Alfred Geiger Moses (1878–1956) was an American rabbi associated with Reform Judaism and the founder of Jewish Science,[1] a Jewish spiritual movement comparable with the New Thought Movement and viewed as supplementing services at conventional synagogues.
Adolph S. Moses (1840-1902) served as a rabbi for several congregations in the American South.
[1] Alfred Geiger Moses received his rabbinical ordination from Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1901.
[3] He served as the rabbi at the Reform Congregation Sha'arai Shomayim,[4] in Mobile, Alabama, from 1901 to 1940.
[1] In terms of the founding of Jewish Science, while Moses was concerned with the issue for several years during his early rabbinical career, his first major public act was his 1916 publication of Jewish Science: Divine Healing in Judaism which sought to raise awareness of spirituality in Jewish prayer.