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Aimee Semple McPherson
Born
Aimee Kennedy

(1890-10-09)October 9, 1890
Salford, Ontario, Canada
DiedSeptember 27, 1944(1944-09-27) (aged 53)
Spouses
Robert Semple
(m. 1908; died 1910)
Harold McPherson
(m. 1912; div. 1919)
Children2, including Roberta
RelativesHarry Salter (son-in-law)

Aimee Semple McPherson (née Kennedy; October 9, 1890 - September 27, 1944), also known as Sister Aimee or Sister, was a Canadian Pentecostal evangelist and media celebrity.

Early in the itinerant phase of her career, Aimee Semple McPherson discovered that if she prayed over sick people, many of them stated they got well. Consequently, she began holding what she termed as "divine healing" revival sessions. These outdoor, open-air demonstrations drew many thousands of people. As a result, she not only became known by the news media and the public as a dynamic revivalist, but also a sought after faith healer. Those who have been converted and healed saw nothing dubious in their curative experience. Critics, on the other hand, said healings were mesmerism or hypnotism and even "crimes committed in the name of religion." Reporters attended the revival services and wrote of her seeming ability to heal the sick and infirm; and some news articles included even names and addresses of those who stated healing.[1][2][3][4]

Early life

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Aimee Elizabeth Kennedy was born on October 9, 1890, in Salford, Ontario Canada. She attended a revival meeting in 1907 and committed her life to following Christ. She also met Robert Semple, a Pentecostal missionary and they married the following year.[5] During an evangelistic tour to China, Robert contracted dysentry and died. Aimee returned to the US with their daughter and worked with her mother Mildred in the Salvation Army. In 1912 she met and married Harold McPherson and they had a son.

Preaching

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In 1913 Aimee told her family that she felt a call to preach. In 1915, the family started organising revival meetings. She was known for interpreting tongues and became very popular. In 1919, Harold left her as he did not enjoy the travelling lifestyle. Her mother then joined her and the children on tour. She began her faith-healing work the same year.

McPherson said she experienced several of her own personal faith healing incidents. One occurred in 1909, when her broken foot was mended, an event that served to introduce her to the possibilities of the healing power of faith.[6] Another was an unexpected recovery from an operation in 1914, where hospital staff expected her to die.[7] In 1916, before a gathered revival tent crowd, Aimee experienced swift rejuvenation of blistered skin from a serious flash burn caused by a lamp that had exploded in her face.[8]

According to Mildred Kennedy the crowds at the revivals were easily twice as large as McPherson reported in her letters and the healings were not optimistic exaggerations. Kennedy said she witnessed visible cancers disappear, the deaf hear, the blind see, and the disabled walk.[9]

Career

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McPherson's first reported successful public faith healing session of another person was in Corona, New York, on Long Island, in 1916. A young woman in the advanced stages of rheumatoid arthritis was brought to the altar by friends just as McPherson preached "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today and forever". McPherson laid her hands upon the woman's head, and the woman was able to leave the church that night without crutches.[10]

Aimee Semple McPherson conducting a healing ceremony at the Spreckels Organ Pavilion in 1921. Police support, along with U.S. Marines and Army personnel, helped manage traffic and the estimated 30,000 people who attended.
Aimee Semple McPherson conducting a healing ceremony at the Spreckels Organ Pavilion in 1921. Police support along with U.S. Marines and Army personnel helped manage traffic and the estimated 30,000 people who attended.

Spreckels Organ Pavilion (1921)

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In late January 1921 McPherson conducted a healing ceremony at the Spreckels Organ Pavilion in Balboa Park in San Diego, California. Police, U.S. Marines, and Army personnel helped manage traffic and the estimated 30,000 people who attended.[11] She had to move to the outdoor site after the audience grew too large for the 3,000-seat Dreamland Boxing Arena.

