FATHER DIVINE - TYPED LETTER SIGNED 02/22/1951 - HFSID 152182
Price: $2,000.00
FATHER DIVINE.TLS: "Rev. M.J. Divine, Ms.D.", 1p, 8x10½. Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, 1951 February 22 A.D.F.D. On letterhead of Circle Mission Church, Home
and Training School of Pennsylvania, to Mr. Howard L. Haines, East Orange, New Jersey.
In full: "Your letter of the 19th is at hand and I AM responding that you may know I AM
in receipt of same and that I do not know of anyone who has a hotel for sale. With best
wishes to you and all who are concerned, this leaves ME as I AM Well, Healthy, Joyful,
Peaceful, Lively, Loving, Successful, Prosperous and Happy in Spirit, Body and Mind and
in every organ, muscle, sinew, joint, limb, vein and bone and even in every ATOM, fibre
and cell of MY BODILY FORM." Accompanied by original typed envelope, which bears a
sticker picturing Father Divine and his second, wife, Sweet Angel, who became Mother
Divine. Credited with being one of the first Black leaders to combine religion with social
activism, Reverend Major Jealous Divine (circa 1878-1965), better known as Father Divine,
promoted a philosophy of peace and anti-discrimination. Believing his mission was to establish
heaven on earth, the charismatic preacher set out to establish a righteous nation based on
his moral code. To spiritually purify his flock, Father Divine forbade alcohol, tobacco and
profanity and encouraged personal integrity and celibacy, even among married couples. Despite
his strict teachings, Father Divine attracted scores of followers, partly through his dynamic
preaching (even though he was never ordained by any religion), but largely because of his
promise of a better life. Espousing positive thinking and self-reliance, Father Divine moved to
Harlem in 1932, at which time his ministry became known as the Peace Mission
Movement. Based on a cooperative system of social welfare, his first Peace Missions were
restaurants offering low-cost meals. Father Divine eventually expanded to nearly 200 centers,
called "Heavens", that provided food, clothing and job training to the needy during the Great
Depression. His practical teachings against borrowing money, using credit and trusting in banks
brought his movement through the nation's economic crisis and resulted in vast holdings of
property for him and his followers. Despite his success, Father Divine's message and
methods were often targets of criticism. Unlike most other Black leaders, Father Divine,
seeing race as a divisive force that was a product of negative thinking, discouraged racial
pride. Controversy also arose over his claims to be an incarnation of God and his
encouragement of his followers to recognize him as such, as evidenced by his use of the
capitalized "I AM" in this letter and the "A.D.F.D." after the date. Father Divine's marriage to
one of his followers, a white woman with the spiritual name Sweet Angel, added to the furor,
especially when Father Divine claimed she was the reincarnation of his first wife. Sweet Angel,
who became Mother Divine, assumed leadership of the movement after the death of the man
who brought hope for a better future to thousands of the downtrodden. Lightly creased with
folds, not at signature. Fine condition. Framed to an overall size of 33¼x25¼.
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