In the late 1920s, Genevieve Ludlow Griscom, a member of the Outer Court of the Order of the Living Christ (which some say was a cult) had ...
... constructed by Genevieve Ludlow Griscom, a wealthy businessman's wife who belonged to the Outer Court of the Order of the Living Christ.
The Order of the Living Christ was an attempt to merge Christianity and Theosophy. "The group believed in reincarnation, but adopted the ...
... a member of the club—or cult—the Outer Court of the Order of the Living Christ. The group worked off the idea that Jesus, upon his return, ...
... Outer Court of the Order of the Living Christ, which was rooted in Episcopalian beliefs, but focused on reincarnation and Christian mysticism.
Prior to 1916 there existed in New York an unincorporated religious order known as the Order of the Living Christ. In order to provide a legal instrumentality for ...
Genevieve Ludlow Griscom was a member of the Outer Court of the Order of the Living Christ—Theosocial order for short who along with other ...
She was a member of a small Christian cult called the Outer Court of the Order of the Living Christ, and they determined that when Jesus was ...
... members of the Outer Court of the Order of the Living Christ religious community initiated construction on an impressive, 14,000-square-foot ...
Genevieve was a member of a religious order called the Outer Court of the Order of the Living Christ, which attempted to fuse theosophy - a ...