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Unity
of Good
Caution
in the Truth
Perhaps no doctrine of Christian
Science rouses so much natural doubt and questioning as
this, that God knows no such thing as sin. Indeed, this may
be set down as one of the "things hard to be understood,"
such as the apostle Peter declared were taught by his
fellow-apostle Paul, "which they that are unlearned and
unstable wrest . . . unto their own destruction." (2 Peter
iii. 16.)
Let us then reason together on
this important subject, whose statement in Christian Science
may justly be characterized as wonderful.
Does God know
or behold sin, sickness, and death?
The nature and character of God
is so little apprehended and demonstrated by mortals, that I
counsel my students to defer this infinite inquiry, in their
discussions of Christian Science. In fact, they had better
leave the subject untouched, until they draw nearer to the
divine character, and are practically able to testify, by
their lives, that as they come closer to the true
understanding of God they lose all sense of error.
The Scriptures declare that God
is too pure to behold iniquity (Habakkuk i. 13); but they
also declare that God pitieth them who fear Him; that there
is no place where His voice is not heard; that He is "a very
present help in trouble."
The sinner has no refuge from
sin, except in God, who is his salvation. We must, however,
realize God's presence, power, and love, in order to be
saved from sin. This realization takes away man's fondness
for sin and his pleasure in it; and, lastly, it removes the
pain which accrues to him from it. Then follows this, as the
finale in Science: The sinner loses his sense of sin,
and gains a higher sense of God, in whom there is no sin.
The true man, really
saved, is ready to testify of God in the infinite
penetration of Truth, and can affirm that the Mind which is
good, or God, has no knowledge of sin.
In the same manner the sick lose
their sense of sickness, and gain that spiritual sense of
harmony which contains neither discord nor disease.
According to this same rule, in
divine Science, the dying if they die in the Lord
awake from a sense of death to a sense of Life in
Christ, with a knowledge of Truth and Love beyond what they
possessed before; because their lives have grown so far
toward the stature of manhood in Christ Jesus, that they are
ready for a spiritual transfiguration, through their
affections and understanding.
Those who reach this transition,
called death, without having rightly improved the
lessons of this primary school of mortal existence,
and still believe in matter's reality, pleasure, and pain,
are not ready to understand immortality. Hence they
awake only to another sphere of experience, and must pass
through another probationary state before it can be truly
said of them: "Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord."
They upon whom the second death,
of which we read in the Apocalypse (Revelation xx. 6), hath
no power, are those who have obeyed God's commands, and have
washed their robes white through the sufferings of the flesh
and the triumphs of Spirit. Thus they have reached the goal
in divine Science, by knowing Him in whom they have
believed. This knowledge is not the forbidden fruit of sin,
sickness, and death, but it is the fruit which grows on the
"tree of life." This is the understanding of God, whereby
man is found in the image and likeness of good, not of evil;
of health, not of sickness; of Life, not of death.
God is All-in-all. Hence He is in
Himself only, in His own nature and character, and is
perfect being, or consciousness. He is all the Life and Mind
there is or can be. Within Himself is every embodiment of
Life and Mind.
If He is All, He can have no
consciousness of anything unlike Himself; because, if He is
omnipresent, there can be nothing outside of Himself.
Now this self-same God is our
helper. He pities us. He has mercy upon us, and guides every
event of our careers. He is near to them who adore Him. To
understand Him, without a single taint of our mortal, finite
sense of sin, sickness, or death, is to approach Him and
become like Him.
Truth is God, and in God's law.
This law declares that Truth is All, and there is no error.
This law of Truth destroys every phase of error. To gain a
temporary consciousness of God's law is to feel, in a
certain finite human sense, that God comes to us and pities
us; but the attainment of the understanding of His presence,
through the Science of God, destroys our sense of
imperfection, or of His absence, through a diviner sense
that God is all true consciousness; and this convinces us
that, as we get still nearer Him, we must forever lose our
own consciousness of error.
But how could we lose all
consciousness of error, if God be conscious of it? God has
not forbidden man to know Him; on the contrary, the Father
bids man have the same Mind "which was also in Christ
Jesus," which was certainly the divine Mind; but God
does forbid man's acquaintance with evil. Why? Because evil
is no part of the divine knowledge.
John's Gospel declares (xvii. 3)
that "life eternal" consists in the knowledge of the only
true God, and of Jesus Christ, whom He has sent. Surely from
such an understanding of Science, such knowing, the vision
of sin is wholly excluded.
Nevertheless, at the present
crude hour, no wise men or women will rudely or prematurely
agitate a theme involving the All of infinity.
Rather will they rejoice in the
small understanding they have already gained of the
wholeness of Deity, and work gradually and gently up toward
the perfect thought divine. This meekness will increase
their apprehension of God, because their mental struggles
and pride of opinion will proportionately diminish.
Every one should be encouraged
not to accept any personal opinion on so great a matter, but
to seek the divine Science of this question of Truth by
following upward individual convictions, undisturbed by the
frightened sense of any need of attempting to solve every
Life-problem in a day.