During the engagement, a woman paralyzed from the waist down from was presented for faith healing. McPherson feared she would be run out of town if this healing did not manifest, due to previous demonstrations that had occurred at smaller events of hers. McPherson prayed and laid hands on her, and the woman got up out of her wheelchair and walked.[12] Other unwell persons came to the platform McPherson occupied, though not all were cured.[13]

Due to the demand for her services, her stay was extended. McPherson prayed for hours without food or stopping for a break. At the end of the day, she was taken away by her staff, dehydrated and unsteady with fatigue. McPherson wrote of the day, “As soon as one was healed, she ran and told nine others, and brought them too, even telegraphing and rushing the sick on trains".[13] Originally planned for two weeks in the evenings, McPherson's Balboa Park revival meetings lasted over five weeks and went from dawn until dusk.[14][15]

1921-1922

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At a revival meeting in August 1921, in San Francisco, journalists posing as scientific investigators diverted healing claimants as they descended from the platform and "cross-examined as to the genuineness of the cure.” Concurrently, a group of doctors from the American Medical Association in San Francisco secretly investigated some of McPherson's local revival meetings. The subsequent AMA report stated McPherson's healing was "genuine, beneficial and wonderful". This also was the tone of press clippings, testimonials, and private correspondence in regards to the healings.[16] [17]

Stretcher Day at Revival in Municipal Auditorium at Denver , Colorado, 1921. The event attracted a capacity crowd of 12,000 attendees. People were carried in on cots, stretchers, chairs and beds; and awaited McPherson to pray over them for healing.
Stretcher Day at Revival in Municipal Auditorium at Denver, Colorado, 1921. The event attracted a capacity crowd of 12,000 attendees. People were carried in on cots, stretchers, chairs and beds; and awaited McPherson to pray over them for healing.[18]

In 1921 during the Denver campaign, a Serbian Romani tribe chief, Dewy Mark and his mother stated they were faith-healed by McPherson of a respiratory illness and a "fibroid tumor." For the next year the Romani king, by letter and telegram urged all other Romani to follow McPherson and "her wonderful Lord Jesus." Thousands of others from the Mark and Mitchell tribes came to her in caravans from all over the country and were converted with healings being reported from a number of them. Funds in gold, taken from necklaces, other jewelry, and elsewhere, were given by Romani in gratitude and helped fund the construction of the new Angelus Temple. Hundreds of people regularly attended services at the newly built Angeles Temple in Los Angeles. Many Romani followed her to a revival gathering in Wichita, Kansas, and on May 29, 1922, heavy thunderstorms threatened to rain out the thousands who gathered there. McPherson interrupted the speaker, raised her hand to the sky, and prayed, "if the land hath need of it, let it fall (the rain) after the message has been delivered to these hungry souls". To the crowd's surprise, the rain immediately stopped and many believed they witnessed a miracle. The event was reported the following day by the Wichita Eagle. For the gathered Romani, it was a further acknowledgement "of the woman's power". Up until that time, the Romani in the US were largely unreached by Christianity. The infusion of crosses and other symbols of Christianity alongside Romani astrology charts and crystal balls was the result of McPherson's influence.[19][20]

In 1922, McPherson returned for a second tour in the Great Revival of Denver[21] and asked about people who have stated healings from the previous visit. Seventeen people, some well-known members of the community, testified, giving credence to the audience of her belief that "healing still occurred among modern Christians".[22]

Examples of significant healings

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Epstein, a biographer who made a point of giving a portion of his book "Sister Aimee" to details of her faith healing career writes "The power of healing, which Aimee exercised with reluctance and spectacular results, presents an overwhelming problem to historians, who largely ignore it." Epstein continues "....the documents that attest to Aimee Semple McPherson’s healing ministry are so baffling, they have been buried in the Church archives for almost seventy years. The few surviving eyewitnesses of that ministry, including the evangelist’s son and daughter, discuss the healings hesitantly, brimful with emotion, like veterans of a battle too horrible to recollect." [23]

To add A brief summary timeline of McPherson's faith healing origin experience leading to her own career and examples of prominent healings.

Durham's history and links to Azusa Street revival

William Durham, attended the Azusa Street revival, initiated with African American preacher William J. Seymour who had established the Azusa Street Mission in 1906. was known also for its numerous statements by people of either faith healings they saw or received.

William Durham, himself was convinced; after severe attack of rheumatic fever in 1891, he survived by praying, confirming his belief in the doctrine of divine healing.

Durham brings Azusa Street to Chicago

McPherson's (Aimee Semple and husband ) involvement with Durham's group

Aimee seriously injures her foot breaking her ankle requiring a doctor and her foot to be set in a cast.

Later, after trying to travel with crutches, she was in so much pain, she stated she sat down to rest. A voice told her to see William Durham. Looking around, she saw no one, but followed the advice and sought out Durham for prayer.

He placed his hands on her and commanded a healing then demanded the cast be removed.

The healing, stated, by Aimee, in a testimony, was done before 12 witnesses (one a skeptic who was astonished then joined the others in praise after he saw the cast removed from the healed foot).

