News of Carrie’s healing spread and she soon became the talk of the town. People heard of her story in newspapers Based on the prayer found in James 5 and her own healing experience, she wrote
The Prayer of Faith (1880) to encourage others to embrace and take hold of their healing, This book was significant because it was among some of first prominent books written on the subject of divine healing in her time. In 1881, she also initiated a magazine called
Triumphs of Faith which emphasized holiness and divine healing. Carrie became an itinerant preacher and teacher and traveled internationally throughout her life to share her story of healing and encourage people in their faith. Her zeal to spread the somewhat unpopular message of divine healing at that time put her in a category of a radical evangelical. Through her close friendship with
Albert Benjamin Simpson she eventually became a part of the forming of the Christian and Missionary Alliance (CMA). Simpson continually encouraged and created space for her to step out and share her story. Carrie transcended denominational barriers as she shared her story, speaking at Baptist (including
The Temple in
Old Orchard Beach, Maine, in 1910), Presbyterian, Episcopalian,
Salvation Army, Alliance, and other gatherings. Not too long after the Civil War and in a time before
Martin Luther King Jr. came to the scene, she also preached to African Americans. In 1889 Carrie experienced some persecution and even some churches shutting their doors to her, first because she was a woman preacher and second because she spoke to African Americans. In 1892, Montgomery's donated land to form the
Home for Aged and Infirm Colored People of California in
Beulah, California. ==Marriage==