"Great is the mystery of
godliness," says Paul; and mystery involves the
unknown. No stubborn purpose to force conclusions on this
subject will unfold in us a higher sense of Deity; neither
will it promote the Cause of Truth or enlighten the
individual thought.
Let us respect the rights of
conscience and the liberty of the sons of God, so letting
our "moderation be known to all men." Let no enmity, no
untempered controversy, spring up between Christian Science
students and Christians who wholly or partially differ from
them as to the nature of sin and the marvellous unity of man
with God shadowed forth in scientific thought. Rather let
the stately goings of this wonderful part of Truth be left
to the supernal guidance.
"These are but parts of Thy
ways," says Job; and the whole is greater than its parts.
Our present understanding is but "the seed within itself,"
for it is divine Science, "bearing fruit after its kind."
Sooner or later the whole human
race will learn that, in proportion as the spotless selfhood
of God is understood, human nature will be renovated, and
man will receive a higher selfhood, derived from God, and
the redemption of mortals from sin, sickness, and death be
established on everlasting foundations.
The Science of physical harmony,
as now presented to the people in divine light, is radical
enough to promote as forcible collisions of thought as the
age has strength to bear. Until the heavenly law of health,
according to Christian Science, is firmly grounded, even the
thinkers are not prepared to answer intelligently leading
questions about God and sin, and the world is far from ready
to assimilate such a grand and all-absorbing verity
concerning the divine nature and character as is embraced in
the theory of God's blindness to error and ignorance of sin.
No wise mother, though a graduate of Wellesley College, will
talk to her babe about the problems of Euclid.
Not much more than a half-century
ago the assertion of universal salvation provoked discussion
and horror, similar to what our declarations about sin and
Deity must arouse, if hastily pushed to the front while the
platoons of Christian Science are not yet thoroughly drilled
in the plainer manual of their spiritual armament. "Wait
patiently on the Lord;" and in less than another fifty years
His name will be magnified in the apprehension of this new
subject, as already He is glorified in the wide extension of
belief in the impartial grace of God, shown by the
changes at Andover Seminary and in multitudes of other
religious folds.
Nevertheless, though I thus
speak, and from my heart of hearts, it is due both to
Christian Science and myself to make also the following
statement: When I have most clearly seen and most sensibly
felt that the infinite recognizes no disease, this has not
separated me from God, but has so bound me to Him as to
enable me instantaneously to heal a cancer which had eaten
its way to the jugular vein.
In the same spiritual condition I
have been able to replace dislocated joints and raise the
dying to instantaneous health. People are now living who can
bear witness to these cures. Herein is my evidence, from on
high, that the views here promulgated on this subject are
correct.
Certain self-proved propositions
pour into my waiting thought in connection with these
experiences; and here is one such conviction: that an
acknowledgment of the perfection of the infinite Unseen
confers a power nothing else can. An incontestable point in
divine Science is, that because God is All, a realization of
this fact dispels even the sense or consciousness of sin,
and brings us nearer to God, bringing out the highest
phenomena of the All-Mind.
Seedtime
and Harvest
Let another query now be
considered, which gives much trouble to many earnest
thinkers before Science answers it.
Is anything
real of which the physical senses are cognizant?
Everything is as real as you make
it, and no more so. What you see, hear, feel, is a mode of
consciousness, and can have no other reality than the sense
you entertain of it.
It is dangerous to rest upon the
evidence of the senses, for this evidence is not absolute,
and therefore not real, in our sense of the word. All that
is beautiful and good in your individual consciousness is
permanent. That which is not so is illusive and fading. My
insistence upon a proper understanding of the unreality of
matter and evil arises from their deleterious effects,
physical, moral, and intellectual, upon the race.
All forms of error are uprooted
in Science, on the same basis whereby sickness is healed,
namely, by the establishment, through reason,
revelation, and Science, of the nothingness of every claim
of error, even the doctrine of heredity and other physical
causes. You demonstrate the process of Science, and it
proves my view conclusively, that mortal mind is the cause
of all disease. Destroy the mental sense of the disease, and
the disease itself disappears. Destroy the sense of sin, and
sin itself disappears.
Material and sensual
consciousness are mortal. Hence they must, some time and in
some way, be reckoned unreal. That time has partially come,
or my words would not have been spoken. Jesus has made the
way plain, so plain that all are without excuse who
walk not in it; but this way is not the path of physical
science, human philosophy, or mystic psychology.
The talent and genius of the
centuries have wrongly reckoned. They have not based upon
revelation their arguments and conclusions as to the source
and resources of being, its combinations, phenomena,
and outcome, but have built instead upon the sand of
human reason. They have not accepted the simple teaching and
life of Jesus as the only true solution of the perplexing
problem of human existence.
Sometimes it is said, by those
who fail to understand me, that I monopolize; and
this is said because ideas akin to mine have been held by a
few spiritual thinkers in all ages. So they have, but in a
far different form. Healing has gone on continually; yet
healing, as I teach it, has not been practised since the
days of Christ.