When members of the extended congregation outside of Chicago heard of it they were divided. Doubters did not think the foot had ever been broken, or did not believe it had been healed (Epstein p 59).

Cessationism is the view that the “miracle gifts” of tongues and healing have ceased, at the end of the end of the apostolic age.

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McPherson was the subject of over 45 lawsuits over her lifetime, including those involving her assistant pastor Rheba Crawford Splivalo and her own daughter Roberta Star Semple, along with faking her own kidnapping, the latter of which charges were dropped for lack of evidence.[24][25]

In 1928, when two clergymen were preaching against her and her "divine healing," McPherson's staff assembled thousands of documents and attached to each of them photos, medical certificates, X-rays and testimonies of healing. The information gathered was used to silence the clergymens' accusations and was also later accessed by some McPherson biographers.[26][27]

Later life

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In later years, McPherson identified other individuals with a faith healing gift. During regular healing sessions she worked among them but over time she mostly withdrew from the faith healing aspect of her services, as she found that it was overwhelming[28] other areas of her ministry.

Scheduled healing sessions nevertheless remained highly popular with the public until her death in 1944. One of these was Stretcher Day, which was held behind the Angeles Temple parsonage once every five or six weeks. This was for the most serious of the infirm who could only be moved by "stretcher." Ambulances would arrive at the parsonage and McPherson would enter, greet the patient and pray over them. On Stretcher Day, so many ambulances were in demand that Los Angeles area hospitals and medical centers had to make it a point of reserving a few for other needs and emergencies.[29]

McPherson's faith healing in the media

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McPherson's faith-healing demonstrations were extensively covered in the news media and were a large part of her early career legacy.[30] James Robinson, an author on Pentecostalism, diverse healing and holiness traditions, writes: "In terms of results, the healings associated with her were among the most impressive in late modern history.”.[31]

Aimee Semple McPherson's apparently successful faith healings attracted large crowds and journalists to her revivals.
Aimee Semple McPherson's apparently successful faith healings attracted large crowds and journalists to her revivals.[32]

In April 1920, a Washington Times reporter conveyed that for McPherson's work to be a hoax on such a grand scale was inconceivable, communicating that the healings were occurring more rapidly than he could record them. To help verify the testimonies, as per his editor, the reporter took names and addresses of those he saw and with whom he spoke. Documentation, including news articles, letters, and testimonials indicated sick people came to her by the tens of thousands. According to these sources, some healings were only temporary, while others lasted throughout people's lives.[33][11][34]

In 1921 a survey was sent out by First Baptist Church Pastor William Keeney Towner in San Jose, California, to 3,300 people to investigate McPherson's healing services. 2500 persons responded and 6% indicated they were immediately and completely healed while 85% indicated they were partially healed and continued to improve ever since. Fewer than 0.5% did not feel they were at least spiritually uplifted and had their faith strengthened.[35]

Denver Post reporter Frances Wayne wrote that while McPherson's "attack" on sin was "uncultured,...the deaf heard, the blind saw, the paralytic walked, the palsied became calm, before the eyes of as many people that could be packed into the largest church auditorium in Denver".[36]

After McPherson's death, LIFE Magazine wrote that, "her vast popularity in derived in part from the skill with which she applied theatrical techniques to the art of homiletics".[25]

Views on McPherson’s work

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In 1921, some members of Lodi California's First Congregational Church attended McPherson's tent revival meeting in San Jose California and returned speaking enthusiastically of healings and conversions. Their Oxford-educated Pastor Charles S. Price (1887–1947), believed what they underwent was "metaphysical, psychological, nothing tangible,” and "they had been inoculated with a strange serum, had “gotten the hallelujahs.” He went to San Jose to learn how to “straighten them out.” Price was eventually persuaded by McPherson who “won more people to Jesus Christ in one afternoon” than he could recall in fourteen years of ministry. He became her assistant and starting in 1922 went on to preach as a traveling evangelist who converted tens of thousands along with many instances of miraculous divine healings that were stated to have occurred.[37][38][39]

Although he was an atheist, Charles Chaplin discretely enjoyed listening to McPherson's Sunday night illustrated sermons. He was astounded by the healings he saw in her services. He thought they might have been a combination of McPherson's skilled hypnotism and the power she commanded over the crowds.[40]

