History of New Thought

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The history of New Thought started in the 1830s, with roots in the United States and England. As a spiritual movement with roots in metaphysical beliefs, New Thought has helped guide a variety of social changes throughout the 19th, 20th, and into the 21st centuries. Psychologist and philosopher William James labelled New Thought "the religion of healthy-mindedness" in his study on religion and science, The Varieties of Religious Experience.[1][2]

Roots[]

Rooted universal science, early New Thought leaders shared a Romantic interest between metaphysics and American Christianity. In addition to New Thought, Christian Science, transcendental movement, theosophy, and other movements were born from similar interests, all in the late 18th and early 19th century. John Locke's definition of ideas as anything that existed in the mind that could be expressed through words;[3]and the transcendentalist belief that ideal spirituality "transcends" the physical and is realized only through individual intuition, instead of through religion.[4]

Founding figures[]

Before anyone practiced New Thought as a set of beliefs there were a few influential figures whose teaching later contributed to the movement. The founder of the 18th century New Church, Emanuel Swedenborg, extended clear influence on many authors' New Thought writings on the Bible.[5] Ralph Waldo Emerson was also influential, as his philosophical movement of transcendentalism is incorporated throughout New Thought.[6] Franz Mesmer's work on hypnosis drove the work of Phineas Quimby, who was influenced in part by hearing a lecture by Charles Poyen.[7]

Phineas P. Quimby is widely recognized as the founder of the New Thought movement. Born in Lebanon, New Hampshire but raised in Belfast, Maine, Quimby learned about the power of the mind to heal through hypnosis when he observed Charles Poyen's work.[8] About 1840, Quimby began to practice hypnotism, or mesmerism as it was called. Through this practice and further study, he developed the view that illness is a matter of the mind. He opened an office for mental healing in Portland in 1859.

Calvinistic Baptist ministerial candidate Julius Dresser and his future wife Annetta Seabury Dresser came from Waterville, Maine to be healed by Quimby in 1860. They were healed in a short time.[9] In 1882, Dresser and Annetta (his wife by then) began promoting what they called the "Quimby System of Mental Treatment of Diseases" in Boston. Their son Horatio figures importantly as New Thought's first historian. Horatio, a popular lecturer, edited , which Quimby wrote between 1846 and 1865.[10]

In 1862 Mary Baker Eddy, originally a Congregational Church member, came to Quimby hoping to be healed from lifelong ill-health. In later years Eddy went on to found Christian Science. Because of this, while not seen as a New Thought denomination, Christian Science is largely regarded by New Thought followers to be heavily driven by New Thought beliefs. Christian Scientists disagree, frequently stating that Eddy was not influenced by Quimby.[11] In 1875 Eddy published Science and Health, thus establishing Christian Science as a denomination.

A former Methodist minister and Swedenborgian minister named Warren Evans came to Quimby for healing in 1863. When he was healed shortly after, he started writing New Thought literature immediately. One source names him as the first person to publish a clear philosophy based on Quimby's practices.[12][13]

Prentice Mulford was pivotal in the development of New Thought thinking. From his writings in the White Cross Library, including Your Forces and How to Use Them,[14] the terms "New Thought" and the "Law of Attraction" first came to fruition.[citation needed]

Movement leaders[]

After the philosophy of New Thought was established, several individuals and organizations rose to prominence to promote the beliefs. However, there is no consensus on who founded the New Thought movement. Charles Brodie Patterson has been credited. Patterson, a Canadian expatriate who lived in New York City, was labelled the movement's leader when he died in the early 20th century.[15] One of Eddy's early Christian Science students, , created a philosophy called the "Science of Being" after Eddy kicked her out of her church. Science of Being groups eventually formed the in 1904, which was the first group to refer itself as such.[16] While Julius Dresser, and later his son Horatio, are sometimes credited as founders of New Thought as a named movement, others share this title. Horatio wrote A History of the New Thought Movement, which was published in 1919, and named his father an essential figure in founding the movement. Emma Curtis Hopkins is also considered a founder.

Hopkins, called the "Teacher of Teachers", was a former student of Mary Baker Eddy. Because of her role in teaching several influential leaders who emerge later in New Thought movement history, she is also given credit as a mother of the movement. Inspired by medieval mystic Joachim of Fiore, Hopkins viewed the Christian Trinity: God the Father, God the Son, and . She wrote High Mysticism and Scientific Christian Mental Practice and founded the , which graduated a large number of women.[17]

Organizations[]

Numerous churches and groups developed within the New Thought movement. Emma Curtis Hopkins is called the "Teacher of Teachers" because of the number of people she taught who went on to found groups within the New Thought movement. After learning from Hopkins, Annie Rix Militz went on to found the Home of Truth. Another student, Malinda E. Cramer became a co-founder of Divine Science, along with Mrs. Bingham, who later taught Nona L. Brooks, who co-founded Divine Science with Cramer. Charles and Myrtle Fillmore, who went to Hopkins together, went on to found the Unity School of Christianity afterwards. Authors learned from Hopkins, too, including Dr. H. Emilie Cady, writer of the Unity textbook Lessons in Truth; Ella Wheeler Wilcox, New Thought poet; and Elizabeth Towne. Considerably later, Ernest Holmes, who established Religious Science and founded the United Centers for Spiritual Living.[18]