What is the cardinal point of the
difference in my metaphysical system? This: that by
knowing the unreality of disease, sin, and death, you
demonstrate the allness of God. This difference wholly
separates my system from all others. The reality of these
so-called existences I deny, because they are not to be
found in God, and this system is built on Him as the sole
cause. It would be difficult to name any previous teachers,
save Jesus and his apostles, who have thus taught.
If there be any monopoly
in my teaching, it lies in this utter reliance upon the one
God, to whom belong all things.
Life is God, or Spirit, the
supersensible eternal. The universe and man are the
spiritual phenomena of this one infinite Mind. Spiritual
phenomena never converge toward aught but infinite Deity.
Their gradations are spiritual and divine; they cannot
collapse, or lapse into their opposites, for God is their
divine Principle. They live, because He lives; and they are
eternally perfect, because He is perfect, and governs them
in the Truth of divine Science, whereof God is the Alpha and
Omega, the centre and circumference.
To attempt the calculation of His
mighty ways, from the evidence before the material senses,
is fatuous. It is like commencing with the minus sign, to
learn the principle of positive mathematics.
God was not in the whirlwind. He
is not the blind force of a material universe. Mortals must
learn this; unless, pursued by their fears, they would
endeavor to hide from His presence under their own
falsities, and call in vain for the mountains of unholiness
to shield them from the penalty of error.
Jesus taught us to walk
over, not into or with, the currents of
matter, or mortal mind. His teachings beard the lions in
their dens. He turned the water into wine, he commanded the
winds, he healed the sick, all in direct opposition
to human philosophy and so-called natural science. He
annulled the laws of matter, showing them to be laws of
mortal mind, not of God. He showed the need of changing this
mind and its abortive laws. He demanded a change of
consciousness and evidence, and effected this change through
the higher laws of God. The palsied hand moved, despite the
boastful sense of physical law and order. Jesus stooped not
to human consciousness, nor to the evidence of the senses.
He heeded not the taunt, "That withered hand looks very real
and feels very real;" but he cut off this vain boasting and
destroyed human pride by taking away the material evidence.
If his patient was a theologian of some bigoted sect, a
physician, or a professor of natural philosophy,
according to the ruder sort then prevalent, he never
thanked Jesus for restoring his senseless hand; but neither
red tape nor indignity hindered the divine process. Jesus
required neither cycles of time nor thought in order to
mature fitness for perfection and its possibilities. He said
that the kingdom of heaven is here, and is included in Mind;
that while ye say, There are yet four months, and
then cometh the harvest, I say, Look up, not down,
for your fields are already white for the harvest; and
gather the harvest by mental, not material processes. The
laborers are few in this vineyard of Mind-sowing and
reaping; but let them apply to the waiting grain the curving
sickle of Mind's eternal circle, and bind it with bands of
Soul.
The
Deep Things of God
Science reverses the evidence of
the senses in theology, on the same principle that it does
in astronomy. Popular theology makes God tributary to man,
coming at human call; whereas the reverse is true in
Science. Men must approach God reverently, doing their own
work in obedience to divine law, if they would fulfil the
intended harmony of being.
The principle of music knows
nothing of discord. God is harmony's selfhood. His universal
laws, His unchangeableness, are not infringed in ethics any
more than in music. To Him there is no moral inharmony; as
we shall learn, proportionately as we gain the true
understanding of Deity. If God could be conscious of sin,
His infinite power would straightway reduce the universe to
chaos.
If God has any real knowledge of
sin, sickness, and death, they must be eternal; since He is,
in the very fibre of His being, "without beginning of years
or end of days." If God knows that which is not permanent,
it follows that He knows something which He must learn to
unknow, for the benefit of our race.
Such a view would bring us upon
an outworn theological platform, which contains such planks
as the divine repentance, and the belief that God must one
day do His work over again, because it was not at first done
aright.
Can it be seriously held, by any
thinker, that long after God made the universe,
earth, man, animals, plants, the sun, the moon, and "the
stars also," He should so gain wisdom and power from
past experience that He could vastly improve upon His own
previous work, as Burgess, the boatbuilder, remedies
in the Volunteer the shortcomings of the Puritan's model?
Christians are commanded to
grow in grace. Was it necessary for God to grow in
grace, that He might rectify His spiritual universe?
The Jehovah of limited Hebrew
faith might need repentance, because His created children
proved sinful; but the New Testament tells us of "the Father
of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of
turning." God is not the shifting vane on the spire, but the
corner-stone of living rock, firmer than everlasting hills.
As God is Mind, if this Mind is
familiar with evil, all cannot be good therein. Our infinite
model would be taken away. What is in eternal Mind must be
reflected in man, Mind's image. How then could man escape,
or hope to escape, from a knowledge which is everlasting in
his creator?
God never said that man would
become better by learning to distinguish evil from good,
but the contrary, that by this knowledge, by man's
first disobedience, came "death into the world, and all our
woe."
