RIP Mother Divine

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jarnon
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RIP Mother Divine

#1 Post by jarnon » Tue Mar 07, 2017 12:34 pm

Mother Divine, leader of the International Peace Mission, dies at 92
She was a young woman, working as a stenographer in Canada, when she first heard of the Rev. Major Jealous Divine.

He was the charismatic and controversial head of a homegrown religious movement, literally God in the flesh to his followers. They called him Father Divine, and he preached racial equality, celibacy, and total devotion to the kingdom of heaven -- which, he believed, he was creating in Philadelphia.

The stenographer was intrigued. She immigrated to Philadelphia and met Father Divine in his office on South Broad Street.

It was during World War II. She was 21; he was probably in his mid-60s. She was white; he was black. Soon, they were married -- in 1946, in secret in Washington, where interracial marriages were legal -- and Edna Rose Ritchings, the oldest daughter of a florist, became Mother Divine, the “Spotless Virgin Bride,” the living embodiment of her husband’s teachings. The couple maintained that they never consummated their marriage, in keeping with Father Divine's devotion to celibacy.
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Bob Juch
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Re: RIP Mother Divine

#2 Post by Bob Juch » Tue Mar 07, 2017 3:08 pm

jarnon wrote:Mother Divine, leader of the International Peace Mission, dies at 92
She was a young woman, working as a stenographer in Canada, when she first heard of the Rev. Major Jealous Divine.

He was the charismatic and controversial head of a homegrown religious movement, literally God in the flesh to his followers. They called him Father Divine, and he preached racial equality, celibacy, and total devotion to the kingdom of heaven -- which, he believed, he was creating in Philadelphia.

The stenographer was intrigued. She immigrated to Philadelphia and met Father Divine in his office on South Broad Street.

It was during World War II. She was 21; he was probably in his mid-60s. She was white; he was black. Soon, they were married -- in 1946, in secret in Washington, where interracial marriages were legal -- and Edna Rose Ritchings, the oldest daughter of a florist, became Mother Divine, the “Spotless Virgin Bride,” the living embodiment of her husband’s teachings. The couple maintained that they never consummated their marriage, in keeping with Father Divine's devotion to celibacy.
He was actually in his mid-70s. But when you're marrying God does age matter?
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.
- Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001)

Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.

Teach a child to be polite and courteous in the home and, when he grows up, he'll never be able to drive in New Jersey.

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