Texas
and became a mining assayer in Gunnison, Colorado.When the mining
boom broke, in a kind of nomadic way, the new couple moved from
Gunnison to Pueblo, Colorado, where he began working in real estate.
Sons Lowell Page (named for James Russell Lowell) and Waldo Rickert
(for Ralph Waldo Emerson) were born in 1882 and 1884, respectively.
Mother seemed always cheerful and helpful, but there came a time
when she seemed to grow more cheerful. People from the neighborhood began coming in to see her. She explained to me that she
was praying for them. I remember one old gentleman, who lived
across the street, came several times using his crutches.Then, one
day, I heard Mother tell him to lay down his crutches and walk
across the room. He said he couldnt do it, but she insisted that he
go ahead and try it. He did try, and walked without his crutches,
but it was difficult, for I heard his joints pop.This man was soon
healed, as were many others who came in for Mothers help.10
At first Charles was too much a practical man to be interested in his wifes
newly found involvement with spiritual healing, even though he was in
almost constant pain. However, he watched Myrtles continued success,
both with healing herself and with the reported results of answered
prayer on behalf of others. Concerning the help she offered, the late
Unity historian James Dillet Freeman wrote:
Like the little leaven that leavens the whole loaf, this thought was
to work in her [Myrtle Fillmore] until it had made her every whit
whole. It was not to let her go until, through her, thousands had
been made whole,too.It was not to let her go until she and her husband, who was soon set afire with it too, had founded a faith that
reached around the world and blessed the lives of millions.11
Eventually, Charless interest grew all-consuming and he began to neglect his real-estate business for increased involvement with and promulgation of what his friends deemed a fanatical delusion. With this
fanatical delusion, Charless chronic pains ceased, his hip healed and
grew stronger, and his leg lengthened until, in a few years, he finally dispensed with the steel extension that he had worn since he was a child.
standing of the realm of ideas and their legitimate expression. 12 An influential pioneer in religious metaphysics and the American New Thought
movements, Phineas Parkhurst Quimby attracted several significant
future teachers in the early 1860s, foremost among them Mary Baker
Glover Patterson (later known as Mary Baker Eddy).13 In 1881 Mrs.Eddy
founded Christian Science in Boston. She then abandoned Quimby and
in 1883 began publishing the Christian Science Journal with the assistance
of her student, Emma Curtis Hopkins.The following year, Mrs. Hopkins
became the editor of the Journal, but was released from that position one
year later for reading metaphysical literature other than Mrs. Eddys
writings.14
Although she was separated from the Eddy School of Christian Science, Mrs. Hopkins retained what she considered was the best among all
her learning experiences, and she remained generous in her attitude
toward all Christian Science. In 1887 she wrote:
Presumptively, if W. S. Adams, who wrote a treatise on Christian
Science in 1844, had read Mrs. Eddys work on Christian Science
published about twenty [actually thirty-one] years after his book
came out, he would have exclaimed,Stupendous folly! He would
have been very Christian indeed not to have said so, for he insisted
that forced right behavior was Christs method of training the heart
and mind, while she insisted that forced right thinking would train
all externals.15
Mrs. Hopkins developed the view that each person has a right to his convictions and the fidelity to those beliefs will serve as a leaven in the midst
of flour and water. That is, each individual will experience gratifying
continued personal growth.16
Emma Curtis Hopkins was unique. She took the theses of material
scientists and their polar opposites, the Christian Scientists, Adams,
Quimby via Eddy, Mrs. Eddy herself, and her own theses, and from these
Mrs. Hopkins produced a synthesis that became the foundation of her
eventual teachings.A prolific writer, she founded her own, most influential school. Even the schools original name was an evidence of evolution
and synthesis:Hopkins Metaphysical College. Emma Curtis Hopkinss
school attracted numerous students who eventually became teachers of
metaphysics and founders of metaphysical movements of their own.
During the course of study with Mrs. Hopkins, the Fillmores became
her favorite students and close friends. Later, she often corresponded
with them, asking for their assistance with healing prayers for people
with whom she was praying.17 Charles Fillmore expressed his high regard
for Mrs. Hopkins through an editorial:
Emma (Curtis) Hopkins will commence a course of lectures on
Christian Science at Room 31 Deardorff Building, Kansas City,
January 16th, 1890. . .
Everyone who has a desire to know more of this wonderful philosophy should embrace this opportunity of listening to Mrs. Hopkins. She is undoubtedly the most successful teacher in the world;
. . . She dwells so continually in the spirit that her very presence
heals, and those who listen to her earnest words are filled with new
life.These are not the claims of an enthusiast but the carefully sifted
testimony of scores of her students. . . .
We are not partial to Christian Science as taught by those who
are sticklers for many of its dogmas, because in our humble opinion they thresh a whole lot of unnecessary straw in elucidating simple principles. But that they lay hold of an underlying principle, the
one great principle that moves the universe we are satisfied,
because we have seen the power demonstrated through them.18
Among the several founders of movements and teachers of metaphysics besides Charles and Myrtle Fillmore were Malinda Cramer, the
first president of the International Divine Science Association; Helen
Williams, the editor of Wilmans Express; Ella Wheeler Wilcox, a wellknown writer;Annie Rix Militz and Harriet Rix, founders of Home of
Truth on the West Coast; Mrs. Bingham, teacher of Nona Brooks, founder of the Divine Science movement; and Dr. H. Emilie Cady, who studied with Mrs. Hopkins during a lecture trip to NewYork City.19
yet the evolution toward publication began at least three years before.
The legal corporation did not become a reality until 1903.
Early Publications
In the first issue of ModernThought (April 1889),Charles Fillmore outlined
his concept of the magazines purpose in the religious milieu of the day:
Modern Thought . . . being somewhat of a pioneer in the field, it has
to overcome the precedent and prejudice of generations of religious journalism.That a publication devoted to the development
of mans spiritual nature could be liberal enough in its ideas to
embrace the good in all sects and systems has not heretofore been
deemed a possibility.20
Charles expressed his conviction that spiritually progressive people
desired a close relationship with devotees of all religious persuasions and
that such people had grown beyond the creeds, doctrines, and dogmas
of denominationalism.The time had arrived, he felt, when words that
expressed systems of philosophy and theology would be replaced with
words to serve as a yardstick for measuring their value.
As for the magazines relationship to independent thinking, he
clarified:
It is for the independent Christian, or the independent thinker on
any line of spiritual philosophy or science, that Modern Thought has
a word. . . . Papers and magazines there are by the thousands, the
acknowledged exponents of this church and that society, each
claiming to point out to man the true path; but where is there one
that accords to all its contemporaries the full measure of truth to
which they are entitled?
In this vein, he expressed the hope that the existence of Modern Thought
would be perpetuated by revealing the good in all religions and philosophies and by reminding people that they could serve God without being
tied hand and foot to churchianity. He concluded:
All these [beliefs and isms] have good within them, and are doing
the work needed on their respective planes, but that any church or
ism has a copyright on Gods truth is preposterous. . . . [W]e have
but one standard by which to estimate the truth or error in the
the column and, in announcing the purpose and role of the Society of
Silent Help in April 1890, she said the healing experiences already
recorded were evidence that physical presence was not required for
answered prayer. She further explained:
[A] little band in this city have agreed to meet in silent soul communion every night at ten oclock. . . .
Whoever will may join this society, the only requirement being
that members shall sit in a quiet, retired place, if possible, at the
hour of ten oclock every night, and hold in silent thought for not
less than fifteen minutes, the words that shall be given each month
by the editor of this department.24
The subscribers quickly came to be considered classes and their
monthly prayer thoughts called class thoughts. These prayers were of
a general nature, to help one in seeking healing, harmonious domestic
and business relations, or money. Later, the class thought was divided
into categories with specific prayers for healing, prosperity, and
illumination.
For convenience of the rural community classes, in the second month
of its existence the Society of Silent Help changed its class thought or
prayer time from 10 p.m. to 9 p.m. This change, which allowed farmers
to sit in but still retire early enough to arise for early morning chores,
was one of the early evidences of Unitys responsiveness to the practical
needs of its members.
In May 1890 Myrtle Fillmore wrote:It should be understood that this
department is not intended for trained teachers [of Christian metaphysics], although many of them might be benefited by sitting in the
silence each evening, but the object is to start into spiritual unfoldment
those who are so situated that they cannot have personal teaching.25
The instruction given in the first editorial to hold silent thought is in
keeping with words and phrases such as mind, thought, silent, mental,
thinking, silent thought, mind power, and mental healing, which abound in
the early Unity publications:
[T]he only effectual cure is that brought about and perfected by
Spirit, the real self, through the process of silent thought. . . .
publications indicate that the spoken word of prayer is the natural result of
holding a thought in mind until an image is established and then completed with an audible expression.
Soon after the Society of Silent Unity began emphasizing the importance of speaking the prayer thought, the concept attained high visibility
in Unity publications and in all prayer activities conducted by various
departments of Unity School of Christianity. Silent Unity accompanied
the instruction to speak constructive words with a warning not to speak
destructive words, and with appropriate Scripture in support of the
directive:
Woe unto them that decree unrighteous decrees. . . . (Isa. 10:1)
[E]very idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account
thereof. . . . For by thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy
words thou shalt be condemned. (Matt. 12:36, 37)
The concept of the spoken word aimed at producing unwanted conditions is also clearly based upon Scripture:
Thou shalt decree a thing, and it shall be established unto thee: . . .
When men are cast down, then thou shalt say,There is a lifting up.
(Job 22:28, 29)
Set a watch, O Lord, before my mouth; keep the door of my lips.
(Ps. 119:105)
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
the Word was God. The same was in the beginning of God. All
things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made
that was made. (John 1:13)35
Therefore I [Jesus] say unto you,what things soever ye desire,when
ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them [italics
added]. (Mark 11:24)
With reference to the spoken word, Silent Unity placed special emphasis
on the word believe.A person needs to conceive him- or herself to be the
expression or pressing out of God; the student was instructed to believe
with the man, Jesus, I and my Father are one (John 10:30).Because of
what a person conceives him- or herself to be, and because mind acts
under its own conception of itself, ones word goes from the speaker
filled with power to create whatever the speaker says.The prayer of faith
stemmed from an unconditional belief in both the ability and the desire
of Spirit to hear the call and respond.
Silent Unity taught that when our words are spoken in a consciousness of One Mind or Spirit,then our spoken word becomes this life,power,
and action. Our words are like molds that indicate in what form our
thoughts will be shaped and become a part of the conditions of our life.
The word gives form to the unformed, visibility to the invisible, manifestation to the not manifest.
Devotees were asked to decide what they genuinely wished to produce in life before speaking.They were told to formulate the idea clearly
and then speak the word with authority.Then, having spoken the word,
they were to relax, realizing that they had given an order to the subconscious mind, which is said to be entirely responsive to ones conscious
thought and ones spoken word, whether the word spoken is negative or
positive.
Unity students were told that they could build confidence in prayer
by daily practicing and experimenting with the spoken word and by
observing the precision of results. If the words have been constructive,
they need not trouble themselves about the results.36
Not until 1904 were the written requests for prayer, thousands of
which were sent to the Society of Silent Prayer, answered by mail. Since
then, all letters, telephone calls, and telegrams have been specifically
answered by the Society.37 In recent years, the Society has added
responses to e-mail requests.
In 1904, the Society, now known solely as Silent Unity, began sending
prayers along with letters of comfort and instruction. Like the division
of Class Thoughts in previous publications, these prayers are precisely
for needs such as healing, prosperity, guidance, harmony, order, and justice.An instructional pamphlet, A Manual of Prayer, advises repeating
the prayers aloud and/or silently until the request for help is answered.38
The Silent Unity letters instruct recipients to declare, state, speak, say, or
affirm for themselves, or for whomever they consider in their prayers,
the words printed on the leaflet that accompanies the letter. All these
logotype of the first Daily Word cover (July 1924) reads, in part, Man
finds the lost word when he finds within himself his God-given power to
create through his word. Each days exercise includes an affirmative
prayer for silent and/or audible use, a brief lesson, and a Scripture, with
the selection designed to set the lesson and affirmation in focus.
Two months after its first issue in July 1924, Daily Word had 5,300 subscribers.42 By 1959, James Decker would note: There are more than a
million readers of the English-language edition of DailyWord,and it is also
published in seven foreign-language editions and in a Braille edition.43
Since May Rowland was director of the department under whose inspiration Daily Word was written and edited, she naturally exerted a strong
influence upon the publication. Until her retirement in 1971, she contributed innumerable signed articles and unsigned lessons.Two articles
have been reprinted as instruction pamphlets for Silent Unity correspondents: A Drill in the Silence, and Come Ye Apart Awhile. 44 In both
pamphlets, Mrs. Rowland gives considerable attention to relaxation as
preparation for effective prayer.
May Rowland encouraged speaking words of relaxation directly to the
various parts of the body, as did her friend and mentor, Myrtle Fillmore.
In an article that has been reprinted innumerable times,Myrtle recorded
how her own healing was effected:
[I]t flashed upon me that I might talk to the life in every part of my
body and have it do just what I wanted . . .
I told the life in my liver that it was not torpid or inert, but full
of vigor and energy. I told the life in my stomach that it was not
weak or inefficient, but energetic, strong, and intelligent . . .