"Shall mortal man be more just
than God?" asks the poet-patriarch. May men rid themselves
of an incubus which God never can throw off? Do mortals know
more than God, that they may declare Him absolutely
cognizant of sin?
God created all things, and
pronounced them good. Was evil among these good things? Man
is God's child and image. If God knows evil, so must man, or
the likeness is incomplete, the image marred.
If man must be destroyed by the
knowledge of evil, then his destruction comes through the
very knowledge caught from God, and the creature is punished
for his likeness to his creator.
God is commonly called the
sinless, and man the sinful; but if the
thought of sin could be possible in Deity, would Deity then
be sinless? Would God not of necessity take precedence as
the infinite sinner, and human sin become only an echo of
the divine?
Such vagaries are to be found in
heathen religious history. There are, or have been, devotees
who worship not the good Deity, who will not harm them, but
the bad deity, who seeks to do them mischief, and whom
therefore they wish to bribe with prayers into quiescence,
as a criminal appeases, with a money-bag, the venal officer.
Surely this is no Christian
worship! In Christianity, man bows to the infinite
perfection which he is bidden to imitate. In Truth, such
terms as divine sin and infinite sinner are
unheard-of contradictions, absurdities; but
would they be sheer nonsense, if God has, or can
have, a real knowledge of sin?
Ways
Higher than Our Ways
A lie has only one chance of
successful deception, to be accounted true. Evil
seeks to fasten all error upon God, and so make the lie seem
part of eternal Truth.
Emerson says, "Hitch your wagon
to a star." I say, Be allied to the deific power, and all
that is good will aid your journey, as the stars in their
courses fought against Sisera. (Judges v. 20.) Hourly, in
Christian Science, man thus weds himself with God, or rather
he ratifies a union predestined from all eternity; but evil
ties its wagon-load of offal to the divine chariots,
or seeks so to do, that its vileness may be
christened purity, and its darkness get consolation from
borrowed scintillations.
Jesus distinctly taught the
arrogant Pharisees that, from the beginning, their father,
the devil, was the would-be murderer of Truth. A right
apprehension of the wonderful utterances of him who "spake
as never man spake," would despoil error of its borrowed
plumes, and transform the universe into a home of marvellous
light, "a consummation devoutly to be wished."
Error says God must know evil
because He knows all things; but Holy Writ declares God told
our first parents that in the day when they should partake
of the fruit of evil, they must surely die. Would it not
absurdly follow that God must perish, if He knows evil and
evil necessarily leads to extinction? Rather let us think of
God as saying, I am infinite good; therefore I know not
evil. Dwelling in light, I can see only the brightness of My
own glory.
Error may say that God can never
save man from sin, if He knows and sees it not; but God
says, I am too pure to behold iniquity, and destroy
everything that is unlike Myself.
Many fancy that our heavenly
Father reasons thus: If pain and sorrow were not in My mind,
I could not remedy them, and wipe the tears from the eyes of
My children. Error says you must know grief in order to
console it. Truth, God, says you oftenest console others in
troubles that you have not. Is not our comforter always from
outside and above ourselves?
God says, I show My pity through
divine law, not through human. It is My sympathy with and My
knowledge of harmony (not inharmony) which alone enable Me
to rebuke, and eventually destroy, every supposition of
discord.
Error says God must know death in
order to strike at its root; but God saith, I am
ever-conscious Life, and thus I conquer death; for to be
ever conscious of Life is to be never conscious of death. I
am All. A knowledge of aught beside Myself is impossible.
If such knowledge of evil were
possible to God, it would lower His rank.
With God, knowledge is
necessarily foreknowledge; and foreknowledge
and foreordination must be one, in an infinite Being.
What Deity foreknows, Deity must foreordain;
else He is not omnipotent, and, like ourselves, He foresees
events which are contrary to His creative will, yet which He
cannot avert.
If God knows evil at all, He must
have had foreknowledge thereof; and if He foreknew it, He
must virtually have intended it, or ordered it aforetime,
foreordained it; else how could it have come into the
world?
But this we cannot believe of
God; for if the supreme good could predestine or foreknow
evil, there would be sin in Deity, and this would be the end
of infinite moral unity. "If therefore the light that is in
thee be darkness, how great is that darkness!" On the
contrary, evil is only a delusive deception, without any
actuality which Truth can know.
Rectifications
How is a mistake to be rectified?
By reversal or revision, by seeing it in its proper
light, and then turning it or turning from it.
We undo the statements of error
by reversing them.
Through these three statements,
or misstatements, evil comes into authority:
First: The Lord
created it.
Second: The Lord
knows it.
Third: I am afraid
of it.
By a reverse process of argument
evil must be dethroned:
First: God never
made evil.
Second: He knows it
not.
Third: We therefore
need not fear it.
Try this process, dear inquirer,
and so reach that perfect Love which "casteth out fear," and
then see if this Love does not destroy in you all hate and
the sense of evil. You will awake to the perception of God
as All-in-all. You will find yourself losing the knowledge
and the operation of sin, proportionably as you realize the
divine infinitude and believe that He can see nothing
outside of His own focal distance.
