Faith and Health, by Charles Reynolds Brown
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Biography in old Religious Encyclopedia
more emmanuel movement info
http://www.aabibliography.com/aahtml3/religmed.html
http://www.aabibliographyml/religion_and_medicine.html
Making Life Better Elwood Worcester 1933
Gifford, Sanford.
THE EMMANUEL MOVEMENT :
(BOSTON, 1904-1929) :
THE ORIGINS OF GROUP TREATMENT AND THE ASSAULT ON LAY PSYCHOTHERAPY
/ SANFORD GIFFORD.
Harvard University Press, 1997, c1996.
Not Reviewed yet by Your Host/Editor
but I cant want to read this one
Chambers, Francis T. Francis Taylor b.
1897.
The Drinker's Addiction : Its Nature and
Practical Treatment
The Glass Crutch By Jim Bishop
Clinbells book has very good chapter on Emmanuel Movement
Counterfeit Miracles BB Warfield
Mind Cure AUTHOR OF “THE YOUNG MAN’S AFYAIHS,” “THE SOCIAL MESSAGE OP THE
MODERN PULPIT,” “THE MAIN POINTS,” AND “THE STRANGE WAYS OP GOD” NEW YORK THOMAS Y. CROWELL COMPANY PUBLISHERS THE HEALING MIRACLES OF CHRIST MODERN FAITH CURES THE PROS AND CONS OF CHRISTIAN SCIENCE THE HEALING POWER OF SUGGESTION Tnn EMMANUEL MOVEMENT THE GOSPEL OF GOOD HEALTH THE CHURCH AND DISEASE THE wise man, were he alive to-day, could slightly amend his original
statement and feel quite sure of winning general assent -“ Of the making
of health books there is no end.” We find issuing from the press a
steady stream of volumes written, some in support of and some in
opposition to “Christian Science,” “The New Thought,” “The Emmanuel
Movement,” “The Power of Suggestion,” and all the other forms in which
a widespread popular interest is manifesting itself. The endeavor in
these pages has been to bring together in a single volume and in simple
language some of the main arguments which may be properly advanced in
this general contention, and to indicate in briefer compass the line
along which, in the judgment of the author, genuine progress may be
expected in seeking increased physical efficiency through the aid of
mental and spiritual forces. The larger part of the material in the sixth chapter was formerly
used in a little booklet entitled “The Gospel of Good Health,”
publisiied by The Pilgrim Press, Boston, in its “Envelope Series,” and
it is republished here by their kind permission. It has been freely
retouched. IT is highly suggestive that in the Greek New Testament the word
translated in certarn passages “to save is translated in other passages
“to heal” or “to make whole.” This would seem to indicate that the
ultimate purpose of both these restorative processes is the same.
Salvation is wholeness, soundness, completeness of life. And
conversely, for a man to be truly “in good health” means not only that
his digestion, circulation and other bodily functions are all working
properly, but that he is also upright, aspiring and useful. The one word applied to both processes also points back to the common
source of healing energy. The psalmist of old sang praises to his Lord
who had forgiven all his iniquities and healed all his diseases. He was
sound in his philosophy, for in the last analysis it is one and the same
divine energy which operates upon the body and upon the soul. It is one
divine energy which operates, now utilizing thoughts and desires,
impulses and confidences; now utilizing fresh air and pure water,
wholesome food and chemical substances, useful exercise and congenial
employment. In either case we have the same divine energy at work
restoring, up-building and completing the life according to a purpose
eternally beneficent. It is natural, therefore, it is inevitable, that the relations
between religion and medicine should be close. It is altogether fitting
that the pastor who ministers to the moral life, which in turn reacts
upon physical health, and the physician who ministers to the body, which
in turn reacts upon the formation of character, should be on sympathetic
and cordial terms, each one doing his own work, and each one doing it
better if he attempts only that for which he is adapted and trained. In
these chapters I hope to indicate clearly how these two arms of a common
service to human well-being may best be maintained in those forms and
relations which shall be most advantageous to the people who are to
profit by such a combined ministry The Saviour of the soul is known also
as the Great Physician. It is not inappropriate, therefore, in
considering the relation of religion to health to speak first of those
acts in His life which are known as His healing miracles. It is
inaccurate and unfair to define a miracle as “a violation of law,” or as
a piece of magic introduced, no one knows how, for the amazement of the
people. A miracle is a result wrought by divine power according to laws
which at present lie outside the field of ordinary experience. In what
we call the operation of natural law we find when we look closely “a
divine purpose moving steadily across the ages, keeping its appointments
with foreseen human needs” and ministering to them with differences of
administration, but in the same abiding spirit of intelligent
helpfulness. And in those events called miraculous, .we find this same
divine energy mani1910 Faith And Healing Charles
Reynolds Brown
Contents Review

http://webtext.library.yale.edu/xml2html/divinity.037.con.html
Papers of Charles Reynolds Brown
The text of lectures on
this page can be found in the
Andover-Harvard Theological Library on Reel 1 of Mflm. 2789
http://www.hds.harvard.edu/library/ingersoll/List1.html#1920
| Title: | Living Again | |
| Author: | CHARLES REYNOLDS BROWN, Congregational minister of University Church at Yale and dean of Divinity School at Yale. | |
| Citation: | Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1920. 58 p. |
Ellenwood, Cecilia Freeman Atherton.
Class notes, 1898-1902.
This collection consists of the printed syllabi, with her handwritten
lecture and reading notes, for three classes she took at Stanford: the
life of Christ, 1898; the ethics of Christ, taught by Charles Reynolds
Brown, 1900; and the life and literature of the early Hebrews, taught by
Charles Reynolds Brown, 1902
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/hasrg/religious/archive.html