I went to all the life centers in my body and spoke words of Truth
to themwords of strength and power.45
In discussing the increasing use of the spoken word, Charles Fillmore
wrote in Heal the Sick, now a Silent Unity pamphlet: Speak the first
word of Truth that comes to you. Speak it silently until you have courage
to speak it aloud; but dont fail to speak it. Silent words do their work,
but audible words, rightly said, bring quicker results.46
Mrs.Rowland explained why audible words bring quicker results.She
said that the words one speaks exist and move through a universe of
vibration and energy that take form just as one shall decree. Because they
Kansas City area who were interested in Unity teaching and healing
work.50
By 1916 many recipients of the printed word began requesting local
classes.The first step was mimeographing some of Charles Fillmores lessons, thereby establishing a correspondence school with courses similar
in content to the primary courses the Fillmores taught in Kansas City.
Courses were presented in a series of twelve lessons, with students
receiving one lesson at a time. Students studied the material, then
answered the questions on the lesson from the school. Students would
then return their answers to Unity headquarters for grading and
response from the Fillmores.Within two years from its inception, the
correspondence school had more than 2,000 enrollees.51
Despite this success, requests for local classes persisted. Many Unity
students who completed the correspondence course, attended classes in
Kansas City, and read Unity literature sought to establish centers of
Unity work in their local communities. In 1915 Unity School decided to
support these efforts by establishing a Field Department within Unity
School.The Field Department saw its mission as assisting in organizing
study classes and centers among groups of students who are interested
in applying the Jesus Christ principles in their lives and in their affairs.
The purpose of the work was to encourage cooperation, harmony and
constructive methods in the advancement of Truth.52
The study-class idea caught on.The steps for organizing such classes
were simple.An interested person would make arrangements for a place
to hold an opening meeting,usually in someones home,and notify Unity
a few weeks in advance.Unity would then notify their readers of the time
and location of the meeting, and the class would begin. The Fillmores
continued their emphasis on study classes and centers as opposed to
churches and ministries.They felt that although Unity presented a spiritual teaching in the field of religion, the work was not a sect or a church.
The logical next step would have been to establish a course of instruction at Unity School for the licensing of Unity teachers, and to set up a
training school for ordaining ministers. Charles and Myrtle Fillmore
wished to avoid making Unity a denomination and, therefore, resisted
both of these moves.They were concerned that ministersand services
would clash with the message of complete personal freedom in worship.
The Fillmores wanted to develop a fellowship of students who would
take their new understanding back to their churches for sharing and so
avoided proselytizing.They sought no converts and made no missionary
efforts.53 After noting the structural change from a religious publishing
house and a loosely knit prayer ministry to an organization with licensed
teachers and ordained ministers, religious researcher Marcus Bach forecast: There is no reason to believe that the Unity School of Christianity
will not one day be rated as a denomination.The pattern is already becoming apparent.Some eighty years young,it is already a church of striking proportions.54
At first, leaders of local groups called their organizations fellowships,
associations, study groups, and centers, primarily in an effort to avoid
using the word church.Today, although names of local groups still vary
greatly, the field activities in the United States and abroad are coordinated by a self-governing organization, the Association of Unity
Churches, International. (Administrative offices are located in Lees
Summit, Missouri, three miles from Unity Village.)
Following Charles Fillmores example, Unity ministers and licensed
teachers encourage students to establish and maintain direct, personal
communication with God and not to depend upon secondary sources,
not even the Unity leaders themselves. Like Fillmore before them,
todays Unity leaders attempt to provide their students with the tool of
the spoken word (see pp. 14-17), and with the tool of Scriptural interpretation that relates to the students everyday life and needs.To this concern, we now turn.
Among Orthodox Christian views of the Bible, one discovers that the
Catholic, Lutheran, Episcopal,Anglican, and Reformed Churches are in
similar streams of thought. Each views the Bible as the clear, perfect,
inspired, and authoritative word of God and guide of man.55 The fundamentalists, including Baptists, Nazarenes, and Pentecostals, hold views
of the Bible similar to the group previously discussed. However, this second group adds the doctrinal insistence that the individual conscience
must be the interpreter of the Bible.56 In practice, this means that the
individual conscience can be relied upon as the absolute interpreter of
the Bible, so long as the conscience perceives in harmony with the fundamentalists doctrinal perspectives.These include Scripture-based statements of belief, with such particular emphasis on certain Scripture as to
make them appear inordinately important in relation to the rest of the
An Overview
Unity School of Christianity and the Unity Society of Practical Christianity in Kansas City are distinct organizations, and have been since the turn
of the twentieth century. Unity School is the larger organization,
embodying numerous departments to minister to the spiritual needs of
people worldwide. The society serves as one of the local Unity ministries, housed in a church-like structure in Kansas City, and is called
Unity Temple on the Plaza.
There is also a distinction between Fillmore, cofounder and president
of Unity School of Christianity, and Fillmore, minister of the local congregation in Kansas City. In the former capacity, he had a strong influence, both through his belief in the power of the spoken word and in his
method of interpreting Scripture.Through the printed word, Fillmore
influenced the lives of people around the world and, at home, through
training classes. He also influenced the professional lives of the licensed
teachers and ordained ministers whom he taught personally. In the latter capacity, he was the minister from 1889 to 1933.
vidual and prayerful study of the Scriptures and practicing Truth principles in ones daily living.
Like the Unity teachings themselves, I offer no final solutions. Unity
attempts to point students to methods for receiving their own solutions
and to encourage continuing unfoldment, not to spoonfeed beliefs or
solutions handed down from on high by a clerical hierarchy. Unity does
not claim to be an easy religion to follow. In fact, with its insistence on
self-discipline to induce personal growth, Unity is one of the most
demanding regimens of spiritual unfoldment.
With spiritual unfoldment as their purpose,Unity students,teachers,
and ministers are resolute that the Unity message will not atrophy by
becoming a monument either to the man Jesus, or to the man Charles,
or to the woman Myrtle. Unity teachers and ministers today, like their
mentor,Charles Fillmore,issue an ongoing invitation to self-exploration
through all the systems and theories that they teach.The Unity leaders
place considerable emphasis on the power that is humankinds through
the ability to change ones personal world through the spoken word and
to better understand ones self and ones fellow humankind through reinterpreting Scripture for ones self.
at other times with simple, painless clarity, that their present turmoil is
part of their evolution into the next phase of personal and spiritual
growth, which may well include an expanded awareness that they are a
spirit, mind, body.This sense of an ultimately optimistic outcome and
the desire to experience it substantially guides the Unity person in the
selection of a mental health professional.
Unity students believe that God indwells humankind and all creation
and that prayer and meditation are the direct access routes to an awareness of that indwelling Presence.Over 80 percent of Unity people do not
think of treatments by chiropractors, use of nutritional supplements for
physical and emotional problems, high-performance eating plans, acupuncture,prayer and meditation,therapeutic touch,healing hover touch,
osteopathy, vitamin and mineral therapy, breathing exercises, etc., as
peripheral to general medicine but rather as a part of the core of integrative modalities of treatment.The Unity student sees the various disciplines of health care as being part of the entre with allopathy and not as
incidental side dishes.
As noted earlier, Unity students are eclectic in many ways, including
their pursuit of mental and physical health and well-being.They tend to
read, study, and experiment with myriad ways to maintain health and to
regain health for any of the three phases of beingspirit, mind, body
once it has broken down. Eighty percent of those who responded to the
Association of Unity Churches survey exercise from one to six times a
week, from fifteen to forty-five minutes each time. Even those who do
not exercise regularly know of the benefits of exercise.
Exercises and spiritual practices with a physical component that are
most often engaged in by adult Unity students are tai chi,hatha yoga,martial arts,stair climbing,golf,brisk walking,swimming,dance,low-impact
aerobics, hiking, bicycling, and stretching.They generally practice, or at
least have read about or studied, relaxation techniques, meditation,
nutrition, breathing exercises, etc. Many of these studies are included in
the adult education programs of the ministry they attend.6 The study and
practice of pranayama,a part of the ancient East Indian breath control associated with yoga,is a popular class in the Unity adult education classroom.
Pranayama is both authentic spiritual practice and one of the pathways to
regaining and maintaining mental and physical health. A mental health
practitioner who would work well with a Unity patient/client might
prescribe a varying combination of the previously discussed practices.
light that is ten to twelve times brighter than average indoor light for two
hours daily.
Dr.Alsip was able to draw this patient back to the most stable personality, that of the woman with controlled diabetes, he appropriately did not
draw conclusions based on this one case.
It would be most difficult to determine whether a dangerously high
blood sugar level caused extraordinarily erratic behavior or whether the
extraordinarily erratic behavior prompted the dangerously high blood
sugar level.The causative relationship probably would not be possible to
determine with a single case study, although it is suggestive.
A Unity student who was aware of the possible correlation of blood
sugar to behavior might well feel comforted if a psychiatrist or other
mental health care professional ordered a blood sugar test and then took
the results into consideration while planning and providing a treatment
program.
problems.Therefore, one might ask, Why do psychiatrists, psychologists, and other mental health professionals not pray with their patients/
clients more often?
Four possible reasons for this come quickly to mind: (a) that a given
patient/client may be one in the population who would not want the
mental health professional to pray with him or her; (b) in the therapists
mind, to offer prayer might raise questions in the patient/clients mind
regarding competence; (c) that the therapist and patient/client are of
different religious backgrounds; and (d) that therapists do not know
patient/clients would like prayer.
In response to the four scenarios noted previously, it seems appropriate that for the Unity patient (a) the mental health professional ask either
on the intake questionnaire or during the first consultation whether the
patient/client would want the therapist to pray with him or her; (b) the
Unity patient/client will only have more confidence in the therapists
skills as the result of such an inquiry;and (c) since Unity students attempt
to honor diversity,patient/client and therapist being of different religious
backgrounds would tend to heighten the prayer experience together
(the Unity student who had selected a therapist who was Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, or of any other religious background would consider praying with that therapist an added bonus).
It is not suggested that a physician or mental health professional proselytize or in any way apply pressure regarding religious views, but simply allow for the positive effects of coping, restoring hope, and peace
that are brought about through prayer. At the very least, the psychiatrist, psychologist, or other mental health professional might ask if the
Unity patient/client would like a few minutes of silence to close the
consultation.
The Development of
the New Thought Movement
after Quimby treated her.5 In 1879, the Church of Christ, Scientist was
assembled and soon ordained Eddy as the pastor.
image in the mind, before the divine energies can play upon it and
make it productive. . . . But let us remember that true prayer is
always universal. There can be no good to us alone, only as that
good is for all.11
When Holmes was once asked upon what authority his teaching was
based, he referred the questioner to Jesus, who, when asked the same
question, said that the authority of his words was in his works. There
is no authority for Science of Mind, said Holmes, other than what it
accomplished. The serious student of Science of Mind will discover that
it teaches a principle that can be demonstrated, that its authority is not
in its words, but in what it can accomplish.12
In beautiful writings that are powerful and precise, The Science of Mind
offers a blueprint for the remaking of the mind, redirecting the thought
processes, and granting the individual tremendous ability to construct
our world through the extraordinary working power of our minds.
Holmess philosophy incorporates two routes to our minds yearning to
know what is so:Those who know themselves comprehend the universe,
and those who know the universe comprehend themselves!
As we remain open to growth on all levels of our being, we avoid
diminishment.We become aware that we may represent the music of life,
but the Creator is the Master Musician.
mind.The source of all necessary supply is already within you. Rise now!
Begin your mission now!13
Immediately after this inspiration he published the first issue of his
magazine, Seicho-No-Ie. Surprisingly, this magazine brought another
sequence of healings to the readers. People began to realize that this spiritual movement was, indeed, divinely founded and guided by spirit in
order to help humanity. Under his direct leadership, Seicho-No-Ie, a
nondenominational religion,grew into an extensive religious movement
with over five million followers.
During these days of tremendous social change,many are seeking new
and effective ways of coping with everyday living and ways to bring
needed socioeconomic change to the world. The message of practical
Christianity can bring a message of hope for people all over the world.
Another New Thought leader is Reverend Dr. Johnnie Colemon,
founder of Christ Universal Temple in Chicago, Illinois. Often referred
to as the first lady of Americas religious community, she brings a message of hope, peace, love, joy, and happiness. Christ Universal Temple is
a teaching ministry that inspires and empowers people to live from the
divine potential within them, thereby meeting the needs of the total person. Christ UniversalTemple is a thriving, spirited, and progressive New
Thought church with more than 20,000 members.The Temples philosophy is not to attempt to teach a person what to think, rather, to teach
one how to think so the individual may go forth and experience a revelation of Truth that is right for him or her.
Dr. Colemons book, OpenYour Mind and Be Healed, tells her remarkable personal story along with describing universal principles of healing.
After learning she had an incurable disease (1953), Dr. Colemon enrolled in the Unity School of Christianity in Lees Summit, Missouri,
where she received her teaching certificate and became an ordained minister.Always a trailblazer, Dr. Colemon pioneered many firsts. Out of
a sense of knowing that a need for a vital, new affiliation of independent
New Thought churches existed, Dr. Colemons dynamic leadership led
to the organization of the Universal Foundation for Better Living, Inc.
Her message is simple:Gods desire for everyone is absolute good.And
many have been molded, shaped, and inspired by Dr. Colemons insightful and loving instruction.
In addition to serving as district president for the International New
might embed our collective wisdom, I found that the Noble Eightfold Path of the Buddhist tradition worked quite well.
Since many of our insights easily cross categories, please feel
free to edit and rearrange my structural choices as a way of engaging in our continuing dialogue!
It would be very interesting if those among us with knowledge
of parallel systems in Christianity, Islam, New Thought, Suffism,
Native American, Bahaii, scientific, economic, and other traditions would care to submit them into dialogue with reference to
the notes from our visioning process.Synthesis benefits from articulating precise universalities.