A
Colloquy
In Romans (ii. 15) we read the
apostle's description of mental processes wherein human
thoughts are "the mean while accusing or else excusing one
another." If we observe our mental processes, we shall find
that we are perpetually arguing with ourselves; yet each
mortal is not two personalities, but one.
In like manner good and evil talk
to one another; yet they are not two but one, for evil is
naught, and good only is reality.
Evil. God hath said, "Ye
shall eat of every tree of the garden." If you do not, your
intellect will be circumscribed and the evidence of your
personal senses be denied. This would antagonize individual
consciousness and existence.
Good. The Lord is God.
With Him is no consciousness of evil, because there is
nothing beside Him or outside of Him. Individual
consciousness in man is inseparable from good. There is no
sensible matter, no sense in matter; but there is a
spiritual sense, a sense of Spirit, and this is the only
consciousness belonging to true individuality, or a divine
sense of being.
Evil. Why is this so?
Good. Because man is made
after God's eternal likeness, and this likeness consists in
a sense of harmony and immortality, in which no evil can
possibly dwell. You may eat of the fruit of Godlikeness, but
as to the fruit of ungodliness, which is opposed to Truth,
ye shall not touch it, lest ye die.
Evil. But I would taste
and know error for myself.
Good. Thou shalt not admit
that error is something to know or be known, to eat or be
eaten, to see or be seen, to feel or be felt. To admit the
existence of error would be to admit the truth of a lie.
Evil. But there is
something besides good. God knows that a knowledge of this
something is essential to happiness and life. A lie is as
genuine as Truth, though not so legitimate a child of God.
Whatever exists must come from God, and be important to our
knowledge. Error, even, is His offspring.
Good. Whatever cometh not
from the eternal Spirit, has its origin in the physical
senses and material brains, called human intellect
and will-power, alias intelligent matter.
In Shakespeare's tragedy of King
Lear, it was the traitorous and cruel treatment received by
old Gloster from his bastard son Edmund which makes true the
lines:
The
gods are just, and of our pleasant vices
Make
instruments to scourge us.
His lawful son, Edgar, was to his
father ever loyal. Now God has no bastards to turn again and
rend their Maker. The divine children are born of law and
order, and Truth knows only such.
How well the Shakespearean tale
agrees with the word of Scripture, in Hebrews xii. 7, 8: "If
ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with sons; for
what son is he whom the father chasteneth not? But if ye be
without chastisement, whereof all are partakers, then are ye
bastards, and not sons."
The doubtful
or spurious evidence of the senses is not to be admitted,
especially when they testify concerning Spirit,
whereof they are confessedly incompetent to speak.
Evil. But mortal mind and
sin really exist!
Good. How can they exist,
unless God has created them? And how can He create anything
so wholly unlike Himself and foreign to His nature? An evil
material mind, so-called, can conceive of God only as like
itself, and knowing both evil and good; but a purely good
and spiritual consciousness has no sense whereby to cognize
evil. Mortal mind is the opposite of immortal Mind, and sin
the opposite of goodness. I am the infinite All. From me
proceedeth all Mind, all consciousness, all individuality,
all being. My Mind is divine good, and cannot drift into
evil. To believe in minds many is to depart from the supreme
sense of harmony. Your assumptions insist that there is more
than the one Mind, more than the one God; but verily I say
unto you, God is All-in-all; and you can never be outside of
His oneness.
Evil. I am a finite
consciousness, a material individuality, a mind in
matter, which is both evil and good.
Good. All consciousness is
Mind; and Mind is God, an infinite, and not a finite
consciousness. This consciousness is reflected in individual
consciousness, or man, whose source is infinite Mind. There
is no really finite mind, no finite consciousness. There is
no material substance, for Spirit is all that endureth, and
hence is the only substance. There is, can be, no evil mind,
because Mind is God. God and His ideas that is, God
and the universe constitute all that exists. Man, as
God's offspring, must be spiritual, perfect, eternal.
Evil. I am something
separate from good or God. I am substance. My mind is more
than matter. In my mortal mind, matter becomes conscious,
and is able to see, taste, hear, feel, smell. Whatever
matter thus affirms is mainly correct. If you, O good, deny
this, then I deny your truthfulness. If you say that matter
is unconscious, you stultify my intellect, insult my
conscience, and dispute self-evident facts; for nothing can
be clearer than the testimony of the five senses.
Good. Spirit is the only
substance. Spirit is God, and God is good; hence good is the
only substance, the only Mind. Mind is not, cannot be, in
matter. It sees, hears, feels, tastes, smells as Mind, and
not as matter. Matter cannot talk; and hence, whatever it
appears to say of itself is a lie. This lie, that Mind can
be in matter, claiming to be something beside God,
denying Truth and its demonstration in Christian Science,
this lie I declare an illusion. This denial enlarges
the human intellect by removing its evidence from sense to
Soul, and from finiteness into infinity. It honors conscious
human individuality by showing God as its source.