The Unity Church is the largest New Thought church today, with thousands of members around the world. It was formed by the Fillmores in 1891. Divine Science was also founded in the late 19th century by Melinda Cramer and Nona Brooks. The United Centers for Spiritual Living was founded by Ernest Holmes in 1927. A similar organization, the Society for Jewish Science, originally conceived by Rabbi Alfred G. Moses in the early 1900s, the movement was institutionalized in 1922 with Rabbi Morris Lichtenstein's. The New Thought movement extends around the world. The largest denomination outside the U.S., Seicho-no-Ie, was founded in 1930 by Masaharu Taniguchi in Japan. Today, it has missions around the world, including the U.S.[19] Smaller churches, including the Home of Truth founded in 1899 in Alameda, California continue successfully,[20] as does the Agape International Spiritual Center, a megachurch led by Rev. Dr. Michael Beckwith in the Los Angeles-area.

A variety of umbrella New Thought organizations have existed, including the International New Thought Alliance, which existed in some form as early as 1899. The Affiliated New Thought Network was formed in 1992 to provide an overarching New Thought organization. Since 1974 the Universal Foundation for Better Living has been a gathering of Christian New Thought congregations around the world.[21] In New York City, New Thought leaders created an umbrella organization called the League for the Larger Life. It lasted from 1916 through the 1950s.

There have been many New Thought schools. The most famous may be the Unity School of Christianity in Missouri, founded in the early 20th century. The Emerson Theological Institute has operated since 1992.[22] At the turn of the 20th century Horatio Dresser ran an organization called the .[23]

Psychiana was a mail-order denomination operated by Frank B. Robinson that taught and spread the word about New Thought through the U.S. Postal Service.[citation needed]

Gallery[]

References[]

  1. ^ James, W. (1902) "The religion of healthy-mindedness", The Varieties of Religious Experience. Retrieved June 12, 2011.
  2. ^ "Our history" Archived 2010-10-03 at the Wayback Machine. NewThoughtHistory.com. Retrieved June 15, 2011.
  3. ^ "John Locke's Theory of Knowledge". WallaceProvost.com. 2016. Archived from the original on September 19, 2016. Retrieved September 12, 2016.
  4. ^ Braden, C.S. (1963) "A Brief History of The New Thought Movement" Archived 2012-03-10 at the Wayback Machine, Spirits In Rebellion. Retrieved June 14, 2011.
  5. ^ Mosley, G. (2006) New Thought, Ancient Wisdom: The History and Future of the New Thought Movement. Templeton Foundation Press. p 131.
  6. ^ Mosley, G. (2006) p. 132.
  7. ^ Fuller. (1982) Mesmerism and the American Cure of Souls. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press
  8. ^ Fuller. (1982)
  9. ^ (1999) "Horatio Willis Dresser", Religious Leaders of America 2nd ed. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale Group.
  10. ^ Quimby, P.P. (1921) The Quimby Manuscripts. Edited by J. Horatio and H. Horatio. Retrieved June 15, 2011.
  11. ^ Gottschalk, S. (1973) The Emergence of Christian Science in American Religious Life. Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 130.
  12. ^ Teahan, J.F. (1979) "Warren Felt Evans and Mental Healing: Romantic Idealism and Practical Mysticism in Nineteenth-Century America", Church History. Vol. 48, No. 1.
  13. ^ Also see Albanese, Catherine (2016). The Spiritual Journals of Warren Felt Evans: from Methodism to Mind Cure, Indiana University Press.
  14. ^ "Your Forces and How to Use Them, Vol. 1".
  15. ^ Mount, N.J. and Mount, N. (2005) When Canadian literature moved to New York. University of Toronto Press, 2005 . p 91.
  16. ^ Braden, C.S. (1963) "A Brief History of The New Thought Movement" Archived 2012-03-10 at the Wayback Machine, Spirits In Rebellion. Retrieved June 14, 2011.
  17. ^ Harley, G.M. (2002) Emma Curtis Hopkins: Forgotten founder of New Thought. Syracuse University Press. p 53.
  18. ^ Braden, C.S. (1963) "A Brief History of The New Thought Movement" Archived 2012-03-10 at the Wayback Machine, Spirits In Rebellion. Retrieved June 14, 2011.
  19. ^ (1970) Rice University Studies, Volume 56, Issues 1-2. p. 210.
  20. ^ Keller, R.S., Ruether, R.R., and Cantlon, M. (2006) Encyclopedia of women and religion in North America, Volume 2. Indiana University Press.
  21. ^ DuPree, S.S. (1996) African-American Holiness Pentecostal Movement: An annotated bibliography. Taylor & Francis. p 380.
  22. ^ Mosley, G. (2006) New Thought, Ancient Wisdom: The History and Future of the New Thought Movement. Templeton Foundation Press. p 141.
  23. ^ Tumber, C. (2002) American feminism and the birth of new age spirituality: searching for the higher self, 1875-1915. Rowman & Littlefield, 2002. p. 126.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""