The Noble Eightfold Path
The Noble Eightfold Path describes the way to the end of suffering, as it was laid out by Siddhartha Gautama. It is a practical
guideline to ethical and mental development with the goal of freeing the individual from attachments and delusions; and it finally
leads to understanding the truth about all things. Together with
the Four Noble Truths, it constitutes the gist of Buddhism. Great
emphasis is put on the practical aspect, because it is only through
practice that one can attain a higher level of existence and finally
reach Nirvana.The eight aspects of the path are not to be understood as a sequence of single steps, instead, they are highly interdependent principles that have to be seen in relationship with each
other.
Wisdom
1. Right View. Right view is the beginning and the end of the path.
It simply means to see and to understand things as they really are
and to realize the Four Noble Truths.As such, right view is the cognitive aspect of wisdom. It means to see things through, to grasp
the impermanent and imperfect nature of worldly objects and
ideas, and to understand the law of karma and karmic conditioning. Right view is not necessarily an intellectual capacity, just as
wisdom is not just a matter of intelligence. Instead, right view is
attained, sustained, and enhanced through all capacities of mind.
Ethical Conduct
3. Right Speech.Right speech is the first principle of ethical conduct
in the Eightfold Path. Ethical conduct is viewed as a guideline to
moral discipline, which supports the other principles of the path.
This aspect is not self-sufficient, however, essential, because mental
purification can only be achieved through the cultivation of ethical
would violate the principles of right speech and right action should
be avoided.
Comments from the Synthesis Dialogues:
% To give and receive with authenticity.
% Knowing when to stop business as usual,because we are not
applying our efforts to the right business for cultural change.
% Ask the Gandhian question: Will it benefit the weakest and
poorest among us?
% Models and methodologies of evolving awareness:
% To live the experience that matter and non-matter are one.
% To recognize the fundamentals of spiritual capital and
bring them into our economic thinking and government
policies.
% Infuse meme of interdependence into the value system of
our economics so that spiritual riches are prized over the
material.
Mental Development
6. Right Effort. Right effort can be seen as a prerequisite for the
other principles of the path.Without effort, which is in itself an act
of will, nothing can be achieved, whereas misguided effort distracts the mind from its task, and confusion will be the consequence. Mental energy is the force behind right effort.The same
type of energy that fuels desire, envy, aggression, and violence can,
on the other side, fuel self-discipline, honesty, benevolence, and
kindness.
Comments from the Synthesis Dialogues:
% To promote education, interest, and respect.
% To respect, protect, and awaken all life.
% To base every interaction on Right Relationship; to develop
technologies to evolve social and emotional learning.
% Any social and mystical technology of synthesis must back
away from the external to internal process; turn to cultivation of neglected internal technologies such as character,
virtue, truth-telling, courage, compassion.
7. Right Mindfulness. Right mindfulness is the controlled and perfected faculty of cognition. It is the mental ability to see things as
Deloitte & Touche have prayer groups and New York law firms have
studies in the Talmud. All of this and much more is a part of a much
broader trendthe spiritual revolution that is definitely not being led
by the traditional church.
In Unity, the Association of Unity Churches, International has been
working with the idea of a Noble Purpose Project. As an example, we
now have an annual award for a domestic or international for-profit business practicing spiritual principles in the workplace. Many Unity and
other New Thought churches are active in a wide variety of community
outreach programs that appropriately come under the heading of faithbased initiatives.
New Thought has historically been at the forefront of spiritual revolution,but we dare not let it just pass us by.We need to remain at the forefront of influence into the consciousness of humankind.
New Thought philosophy and teachings are being folded into other
denominations as well. The common denominator among the megachurches of the Methodists, Lutherans, Congregationalists, Episcopalians, Dutch Reform, and Presbyterians is that their messages all sound
like each other and they all have a New Thought ring to them. Most
important to note is that they do not sound like the denomination they
represent. It is no accident that almost no one knew that Norman Vincent Peale was Dutch Reform or that Robert Schuller is Dutch Reform.
Naisbitt, I believe, foresaw New Thought as a major force in societalreligious change, but largely while acting like a denomination. Most of
us have colleagues with whom weve discussed the question: Is New
Thought denominational or not?
Perhaps those of us who are part of the New Thought movement
would be served well by not trying to lock us in to a position, but to
look beyond to what more we are.The Trends Journal predicts people will
find fresh answers in a new faith movement that mixes Eastern thought,
Western religion, mysticism, and native teachings.
For a movement such as New Thought that has admittedly been influenced by large segments of some of the worlds eight great religions
(Islam, Confucianism, Hinduism, Judaism, Christianity, Buddhism,Taoism, and worldwide indigenous religionsnot just American Native
spirituality), we are well positioned to go beyond being just another
At the same time, the University changed its name to Wisdom University. Matthew, a former Catholic priest and now an Episcopal priest, will
remain fully engaged as the Universitys president emeritus and its creative director.
Because Matthew Fox andWisdom University and,to all appearances,
Jim Garrison, all epitomize the ancient wisdom traditions and have a fascinating way of bringing that wisdom to shine in the dimly lighted corners of our present world, they clearly belong alongside, and more, they
clearly belong to the genre of New Thought and ancient wisdom believers, followers and leaders.
The following information is largely in the words of Matthew Fox and
Jim Garrison at the dawning of a new era in the history of an important
institution of wisdom, the University of Creation Spirituality, as it fully
becomes Wisdom University.
With permission and grateful appreciation, we share the following
from Matthew Fox.17
A Thought on University of Creation Spirituality
(UCS) from Matthew Fox
I have heard a few concerns about UCS changing its name.Yet over
the years I have heard more concerns about how difficult it is to
explain the name, University of Creation Spirituality, in a few
wordshow one has to tell people we are NOT about creationism, how the CS (creation spirituality) tradition is not this but is
so-and-so, etc. etc.
I believe the change to Wisdom University is the right way to
go. One does not have to spend a lot of time on explaining what is
meant; yet it arouses interest.There is a seamless transition from
UCS to Wisdom University because, as every student of creation
spirituality knows, CS is the wisdom tradition of the West. It is also
the tradition of the historical Jesus (scholars from the Jesus Seminar like Marcus Borg, Dominic Crossan, Bruce Chilton, and more
agree to that)and, to be honest, I have been saying this for many
years long before the Jesus seminar people finally spoke out. As I
pointed out in The Coming of the Cosmic Christ, Cosmic Wisdom is a synonym for Cosmic Christ. . . .
Consider, too, how the very first page of Original Blessing, written as a primer in creation spirituality, is all about wisdom.The
title of the Introduction is: Two Questions Apropos of Wisdom
and Human/Earth Survival, and I lay out the entire argument for
CS on the basis of the search for wisdom and how the CS tradition
represents such a tradition. I also cite E. F. Schumacher in that first
page for his observation that wisdom is found in two places: nature
and religious traditions.
I think Jim Garrison, in the following document, makes strong
arguments about how what we have been about for years as UCS
and where we can go now as Wisdom University places us in the
midst of the political-historical-religious struggle of our times . . .
So, I am fully on board professionally and personally with this
switch and to me it represents the bigger switch that UCS is undergoing: Our moving from our eight years (really, 28 years) of testing and start-up to our coming into a more mature role as a true
cultural influence on a larger scale. I believe Jims vision and contacts, combined with the hard work invested by so many in creating this vessel called UCS over the past eight years (and the twenty
years that preceded that in its other incarnations), are bringing
UCS and now Wisdom University to its true potential as a vessel
for gathering wisdom and a challenger to corrupted power
whether of religion, academia or other places.
I believe the name,Wisdom University, will more easily facilitate our role of interfering, that is our prophetic role, at the same
time that it gets to the essence of what we are aboutrecovering
the wisdom and mystical traditions of the West and allying them
(including science) to wisdom traditions of the East and of indigenous peoples. . . .
Wisdom University
By Jim Garrison, President
As the twenty-first century unfolds, there is a critical need for a
new way of thinking and acting that applies ancient wisdom to
contemporary challenges.In this spirit,the University of Creation
Spirituality, founded in 1996 by Matthew Fox and now led by its
new President, Jim Garrison, is changing its name to Wisdom
help that it has given me in my ministry over the years.19 Also, in a lecture at UnityVillage at the MinistersConference in 1964,Dr.Peale said,
I consider Charles Fillmore to be my spiritual father.
So where do we go from here? As a movement, Unity faces a variety
of perspectives as it proceeds further into the twenty-first century. Certainly there is a continued commitment to provide the prayer ministry
and spiritual healing work through Silent Unity that brings widespread
benefits to a wide range of constituents,both Unity and non-Unity members.The ministerial training program offered through the Unity Institute equips its graduates for leadership in Unity ministries. Another
pathway to ministerial leadership is the Field Licensing Program conducted by the Association of Unity Churches, International. Both of
these programs continue to work toward cutting a major swath across
the consciousness of humankind. In a cooperative way, both of the programs receive input from both Unity and the Association of Unity
Churches, International.
The New Thought message has been, in a sea of troubled waters, a
rock.Now it is a seed upon the wind,taking root in numerous traditional
religions; they often are difficult to distinguish from New Thought
ministries.
istries, and 117 informal study groups (first step to becoming a fullfledged ministry).We envision together continuing growth in all nations
as we jointly create national schools, thereby making leadership training
more accessible and more affordable.
The potential of countries as well as of people provides tremendous
outward pressure to share their rich heritage/tradition of the past and of
their future potential. Not only is the Association of Unity Churches,
International not an institutional monolith, neither is Unitys message a
monolith.What gives birth to expressions of Truth is the personal quest
for two items: 1) understanding answers to ultimate meaning, and 2)
relationships to the world and to the Transcendent, both inherent and
out-there-ent. People the world over have been, and are, giving birth
essentially to the same belief systems that Unity and all New Thought
movements hold as dear. They have called it by various namesand
sometimes they just hold it in their hearts, without names.
Perhaps you will recall the movie Groundhog Day. Doesnt progress
often feel like that? No matter how much progress appears to be made,
it often feels as though we get pulled back to Go the next day, which
also somehow feels normal.A desire to change, or for major transformation,is often accompanied by a pulling and tugging by our own known
present behavior with a desire not to change.We experience both the
comfort of the known way, and the discomfort or fear of the unknown.
Thats part of our continuing motivation for the joint search for spiritual
truth by modern science and world religion.
watched the moon and stars move across the dark sky while
tending his sheep, tells us, The Heavens declare the glory of
God (Ps. 19:1).Van Leeuwenhoek clapped his hand to his mouth in awe
when he first observed through his microscope a tiny animal, never
before seen by human eyes. And after formulating his groundbreaking
equations for general relativity and gravitation, Einstein is said to have
made the often-quoted remark, The most incomprehensible thing
about the universe is that it is comprehensible.
Scientists and theologians experience a similar kind of awe and mystery about nature or creation.Although they study the mysteries with
different methods and for different purposes, could there be an acutely
meaningful relationship between science and religion? In some ways, the
tremendous technological advances within recent decades have given
expanded meaning to our scientific culture. However, for many people,
there still remains a strong, inner yearning for greater meaning to life.
We search for a significant and purposeful explanation for the questions
What is it all about? Who are we? and Why are we here?
If we look through the eyes of scientists, perhaps we see ourselves
standing at a midpoint between the infinitely large cosmic space and the
infinitesimally small atomic nuclei. If we gaze through the eyes of the
philosophers and the theologians, we see ourselves standing midway
between the finite and the infinite. From the perspectives of the historians and the archaeologists, we stand between the eternity of the past and
the eternity of the future.What important facts and features have we
Following the conflict surrounding Darwin, many scientists and theologians developed an independent way of thinking, assuming that science and religion represent independent fields of study. Science has very
little to say about religious beliefs,and religion has very little to say about
scientific study. This model appeals to both scientists and theologians
because it allows them freedom to think and believe what they wish in
their respective fields, without having to relate one to the other.
Barbours dialogue model looks for methodological parallels between
science and religion. Some scholars support this model because they
realize that scientific study is perhaps not as objective as once thought.
Both science and religion involve a set of beliefs and a multilevel
approach to reality. Barbour then goes a step further by applying scientific methods and standards to religious beliefs and practices.
The integration model of relating science and theology is sometimes
called the mutual support model. Recently, a group of American scientists, including William Dembski, considered natural theology in terms
of Intelligent Design. While accepting all the evidence in support of an
ancient universe and most of the evidence for the evolutionary history of
life, they argue that there may be an irreducible complexity to life that
transcends the laws of chance and physics. Others, such as astronomer
Howard van Till, and theologian-biochemist Sir Arthur Peacocke, feel
that the very laws of science were the methods God used to develop the
great variety of living things that exist.
Both scientific and theological expressions of reality use models and
metaphors to deal with the complexity and limited precision of their
fields. Sometimes I feel almost schizophrenic about science and religion. I cannot tell where one begins and the other leaves off, nor do I
wish to try. Continuing to ask the questions of how and why may
provide an avenue to bring science and religion together as joint participants in understanding what Einstein called the inner justification of
natural law.
Perhaps one of Albert Einsteins more familiar statements of his
beliefs is:I believe in Spinozas God who reveals Himself in the orderly
harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns Himself with fates
and actions of human beings.3 Years later, he expanded on this statement in a letter to Maurice Solovine, the survivor of the Olympia Academy, by writing,
lies behind the universe we study.Teilhard de Chardin, in The Phenomenon of Man, told us that knowledge is basic and enables us to understand
the world and ourselves and to exercise some control or guidance over
our actions.9 A distillation of Chardins work seems to indicate that
humankind contains the possibilities of the earths immense future.We
can realize more of these wondrous possibilities as we increase our
knowledge and ability for universal love. Is it time for a rebirth of images
concerning the nature of God as Creator,the act of creation,and the continuing nature of Gods creative interaction with the world? How could
this greater search for meaning come about? We can look into the
labyrinthine architecture of a cell, examine the numbing diversity of the
rain forest, and plumb the unfathomable depths of the human brain.We
can explore the depths of space and discover heretofore unknown planets, even universes!