Evil. I am a creator,
but upon a material, not a spiritual basis. I give
life, and I can destroy life.
Good. Evil is not a
creator. God, good, is the only creator. Evil is not
conscious or conscientious Mind; it is not individual, not
actual. Evil is not spiritual, and therefore has no
groundwork in Life, whose only source is Spirit. The
elements which belong to the eternal All, Life,
Truth, Love, evil can never take away.
Evil. I am intelligent
matter; and matter is egoistic, having its own innate
selfhood and the capacity to evolve mind. God is in matter,
and matter reproduces God. From Him come my forms, near or
remote. This is my honor, that God is my author, authority,
governor, disposer. I am proud to be in His outstretched
hands, and I shirk all responsibility for myself as evil,
and for my varying manifestations.
Good. You mistake, O evil!
God is not your authority and law. Neither is He the author
of the material changes, the phantasma, a belief in
which leads to such teaching as we find in the hymn-verse so
often sung in church:
Chance
and change are busy ever,
Man decays and ages move;
But His mercy waneth never,
God is wisdom, God is love.
Now if it be true that God's
power never waneth, how can it be also true that
chance and change are universal factors,
that man decays? Many ordinary Christians
protest against this stanza of Bowring's, and its sentiment
is foreign to Christian Science. If God be changeless
goodness, as sings another line of this hymn, what place
has chance in the divine economy? Nay, there is in
God naught fantastic. All is real, all is serious. The
phantasmagoria is a product of human dreams.
The
Ego
From various friends comes
inquiry as to the meaning of a word employed in the
foregoing colloquy.
There are two English words,
often used as if they were synonyms, which really have a
shade of difference between them.
An egotist is one who
talks much of himself. Egotism implies vanity and
self-conceit.
Egoism is a more
philosophical word, signifying a passionate love of self,
which doubts all existence except its own. An egoist,
therefore, is one uncertain of everything except his own
existence.
Applying these distinctions to
evil and God, we shall find that evil is egotistic,
boastful, but fleeing like a shadow at daybreak;
while God is egoistic, knowing only His own
all-presence, all-knowledge, all-power.
Soul
We read in the Hebrew Scriptures,
"The soul that sinneth, it shall die."
What is Soul? Is it a reality
within the mortal body? Who can prove that? Anatomy has not
descried nor described Soul. It was never touched by the
scalpel nor cut with the dissecting-knife. The five physical
senses do not cognize it.
Who, then, dares define Soul as
something within man? As well might you declare some old
castle to be peopled with demons or angels, though never a
light or form was discerned therein, and not a spectre had
ever been seen going in or coming out.
The common hypotheses about souls
are even more vague than ordinary material conjectures, and
have less basis; because material theories are built on the
evidence of the material senses.
Soul must be God; since we learn
Soul only as we learn God, by spiritualization. As the five
senses take no cognizance of Soul, so they take no
cognizance of God. Whatever cannot be taken in by mortal
mind by human reflection, reason, or belief
must be the unfathomable Mind, which "eye hath not seen, nor
ear heard." Soul stands in this relation to every hypothesis
as to its human character.
If Soul sins, it is a sinner, and
Jewish law condemned the sinner to death, as does all
criminal law, to a certain extent.
Spirit never sins, because Spirit
is God. Hence, as Spirit, Soul is sinless, and is God.
Therefore there is, there can be, no spiritual death.
Transcending the evidence of the
material senses, Science declares God to be the Soul of all
being, the only Mind and intelligence in the universe. There
is but one God, one Soul, or Mind, and that one is infinite,
supplying all that is absolutely immutable and eternal,
Truth, Life, Love.
Science reveals Soul as that
which the senses cannot define from any standpoint of their
own. What the physical senses miscall soul, Christian
Science defines as material sense; and herein lies the
discrepancy between the true Science of Soul and that
material sense of a soul which that very sense declares can
never be seen or measured or weighed or touched by
physicality.
Often we can elucidate the deep
meaning of the Scriptures by reading sense instead of
soul, as in the Forty-second Psalm: "Why art thou
cast down, O my soul [sense]? . . . Hope thou in God
[Soul]: for I shall yet praise Him, who is the
health of my countenance, and my God [my Soul,
immortality]."
The Virgin-mother's sense being
uplifted to behold Spirit as the sole origin of man, she
exclaimed, "My soul [spiritual sense] doth magnify
the Lord."
Human language constantly uses
the word soul for sense. This it does under
the delusion that the senses can reverse the spiritual facts
of Science, whereas Science reverses the testimony of the
material senses.
Soul is Life, and being spiritual
Life, never sins. Material sense is the so-called material
life. Hence this lower sense sins and suffers, according to
material belief, till divine understanding takes away this
belief and restores Soul, or spiritual Life. "He restoreth
my soul," says David.
