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MineralMan

(146,324 posts)
Thu Oct 25, 2012, 08:48 PM Oct 2012

A Call for Prayer

In another thread, I made a joke about a call-in prayer line, which took you to a call center in Mumbai. The number I gave, 1-866-NOW PRAY was incorrect, however. The correct number is 1-800-NOW PRAY. That number will connect you with the Silent Unity prayer center. To learn more, you can visit their website:

http://www.unity.org/prayer

To learn what to expect when you call, click the link below:

http://www.unity.org/prayer/what-expect-when-you-call


Don't know what to pray for? Here are some guidelines from their website:

No prayer request is too big or too small. Some people call when they’ve lost a loved one; others call when they’ve misplaced their keys! Even if you are not sure what to pray for, the telephone prayer ministry associate will listen with love and compassion and then pray with you about your situation. You need only listen and take it in. After we have prayed with you we then place your prayer request in the Silent Unity Prayer Vigil Chapel for 30 days of continuous prayer.


I apologize for posting the wrong number in my early post in another thread. I do not know where the Silent Unity prayer center is located.

If you're interested in becoming a Silent Unity Prayer Ministry Associate, see their jobs page:

http://content.unity.org/cms-global/jobpostings/ListJobPostings.do

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A Call for Prayer (Original Post) MineralMan Oct 2012 OP
Probably in my hometown REP Oct 2012 #1
Yup, that's it. nt MineralMan Oct 2012 #2
Widely regarded as harmless wackdoodles locally REP Oct 2012 #3
It looks like a thriving enterprise, though. MineralMan Oct 2012 #4
Mostly elderly; the sect is dying out REP Oct 2012 #5

REP

(21,691 posts)
1. Probably in my hometown
Thu Oct 25, 2012, 08:53 PM
Oct 2012
http://unityvillage.org/village

They also have a center closer to where I grew up, on the Plaza.

It was founded in Kansas City, Missouri in 1889 by Charles Fillmore (1854–1948) and Myrtle Fillmore (1845–1931) after Mrs. Fillmore had been cured of her tuberculosis, she believed, by spiritual healing. This resulted in the Fillmores studying spiritual healing, and being influenced by Emma Curtis Hopkins and Mary Baker Eddy (the founder of Christian Science). Unity began without intention of becoming a “church” as demonstrated by the name “Unity School of Christianity.” For the first three-quarters of a century, “it had been an auxiliary type of religion, a booster station amplifying the power of Christian faith.” (Bach, 1965, p 5) Originally it was “A religious-educational movement teaching the use of God-consciousness in everyday life, clarifying the working of divine law, explaining the action of the mind which it calls the connecting link between God and man.” (Bach, 1965, p 5) Leaders and followers, equally shared their understandings in attempts to find “universal truths,” or laws that were true for all persons, all religions, all places, all times. “Unity, a synthesis of all religions, embracing and embraced by all religions, distilled in the essence of Christianity, is essentially the path of goodness. It says, “God is Good” and never ceases saying it.” (Bach, 1965, p 29) As such, its practices can be traced back to a wide variety of religions. It incorporates meditation akin to far east religions. Unity’s 24/7 silent continuous prayer and daily word can be traced to the 18th century Moravian village of Hernhutt. In recent decades it has evolved into a “church” separated from other religions, with definable doctrines of its own.
Unity School of Christianity, shares their insights through magazines, books, and pamphlets and through Silent Unity, a telephone and mail service that offered people help through prayer and counseling. This growth led to several moves within Kansas City, and eventually, after World War I, to the development of Unity Village, 15 miles from Kansas City. The movement was led, in part, after Charles Fillmore’s death, by the Fillmores’ sons and grandchildren.

REP

(21,691 posts)
3. Widely regarded as harmless wackdoodles locally
Thu Oct 25, 2012, 08:57 PM
Oct 2012

Much like the I AM Temple of St Germaine people in Brookside.

MineralMan

(146,324 posts)
4. It looks like a thriving enterprise, though.
Thu Oct 25, 2012, 09:01 PM
Oct 2012

Nice grounds, and lots of weddings, I bet.

There are a few buildingless churches here listed in their listings of places to worship.

"harmless wackdoodles..." I like that description.

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