Some tremendous eye-openers have resulted from the missions
operations of the Hubble space telescope. Its numerous highlights
include: the Hubble Deep Fields, proof that quasars reside in galaxies,
expansion of the universe measured, and proof that gamma-ray bursts
are found in galaxies. One recent media press release announced,Hubble Uncovers a Baby Galaxy in a Grown-up Universe.10 The news release
is electrifying with possibilities!
Our human role in evolving our future and the vast wilderness of
unexplored reality is critical. It is important to release the close-minded
attitude that says, I already know it all. The emerging field of cosmology reveals the universe to be larger, by many orders of magnitude, than
previously thought. Our scientists research the natural wonders of the
universe, devise new hypotheses, test them, challenge old assumptions,
and compete with each other. Some religious leaders, theologians, and
laypeople do not yet realize that spiritual reality can be researched in
ways similar to those used by natural scientists.
The past few decades, with its fascinating discoveries, have influenced
many scientists to a sense of awe and, for some, a new and compelling
sense of humility. Could the stage be set now for new dialogue between
scientists, philosophers, and theologians? Are we on the verge of a grand
opportunity for the revitalization of religion, theology, and science
departments? What steps might be taken toward the development of
religion as a science?
to reach deeper insights. Hopefully, the religious perspectives represented by the ISSR will be beneficial in understanding the world, and
competitive in understanding reality. Friendly competition often produces mutual learning and disagreements can usually point the way
toward deeper understanding. People have a hunger for knowledge of
ultimates,and science and spirituality are two main paths often traversed
in trying to glean that knowledge. Surely, the culture of our world is
impoverished if scientists and theologians are not encouraged to talk.
This is especially vital at this uniquely perilous moment in the planets
natural progression.
With this frame of reference in mind, let us look at ways I believe all
religious traditions can embrace spiritual seekers globally and welcome
them into our houses of worship, fostering involvement that will benefit them individually and as communities, as well as our ministries and
the world at large. Communities of believers across the spectrum of the
worlds great religions may be the hope for ultimate peace and mutual
understanding.
Much of the future of the worlds great religions may take fifty years
to evolve, but what has happened in recent years, what is in process currently, and what is going to happen in this twenty-first century (namely,
by 2075 c.e.) is outlined below. Some cultures may change sooner; others will take longer.
1. Ministry by laity will be the norm,not the exception.
This will occur in local houses of worship and throughout our organizational structures. Ministry by laity will help large houses of worship
grow, especially in large cities, and larger houses of worship than the
norm in small cities or communities. Regardless of size, they will
increase in effectiveness. More than half will still have fewer than 100 in
worship-service attendance, but more than one-third will have more
than 1,000 attendees,with several having 1,500 and above in attendance.
Staff will include one full-time professional clergy for every 500800
people at worship, with most of the program staff being lay specialists,
full-time, part-time, and many volunteer congregations of 2,000 will
regularly have 500800. Larger congregations will offer a denominational day school from nursery classes through at least grade five.This
service to the larger community surrounding our houses of worship
becomes more critical each year, given both the unresponsiveness of
mass media to the needs of children (and their families) to not be bombarded with violence and atrocities, as well as the increasing ineffectiveness of our public school systems.
2. The importance of community will be recognized.
Historically, people have been drawn to our houses of worship
because of their teachings. More and more people now seem to be
attending their chosen house of worship because of a desire for relationships in addition to the teachings. By 2015 c.e., for at least half of worshippers, the majority of friends in their social network will come from
among fellow worshippers.With divorce and single parenthood still a
major fact through the next few decades for most cultures, religions
need to be mindful in preparing both adult and childhood curriculum,
as well as activities designed to draw them into the circles (all age levels
of the family) of fellowship.Views on sexual orientation are changing in
many religions as well.
3. The way our houses of worship are structured will change.
Members will give up administriviaand professional clergy will give
up ministry. Devotees will no longer be on committees. They will
instead be enrolled in ministry, such as the hospitality ministry, including,
but not limited to, ushers and host(esses), the visitation or chaplaincy
ministry, the prayer ministry, or the parish nurse ministry.
These ministries are the beginnings of what I call ministries within
ministries, nurture ministry, or nurture groups. Clergy will still be
necessary for teaching, but a greater portion of their time will involve
recruiting, capacity-building (training), and nurturing devotees to perform ministry.We will look for yes answers to the three sociological
questions: a) Can I get in? b) Will I be accepted? and c) Can I make a difference? In fact, these questions will increasingly serve as a guide to people as to whether they want to be a part of a given religious community.
4. New definitions of authentic spirituality will be created.
It wont be defined by reading the Bible,Torah, Bhagavad Gita, Koran
or other sacred documents or teaching or attending adult or childrens
classes. This one is akin to number 2 above. Authentic spirituality will
address first the taking in of spiritual literature and meditation and then
will address: How can I use what Ive absorbed and truly serve in relationship to those in my religious/spiritual community and then to my
larger community of humankind?With new ears we will hear Spirit
tell us to heal one person and carry water for another.The continuing
growth in our houses of worship in part will be because of peoples driving proclivity for holistic healing and wellness programs.They are interested in meditation, prayer, nutrition, homeopathy, and the mind/body
connection. As they learn, they will then want to pass it on through
service. Over the doors where people enter our worship services we
might place a sign that says,Enter to worship, and over the doors where
they leave, perhaps a sign that says, Exit to serve. Inside those doors,
much of the worship is also service to fellow worshippers.These messages might be placed on signs at drive entrances and exits as well.
The survey provides an easy entrance into the possibility of an otherwise awkward conversation (bearing in mind that well over 50 percent
of all religious professionals are introverts).
The survey conveys an important message: You are important to us;
we care what you think; we would like you to return to worship with us.
As we are increasingly learning, much of fundraising is asking; so is
membership and/or prospective participant assimilation largely asking.
Finally, the survey as an entrance to talking allows the first-timer to
ask about our spiritual communityespecially when we tell the firsttimer, In exchange for responding to my questions, you can ask me anything you like. People who are looking are likely to ask some really good
questions. And we are likely to learn some really good answers to our
questions of them.
For clergy and friends and members of every congregation:Describe
a person to whom you not only would, but do, make to feel welcome
his/her first time to your house of worship. Periodically, I ask clergy and
friends and members of every congregation to do just that.The answers
are wide-ranging, often including the statement that We welcome
everybody! In asking a few more questions, we often discover that the
descriptions given are of people who already attend. But even that is not
a complete answer.The exercise is to describe a person whom you make
to feel welcome when he/she first attends. One of the reasons I often
include this exercise is because of an experience I had in a ministry that
I served that showed me we were practicing discrimination unawares.
One of my practices systematically in attempting to assimilate newcomers over the years was to interview each new person personally, accompanied by at least one volunteer department leader from the major
ministries (or departments) of our church.The idea was manifold: it
allowed the new person to become acquainted with about a dozen ministry leaders and what they did in the church, it also allowed those dozen
volunteers and me to become better acquainted with the newcomer,and
it encouraged the newcomer to look at how he/she might want to
become involved.
Later, I would ask for a follow-up interview with me alone. In one
such procedure a woman told me what a joyous, enthusiastic, welcoming feeling she received from the congregation and the new members
support ministry.A few days later, a man who attended the same intro-
ductory class as the woman told me what a cold fish congregation and
support ministry we had. He felt very unwelcome and said if it were not
for the message that he had by now learned he needed and wanted so
much, he would have already left membership.These two friends were
reporting on the same congregation and, largely, on the same support
ministry members.
One of two variables can be addressed: both individuals were of the
same race as most of the congregation and most of the ministry members.The congregation and support ministry members were close to 5050 in men and women.The woman felt welcomed by men and women;
the man felt not welcomed by men and women.
Differences?Yes.The woman was upwardly mobile, educated, articulate,and finely groomed and dressed.The man may not have finished high
school;he was struggling financially and,therefore,was not well dressed.
Welcoming only those who look like us, talk like us, and so on eventually will make us extremely segregated. The greater the variety we
attract, the greater opportunity we have to reach out to the myriad people who are looking for a spiritual community of which to become a real
part.
The following brief list can be expanded ad infinitum. Make copies and
give two copies to at least key volunteers,including those who work with
new members, to rank order two different ways. First, they should rank
order for themselves,1) a top-priority person to welcome,2) a mediumpriority person to welcome, and 3) those least likely to receive much (if
any) efforts in welcoming.Then, on their second list, ask them to provide the same ranking of how, based on their observations of members
and attendees, they think others might function regarding welcoming.
After asking participants to decide who would receive welcome easily, not so easily, and probably not at all, bring them together to see if a
consensus can be drawn. Likely, for some groups from descriptions
above, number 1 will be easy to agree upon. Go on to number 2, or
medium group. Begin with at least three to five descriptions to see if,
with a little work and effort, your leaders might be led to plan strategies for welcoming the medium category into your church. Perhaps this
is where the greatest outreach can take place with the number 3 group.
It is not the not-so-welcome category, but we might all be surprised
how much folks in this group are willing and able to give back in talents,
presence, and love. It takes intentional effort and planning on the part
of the leadership as a whole to make our houses of worship inviting and
inclusive.
Divorced female
Person on welfare
Ex-convict
Smoker
Lower-income male
Alzheimers patient
Lower-income female
HIV-positive person
Middle-class male
Middle-class female
Gay male
Lesbian female
Male of another ethnic group
A gay couple
A lesbian couple
ture, traditions, and practices so that they may join in the enriched life
that you and I experience as we share our sacred beliefs.
The rich variety of world religions creates a tapestry of amazing
beautya testimony to the essential spiritual nature of our human
existence.And yet, within this amazing, and sometimes fascinating
diversity can be found an equally amazing unity, the basis of which
is love. Perhaps without even being fully aware of it, religious
leaders and their followers through the ages have defined religion
largely in terms of love.All the worlds great religions, to varying
degrees, both teach and assume the priority of love in religious
practice. Sir John Templeton, Agape Love
The main contribution of 1893 was that it generated academic interest from East and West in the study of comparative religions.Apparently
it also had an indirect effect in prompting the creation of the International Association for Religious Freedom in 1900. However, the Parliament itself was not resurrected until 1993.
In 1993, in Chicago, the assembly was invited to consider the document that came to be known as Towards a Global Ethic:An Initial Declaration, which presented four ethical principles common across the
major Eastern and Western traditions. Since that time, the Declaration
has been translated into many languages and has provided the focus of
many books and engendered much additional study.
In 1999, the council broadened participation in the Assembly of Leaders to include young people. Gratifyingly, young people were very evident in 2004, as well as leaders from eight guiding institutions: Religion
and Spirituality; Government; Agriculture, Labor, Industry, and Commerce; Education; the Arts and Communications Media; Science and
Medicine; International Governmental Organizations; and Organizations of Civil Society.These leaders considered another document, A
Call to Our Guiding Institutions, which presented an invitation to people leading these institutions to consider how they would behave if they
took seriously the ethical principles from the Global Ethic work of 1993.
One observation I made in comparing my attendance in 1993 and now
was that in 1993 I dont remember hearing individuals or representatives
of groups making distinctions between spirituality and religion.There
were numerous such distinctions made this time. For that matter, most
of the scientists I know personally make the same distinction now and
probably most did not in 1993.
It is interesting to note that print and oral communications were in
three languages: Spanish, Catalan, and English, with multiple language
translations.
There was a call for religious and spiritual communities and other
institutions to develop and enact practical and transformative, simple
and profound responses to these four issues:
Improving the plight of refugees.
Relieving the crushing burden of international debt on poor and
emerging countries. (Following this intention in 2004, eight of the
worlds richest nations, the G-8, in July 2005 forgave the indebtedness of the worlds fifteen most impoverished nations.)
Creating access to clean water.
Overcoming religiously motivated violence.
The participants at the Parliament were invited to commit and to act.
One of the actions was to ask their communities to also commit and act.
At the heart of the process, participants and their communities were
asked to view the four issues through the lens of their own traditions:
What in your own (and others) tradition compels and inspires you to
care about this issue? (You choose which issue.)
How does the strategy for social change embedded in the teachings of
your own and others traditions shape your response?
Please consider this: It is all right for each of us to teach our values and
beliefs about religion and politics.To maintain the separation of church
and state in the United States of America, clergy are not (although many
do) supposed to campaign for political leaders who espouse those same
beliefs. (Usually the only trouble clergy get into for doing so is within
their own communities, because they run a good chance of offending
one-half of their congregations.) However, as a member of an interfaith
group, you may have more secular and political clout.
Add the following into the mix of the paragraph above: As a New
Thought minister, I have never had the mayor of my city or a representative of city council call me for advice or invite me to come to a meeting for any input I may have. (Occasionally, I have been invited to lead
an invocation.) However, as members of an interfaith movement in our
cities, we may be either individually or, more likely, collectively with
our interfaith group, be asked to participate in a citywide event, or
perhaps give input on given issues facing our city. In one of my former
ministries, several members and I became known in the city as a
miniUnited Nations.
If there is an interfaith organization or initiativein your city,you may
want to join it and become active if it is active (actually making a difference) in your larger community. If not, you may want to start such an
organization.
