Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Malinda Cramer

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Full Name
  
Malinda Elliott

Occupation
  
Minister, author

Cause of death
  
Tuberculosis

Years active
  
1887 - 1906

Name
  
Malinda Cramer

Nationality
  
American


Malinda Cramer malindacramerwwwhubscomcramerjpg

Born
  
12 February [O.S. 12 February] 1844
Greensboro, Indiana, United States

Residence
  
324 17th Street, San Francisco, CA

Died
  
August 2, 1906, San Francisco, California, United States

Books
  
Divine Science and Heali, Divine Science: Its Principle, Health Treatment of Truth, Lessons in the Science o, Divine Science and Heali

Resting place
  
Woodland Park Cemetery

Voices of the angels malinda cramer annie militz


Malinda Elliott Cramer (February 12, 1844 – August 2, 1906) was a founder of the Church of Divine Science, a healer, and an important figure in the early New Thought movement.

Contents

Biography

Cramer was born in Greensboro, Indiana, the daughter of Obediah and Mary Hinshaw Elliott. Hoping to alleviate a persistent health problem, she moved to San Francisco in 1872, where she met Charles Lake Cramer, a photographer, whom she married in 1872. Despite the move, health problems continued to plague her, making her an effective invalid.

In 1885, perhaps under the impetus of Christian Scientist Miranda Rice, Cramer had what she described as a divine revelation after an "hour of earnest mediation and prayerful seeking" and "that hour was the beginning of my realization of the oneness of Life, [and] a gleam of its Truth flashed across my mental vision". Within two years she was healed.

Divine Science

In 1887, she began to practice faith-healing herself. In October 1888, Cramer inaugurated Harmony, a monthly journal. In May 1888, she and her husband opened what would become the Home College of Divine Science. The term "Divine Science", however, was not coined by Cramer, but had been used earlier by Mary Baker Eddy, founder of Christian Science, as well as by Wilberforce Juvenal Colville, who had published a book by that title that year.

In 1892, Cramer founded the International Divine Science Association, a forerunner of the International New Thought Alliance, which would interconnect the various New Thought centers. In 1893, she helped open the second Divine Science College, in Oakland, and undertook several cross-country missionary trips.

Between 1893 and 1898, Cramer trained Nona L. Brooks, ordaining her as a minister in the Church of Divine Science on December 1, 1898. Brooks returned to Denver and, with sisters Fannie Brooks James and Alethea Brooks Small, formed a church there, one which would eventually become the home church of the denomination.

Cramer died August 2, 1906, in San Francisco, due to a recurrence of her tuberculosis as a result of the aftermath of the great San Francisco earthquake.

References

Malinda Cramer Wikipedia