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HATTIE P. WILLIAMS
Very soon the chance came to prove if I were on guard. An old and very alluring sense of material pleasure swept over me, insistently demanding that I follow the former paths and participate again in what in the old way had given me so much seeming enjoyment (sense satisfaction). A sharp struggle ensued; error bringing up its arguments that a little excursion into the old playgrounds of mortal mind was harmless, etc.; the prospect looked attractive, promising some excitement, and a renewal of old friendships that had existed solely on the basis of selfishness and love of admiration. Then quickly a voice whispered, This is the opportunity to repulse and cast out the claim of any sense of pleasure apart from Spirit and spiritual being. Immediately the desire was gone, and a wondrous sense of peace came to my consciousness. I knew that the idea of Truth had bruised the head of the serpent, and the utter falsity of the suggestion of any life or joy apart from the pursuit of holiness, the knowledge of God, was made plain to me. I rejoiced that another step had been taken out of Egypt (mortal mind) into the promised land of spiritual understanding and completeness, wherein man is the forever expression of purity and spiritual content.
Christian Science Sentinel, October 2, 1909 |
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