For a first-hand account by a Unity colleague on how such a group may
work with a mayor and/or a city council,you may want to call Kyra Baehr
in Chandler,Arizona. She is a part of a mover and shaker group called
The Arizona Interfaith Initiative.
Whether you become active in an existing interfaith organization or
you create one, you may also find the Web site of the International Association for Religious Freedom of great help: www.iarf.net and
www.interfaithalliance.org (a new soon-to-be global network of interfaith).
APPENDIX A
Preface of the Metaphysical Bible Dictionary
106 Appendix A
means such or such a thing and nothing else. A dozen persons may get
inspiration in a dozen different ways from one Scripture text.
Following the definitions given for each name will be found a brief
sketch of the individual,or place,with references telling where the name
can be found in the Bible. Unless some particular incident warrants calling attention to it elsewhere, only one reference is given.This reference
is either to the place where the name first appears, to that which explains
most clearly the historical facts regarding the person or place for whom
or which the name stands, or to the passage discussed in the metaphysical interpretation.Wherever the name of an individual is spelled differently in other texts, where another name is used, or where there are
several persons bearing the same name, note is made of such fact. In a
few cases we have found two names alike, apparently, but separated and
having entirely different meanings.This is due to the spelling in translations, which cannot or does not convey the differences in the Hebrew
spelling. An instance of this kind is found in Abel, second son of Adam,
which should be spelled Hebel, and Abel, the name of several villages. In
the Hebrew the two names are spelled with entirely different letters of
the alphabet.
Following the biographical sketch of a name comes the metaphysical
interpretation. This abbreviation is headed Meta., an abbreviation of
metaphysical. By metaphysical we refer to the inner or esoteric meaning
of the name defined, as it applies to every unfolding individual and to his
relation to God.
We have found in interpreting Bible names that there are varying
phases or shades of meaning connected with some of them, beyond that
conveyed in the strict definition of the name word.Who the individual
was, who his father or mother was, what his occupation was, who his
associates wereall these things are modifying factors that we must
consider in working out the true character definitions and the metaphysical interpretations as they relate to man generally.Thus we may have two
or more men with identical names, each of whom may relate to a different line of thought and develop very different characteristics.These character indexes, which we call names, might therefore be symbolic of
diverse phases of Truth or error, and different applications of it. For
instance, suppose that we have an Israelite and a Gentile with the same
name.The two men would symbolize different planes of consciousness
108 Appendix A
110 Appendix A
by the spoken word a vessel filled with water may be changed into wine.
The means by which this purification can be accomplished and the power
thus acquired are also explained in the symbolism of the Old Testament.
We could go on thus through all the Bible, but the foregoing is enough
to show how we see in the Bible symbolical pictures showing the growth
and unfoldment of the latent spiritual power in man up to the time when
he comes into manifestation of the perfect image and likeness in
which he was created.
In presenting these methods of interpretation we have endeavored to
give with each one sufficient explanation to enable the student to get an
idea as to how and why we arrive at given metaphysical conclusions. By
reasoning along the same lines the student can develop the inner interpretation of the Scriptures for himself. Our real aim is to assist in leading the student into the inner or spiritual interpretation of the Bible, that
he may apply it in the very best and most practical way in his own life. If
he does not wish to accept our interpretations, but would rather do his
own thinking, entirely apart from our suggestions, we fully recognize his
right to do so.We are always pleased when anyone learns to go within
and get his inspiration direct from his own indwelling Lord or Spirit of
truth. By doing this a person will come to appreciate, as he can in no
other way, the patient, faithful effort that culminates in the production
of such books as this one.
As stated before, this book is not final in the field that it covers; at best
it is only a stepping-stone to the higher realm of spiritual consciousness,
toward attainment of the mind which was also in Christ Jesus.
APPENDIX B
Selections From the
Metaphysical Bible Dictionary
114 Appendix B
116 Appendix B
Baalath-beer, ba-a l-a th-ber (Heb.)city of the well; place of the well;
lady of the well;mistress of the well;subjects of the pit.
A city of Canaan that was allotted to the Israelitish tribe of Simeon
(Josh. 19:8); Baal of 1 Chronicles 4:33 may be the same city.
Meta. Baal-beer,meaning city of the well,place of the well, . . .
Ruth (Heb.)female friend; sympathetic compassion; desirable; delightful;
friendship;pleasing;beautiful.
A Moabitess who became the wife of Boaz, an Israelitish man of Bethlehem-Judah. David was descended from her. Ruth was the daughter-inlaw of Naomi and returned with her from Moab to Bethlehem-Judah
(Ruth 1 to 4).
Meta.The love of the soul in its natural state, or the love of the natural
soul for God and for the things of Spirit.
Ruth is a type of the beautiful, the pure, and the loving characteristics
of the natural man (sympathetic companion,friendship,female friend,delightful, desirable, beautiful). She was the one and only good that Naomi took
with her back to Bethlehem-Judah (divine substance, the real).
In Ruths words in Ruth 1:16 is represented human love raised to
divine love by its willingness to leave the love of the unreal, to follow
after the real, to go wherever true love leads, to be steadfast in that love;
in other words, to love in the highest and best degree and to acknowledge and worship always the God of love.
Ruths loyalty to God and the spiritual life was rewarded, just as such
loyalty always is. Boaz and Ruth were ancestors of King David and of
Davids greater son, Jesus the Christ. Here we have the progression of a
thought from simple, loving obedience and devotion to a mighty ruler of
worlds.Thus spiritual thought growsvery quietly and slowly at first,
but gradually increasinguntil it finally carries all before it.
sabachthani, sa-ba ch-tha-ni (Grk. Fr. Chald.)thou hast forsaken me;
thou hast Left me (to what) hast thou surrendered me? (why) hast thou forsaken me?
In sabachthani we find the root idea of loosening, setting free; letting
alone and forsaking are secondary developments.The real root idea of
the word expresses the cutting loose of bondage, or freeing from slavery.
On the cross Jesus cried,Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? That is, My God,
my God, why hast thou forsaken me? (Matt. 27:46).
118 Appendix B
We use all these different parts of our being, but not understandingly.
In our ignorance we dissipate the natural purity and strength of these
obedient people who form our soul and our body; but when we become
illumined by Spirit a reform sets in, and they all reflect the new light that
has come to us, especially so when we concentrate our mind on the life
centers, or enter into a house (Mark 7:24).
There lingers in the mind that old idea, borrowed from the limited
vision of the Jew, that Spirit does not include the body in its redemptive
process, but the body cries out for cleansing and purification. Even the
dogs under the table eat of the childrens crumbs. Good common sense
should teach us that life is always present throughout nature, a stream
proceeding from the highest to the lowest.
The woman with the alabaster cruse of exceeding precious ointment(Matt.26:7) signifies the forgiving love of Spirit,and her ointment
is the conserved nerve fluid that is stored up in the secret recesses of the
body.
The disciples thought that this precious ointment should be sold and
the proceeds given to the poor,because they were in the outer consciousness where there is a seeming lack of vitality at times, and, not understanding the law of conservation, they thought that their poor needs
should be supplied first.
Jesus was passing through the regeneration, and the sense consciousness of the flesh body was being crucified.The precious substance of love
was consumed to the end that it might be brought forth as the vitalizing
element of His resurrected body.This is what Jesus meant when He said
that the ointment that the woman poured upon His body was preparation for His burial. . . .
Word, of God.
Meta. John gives us the following concerning the Word of God:In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was
God. The Word of God is the divine Logos, God in His capacity as creative power, and includes all the potentialities of Being. It is the idea of
God, the image and likeness of God, spiritual man. In it are all the possibilities, all the qualities, of God.
Being, the original fount, is an impersonal principle; but in its work
of creation it puts forth an idea that contains all ideas: the Logos,Word,
Christ, the Son of God, or spiritual man.This spiritual man or Christ, the
Word of God, is the true inner self of every individual. . . .
...through their being received by the mind and carried into the body
through the subconsciousness by ones thought. Constructive words that
renew the body are made a part of the body consciousness by prayer and
meditation. . . .
Wrath, of God.
Meta. Some Bible authorities claim that the wrath of God, or of the
Lord (Rom. 1:18), might with equal propriety be translated the blessings of the Lord.We know that after the destruction of limited and inferior thoughts and forms of life, other and higher thoughts and forms take
their place, and the change is actually a blessing in the end. So even the
wrath that comes to our fleshly tabernacles, when we persist in holding them in material thought, is a blessing ultimately.When we are loving and nonresistant we do not suffer under the transformations that go
on when the Mosaic law is being carried out.
The wrath of God is really the working out of the law of Being
destructively or inharmoniously for the individual who does not conform to the law but thinks and acts in opposition to it.
APPENDIX C
Charles Fillmore in His Own Words:
A Radio Interview Given in 1936,
and a Radio Talk (Undated)
Radio Interview
Question: Mr. Fillmore, you are one of the founders and still active officials of the Unity School of Christianity of Kansas City, Missouri?1
Answer:Yes.
Q:When was the Unity School begun?
A: Unity began about fifty years ago, as it was, then we started having
study classes, but we usually reckon the real beginning as April 1889 as
that was when we issued our first monthly periodical,the Unity Magazine.
Q: Mr. Fillmore, what is your age?
A: In about two months, I will have completed my 82nd year.
Q: And, Mr. Fillmore, you are still actively engaged in carrying on the
work of the Unity School?
A:Yes. I deliver six lectures regularly every week and some extras.Write
several articles monthly for the Unity Magazine. Have written two books
in the past twelve months besides taking two extensive lecture tours,one
in Colorado, and the other in the eastern states down to Florida. Have
no idea of retiring but shall continue the Unity work with renewed interest and enthusiasm always.
Q:Mr.Fillmore,to what do you attribute your good health and your ability to continue your rather strenuous work beyond the age where most
men experience mental and physical decline, if not death?
A:When I began the study of the doctrine of Jesus Christ I was a bodily
wreck. At the age of ten, I had been afflicted with tuberculosis of the
122 Appendix C
hipwas very lame and suffered continually. The doctors said the
abscesses on my leg would kill me before I was forty. I was not a Christian, but when I began to study what Jesus taught in the Bible about God
as the source of life and health, I had faith that I could be healed. From
that time, I began to improve in health. I have improved gradually and
now teach and believe that man can demonstrate what Jesus taught: If
any one keeps my word, he will never see death [John 8:51].
Q: Mr. Fillmore, do you believe that the healing power of God, as taught
by Jesus and demonstrated so strikingly by you, can be applied by all persons?
A: I can conceive no possible reason why the healing system of Jesus cannot be applied by all persons who will accept it. Jesus demonstrated it by
healing great multitudes and He commissioned His disciples to go forth
and preach the gospel, cast out demons, and heal the sick.The New Testament proved that the Holy Spirit bore witness to their divine commission by the signs that followed, in other words, they cast out demons and
healed the sick by using the healing system taught them by Jesus.We are
teaching that body healing is fundamental in Christianity and thousands
are being healed every year.Our healing demonstrations have been going
on for fifty years.
Q: Mr. Fillmore, could you, in a few words, tell us what the fundamental principles are in the healing system taught by Jesus?
A:To understand and become efficient in the use of the healing system
taught and used by Jesus requires study and experience. Sometimes the
underlying principle of faith in God as the omnipresent Spirit of life and
health is quickly grasped by the student, but this must be followed up by
a further realization of the cooperation of the Holy Spirit as the helper
of those who have faith in God as the health of His people.
Q: Mr. Fillmore, do you understand and teach that physical healing is the
main objective of the doctrine of Jesus?
A: By no means. Physical healing is merely the partial product of the
soul salvation accomplished by following the guidance of the Lord
Jesus Christ.
Q: Jesus claimed that in no other way could we escape the race ills of
mind, body, and affairs except by following Him. Do you believe that,
and does your experience in handling race thoughts convince you that
Jesus knew what He was talking about?
A: I am satisfied that Jesus was a master of mind forces and that He broke
the spell of evil or satanic thoughts that has for ages bound humanity.All
those who look to Jesus for help will be mentally freed from the race
insanity of sin, sickness, greed, hate, poverty, and death.Also, they will
all be eventually gathered together here on earth and form the nucleus
of a new and higher civilization for this planet.The disintegration of the
old civilization is close at hand, and those who have been following Jesus
in the spiritual life are preparing to get together and establish His kingdom here on earth.
Q: Mr. Fillmore, what is the object of Unity?
A:The object of Unity, concisely stated, is to educate people in the fundamental principles of Christianity and quicken and make active in
everyone the innate spiritual life of man.
Q: Mr. Fillmore, do you think that the popular Christian world does not
understand the fundamental principles of Christianity?
A:The popular Christian world does not understand the scientific principles upon which Christianity is founded.The popular Christian religion teaches faith as the foundation of Christianity, but in addition to
faith, which we stress emphatically, we add understanding of the mind
and how it operates to build soul and body.
Q: Do I understand, Mr. Fillmore, that you make psychology a part of
your study of Christian principles?
A: Certainly. Psychology pertains to the soul, and soul salvation is an
important part of the teaching of Jesus.
Q: Mr. Fillmore, I understand there are hundreds of Unity Centers in
various parts of the world where the doctrines of Unity are taught and
the literature distributed. Is Unity a church?
A: No. Unity is not a church and we strive to keep its centers undenominational. However, as the students of the centers organize, they tend to
124 Appendix C
form what appears to be church groups, but the majority of our students
are regular members of orthodox churches.
126 Appendix C
men of science are telling us that our bodies are heavily charged with
dynamic energies that, if released, would make us the most powerful
beings in the world.
