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Unity of Yakima Spiritual Life Center
Yakima
WA
98902
- Unity churches in Yakima, WA
- Unity churches in Washington
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- All churches in Yakima, WA
Who we are
Spiritual seekers often say that finding Unity is like coming home. We are an open-minded, accepting spiritual community that honors all spiritual paths.
Whoever you are. Wherever you are on your spiritual path.
You are welcome here!
Whoever you are. Wherever you are on your spiritual path.
You are welcome here!
Church Address
401 South 8th Avenue
Yakima,
WA
98902
United States
Phone: 509-575-5551
Download Unity of Yakima Spiritual Life Center vCard with Service Times
Church Pastor
Rev. Cheryl Mayes
Senior Minister
401 South 8th Avenue
Yakima,
WA
98902
United States
Phone: 509-575-5551
Download Senior Minister Rev. Cheryl Mayes vCard
Quote of the Day
Luke 12:24
Consider the ravens: for they neither sow nor reap; which neither have storehouse nor barn; and God feedeth them: how much more are ye better than the fowls?
Consider the ravens: for they neither sow nor reap; which neither have storehouse nor barn; and God feedeth them: how much more are ye better than the fowls?
Denomination
Unity
Unity churches in Yakima, Washington, United States
Unity churches in Washington, United States
Unity churches in United States
All churches in Yakima, WA
Affiliations:
Unity Worldwide Ministries
Website:
Social Media
Leadership
Leader Name:
Rev. Cheryl Mayes
Leader Position:
Senior Minister
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Leader Bio:
Other Church Leaders:
Rev. Cheryl Mayes on Social Media:
Unity of Yakima Spiritual Life Center Leadership Photos
Administration
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Mailing Address
401 South 8th Avenue
Yakima, WA
98902-3514
Yakima, WA
98902-3514
Driving Directions to Unity of Yakima Spiritual Life Center
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Unity of Yakima Spiritual Life Center Yakima Service Times
Sunday Morning Celebration Service 10:30 am
Sunday morning is filled with prayer, music, meditation and lessons that assist us in our relationships with ourselves, our family members, co-workers and God/Spirit/Universe.
Service Times last updated on the 28th of January, 2025
Sunday morning is filled with prayer, music, meditation and lessons that assist us in our relationships with ourselves, our family members, co-workers and God/Spirit/Universe.
Service Times last updated on the 28th of January, 2025
Worship Languages
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Other activities & ministries
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Unity is Wheelchair Accessible
Nursery Care is Provided
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Unity of Yakima Spiritual Life Center Photo Gallery
Unity of Yakima Spiritual Life Center History
History of Unity
The Unity movement was founded by Charles and Myrtle Fillmore in 1889 as a healing ministry based on the power of prayer and the power of our thoughts to create our own reality.
Charles and Myrtle Fillmore, a Kansas City, Missouri, couple with three young boys, had suffered lifelong physical ailments and constantly sought healing. After attending a lecture by a metaphysician named E.B. Weeks, Myrtle came away with a startling new idea: “I am a child of God, and therefore I do not inherit sickness.”
In two years of prayer and meditation, she healed her body of tuberculosis. While once expected to die by the time she was forty, Myrtle live into her 80's. After her success, Charles also began to investigate spiritual principles and healed a leg that had been damaged in a childhood ice skating accident.
Over a 30 year period, Charles poured over The Bible asking himself, "What if there is something deeper here?" Looking at The Bible as allegory, he was on a search for underlying meaning. It took him 30+ years of studying to write the Metaphysical Bible Dictionary.
The Fillmores, hosted group meetings to teach people what they had been studying of world religions, spiritual healing, and the link between science and religion. Unity became a movement because the people attending their groups wanted to make it their primary Sunday teaching. Today, the movement continues with over 800 churches across the United States .
Unity was founded with the intention that people might belong to other faiths and still be interested in the teachings of Unity and that those two things don’t have to be in conflict. Communication across religious lines is a corner stone of Unity as we believe people from all different faiths have something to learn from one another.
The Unity movement was founded by Charles and Myrtle Fillmore in 1889 as a healing ministry based on the power of prayer and the power of our thoughts to create our own reality.
Charles and Myrtle Fillmore, a Kansas City, Missouri, couple with three young boys, had suffered lifelong physical ailments and constantly sought healing. After attending a lecture by a metaphysician named E.B. Weeks, Myrtle came away with a startling new idea: “I am a child of God, and therefore I do not inherit sickness.”
In two years of prayer and meditation, she healed her body of tuberculosis. While once expected to die by the time she was forty, Myrtle live into her 80's. After her success, Charles also began to investigate spiritual principles and healed a leg that had been damaged in a childhood ice skating accident.
Over a 30 year period, Charles poured over The Bible asking himself, "What if there is something deeper here?" Looking at The Bible as allegory, he was on a search for underlying meaning. It took him 30+ years of studying to write the Metaphysical Bible Dictionary.
The Fillmores, hosted group meetings to teach people what they had been studying of world religions, spiritual healing, and the link between science and religion. Unity became a movement because the people attending their groups wanted to make it their primary Sunday teaching. Today, the movement continues with over 800 churches across the United States .
Unity was founded with the intention that people might belong to other faiths and still be interested in the teachings of Unity and that those two things don’t have to be in conflict. Communication across religious lines is a corner stone of Unity as we believe people from all different faiths have something to learn from one another.