In October 1921, crowds filled the auditorium at Canton, Ohio, and many people who were carried to the platform for prayer walked away unassisted. Crutches and braces were left behind while the blind stated they could see and the deaf could hear. Though six local ministers concurred that the work was a "genuine manifestation of God to fulfill his promises," three others did not commit and P.H. Welshimer of First Christian Church, a congregation of 6,000 members, stated the healings were the result of hypnotism and "mesmeric power.".[41] According to a church publication, psychologist and hypnotist, Professor D. H. Deamude, who was in town during the campaign, stated that, based on his expertise, whatever McPherson was doing, hypnotism could not account for it.[42]

Actor Anthony Quinn, who for a time played in the church's band and was an apprentice preacher, in this partial quote, recalls a service:

I sat in the orchestra pit of the huge auditorium at the Angelus Temple. Every seat was filled, with the crowd spilling into the aisles. Many were on crutches or in wheelchairs. Suddenly a figure with bright red hair and a flowing white gown walked out to the center of the stage. In a soft voice, almost a whisper, she said, "Brothers and sisters, is there anyone here who wants to be cured tonight?" Long lines formed to reach her. She stood center stage and greeted each one. One man said, "I can't see out of one eye." She asked. "Do you believe, brother?" And suddenly, the man cried, "Yes, sister, I can see, I can see!" And the audience went crazy. To a woman dragging herself across the stage on crutches she said, "Throw away that crutch!" Suddenly, the woman threw away her crutch and ran into Aimee's open arms. I left that service exhilarated, renewed.[43]

Biographer Daniel Mark Epstein wrote that described incidents of miraculous faith healing are sometimes clinically explained as a result of hysteria or a form of hypnosis. Strong emotions and the mind's ability to trigger the production of opiates, endorphins, and enkephalins have also been offered as explanations, as well as the suggestion that the healings were simply faked.[44] In an interview with the Baltimore Sun, Epstein said:

"There is no doubt in my mind," he says "that this was a great and courageous woman, whose religious inspiration was totally authentic. I tried to find some evidence in the voluminous newspaper accounts of her healings, of fraud. There is none. Instead, I found hundreds of pages of newspaper documentation of reporters who were overwhelmed by what they saw at the healing services. The famous phrase used back then was 'those who came to scoff stayed to pray.'"[45]

Years later, Epstein interviewed Rolf McPherson, his mother's appointed successor who spoke of the period: "more patients were open to the possibilities of faith healing." Next to him, mounted on his office wall, was a hand-tinted photo enlargement of his mother helping a woman out her wheelchair in Balboa Park. He speculated that healings occurred because people had more faith in God and less in science, and he could not "imagine this sort of thing happening again."[46]

Personal views

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When McPherson retired after a long and exhausting faith healing service, she would sometimes suffer from insomnia, a problem she would contend with for the rest of her life.[47]

She did not abstain from visiting doctors or using medicine to treat her own illnesses.[48]

When traveling abroad, she paid scrupulous attention to sanitation, concerned that a careless oversight might result in acquiring an exotic disease.[49]

When asked by a journalist about her demonstrations, McPherson said, "the saving of souls is the most important part of my ministry.".[50]

Religious views

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McPherson considered each faith healing incident a sacred gift from God, the glory of Jesus Christ, passed through her to persons healed and not to be taken for granted.[49][41]

Divine healing, in her view, was a church sacrament rather than entertainment.[51] In her own writings and sermons, McPherson did not referred to divine healing as being accessible by faith and devotion. She disliked being given credit for the healings, considering herself the medium through which the power flowed, with the power of Christ working the cure.