For instance, a recent report of a conclave of scientists says that they
talked about the marvelous possibilities in the release of electronic
energy locked up in atoms; that in one pound of water there is ten million horsepower. The Earl of Birkenhead once said, Give man that
atomic energy and he can alter the climate and geography of the world.
Yet, mans body is ninety percent water, and with every thought and act
he is releasing some of its energy.Who shall say that this release of energy
shall be limited to ordinary muscular or brain action?
Through the impact of a more dynamic mind, it is within reason to
assume that man might increase his brain capacity a thousand-fold. Jesus
said to His followers,If you have faith as a grain of mustard seed (atom),
you will say to this mountain,Move hence to yonder place and it will
move; and nothing will be impossible to you [Matt. 17:20].
Here we have the declaration of a Master Mind that nothing shall be
impossible to man if he develops that subtle and little understood attribute of the mind named faith.
Faith has been associated with a species of blind fanatical belief in the
supernatural until logical minds that seek an understanding of the principles underlying their religious conviction have classed its exponents as
subjects of a sort of ecclesiastical delusion.That faith might be a faculty
with dynamic power equal to the release of hidden forces in the natural
world has not occurred to scientifically trained minds.
However, a new type of scientific mind is being trained in this age of
phenomenal discoveries.This mind is not content with the materialism
of the evolutionary schools of science,nor the spirituality of the religious
schools.The evolutionist and the modernist are both respected and their
views accepted up to a certain point, but not considered as the final revelation of either science or religion.
Schools of scientific mental discipline are being established in which
the mind is subject to fearless research as to its ability to react to certain
ideas both religious and secular.The Unity School of Christianity is of this
character. It is inquiring into all thought processeshow thought acts
upon man in the mechanical,emotional,and reasoning zones of his being.
Some unusual results have been obtained from this unbiased research into
the mental sources of the dominant traits of the human race.Not the least
of these has been the discovery that the mind of man has possibilities far
beyond anything achieved in the past or imagined for the future.
This study of the mind in its higher aspects of faith and love reveals that
it has three primal fields of action: the spiritual, the intellectual, and the
physical. Also, that these three zones are as well defined in the mental
world as are the zones of radioactivity in the physical. The man who
thinks physically is mentally chained to his physical plane, and the man
who thinks intellectually cannot rise above his plane of logic and comparison.Only the man who thinks spiritually,who trains his mind to handle ideas unhindered by dimension, comparison, or human limitations,
attains the supremacy of a Master Mind. History records only one such
mind, that of Jesus Christ.
It is not claimed that this Unity has produced an equal of Jesus Christ,
nor that it ever will produce His equal, but it is claimed that what He did,
and what He said we could do if we followed Him, has been demonstrated in part, and enough proven to insure the fulfillment of all His
promises to those who adopt and apply His methods.
It is impossible to give in a short lesson such as this more than a hint
of the tremendous powers locked up in the mind and body of man. It is
enough to say that our bodies have stored within them all the energies
that we have touched in thought and act during the millions of years that
we have existed on this planet. Jesus said that His body was the temple
of the living God. Jesus, according to the Scriptures, took on the body of
the race and what was true of His body is true of the bodies of us all.
You ask, how shall we release and get the benefit of these pent-up
experiences of man stored in his subconsciousness since the beginning?
Jesus taught in parables, figures, and stories how to do this very thing. By
studying His methods of concentrating the mind on the super realm of
ideas and then projecting these ideas into the body,we attain at first a theoretical understanding of the law. Then, this understanding must be
applied by doing the work of releasing the imprisoned ideas, both good
and bad, as He released them, when, for example, He loosed the demons
imprisoned in the tombs and drove them into the swine.This so-called
miracle is a symbolic illustration of how to eliminate from the body certain imprisoned discordant energies.These are the erratic thoughts that
the ego inhibited in some previous incarnation which, if left in the
128 Appendix C
imprisoned cells, will eventually break loose and destroy the body. It is
these violent thought entities which we have generated in our mind that
finally destroy our body. Under the instruction of the Master Mind,
Jesus, we are told in symbols how to cast out these errors and save ourselves from sickness and body deterioration.
This is but a single illustration of the numerous lessons that are taught
to us by the great physician, Jesus Christ. He opened up to the whole
human family a new kingdom which He called the kingdom of the heavens. He did not name this higher kingdom as a place but as a higher
attainment by man of his innate possibilities. He said, The kingdom of
God is in the midst of you [Luke 17:21].We are on the verge of tremendously important discoveries about man and his relation to the universe.
Nearly all of our scientific discoveries so far have been located in the environment of man. Now we are seeking to know more about the dominant
inhabitant of that environment, which is man.
The great English scientist, Sir James Jeans, says that science is finding that God is a great mathematician.Those who study the esoteric side
of Jesus teaching find that there is a science in which thoughts and words
are scientifically related in rate of vibration or power, compression or
love, wavelength or poise, etc.
All things can be resolved into the primal ideas from which they originally sprang and by which they are sustained.This great truth is epitomized in the first chapter of Johns gospel where it is written, In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was
God. He was in the beginning with God; all things were made through
him and without him was not anything made that was made. In him was
life, and the life was the light of men [John 1:14]. In this is restated, in
epitomized form, the God said of the first chapter of Genesis.
This formative power of thought and word has been passed on by Creative Mind to man, his image and likeness, and experimentation with
thoughts and words proves that there is a definite movement in cell life,
especially in the human organism, when certain kinds of words are
focused upon them.Thus is being worked out a mathematical relation
between the thoughts and words of man and their effects in his body,
proving the truth of Jesus statement that, By your words you will be
justified, and by your words you will be condemned [Matt. 12:37].
Note: In his Unity book, The Twelve Powers of Man, Charles Fillmore
expressed his thought about the power of the spoken word when amplified
through radio broadcasts. He said, If the spoken word can be mechanically intensified a hundred million times, how much greater will be its
power when energized by Spirit!
APPENDIX D
Early New Thought Movement Participants
16881772
Emanuel Swedenborg
Teacher, author, spiritual philosopher, and prominent scientist in Sweden. He developed a theological system of beliefs, adopted by those who
refer to themselves as Swedenborgians. His first theological writings
were published in 1748; his visions and writings inspired his followers to
establish the Church of the New Jerusalem, often shortened to the New
Church. New Thought historian J. Gordon Melton states that Swedenborgs influence on New Thought is inestimable as exemplified in the
Bible interpretations in Charles Fillmores Metaphysical Bible Dictionary
and in Mary Baker Eddys Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures.
17351815
Franz Mesmer
Viennese psychiatrist who developed theory of animal magnetism, a
belief that thoughts could be transferable. He used hypnosis, suggestion,
and laying-on of hands in his practice. He was a major influence in the development of NewThought and also of Mary Baker Eddy in her early years.
Not available Charles Poyen
Brought Mesmerism to America and Phineas Parkhurst Quimby heard
him in 1838.
18021866
Phineas Parkhurst Quimby
Dedicated his adult life to healing and the study of it. He was a key influencer in the development of New Thought. Some label him as the founder of the movement; however, this is an overstatement. Many of those
instrumental in the development of New Thought such as Mary Baker
Eddy and Julius and Annetta Dresser studied the work of Quimby,
although they learned of him from the work and writings of Warren Felt
Evans because Quimbys writings were locked in Washington and
unavailable to them.
132 Appendix D
18031882
Ralph Waldo Emerson
American essayist and poet, a leader of the philosophical movement of
transcendentalism, which every stream of New Thought incorporates.
He was ordained a Unitarian minister, as was his father, and gave the
address at Harvard Divinity School in 1839. His father served the First
Unitarian Church and Ralph served the Second Unitarian Church, both
in Boston. In a history of New Thought, Emmet Fox wrote that Emerson
was the founder of the movement.This is not true, although his thoughts
did influence the early stages of New Thought development.
18171889
Warren Felt Evans
NewThought author and healer. He was among the first to write of healing as taught and practiced by Phineas Parkhurst Quimby. Evans was a
Swedenborgian and he integrated the philosophies of Emanuel Swedenborg and Quimby and, to some degree, Franz Anton Mesmer. Several
New Thought historians believe that the literary efforts of Evans in synthesizing the work of Swedenborg and Quimby is more important to the
New Thought movement than the work of Quimby himself.
18211910
Mary Baker Eddy
Founded Church of Christ, Scientist, 1881. She was initially a student in
the growing New Thought movement, but she became insular and separated herself and her organization from the movement and its outgrowths, such as Religious Science, Divine Science, and Unity.
18381893
Julius Dresser and
Not Available Annetta (Seabury) Dresser
They met Phineas Parkhurst Quimby in 1860, and because they supported and practiced his work, they were among the first to effectively
organize what has since been called New Thought. In fact, the couple was
so effective in organization of New Thought that they have even been
named by some as the founders of New Thought, but they were not.They
were serious students who worked to advance the cause of NewThought.
18421910
William James
A famous American psychologist and philosopher who was also an avid
student of Phineas Parkhurst Quimby. Jamess lectures and his written
134 Appendix D
18481908
Althea B. Small
Student of Emma Curtis Hopkins.With the help of others and her sisters
Nona Brooks and Fannie James, she helped influence the Divine Science
movement in Denver. In 1898, she and her sisters, with the help of others, established the Denver Church and College of Divine Science.
18481941
Emilie Cady
Homeopathic physician and author, she was a student of Hopkins and a
good friend of the Fillmores, although she never visited Kansas City. She
wrote two classic volumes,Lessons inTruth (originally published as a series
in Modern Thought) and How I Used Truth, which are still used as basic textbooks by Unity and New Thought students.
18541917
Charles Brodie Patterson
President of the International Metaphysical League and then became the
first president of the NewThought Federation. He was editor and author
of several New Thought publications in addition to being widely read in
New Thought.
18541914
Fannie B. James
Student of Mabel McCoy, a classmate of Mrs. Frank (Kate) Bingham.
Along with her sisters, Nona Brooks and Althea B. Small, she helped
organize the Divine Science movement in Denver.
18541948
Charles Fillmore
Cofounded the Unity School of Christianity with his wife, Myrtle, in
1889. Emma Curtis Hopkins ordained him in 1891, as well as his wife,
and he was later ordained as one of the first Unity ministers in 1906.
Charles was an instrumental leader of Unity until his death, and wrote
the Metaphysical Bible Dictionary, among other books.
18531925
Emma Curtis Hopkins
Is known as the teacher of teachers as she taught and influenced many
key people in the New Thought movement, including Charles and Myrtle Fillmore, Ernest Holmes, Malinda Cramer, and Mrs. Frank (Kate)
Bingham. Hopkins was to the New Thought movement what the Apostle Paul was to Christianity. Had it been left to the twelve disciples,
136 Appendix D
worked closely with Ernest Holmes and leaders in both Eastern and
Western traditions of religion.
18661958
Ralph Waldo Trine
A philosopher, mystic, teacher, prolific author, and early mentor of the
New Thought movement. He became known as a self-help author long
before it became a popular genre of literature.
18741948
Christian D. Larson
An early author of numerous self-help books and a prominent leader in
New Thought. He greatly influenced Ernest Holmes, who studied with
Larson.
18821964
Joel Goldsmith
A monumental teacher of practical mysticism and founder ofThe Infinite
Way. He was a prolific author, and his most well-known book is The Art
of Meditation.
18831973
Fenwicke L. Holmes
The older brother of Ernest Holmes.Together they created the Metaphysical Institute in 1918 and taught what they called Mental Science,
named after the magazine they began. After organizing this institute,
Fenwicke stayed east and his brother moved west and eventually established the Institute of Religious Science and Philosophy.
18861961
Emmet Fox
Asked Charles Fillmore to ordain him as a Unity minister, which Charles
would not do without Fox taking classes. He was later ordained in the
Divine Science branch of New Thought and was a prominent New
Thought author. He was also a major supporter of Charles and Myrtle
Fillmore and wrote several tracts published by Unity School. Fox was
also instrumental in establishing Alcoholics Anonymous, and his book,
Sermon on the Mount, was used as its first Big Book in early years.
18871967
Walter C. Lanyon
Ordained by Emma Curtis Hopkins. He was a prolific New Thought
Christian writer, having authored more than forty books.
18871960
Ernest Holmes
Ernest first studied New Thought in Boston, and he and his brother,
Fenwicke, worked together in the east and created the Metaphysical
Institute in 1918. Later, the brothers taught, published a magazine, and
each wrote a book about their movement,Mental Science.Later,Ernest
moved to California and in 1927 was ordained by Agnes Galler of
Divine Science-Seattle. The year before, Ernest wrote The Science of
Mind and, with his magazine of the same name, founded the organization Institute of Religious Science and Philosophy, which eventually
broke into two groups. One was a church-like format and in 1953
became the United Church of Religious Science. The second group
became Religious Science International. Ernest was widely read and
was influenced by Emerson,Troward, and Hopkins, whom he studied
with shortly before her death.
18931985
Masaharu Taniguchi
Founded Seicho-No-Ie, the Truth of Life movement, in Japan in 1930.
He spoke at a Unity ministers conference at Unity Village in the 1960s,
at the invitation of Sig Paulson, former director of World Outreach at
Unity School of Christianity, during one of Taniguchis U.S. lecture
tours. Seicho-No-Ie is a religion that originated in Japan. However,
Taniguchi acknowledged that while he was reading,comparing,and contrasting with his own thinking on the subject of religion, he was exposed
to Christian Science through Ernest Holmess Mental Science.
19041971
Mildred Mahn
Metaphysical teacher and author. She founded the Society of Pragmatic
Mysticism.
