Healing on a spiritual path
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For John and Martine Kohlenberger, their meeting not only led to
marriage, but to a mutual spiritual journey, their eventual
ordination as ministers in the Mystical Spiritualist Church and a
shared, spiritually focused business.
In the early 1990s, both were single.
John Kohlenberger was involved with a singles discussion group for
which he was occasionally a featured speaker. A friend who helped run
the group enticed Martine to visit.
“I was speaking on love at that meeting,” John Kohlenberger
recalled. “And when she came back a month later, I was a speaker that
month, as well. The title of my [talk] was ‘Open Heart Surgery,’
about how as a single you have to open your heart if you are going to
have that relationship, that love, you are looking for.”
The two began to date. It was Martine Kohlenberger, who had been
raised in France without any particular training or influence from
her parents, who first suggested they look for a church to attend
together.
After visiting a few churches in Orange County, the couple found
the Mystical United Spiritualist Church in Anaheim headed by Jack and
Ethel Rowe. They decided it was where they belonged.
They stayed for a decade, until Jack Rowe died in 2001. Ethel Rowe
had died some time earlier.
“Jack got me started doing spiritual healings, and I decided if I
was serious about it, I needed to go to school and get some
training,” John Kohlenberger said.
Today, he is the head pastor of the Mystical Spiritualist Church
in Costa Mesa. The Kohlenbergers are ordained ministers and work with
four other ministers at the local church.
The couple’s business, Therapeutic Dimensions, is also an
expression of their spiritual beliefs and practices. They are
licensed massage therapists who provide holistic healing remedies --
deep tissue, Swedish and sport as well as shiatsu, tuina,
reflexology, herbal wraps, energy balance, inspirational and
intuitive healing.
John Kohlenberger said he first thought about becoming a healer
when he was 2 years old.
“My father was an MD, my mother was a nurse, and I wanted to help
people feel better,” he said. “With a lot of years in between, this
is it.”
In July 2001, the Kohlenbergers, with three other former members
of the Rowe’s Anaheim church, incorporated the Mystical Spiritualist
Church in Orange County.
Spiritualism traces its beginnings to the United States in the
19thcentury, though it was more popular in England, where it spread.
It embraces the idea that the personality survives death -- death is
merely a doorway opening unto a new, larger experience of everlasting
life.
“We believe we are spirits having a human experience and that what
most churches call spirit is real and ever present, even today,” John
Kohlenberger explained. “Thus, miracles and magic did not die 2,000
years ago [because] those who have passed on before us only dropped
their body. The spirit within, or the soul, continues to live.”
The Costa Mesa church is committed to Ethel Rowe’s vision of
bringing Spiritualism into the 21st century. On Sunday mornings, a
dozen to two dozen members ranging from young, career adults to
seniors who are single, married or in families, meet for an hour-long
service.
A half-hour before the service, the church’s ministers offer
spiritual healings while some members focus on inner communion and
spiritual centering. During the service they share prayer and
meditation, inspirational messages, a sermon, music, spirit readings
and angel messages.
“Spiritualism is a way of life [that combines] philosophy,
science, and religion,” John Kohlenberger said. “Though we’re
incorporated as a church, our vision is directed more toward being a
personal growth center [to assist] each other in the progression and
growth of our hearts, minds and souls.”
In addition to its weekly services, the church offers classes on
meditation, healing, spiritual awareness and psychic development. It
sponsors “channelings” that are open to the public once or twice each
year and hosts dinners at each solstice and equinox.
This week, as the country steadied itself in the face of war, John
Kohlenberger said, “From this day forward we will light a candle for
peace at each of our services, the light of which will celebrate the
love and light that exists in all humanity and in every soul.”
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer from Huntington Beach. She
can be reached at [email protected].
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