References

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Notes

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Citations

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  1. ^ Blumhofer, p. 180,185, 177-178
  2. ^ Sutton, p16
  3. ^ Mavity, Nancy Barr "Sister Aimee;" (Doubleday, Doran,, Incorporated, 1931) p. 47-48
  4. ^ Epstein, Daniel Mark, Sister Aimee: The Life of Aimee Semple McPherson (Orlando: Harcourt Brace & Company, 1993), pp. 166, 178, 182,230
  5. ^ Britannica webpage
  6. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 58
  7. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 74
  8. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 119
  9. ^ Robinson, Judith (2006) Working Miracles: The Drama and Passion of Aimee Semple McPherson. Altitude Publishing; epub, Chapter 4, para. end of section, ISBN 9781554390854
  10. ^ Epstein 1993, pp. 107–111
  11. ^ a b Waldvogel Blumhofer, Edith (1993). Aimee Semple McPherson: everybody's sister. Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, Inc. pp. 160–161.
  12. ^ Epstein 1993, pp. 210–211
  13. ^ a b Smith, Jeff (September 16, 2009). "Unforgettable: When Sister Aimee Came to Town - Part 2". San Diego Reader. Retrieved November 14, 2013.
  14. ^ Epstein 1993, pp. 209–210
  15. ^ Blumhofer, Edith L. (2003) [1993]. Aimee Semple McPherson: Everybody's Sister (reprint ed.). Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 156–164. ISBN 0-8028-3752-2.
  16. ^ Robinson, James Divine Healing: The Years of Expansion, 1906–1930: Theological Variation in the Transatlantic World (Eugene, Oregon: Pickwick Publications, 2014)p=220
  17. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 233
  18. ^ Edith Waldvogel Blumhofer, Aimee Semple McPherson: everybody's sister (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, Inc., 1993), pp.168- 172
  19. ^ Epstein, p. 239-240
  20. ^ Blumhofer, p. 179-180,185
  21. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 237
  22. ^ Sutton 2009, pp. 17–18
  23. ^ Epstein, p. 57
  24. ^ Thomas, Lately Storming Heaven: The Lives and Turmoils of Minnie Kennedy and Aimee Semple McPherson (Morrow, New York, 1970) pp. 282-284, 297
  25. ^ a b Aimee Semple McPherson: Thousands Mourn at Famed Evangelist's Funeral. Time Inc. 1944-10-30.
  26. ^ Dicken, Janice Take Up Thy Bed and Walk": Aimee Semple McPherson and Faith-Healing; Canadian Bulletin of Medical History CBMH/BCHM / Volume 17: Spring 2000 / p. 149 (https://www.utpjournals.press/doi/pdf/10.3138/cbmh.17.1.137)
  27. ^ Epstein 1993, p. ix
  28. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 111
  29. ^ DVD God's Generals, Vol. 7: Aimee Semple McPherson; Whitaker House, June 17, 2005, 36:10-37:34, ASIN: B0009ML1VQ
  30. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 57
  31. ^ Robinson, James Divine Healing: The Years of Expansion, 1906–1930: Theological Variation in the Transatlantic World. (Eugene, Oregon: Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2014), p204.
  32. ^ Epstein, Daniel Mark, Sister Aimee: The Life of Aimee Semple McPherson (Orlando: Harcourt Brace & Company, 1993), pp. 166, 178, 182
  33. ^ "Unforgettable: When Sister Aimee Came to Town". San Diego Reader.
  34. ^ Epstein, Daniel Mark (1993). Sister Aimee: The Life of Aimee Semple McPherson. Orlando: Harcourt Brace & Company. pp. 111, 166, 178, 182, 448.
  35. ^ Sutton, Matthew Avery (2009). Aimee Semple McPherson and the Resurrection of Christian America. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 19–20. ISBN 978-0-6740-3253-8.
  36. ^ Sutton p. 17-18
  37. ^ "Biography of Charles S. Price". Healingandrevival.com. 1947-03-08. Retrieved 2013-11-14.
  38. ^ homas W. Miller. "Testimony - "From out of the past"". earstohear.net. Archived from the original on 1 January 2013. Retrieved 30 March 2023.
  39. ^ Blumhofer, p. 172, 175-177, 322
  40. ^ (epub Robinson, Judith Working Miracles: The Drama and Passion of Aimee Semple McPherson Amazing Stories, 2006 Chapter 8 para. 31
  41. ^ a b Blumhofer 177-178
  42. ^ Bridal Call Vol. 5 No. 6; Nov. 1921: p. 16
  43. ^ Quinn, Anthony (1972). The Original Sin: A Self-Portrait. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. pp. 122–132. ISBN 9780316728980.
  44. ^ Epstein 1993, pp. 66, 111, 119
  45. ^ McGuire, Patrick (April 26, 1993). "In search of Sister Aimee Daniel Mark Epstein finds spirit of a believer in writing biography". The Baltimore Sun.
  46. ^ Epstein 1993, pp. 184–185
  47. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 234
  48. ^ Epstein 1993, pp. 224, 342, 436
  49. ^ a b McPherson, Aimee Semple (1936). Give Me My Own God. H. C. Kinsey & Company. p. 88.
  50. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 166
  51. ^ Epstein 1993, p. 400

Further reading

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Category:Aimee Semple McPherson