Palmer, Phoebe Worrall

Palmer, Phoebe Worrall

▪ American evangelist and writer
née  Phoebe Worrall  
born Dec. 18, 1807, New York, N.Y., U.S.
died Nov. 2, 1874, New York City

      American evangelist and religious writer, an influential and active figure in the 19th-century Holiness movement in Christian fundamentalism.

      Phoebe Worrall was reared in a strict Methodist home. In 1827 she married Walter C. Palmer, a homeopathic physician and also a Methodist. From the beginning of their married life the Palmers shared a deep interest in their religion. They became active in the revivalist movement in the 1830s, and from 1835 Phoebe Palmer conducted regular women's home prayer meetings. Gradually the meetings became known as the Tuesday Meeting for the Promotion of Holiness, and they became centres of the growing Holiness movement that sought Christian perfection. As the meetings grew, they were moved into larger accommodations. During the 1840s Palmer also became active in charitable work among the poor and the imprisoned. In 1850 she led the Methodist Ladies' Home Missionary Society in founding the Five Points Mission in a notorious slum district of New York City. She was also a regular contributor to the Guide to Holiness, the chief periodical of the perfectionist movement, and she wrote a number of books, including The Way of Holiness (1845).

      From 1850 Palmer's evangelical activities included annual tours of the eastern part of the country and Canada, during which she and her husband visited Methodist camp meetings and conducted their own Holiness revivals. From 1859 to 1863 the Palmers worked in England. In 1862 Phoebe Palmer became editor of the Guide to Holiness, which her husband had purchased, and she filled that post for the rest of her life. She published a record of her British experiences as Four Years in the Old World (1865). From its organization in 1867 the National Association for the Promotion of Holiness provided the institutional framework for much of the Palmers' evangelical work. Phoebe Palmer continued in that work and in her Tuesday Meetings until her death.

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Universalium. 2010.

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