In his first epistle to the
Corinthians (xv. 45) Paul writes: "The first man Adam was
made a living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening
spirit." The apostle refers to the second Adam as the
Messiah, our blessed Master, whose interpretation of God and
His creation by restoring the spiritual sense of man
as immortal instead of mortal made humanity
victorious over death and the grave.
When I discovered the power of
Spirit to break the cords of matter, through a change in the
mortal sense of things, then I discerned the last Adam as a
quickening Spirit, and understood the meaning of the
declaration of Holy Writ, "The first shall be last,"
the living Soul shall be found a quickening Spirit; or,
rather, shall reflect the Life of the divine Arbiter.
There
is no Matter
"God is a Spirit" (or, more
accurately translated, "God is Spirit"), declares the
Scripture (John iv. 24), "and they that worship Him must
worship Him in spirit and in truth."
If God is Spirit, and God is All,
surely there can be no matter; for the divine All must be
Spirit.
The tendency of Christianity is
to spiritualize thought and action. The demonstrations of
Jesus annulled the claims of matter, and overruled laws
material as emphatically as they annihilated sin.
According to Christian Science,
the first idolatrous claim of sin is, that matter
exists; the second, that matter is substance; the
third, that matter has intelligence; and the
fourth, that matter, being so endowed, produces life
and death.
Hence my conscientious position,
in the denial of matter, rests on the fact that matter
usurps the authority of God, Spirit; and the nature and
character of matter, the antipode of Spirit, include all
that denies and defies Spirit, in quantity or quality.
This subject can be enlarged. It
can be shown, in detail, that evil does not obtain in
Spirit, God; and that God, or good, is Spirit alone;
whereas, evil does, according to belief, obtain in
matter; and that evil is a false claim, false to God,
false to Truth and Life. Hence the claim of matter usurps
the prerogative of God, saying, "I am a creator. God made
me, and I make man and the material universe."
Spirit is the only creator, and
man, including the universe, is His spiritual concept. By
matter is commonly meant mind, not the highest Mind,
but a false form of mind. This so-called mind and matter
cannot be separated in origin and action.
What is this mind? It is not the
Mind of Spirit; for spiritualization of thought destroys all
sense of matter as substance, Life, or intelligence, and
enthrones God in the eternal qualities of His being.
This lower, misnamed mind is a
false claim, a suppositional mind, which I prefer to call
mortal mind. True Mind is immortal. This mortal mind
declares itself material, in sin, sickness, and death,
virtually saying, "I am the opposite of Spirit, of holiness,
harmony, and Life."
To this declaration Christian
Science responds, even as did our Master: "You were a
murderer from the beginning. The truth abode not in you. You
are a liar, and the father of it." Here it appears that a
liar was in the neuter gender, neither
masculine nor feminine. Hence it was not man (the image of
God) who lied, but the false claim to personality, which I
call mortal mind; a claim which Christian Science
uncovers, in order to demonstrate the falsity of the claim.
There are lesser arguments which
prove matter to be identical with mortal mind, and this mind
a lie.
The physical senses (matter
really having no sense) give the only pretended testimony
there can be as to the existence of a substance called
matter. Now these senses, being material, can only
testify from their own evidence, and concerning themselves;
yet we have it on divine authority: "If I bear witness of
myself, my witness is not true." (John v. 31.)
In other words: matter testifies
of itself, "I am matter;" but unless matter is mind, it
cannot talk or testify; and if it is mind, it is certainly
not the Mind of Christ, not the Mind that is identical with
Truth.
Brain, thus assuming to testify,
is only matter within the skull, and is believed to be mind
only through error and delusion. Examine that form of matter
called brains, and you find no mind therein. Hence
the logical sequence, that there is in reality neither
matter nor mortal mind, but that the self-testimony of the
physical senses is false.
Examine these witnesses for
error, or falsity, and observe the foundations of their
testimony, and you will find them divided in evidence,
mocking the Scripture (Matthew xviii. 16), "In the mouth of
two or three witnesses every word may be established."
Sight.
Mortal mind declares that matter sees through the
organizations of matter, or that mind sees by means of
matter. Disorganize the so-called material structure, and
then mortal mind says, "I cannot see;" and declares that
matter is the master of mind, and that non-intelligence
governs. Mortal mind admits that it sees only material
images, pictured on the eye's retina.
What then is the line of the
syllogism? It must be this: That matter is not seen; that
mortal mind cannot see without matter; and therefore that
the whole function of material sight is an illusion, a lie.
Here comes in the summary of the
whole matter, wherewith we started: that God is All, and God
is Spirit; therefore there is nothing but Spirit; and
consequently there is no matter.
Touch.
Take another train of reasoning. Mortal mind says that
matter cannot feel matter; yet put your finger on a burning
coal, and the nerves, material nerves, do feel
matter.
Again I ask: What evidence does
mortal mind afford that matter is substantial, is hot or
cold? Take away mortal mind, and matter could not feel what
it calls substance. Take away matter, and mortal mind
could not cognize its own so-called substance, and this
so-called mind would have no identity. Nothing would remain
to be seen or felt.