1921
Charles R. Fillmore
Grandson of cofounders of the Unity School of Christianity. In 1965, as
executive vice president of Unity School of Christianity, he requested
that Unity field ministers create a sister organization to facilitate all activities having to do with service to and self-governance of Unity ministries,
which they did. They named it the Association of Unity Churches (now
the Association of Unity Churches, International).
138 Appendix D
1936
Angelo Pizelo
Founder and director of the Emerson Theological Institute, established
1992.The Institute is a New Thought School of Ministry and the primary
education arm of the Affiliated New Thought Network.
Not Available Johnnie Colemon
Originally ordained a Unity minister, she had a new vision and founded
the Universal Foundation for Better Living and the Johnnie Colemon
School of Ministry, Chicago, Illinois, in 1974.
Not Available Barbara King
A minister and author, Barbara founded the Hillside Chapel and Truth
Center International and the Barbara King School of Ministry in Atlanta,
Georgia, in 1971.
1940
Matthew Fox
A former Catholic priest, and now an Episcopal priest, in 1996 he
founded University of Creation Spirituality (renamed Wisdom University in 2005). He has just announced a program that will ordain ministers, and his new spiritual community is not yet named but will be a
Creation-Centered Church/Spiritual Community as outlined in his enewsletter of November 25, 2005.
1956
Harry Morgan Moses
Was ordained by Religious Science International (RSI).After a disagreement with the RSI administration, his ordination was rescinded in early
1992. He and colleague-friend Dominic Polifrone, whose ordination
also was rescinded in 1991, collaborated to found Affiliated New
Thought Network (ANTN). Initially it was created to support Religious
Science ministers who considered they were independent from Religious Science International,and then opened itself to serve any Religious
Science ministers. Over time, ANTN began providing support for all
New Thought ministers who were independent.
1939
Dominic Polifrone
After rescission of his Religious Science International (RSI) ordination
over a disagreement with RSI administration in 1991, he co-created the
Affiliated NewThought Network (ANTN) with his friend and colleague,
Harry Morgan Moses, in 1992. ANTN was originally created as a support system for independent Religious Science ministers, and over time
was opened to all independent New Thought ministers.
Emanual Swedenborg
(16881722)
Julius Dresser
(18381893)
and Annetta Seabury
Dresser
(not available)
Seicho-No-Ie (1930)
Masaharu Taniguchi
(18931985)
APPENDIX E
The Evolution of the New Thought Movement
Ralph Waldo Emerson
(18031882)
H. Emilie Cady
(18481941)
Institute of Religious
Science and
Philosophy (1926)
Ernest Holmes
(18871960)
United Church of
Religious Science
(1953)
Ernest Holmes
(18871960)
Home College
of Divine Science (1888)
San Francisco, California
Malinda E. Cramer
(18441906)
Religious Science
International
(1953)
Ernest Holmes
(18871960)
Emerson Theological
Institute, A New Thought
School of Ministry (1992)
Angelo Pizelo (1936)
Notes
Introduction
1. Freeman, The Household of Faith; Bach, The Unity Way of Life; DAndrade,
Charles Fillmore; Vahle, The Unity Movement; Verderber, The Rhetoric of
Charles Fillmore.
2. Mead, Handbook of Denominations in the United States; Cerminara, Insights for
the Age of Aquarius; Braden, These Also Believe and Spirits in Rebellion; Fischer, comp., A Complete Concordance to the Published Writings of Charles Fillmore.
3. Bormann, Theory and Research in the Communicative Arts, 175.
4. Fillmore, Talks on Truth; Fillmore and Schobert, Metaphysical Bible Dictionary.
5. Please note: throughout this volume, Unity School of Christianity and
Unity are used interchangeably.
6. Holmes, The Science of Mind, 25.
7. Herrmann, Sir John Templeton, 15253.
144 Notes
17. Ibid.
18. Editorial in Modern Thought, November 1889; quoted in Freeman, Household of Faith, 43.
19. Hopkins, Catalogue of Classes, 25.
20. Fillmore, Our Mission, 10. All subsequent quotes are from this page as
well.
21. Mead, Handbook of Denominations, 224.
22. Gatlin, Unitys Fifty GoldenYears, 13.
23. Freeman, Household of Faith, 6162.
24. Fillmore, Society of Silent Help, 9 (emphasis added).
25. Ibid.
26. Jethro, Healing Suggestions, 5.
27. Extracts from Letters We Have Written, 3.
28. Dresser, Dr. Quimbys Theory of Matter, 6.
29. Frances, Pencil Jottings, 7.
30. Each Member of Silent Unity, 9.
31. Gatlin, Unitys Fifty GoldenYears, 45.
32. Cady, Lessons in Truth, How I Used Truth, and God a Present Help.
33. Extract of a Letter to Myrtle Fillmore from Dr. H. Emilie Cady, 9.
34. Cady, How I Used Truth, 9495.
35. For further explanation of the Word that was with God, and the way man
uses his own spoken word, see appendix B, s.v. Word.
36. The Unity Viewpoint, 23.
37. Gatlin, Unitys Fifty GoldenYears, 1617.
38. A Manual of Prayer, 8.
39. Gatlin, Unitys Fifty GoldenYears, 2829.
40. Ibid., 19; Interesting Facts about Unity, 2.
41. Gatlin, Unitys Fifty GoldenYears, 21.
42. Unity Daily Word Heartily Received, 28.
43. Decker, ed., Unitys SeventyYears of Faith and Works, 83.
44. Rowland, A Drill in the Silence and Come Ye Apart Awhile.
45. Myrtle Fillmore, How I Found Health, in Unitys SeventyYears of Faith and
Works, ed. Decker, 12.
46. Fillmore, Heal the Sick, 10.
47. Rowland, The Magic of the Word (Unity Village, Mo.: Unity School of Christianity, 1968), 10.
48. Ibid., 12.
49. See, for example, Prayers Are Answered, Unity School of Christianity
booklet, Unity Village, Mo., 1972.
Notes 145
50. Vahle, The Unity Movement, 256.
51. Ibid., 259; Freeman, Household of Faith, 17980.
52. Vahle, The Unity Movement, 315.
53. Lytton, Understanding Unity for the Millions, 140.
54. Bach, The Unity Way of Life, 52.
55. Bach, Had You Been Born in Another Faith, 17172. Martin Luthers main
objection to the Catholic Church was not based upon Scriptural difference, but upon liturgical differences and upon the sale of indulgences. See
Mead, Handbook of Denominations, 133.
56. Bach, Had You Been Born in Another Faith, 36.
57. Mead, Handbook of Denominations, 209, 210.
58. Gatlin, Unitys Fifty Golden Years, 94; Fillmore and Schobert, Metaphysical
Bible Dictionary, i. See appendix A for complete Preface and a description
of Fillmores criteria and methods of research.
59. Dessoir, Aesthetics and Theory of Art, 328; Meyer, Unity and the Bible, 7.
60. Dr. Ernest C.Wilson, telephone interview with the author, Sept. 26, 1974.
61. Fillmore and Schobert, Metaphysical Bible Dictionary, ii.
62. Gatlin, Unitys Fifty GoldenYears, 95.
63. Berry, Unity School of Christianity in the Light of the Scriptures, 8.
64. Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics, s.v. Metaphysics. Emphasis added.
65. Dr. Ernest C. Wilson, minister of Kansas City Unity Society of Practical
Christianity, personal letter to the author, Sept. 26, 1974.
66. Gatlin, Unitys Fifty GoldenYears, 95.
67. See Corson, TheVoice and Spiritual Education (NewYork: Macmillan, 1896).
68. Fillmore, Mysteries of Genesis, 56. Brackets appear in the text.
69. Fillmore, The Adventure Called Unity, 67.
70. Gable, comp., What It Means, iiiii.
71. DAndrade, Charles Fillmore, 142.
72. See, for example, Sloan, Hermeneutics, 102; Marle, Introduction to
Hermeneutics; and The Interpreters Bible (New York:Abingdon Press, 1951).
73. Charles Fillmore, Unity of Religion and Science, speech manuscript in
Unitys SeventyYears of Faith and Work, ed. Decker, 11011.
74. A Thought Is Its Command.
146 Notes
3. Harvard Medical School, Survey on Use of Alternative Medicine (Cambridge:
Harvard Medical School, 1993).
4. Association of Unity Churches, International, Survey of 781 (of 960) Unity
Ministers, Licensed Teachers, and Congregants (Lees Summit, Mo.: Association
of Unity Churches, 1997). All further references to the Association of
Unity Churches, International survey are to this source.
5. Dorsey, Illness or Allness, 44546.
6. G. R. Mosley, A Comparison of Secular and Religious Experiential Education
Activities in the Adult Religious Education Classroom (Ph.D. diss., Ohio State
University, 1980).
7. Weil, Can St. Johns Wort Ease Depression? 8.
8. Althoff,Williams, Molvig, and Schuster, A Guide to Alternative Medicine.
9. Murray, Natural Alternatives to Prozac.
10. DAdamo, Eat Right forYour Type.
11. Vital Signs, television transcript, Bonnie View Productions, New York,
June 26, 1997.
12.Versau, Religion Is Beneficial to Your Health, E1.
13. Reynolds, Prayer the Medicine Patients Are Seeking, 10A.
14. Cohen, The Greatest Story Never Told, 70.
15. Carey and Visgaitis, Doctors Pray for Selves, 2A.
Notes 147
11. Holmes, The Science of Mind (1997 ed.), 458.
12. Vahle, Open at the Top, 7.
13. Dr. Masaharu Taniguchi:The Miracle Man of Japan and the Origins of the
Truth, www.snitruth.org/dr.htm.
14. From a report on the Third Synthesis Dialogues, Rome, 2004, submitted by
Barbara Fields, Synthesis Dialogues Cofounder and Director.
15. Beckwith, A Manifesto of Peace, 42.
16. John Naisbitt and Patricia Aburdene, Megatrends 2000:Ten New Directions for
the 1990s (New York: Morrow, 1990).
17. www.wisdomuniversity.org, accessed Feb. 15, 2005.
18. Vahle, The Unity Movement, 422.
19. Ibid., 423.
148 Notes
Action Information, May/June 1992, published by the Alban Institute, Herndon,Va.
3. Roy Oswald, How DoYou MakeYour Church More Inviting? Action Information, Jan./Feb. 1992, published by the Alban Institute, Herndon,Va.
4. Glenn Mosley, Can I . . .Will I . . .Can I? Contact Magazine (Aug./Sept.
1993), published by the Association of Unity Churches.
Selected Bibliography
Books
Althoff, S., P.Williams, D. Molvig, and L. Schuster. A Guide to Alternative Medicine. Lincolnwood, Ill.: Publications International, 1997.
Anderson, C.Alan, and Deborah G.Whitehouse. New Thought:A Practical American Spirituality. New York: Crossroad, 1995.
Bach, Marcus. Had You Been Born in Another Faith. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.:
Prentice-Hall, 1961.
. The Unity Way of Life. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1962.
Bahn, Eugene, and Margaret L. Bahn. A History of Oral Interpretation. Minneapolis: Burgess, 1971.
Barbour, Ian. Religion and Science:Historical and Contemporary Issues. San Francisco: HarperCollins, 1997.
Beckwith, Michael. A Manifesto of Peace. Culver City, Calif.:Agape Publishing,
2002.
Beebe,Tom. Whos Who in New Thought. Lakewood, Ga.: CSA Press, 1977.
Bormann, Ernest G. Theory and Research in the Communicative Arts. New York:
Holt, Rinehart, & Winston, 1965.
Braden, Charles S. Spirits in Rebellion:The Rise and Development of New Thought.
Dallas: Southern Methodist University Press, 1963.
. These Also Believe. New York: Macmillan, 1950.
Cady, H. Emilie. God a Present Help. Kansas City, Mo.: Unity School of Christianity, 1940.
. How I Used Truth. Kansas City, Mo.: Unity School of Christianity,
1916.
. Lessons in Truth. Kansas City, Mo.: Unity Book Co., 1894.
Cerminara, Gina. Insights for the Age of Aquarius. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.:
Prentice-Hall, 1973.
Clayton, Philip, and Arthur Peacocke, eds. In Whom We Live and Move and Have
Our Being:Panentheistic Reflections on Gods Presence in a Scientific World. Grand
Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2004.
Colemon, Johnnie. OpenYour Mind and Be Healed. Camarillo, Calif.: DeVorss &
Co., 2000.
Connors, Sharon. Adventures in Prayer: Praying Your Way to a God You Can Trust.
New York: Bantam Books, 2004.
Unpublished Materials
Gable, Francis J., comp. What It Means (typewritten). Unity School of Christianity, Kansas City, Mo., 1942.
Hartung, Nancy. The Contributions of Hiram Corson to the Field of Oral
Interpretation. M.A. thesis,Wayne State University, Detroit, 1963.
Hopkins, Emma Curtis.Catalogue of Classes (typewritten). Christian Science
Theological Seminary, Chicago, 1887.
Teener, James W. Thesis on Unity School of Christianity. Ph.D. diss., University of Chicago, 1939.
The Unity Viewpoint (radio transcript). Unity School of Christianity, Lees
Summit, Mo., June 20, 1959.
Verderber, Rudolph F. The Rhetoric of Charles Fillmore. Ph.D. diss., University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo., 1962.
Whaley, Harold Barton. Collection and Preservation of the Materials of the
New Thought Movement. Masters thesis, University of Missouri-Kansas
City, Kansas City, Mo., 1973.
White, Phillip. A Study of New Thought as a Lay Movement: Some Implications. M.Div. essay, St. Paul School of Theology (Methodist), Kansas City,
Mo., 1972.
