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CSEC ON-LINE REFERENCE LIBRARY |
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ANNIE M. KNOTT, CSD
Of old the promise was made to Noah that while the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest . . . shall not cease. In a paragraph where this promise is cited, Mrs. Eddy outlines in mental terms the great world-struggle and says (Science and Health, p. 96), Love will finally mark the hour of harmony, and spiritualization will follow, for Love is Spirit. In a long discourse found in the thirteenth chapter of Matthew, Jesus says, The harvest is the end of the world. This would imply that many existing conditions have been of slow growth, that is, to mortal sense, and these are the ones which most need to be reckoned with. In Christian Science we know that only good is eternal, but its upspringing in human consciousness often seems to be very slow. Christian Scientists however take refuge in the account of creation given in the first chapter of Genesis, where the seed brings forth after his kind and all the divine creation is pronounced good. In human history we read of the thorns and thistles, but we are told that these are the outward manifestations of disobedience to Gods law on the part of mortals. It may be remarked here that many of the discords which spring up, whether sickness or sin, are due to ignorance of Gods law rather than to wilful transgression; but just the same these must all be rooted up, as the Master declared, not allowed to multiply in the soil of human belief, and this rooting up constitutes in large part the work of the Christian Science practitioner. It is at least an indispensable preliminary to the sowing of the good seed. Long ago Christ Jesus said that the harvest was plenteous but the laborers were few. On another occasion he reminded his disciples that one soweth, and another reapeth, and this is a vital lesson for us today. If we are ever tempted to murmur because the results of our sowing do not quickly appear, we may well ponder Jesus words, I sent you to reap that whereon ye bestowed no labor: other men labored, and ye are entered into their labors. How often do we remind ourselves that we are reaping in gladness that which holy men of olden time sowed in tears, and that our richest harvest of health, holiness, and happiness comes from the fields of spiritual experience sown by Christ Jesus. In admitting this with all thankfulness we must not forget that we were wandering in the barren deserts of material belief until we were led back to the Masters sowing by Mrs. Eddys inspired teachings, and who that knows Christian Science would deny the boundless blessings which have in this way reached humanity, for the reaping of this harvest brings abundant supply for all human need. There are at this hour many indications that the final harvest time draws on apace, the chief of these being the fact that the harvest of the good seed sown by the Son of man is being reaped; also the further fact that when human wisdom fails to deal with the tares, as fail it must, the angels, Gods thoughts passing to man (as we read on page 581 of Science and Health), come to our aid and with divine wisdom make eternal separation between Gods ideas and the children of the wicked one, between this false mortal concept and our true selfhood in Gods likeness. This is the hour of separation, and in Gods way and time will follow the harvest song of rejoicing over the unending triumph of Truth and Love.
Christian Science Sentinel, November 6, 1915 |
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