Agnes Sanford
Agnes Mary Sanford was an American Christian writer. She is most known for founding the Inner Healing Movement, a process she described as the healing of memories.
Early life and education
Sanford was born in Kashing, China to parents Dr. and Mrs. Hugh W. White who were Southern Presbyterian missionaries. As a child she was taught the doctrine of Cessationism, which declared that miracles—especially healing—had been temporary for the New Testament Church and then had immediately ceased.Educated mostly at home, she attended the Shanghai American School for one year as a teenager before leaving to the United States to study at the Peace Institute, a Presbyterian women's college in Raleigh, NC. After three years there, she received her certificate in education. Since the teaching certification only allowed her to teach in North Carolina, she attended Agnes Scott College. She planned on receiving her bachelor's degree, but after learning she would be required to take courses in math, science, and French, she switched to a non-degree program so she could take courses in short-story writing, poetry, and art. She then returned to China where she taught English at the Presbyterian mission station before teaching at St. Mary's School and then the Soochow Academy, both Episcopal schools in Shanghai.
Career
Sanford became interested in spiritual healing after she moved back to the United States, settling in Moorestown, New Jersey after her husband Rev. Edgar Sanford accepted a pulpit. She began writing and later lecturing on the topic. She published her first book, The Healing Light, more than a decade prior to the recognized emergence of the Charismatic Movement, and it is often considered a classic in its field. Written from a scientific and metaphysical perspective, it appealed to a wide audience by connecting with those seeking a balanced, mediated position. It had already circulated enough by the 1960s to be considered by some to be the movement's main source for a practical theology of healing prayer. Agnes became a regular speaker at Camps Farthest Out conferences, and has often been referenced by well-known authors, such as Francis MacNutt, John Sandford, and Leanne Payne.Sanford was a leader in restoring healing prayers to mainline Protestant communities, campaigning against cessationism. She is recognized as the founder of the Inner Healing Movement, a type of prayer geared toward healing of memories and emotions. Because of her membership in the Episcopal Church, Agnes had a profound effect upon Christians who otherwise might not accept the validity of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit and the continuation of the Gifts of the Spirit.
After living 23 years in Moorestown, Rev. Sanford accepted a position at a smaller church in Westboro, Massachusetts so he and Agnes would have more time for lecturing. They co-founded the School for Pastoral Care in 1958, where they held sessions in Eastern Massachusetts and other places by invitation. These were first intended for clergy but were then open up to lay people. At these sessions, Agnes would lay hands on people in order to help them heal from the ailments.
These factors together resulted in her having a foundational impact on the early Charismatic Movement. In these respects, Sanford became a significant and foundational part of the Renewal Movement in the first half of the twentieth century.