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Fenwicke Holmes : ウィキペディア英語版
Fenwicke Holmes

Fenwicke Lindsay Holmes (1883-1973) was an American author, former Congregational minister, and Religious Science leader. The brother of Ernest Holmes, Fenwicke is widely recognized for being an important factor in the establishment of Religious Science and the founding of the United Centers for Spiritual Living. Fenwicke is recognized as an important figure in the development of the New Thought movement in Japan in particular Seicho-no-ie.
Throughout his career Holmes served as a Congregational Church minister and as the pastor of a Divine Science Church. He and his brother Ernest created ''Uplift Magazine'', which he served as the editor, and later, he was the president of the International College of Mental Science.
Holmes wrote more than twenty books, lectured for fifty years around the world, and frequently spoke on radio and television.
== Biography ==

Born on a farm near Lincoln, Maine in 1883, Fenwicke was one of nine boys. Despite coming from a poor family, the older boys in the family were admitted to Gould Academy, a private school in Bethel, 70 miles from their home. A teacher at the school urged Fenwicke to attend Colby College in Waterville, Maine, where he graduated from with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1906. There he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and served as editor of the ''Oracle'' yearbook.〔Jennings, J.G. (2008) "(Finding Fenwicke: Ernest's Brother's Spiritual Lessons" ), ''Science of Mind (magazine). Retrieved June 5, 2011.〕 He married novelist Katharine Eggleston in the early 1920s.
He attended the Hartford Theological Seminary and was ordained in the Congregational church. In 1911, he left the Seminary to move to Venice, California for health reasons. Later, he was also ordained as a Divine Science minister.〔Albanese, C.L. (2007) ''A republic of mind and spirit: A cultural history of American metaphysical religion.'' Yale University Press. p 456.〕

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