Index
156 Index
Bingham, Mrs. Frank (Kate), 9,
13435
Birkenhead, Earl of, 126
Borg, Marcus, 64
Braden, Charles S., xiv
breath control, 36
Brooks, Nona, 9, 13334, 141
Buddhism, 5661
Burhoe, Ralph Wendell, 82
Burkmar, Lucius, 46
BusinessWeek, 61
Byrd, F.C., 83
cabin fever, 37
Cady, H. Emilie, xiv, 9, 15, 134, 141
Cain, 106, 109
A Call to Our Guiding Institutions,
1023
Cana wedding, 11011
Carlyle,Thomas, 46
Cary,A., 41
Cerminara, Gina, xiv
Chicago Exposition (1933), 30
Chilton, Bruce, 64
chiropractors, 3536
Christ
as Cosmic Wisdom, 64, 68
as distinct from Jesus, xv, 64, 70,
108, 124
interpretations of, 10910
Christ Universal Temple, 53
The Christian Business Man, 12
Christian Science, 6, 11, 44, 4647
Christian Science Journal, 8
Christian Science Thought, 11
Church and College of Divine Science
(Denver), 13435, 141
Church of Christ, Scientist, xv, 47,
132, 141
Church of New Jerusalem, 131
Church of New Thought, 133, 141
Church of Religious Science, 49
See also Religious Science
churchianity, 10
church/state separation, 103
class thoughts, 13
clergy survey calls, 9295
Colemon, Johnnie, xv, 5354, 138,
140
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 46
Colley, Errol S., 46
Colorado,Apela, 66
ComeYe Apart Awhile (Rowland), 19
complementary medicine, 35
A Complete Concordance to the Published
Writings of Charles Fillmore
(Fischer), xiv
Corson, Hiram, 26, 29
Cosmic Wisdom, 64, 68
Cramer, Malinda E., 9, 133, 141
Creation Spirituality, 66
creationism, 64
Creative Mind (Holmes), 47
Crossan, Dominic, 64
culture of consciousness, 55
DailyWord, 11, 1819
Dalai Lama, 55
DAndrade, Hugh, xiii, 35
Darwin, Charles, 77
debt forgiveness, international, 103
Decker, James, 19
deep ecumenism, 66
Deloitte & Touche corporation, 62
Dembski,William, 77
denominations
denominationalism, 10, 63
fundamentalism, 22, 61, 6768
Unity resisting designation as, 10,
2122, 31, 6263, 12324
depression, 34, 37
Dessoir, Max, 24
Dewey, John, 85
diabetes, 3940
diet, 3940, 89
discrimination, subtle, 9395
Index 157
diversity
internationally, 7273
welcoming, 42, 51, 95, 100
Divine Science, 6, 9, 47, 50, 13234,
13637
Divine ScienceSeattle, 137
Dorsey, John M., 3435
Dresser,Annetta Seabury, 46, 131,
132, 140
Dresser, Horatio W., 4647
Dresser, Julius, 46, 13132, 140
A Drill in the Silence (Rowland), 19
Duke University Medical Center, 83
Dutch Reform, 62
ecumenism, 66
Eddington, Sir Arthur, 80
Eddy, Mary Baker, xv, 8, 4647,
13135, 141
Edinburgh Book Festival, 85
Einstein,Albert, 75, 7778
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 5, 4447, 124,
132, 137, 141
Emerson Theological Institute, 138,
141
Emerson,William, 45
Empedocles, 69
Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics, 25
enter to worship, 89
Ethical Conduct, 5759
Evans,Warren Felt, 46, 13132, 141
evil, as nothingness, 52
exercise, 36, 46
Exodus Club, 141
faith
authentic spirituality, 89
Jesus, 1416, 12425
mind and, 40, 109, 12327
Field Department (Unity), 21, 71
Fillmore, Charles
on biblical interpretation, 2328,
10511
158 Index
Foster, Hazel Durkee, 48
Four Noble Truths, 56
Fox, Emmet, 70, 132, 136
Fox, Matthew, 6370, 138
Freeman, James Dillet, xiii, 7
fundamentalism, 22, 61, 6768
Galileo, 76
Galler,Agnes, 137
Gandhian question, 59
Garrison, Jim, 6365, 70
Gatlin, Dana, 12, 24
Gautama, Siddhartha, 56
Gestefeld, Ursula, 133, 141
Gifford,Adam Lord, 85
Gifford Lectures, 85
glass harmonica, 45
Global Ethic, 1023
glocal challenge, 72
God
immanence of, 70
INTA Declaration on, 51
names of, 10910
Word of, 11819
in the workplace, 6162
wrath of, 119
God-Squads, 61
Goldsmith, Joel, xv, 136
Good Business, 12
Grassie, Billie, 78
Grier,Albert C., 135
Groundhog Day (movie), 73
Harley Davidson corporation, 61
Harvard Divinity School, 45
Harvard Medical School, 34, 83
Harvard University, 45
Hawthorne Books, Inc., 12
health
alternative therapies and, 3439, 45
diet, 3940, 89
exercise and, 36, 46
holistic healing and, 3337, 89
Index 159
inclusivity
proselytizing and, 99100
sexual orientation, 89
survey for, 9598
welcoming newcomers and, 9192,
9295
The Infinite Way, xv, 136
See also Goldsmith, Joel
Ingersoll, Robert, 5
Institute of Religious Science
and Philosophy, 48, 49, 13637,
141
See also Religious Science
INTA. See International New Thought
Alliance (INTA)
integrative medicine, 3338, 89
Intelligent Design, 77
International Association for Religious
Freedom, 102, 104
International Council of Religious
Education, 11
international debt, 103
International Divine Science Association, 9
International Metaphysical League,
134
International New Thought Alliance
(INTA), 5054
International Society of Science and
Religion (ISSR), 82
International Sunday School Bible
Lessons, 23
internationalization, 7172
intuition, 2526, 29
is-ness of life, 69
ISSR (International Society of Science
and Religion), 82
Jaki, Stanley, 85
James, Fannie B., 134, 141
James,William, 85, 13233
Jeans, Sir James, 128
Jesus
160 Index
mental healing, 13, 34, 37, 46, 70
Mental Science, 133, 13637
See also Science of Mind
Mesmer, Franz Anton, 4446,
13132, 140
Messiah. See Christ
Metanexus Institute, 78
Metaphysical Bible Dictionary (C. Fillmore), xiv, 23, 26, 10511,
11319, 134
metaphysical healing, 13, 46, 70
Metaphysical Institute, 136, 140
metaphysical interpretation of the
Bible, 23, 10511
metaphysics, 78, 2526
Middlesex Association of
Ministers, 45
Militz,Annie Rix, 9, 135, 140
Militz, Paul, 9, 135, 140
mind
power of, 13, 17, 12327
prayer and, 49
science of, xv, 43, 4752, 124, 133
spiritual mind treatment, 49
unconscious mind responsive to, 17
See also thought
ministries within ministries, 89
ministry
clergy calls, 9295
diversity and, 42, 51, 100
exclusionary behaviors in, 9395
future of, 8890
greeters at houses of worship, 9398
inclusivity, 89100
ministries within ministries, 89
prayer ministry, 1214, 20, 29
schools of, 138
small ministry syndrome, 97
visitation, 9295
visitor welcoming strategies,
91100
miracle, defined, 125
Miracle Man of Japan, 52
Index 161
packet spotting, 97
Page, Myrtle, 5
See also Fillmore, Myrtle
Parliament of the Worlds
Religions, 55
Parmenides, 69
Patterson, Charles Brodie, 134
Patterson, Mary Baker Glover, 8
See also Eddy, Mary Baker
Paulson, Sig, 137
Peacocke, Sir Arthur, 77
Peale, Norman Vincent, 48, 62, 7071
perception, clear, 5960
The Phenomenon of Man (Teilhard de
Chardin), 81
Philosophia Perennis, 43
Phineas Parkhurst Quimby:The Complete
Writings (H. Dresser), 46
Pinneo, Lawrence, 30
Pizelo,Angelo, 138, 141
Pizza Hut corporation, 61
Plato, 69
Polifrone, Dominic, 13839, 141
The Power of Prayer (Mosley and Hill),
83
Poyen, Charles, 131
pranayama (breath control), 36
prayer
health and, 7, 4042, 49, 83
ministry, 1214, 20, 29
purposes of, 7, 20, 36, 49
responses to requests for, 1718
science on, 8384
silent, 1214, 17, 20, 29
spoken, xiv, xv, 1320, 22, 29, 5758
thought as, 13
prayer ministry, 1214, 20, 29
Precise Simplicity, 57
prescription medication, 34, 3738
pressing out, 16
Progress, 11
proper names, interpretation of,
10611
162 Index
Rowland, Clara May, xiv, 1820
Ruth, analyzed metaphysically, 116
sabachthani, 11617
Sabaoth, 117
Sandage,Allan, 80
Schobert,Theodosia DeWitt, 23, 105
schools
Church and College of Divine
Science, 13435, 141
correspondence, 18, 21
Home College of Divine Science,
133, 141
Hopkins Metaphysical College, 8
Illinois Metaphysical College, 6, 8
of ministry, 138, 140
Oberlin College, 4
of philosophy, 48, 49, 13637, 141
public, 88
universities, 30, 34, 45, 6370, 83,
138
See also Unity School of Christianity
Schuller, Robert, 62
Schumacher, E.F., 65
Schuster, L., 38
Schweitzer,Albert, 85
science
Christianitys foundations in, 123
models for relating religion and,
7683
on prayer, 8384
role of, 30, 78, 8283
Science and Health with Keys to the
Scriptures (Eddy), 131
science and religion. See religion and
science
Science of Being, 133, 141
Science of Mind (Holmes), 4850
Science of Mind, xv, 43, 4752, 133,
13637
scriptural interpretation. See biblical
interpretation
Seale, Ervin, 46
Index 163
studies, medical efficacy of
prayer, 83
See also surveys
study classes, local, 11, 21, 2324, 62,
73
study groups, 11, 21, 2324, 62, 73
Sufism, 68
suggestion (mesmerism), 45
Super Mind, 12425
supplements, nutritional, 3639
surveys
clergy survey calls, 9295
on depression, 34
on diets, 3940
on doctors praying with patients,
4043
to encourage inclusivity, 9598
on exercise, 36
on health attitudes of Unity
students, 36
of newcomers, 9294, 9598
on spiritual practice effects, 4041
Swedenborg, Emanuel, 4446,
13132, 140
Synthesis Dialogues, 5561
Taco Bell corporation, 61
talking cure, 38
Talks on Truth (C. Fillmore), xiv
Talmud studies, 62
Taniguchi, Masaharu, 52, 137
Taoism, 62, 87
Taylor, Caroline, 45
Taylor, Edgar, 4
Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre, 81
Templeton Prize, 76
Templeton, Sir John, xvi, 76, 87, 100
Theosophy, 11
Thomas Aquinas, 69
thought
class thought, 13
methods of, 53
power of, 43, 5052, 127
spiritual, 127
See also mind; prayer
Thought, 11
Towards a Global Ethic:An Initial
Declaration, 1023
transcendentalism, 5, 45, 132
Trends Journal, 6263
Tribal Journey, 63
Trine, Ralph Waldo, xv, 47, 136
triune beings, 33, 36, 127
Troward,Thomas, 47, 133, 137
Truth of Life movement (Japan), 137
The Twelve Powers of Man (C. Fillmore),
129
the unchurched, 90
unconscious mind, 17
Unitarian Universalist Association, 23
United Church of Religious Science,
49, 137, 141
See also Religious Science
Unity. See Unity School of Christianity
Unity DailyWord, 11, 1819
Unity Magazine, 1112, 14, 20, 105,
121
Unity School of Christianity (Kansas
City)
Correspondence School, 18, 21
emphasis, 29, 70, 123, 126
Field Department, 21, 71, 137
founding and growth of, 9, 18, 133,
134, 14041
ministers, 21, 53, 133
New Thought and, 50, 7072
Unity Society of Practical Christianity,
24, 28
Unity Sunday-School Leaflet, 11
Unity Temple on the Plaza, 28
Unity Village, 22, 7071, 137
Universal Foundation for Better
Living, Inc., xv, 53, 138, 140
universalists, 23, 68, 135
164 Index
University of Creation Spirituality
(UCS), 6370, 138
Upanishads, 26
USA Today survey, 40
Vahle, Neal, xiii
Van Leeuwenhoek,Anton, 75
van Till, Howard, 77
Varieties of Religious Experience (James),
133
vegetarian diet, 39
Verderber, Rudolph F., xiii
Visgaitis, G., 41
visitation, 9295
visitor welcoming strategies, 91100
Wal-Mart corporation, 61
water, access to clean, 103
water into wine, 11011
Wee Wisdom, 11, 18, 133
Weekly Unity, 11
Weeks, Eugene B., 6
Weil,Andrew, 37
welcoming strategies, 91100
Whitehead,Alfred North, 135
Whitney, Frank B., 18
Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, 9
Williams, Helen, 9
Williams, P., 38
Wilmans Express, 9
Wilson, Ernest C., 24, 26
wisdom, ancient, 11, 36, 4344,
5661, 6370
Wisdom University, 6370, 138
Woman, analyzed metaphysically,
11617
words
definitions, 10611
Jesus, 2325, 12128
metaphysical analysis of, 11319
written, 11, 1820
See also spoken word
Wordsworth,William, 46
World Fellowship of Faiths, 30
World Parliament of Religions, 1013
wrath, analyzed metaphysically, 119
written word, 11, 1820
Xerox Corporation, 61
You, 11
Youth, 11
Zygon, 82