about us
It all started when the Lord spoke to ricky
Healing is something I ordained from the beginning. I don’t want people to think I’m holding them hostage by the things I have already provided for them. I want everyone to come to me out of their desire to know me, not out of fear of being without something. Healing is for the masses, for the Nations, for the whole earth. Too often people forget that was my plan from the beginning and provisions are already in the earth for people to tap into them.
After hearing that word from the Lord, Julia and I got busy. We’re a blended family that recently came together. Yet the Lord has gifted us with a grace that allows us to love and live like we have known and been a vital part of each other’s lives for decades. Since uniting, Julia and I have been on a fast heart and physical healing training pace. We’ve participated in multiple sessions where we have personally experienced healing for wounds in our own hearts. We’ve attended hundreds of hours of training in various heart and physical healing modalities. We both believe in continuous learning and we value pursuing God’s best for our lives. And we want to share what we have been blessed to receive with whomever we can.
Moore Grace Ministries is a non-profit 501C3 Charitable Christian organization that promotes social well-being for the public good. In addition to our community projects, we share and teach relational brain skills and interactive prayer techniques to help people live more fulfilled lives. With its founders, Moore Grace Ministries has a team of researchers and partners that are committed to the mission of the organization.
Ricky Moore
CO-FOUNDER & CEO
Ricky is a licensed and ordained minister. He served on the Board of Directors with River Church Charlotte. Ricky has a Master of Biblical Studies from Charis Bible College in Charlotte NC. He also has multiple certifications and has completed course work in spiritual and emotional health related disciplines. Including Relational Brain Skills Training from Thrive Today (Premier Tracks T1-T3), Courts of Heaven Facilitator Training from Life Springs International Ministries, Immanuel Approach from Face to Face Ministries and more. In addition to his ministerial teaching that has extended to multiple countries, Ricky has a passion for human flourishing. He has conducted workshops and training sessions on emotional capacity building and relational brain skills to many multiethnic multigenerational audiences. During his business career Ricky held various managerial and executive level positions. He’s had over 40 years of experience in the telecommunications industry. Ricky also has a Bachelor of Science Degree in Electrical Engineering from Purdue University in West Lafayette IN.
Julia Moore
co-founder
Julia Robinson Moore (Ph.D., Michigan State University) joined the Department of Religious Studies at UNC Charlotte in 2005. She teaches courses in African American religion, religions of the African Diaspora, and racial violence in America. Her first book, Race, Religion, and the Pulpit: Reverend Robert L. Bradby and the Making of Urban Detroit (2015), explores how Second Baptist Church of Detroit’s nineteenth minister became the catalyst for economic empowerment, community-building, and the formation of an urban African American working class in Detroit. Her current research project, Remembered: Enslaved Burial Grounds and the Making of Charlotte's Presbyterian Communities was conceived out of her eighteen-year experience as an ordained Presbyterian minister serving defacto-racially segregated Presbyterian churches within the Presbytery of Charlotte (PCUSA) in Charlotte, NC. As a scholar of African American religion and history for over twenty-two years, Dr. Moore created a way for her research to directly enhance communal relations within the Presbyterian communities she served by establishing a community-engaged component of her work titled, Preserving Sacred Spaces Initiative (PSSI). As the principal and director of PSSI, Dr. Moore endeavors to bring connection and conciliation to church communities historically divided by the legacies of slavery.