Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Emma Curtis Hopkins. Josephine Emma Curtis Hopkins (September 2, 1849 – April 8, 1925) was an American spiritual teacher and leader. She was involved in organizing the New Thought movement and was a theologian, teacher, writer, feminist, mystic, and healer; who taught and ordained hundreds of people, including notably many women.

  2. Emma Curtis Hopkins fue una influyente escritora, maestra y teóloga estadounidense que contribuyó al desarrollo y expansión del movimiento del Nuevo Pensamiento a finales del siglo XIX y principios del siglo XX.

  3. Emma Curtis Hopkins re-states the teaching of the Sages of the Ages, whereby the earnest students may find God in the inmost sanctuary of their being – for truly the Highest is the Nearest, Most Distant yet Most Present, and we are in His Image.

  4. Explore the transformative teachings of Emma Curtis Hopkins (1849–1925), a visionary in the New Thought movement.

  5. Emma Curtis Hopkins (1849-1925) is recognised as the primary founder of the New Thought movement, an American new religious movement that arose in the late 19th century and continued to be influential throughout the 20th century.

    • Dee Michell
  6. Emma Curtis Hopkins, founder of the popular metaphysical movement known as New Thought, was born September 2, 1849, in Killingly, Connecticut, of an old New England family. She received a good education and became a schoolteacher.

  7. Emma Curtis Hopkins (1849 – 1925) was the oldest of nine children born to Lydia Phillips Curtis and Rufus Curtis. She grew up with her Congregationalist family in Killingly, Connecticut, and became a teacher. In 1874 she married a schoolteacher, George Hopkins, and they had a son, John, born in 1875.