Marietta Thomas Webb (1864–1951) was a Christian healer. She was one of the first Black Americans listed in The Christian Science Journal as a practitioner of healing through prayer, and the only Black American to have a personal healing testimony selected to appear in Mary Baker Eddy's seminal book Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures.[1][2]

Marietta T. Webb
Born1864 (1864)
Died1951
NationalityAfrican-American
OccupationPractitioner of Christian Science
Known forThe only African-American with a personal healing testimony listed in Science and Health
SpouseHiram Webb
ChildrenHiram Orlando ("Orlando")

Biography

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Webb was born in Petersburg, Virginia in 1864 to Randall and Georgiana Jones, a little over a year after Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. She was one of five children, made up of three sons and two daughters. In 1869 the family relocated to Boston, where Webb received a substantial secondary education. In 1892 she married an engineer named Hiram Webb. They had one child together, Hiram Orlando, who they called "Orlando."[3]

The Mother Church

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By age four, Orlando suffered from a host of physical maladies, the most serious of which was rickets, a disease that softens and weakens bones in children. Constantly hovering between life and death, physicians pronounced him incurable, and said that if he survived he would be an invalid. In early 1897, Webb was invited by a friend to a Wednesday evening testimony meeting at a nearby church called Church of Christ, Scientist, also known as The Mother Church. As Webb wrote nine years later in the Christian Science Journal, after attending the meeting she felt that she had found "the religion for which I had been searching for years."[4]

Healing of Orlando

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Webb sought healing help from a Christian Science practitioner, and borrowed a copy of Science and Health from her friend. As she began reading, she noticed Orlando getting better, and within a week he was able to get up and play. As she read on, she said his limbs grew straighter and stronger until in less than a month he had fully recovered. Orlando would end up living a natural, healthy life until 1979, when he died at age 87. After her son's recovery Webb said she found Christian Science to be "the only salvation of my race." In 1907 Mary Baker Eddy put Webb's testimony of Orlando's healing in the final chapter of her book, where it remains today.[5]

Christian Science Practitioner

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Webb joined the Church of Christ, Scientist in 1899. That same year she wrote her first article in The Christian Science Sentinel, called “The Protecting Power of Truth”, about her allegiance to the "Science of Christianity", and the "prejudice which exists throughout the United States." She later wrote that she found Christian Science the basis for “getting out of the old prejudiced self and into the spiritual sense of man’s union with God,” and saying that according to Mary Baker Eddy and Science and Health, she was a "child of God, not a colored child of God."[6]

In 1900, Webb relocated her family to Los Angeles, California. In 1911, at the age of 47, she became one of the first African Americans to be a journal-listed practitioner of Christian Science.[7]

Influence on the Black American Christian Science Community

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In 1934, Webb became a founding member of a Christian Science congregation in East Los Angeles made up of almost entirely Black Americans. The press called her a "world known church worker," and in 1950, a year before her death, she was the subject of an article in Ebony Magazine featuring Black American Christian Scientists whose numbers had "burgeoned." The photograph the magazine used for the feature shows Webb reading the Bible without glasses, confirming a healing of vision troubles she had written about in her 1906 Journal testimony.[8]

Webb's ardent participation in the Christian Science movement influenced a host of Black American adherents in the Jazz music world in the early to mid-20th century, most notably actor and singer Pearl Bailey, percussionist Lionel Hampton, violinist and conductor Everett Lee, musician Cornelius Bumpus, and singer and composer Blanche Calloway.

Academy award-nominated actor Alfre Woodard has been public about her practice of the religion for years.[4][9][10][11][12][13]

References

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  1. ^ "Woman of History". Los Angeles Sentinel. 17 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Black History Month". Christian Science Sentinel. 27 February 2006.
  3. ^ "Women of History: Marietta Webb". Mary Baker Eddy Library. 3 February 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Christian Science and Race in America". UNC Press. 11 March 2021.
  5. ^ "A New Christian Identity". UNC Press (book by Amy B. Voorhees). 19 April 2021.
  6. ^ "The Protecting Power of Truth by Marietta Webb". Plainfield History. 23 November 1899.
  7. ^ "New Christian Identity: A Book Review". MBE Library. 5 July 2022.
  8. ^ "Ways Mother Church Responded to Racial Unrest". Mary Baker Eddy Library. 13 July 2020.
  9. ^ "Jazz Great Lionel Hampton Christian Science". CBS News. 31 August 2002.
  10. ^ "Jazz Musician Talks about what Changed His Life". Christian Science Sentinel. 15 April 1985.
  11. ^ "The Queen of Syncopation". The Leems Machine. 11 August 2020.
  12. ^ "Alfre Woodard Christian Science". Brainy Quote. 9 May 2017.
  13. ^ "Celebrity Faith". Beliefnet. 5 July 2022.