
UNITED FELLOWSHIP OF
INTERFAITH MINISTERS
This is an open fellowship for INTERFAITH laity, ministers and ministries. No matter what your spiritual or social path may be, all are welcome here. Our purpose is to provide a place of networking that each of us that are on different paths can come together on a common ground. This fellowship has various religious traditions; such as Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, Pagan, Wicca, Mystic, Rosicrucian, Shaman and many other traditions. We do learn from each other and we are open to all spiritual and social paths.
There is neither discrimination nor censorship here.
This organization was originally formed by Rev. John Wilton Stansell, Jr., aka Gospel J, of the Gospel Lighthouse Prison Evangelism. His ministry is in desperate need of money, Bibles, New Testaments, tracts, etc. for distribution among the prison populations they serve. Please help with whatever you can.
Now, this group was under the ownership and management of Rev. Ernest A. Steadman, DD, Founder of The Church of Interfaith Christians. It is now owned and managed by Rev. Dr. Ed Crabtree, the new CEO of The Church of Interfaith Christians. Hopefully, this can become a primary Resource Site for any and all interested in the fuller INTERFAITH experience.
It is hoped you will register with the Email Group in order to keep up with all the latest postings and news related to this organization and site.
We now have a
brand new United Interfaith
Ministers Store. All the items are marked at the base price with
nothing going to me. In fact, they would cut my pension, dollar for
dollar, if I got anything. But, the nice thing you will find is that most
items are printed on BOTH SIDES, not just one like they do elsewhere. The Three Main Tenets of
Interfaith 1 The
first approach is that of dialogue between the clergy and sometimes the
laity of different faiths. The aim is to promote understanding and
respect between members of different established religions and religious
communities. This approach may also include visiting one another's
places of worship, spending times of silence together, or taking part in
actual services in which members of different religions listen
respectfully to readings from one another's holy scriptures or prayers. 2 The
second approach is working together towards a common goal, and often
falls under the title of multi-faith rather than interfaith work. This
may involve different sections of a local community working together to
further common goals, or it may mean addressing broader issues, such as
peace, or relief to famine-stricken or war-torn areas of the world. 3 The
third approach is on a more personal level, where people of any or no
formal religious faith come together to seek what is common to their
traditions and teachings, the place where there is unity. International Organizations Dedicated To Interfaith Council
For The Parliament Of the World’s Religions International
Association For Religious Freedom International
Interfaith Center The
Millennium World Peace Summit Of Religious And Spiritual Leaders United
Nations Spiritual Forum For World Peace Initiative World
Conference On Religion And Peace World
Faiths Development Dialogue and
the World
Fellowship Of Inter-Religious Councils