MARIA WOODWORTH-ETTER - THE WOMAN WITH UNUSUAL ANOINTING
MARIA WOODWORTH-ETTER
Maria was born on July 22, 1844 to Samuel Lewis and
Matilda (Brittain) Underwood.
Her parents weren't Christians and therefore she had
no religious education until her parents joined the Disciple church in 1854.
Her first loss occurred in 1857 when her father went out to the field to work
but was carried back to the house with a severe case of sunstroke. Her mother
was left with eight children and no support. Her mother and all the children
old enough had to work to support the family.
When Maria
was thirteen she heard the story of the cross at a Disciples meeting and was
converted. Soon after she was converted she heard the voice of God tell her to
"go to the highways and hedges and gather the lost sheep". This was
confusing to her as the Disciples did not allow women workers. She thought that
perhaps if she married a Christian man they could do missions work together.
A few
years later she married her Philo Horace Woodworth. They attempted to farm but
it was a failure. She had a son who died at a very young age. Maria then had
another boy, Fred, who died, and she herself came close to dying. Georganna
(Georgie), the second girl, was seven years old and she also became ill and
lingered in terrible pain for several months, before she also died. Three weeks
before Georgie died a little girl named Nellie Gertrude (Gertie) was born.
However she only lived four months before she also died. Maria herself
struggled with poor health and many times thought that she herself would die.
There was one remaining boy and girl left to the Etters. Willie, the seven year
old boy, became ill and died within a few days. All told within a few years
five of the six children had died leaving them in great grief and sorrow.
Elizabeth Cornelia (Lizzie), the oldest girl, was the only child left to them.
The entire
time she felt that God was calling her to preach to the lost. Finally a way was
opened for her to speak at a Friend's meeting. When she got up to speak she was
given a vision of the pit of hell and people not knowing their danger. She
cried out for people to follow God and choose to be saved. Although she felt
called to continue she did not know how to do that. She thought she would study
but she had a vision where Jesus told her souls were perishing and she could
not wait to get ready. Day and night she felt the need to call sinners to
repentance. She finally started in her local area and began to see many
conversions. The power of God would fall and sinners would run to the front in
repentance. Eventually she held nine revival meetings and started two churches
locally.
Due to the
failure of the farm, Maria and her husband decided to start a traveling
ministry. Maria preached wherever God called and moved through the Midwest
where she gained a great reputation for the power of God coming into her
meetings. Not long into her ministry she felt God calling her to pray for the
sick. She was resistant to doing so because she feared that it would distract
from the evangelistic call. Jesus assured her that if she prayed for the sick
more people would be saved. She agreed and began praying for the sick. Her
meetings were characterized by great power, healings, visions, and trances. In
1884 she was licensed as an evangelist by the Churches of God Southern
Assembly, which had been founded by John Winebrenner. Some of her meetings had
over 25,000 attendees. She traveled with a tent and set it up where God gave
her opportunity.
1890-1900
were tough years for Maria. The dramatic occurrences in her meetings and life
made her ministry highly controversial. She had resistance from both the
religious and secular community. She was arrested in Framingham, Massachusetts
for claiming to heal people, but was released when many came forward with their
testimonies. In St Louis, Missouri she had some of her most dramatic meetings
in 1890 and 1891, but local psychiatrists filed charges of insanity against her
for claiming that she saw visions of God. In one of Maria's meetings in 1890 a
man named Ericson prophesied that San Francisco and Oakland would be devastated
by an earthquake and tidal wave on April 14th. This created quite a stir and
the group was given extensive (negative) media coverage. April 14th came and
went without the promised destruction. Ericson was institutionalized in a
psychiatric ward for his prophesy and her group left town. (It is interesting
to note that a major earthquake did occur in San Francisco on April 18, 1906. Maria
and many of her supporters felt that they had been vindicated about the 1890
prophesy.)
By the late 1880s Maria and Philo were separated. Philo was
drinking, sleeping with women who came to the meetings, and sometimes actively
tried to stop her meetings.
In 1891
Maria divorced her husband for infidelity. He was bitter and threatened to
write a critical book about her ministry if she did not pay alimony. He
remarried quickly and then died within a year of the divorce of typhoid fever.
Maria continued her ministry with friends and associates. Even her own
denomination struggled with what was happening in her meetings and she came
under considerable pressure to stop. In 1900 she finally bowed to the pressure
and gave up her Evangelist's license in the Southern Eldership of the Church of
God. She was on her own.
Maria
traveled extensively and met Samuel Etter in 1902 in Arkansas. They married and
worked together for next several years. It is clear that Maria knew about the
Azusa Street meetings and later talked about her approval of the power of God
shown there. In 1912 she and Samuel ministered at a five month long meeting in
Dallas, Texas. This meeting was widely reported in Pentecostal newsletters and
her ministry blossomed from that point on. Pentecostals considered that many of
the unusual things she'd experienced made her a forerunner in the works of the
Holy Spirit.
She was
well known by John
G. Lake who
called her "Mother Etter" in his sermons. She continued to travel and
minister, but Samuel became ill and eventually died in August of 1914. The
strain of her husband's illness and then loss, coupled with a grueling three
meeting a day ministry schedule caused Maria to become ill herself with
pneumonia in November 1914. At 67 she was feeling herself close to death but
God gave her a vision of Himself as the conqueror of death and disease. He
showed her she wasn't done yet. By the end of January 1915 she was back on the
road ministering again.
Finally in
1918 God called her to start a church in Indianapolis. She used it as a
conference center, and often traveled from there to minister and preach in the
mid-west. Her health declined, and she died on September 16, 1924, honored as a
woman of God.

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