Fenwicke L. HolmesFenwicke Lindsay Holmes was an American author who lived from 1883 to 1973. He was also a former Congregational preacher and a leader in Religious Science. Fenwicke Holmes is the brother of Ernest Holmes. He is widely known as a key figure in the cretion of Religious Science and the United Centers for Spiritual Living. Fenwicke is known as a key player in the growth of the New Thought movement in Japan, especially Seicho-no-Ie. Holmes worked as a preacher for the Congregational Church and as the pastor of a Divine Science Church over the course of his life. He and his brother Ernest started Uplift Magazine, and he was the magazine's editor. Later, he led the International College of Mental Science as its president. Holmes wrote more than twenty books, gave talks all over the world for fifty years, and was often on radio and TV. Fenwicke helped Ernest start the Institute of Religious Science and School of Philosophy in 1927 so that their lessons could reach more people. Then, until 1934, he worked as a preacher at the Divine Science Church of the Healing Christ in New York City. Then, Fenwick and his wife moved to Santa Monica, California, where he became head of the International College of Mental Science and kept giving lectures. Read More Read Less
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