What is substance? What is the
reality of God and the universe? Immortal Mind is the real
substance, Spirit, Life, Truth, and Love.
Taste.
Mortal mind says, "I taste; and this is sweet, this is
sour." Let mortal mind change, and say that sour is sweet,
and so it would be. If every mortal mind believed
sweet to be sour, it would be so; for the qualities of
matter are but qualities of mortal mind. Change the mind,
and the quality changes. Destroy the belief, and the quality
disappears.
The so-called material senses are
found, upon examination, to be mortally mental, instead of
material. Reduced to its proper denomination, matter is
mortal mind; yet, strictly speaking, there is no mortal
mind, for Mind is immortal, and is not matter, but Spirit.
Force.
What is gravitation? Mortal mind says gravitation is a
material power, or force. I ask, Which was first, matter or
power? That which was first was God, immortal Mind, the
Parent of all. But God is Truth, and the forces of
Truth are moral and spiritual, not physical. They are not
the merciless forces of matter. What then are the
so-called forces of matter? They are the phenomena of mortal
mind, and matter and mortal mind are one; and this one is a
misstatement of Mind, God.
A molecule, as matter, is not
formed by Spirit; for Spirit is spiritual
consciousness alone. Hence this spiritual consciousness can
form nothing unlike itself, Spirit, and Spirit is the only
creator. The material atom is an outlined falsity of
consciousness, which can gather additional evidence of
consciousness and life only as it adds lie to lie. This
process it names material attraction, and endows with the
double capacity of creator and creation.
From the beginning this lie was
the false witness against the fact that Spirit is All,
beside which there is no other existence. The use of a lie
is that it unwittingly confirms Truth, when handled by
Christian Science, which reverses false testimony and gains
a knowledge of God from opposite facts, or phenomena.
This whole subject is met and
solved by Christian Science according to Scripture. Thus we
see that Spirit is Truth and eternal reality; that matter is
the opposite of Spirit, referred to in the New
Testament as the flesh at war with Spirit; hence, that
matter is erroneous, transitory, unreal.
A further proof of this is the
demonstration, according to Christian Science, that by the
reduction and the rejection of the claims of matter (instead
of acquiescence therein) man is improved physically,
mentally, morally, spiritually.
To deny the existence or reality
of matter, and yet admit the reality of moral evil, sin, or
to say that the divine Mind is conscious of evil, yet is not
conscious of matter, is erroneous. This error stultifies the
logic of divine Science, and must interfere with its
practical demonstration.
Is
There no Death?
Jesus not only declared himself
"the way" and "the truth," but also "the life." God is Life;
and as there is but one God, there can be but one Life. Must
man die, then, in order to inherit eternal life and enter
heaven?
Our Master said, "The kingdom of
heaven is at hand." Then God and heaven, or Life, are
present, and death is not the real stepping-stone to Life
and happiness. They are now and here; and a change in human
consciousness, from sin to holiness, would reveal this
wonder of being. Because God is ever present, no boundary of
time can separate us from Him and the heaven of His
presence; and because God is Life, all Life is eternal.
Is it unchristian to believe
there is no death? Not unless it be a sin to believe that
God is Life and All-in-all. Evil and disease do not testify
of Life and God.
Human beings are physically
mortal, but spiritually immortal. The evil accompanying
physical personality is illusive and mortal; but the good
attendant upon spiritual individuality is immortal. Existing
here and now, this unseen individuality is real and eternal.
The so-called material senses, and the mortal mind which is
misnamed man, take no cognizance of spiritual
individuality, which manifests immortality, whose Principle
is God.
To God alone belong the
indisputable realities of being. Death is a contradiction of
Life, or God; therefore it is not in accordance with His
law, but antagonistic thereto.
Death, then, is error, opposed to
Truth, even the unreality of mortal mind, not the
reality of that Mind which is Life. Error has no life, and
is virtually without existence. Life is real; and all is
real which proceeds from Life and is inseparable from it.
It is unchristian to believe in
the transition called material death, since matter
has no life, and such misbelief must enthrone another power,
an imaginary life, above the living and true God. A material
sense of life robs God, by declaring that not He alone is
Life, but that something else also is life, thus
affirming the existence and rulership of more gods than one.
This idolatrous and false sense of life is all that dies, or
appears to die.
The opposite understanding of God
brings to light Life and immortality. Death has no quality
of Life; and no divine fiat commands us to believe in aught
which is unlike God, or to deny that He is Life eternal.
Life as God, moral and spiritual
good, is not seen in the mineral, vegetable, or animal
kingdoms. Hence the inevitable conclusion that Life is not
in these kingdoms, and that the popular views to this effect
are not up to the Christian standard of Life, or equal to
the reality of being, whose Principle is God.
When "the Word" is "made flesh"
among mortals, the Truth of Life is rendered practical on
the body. Eternal Life is partially understood; and
sickness, sin, and death yield to holiness, health, and
Life, that is, to God. The lust of the flesh and the
pride of physical life must be quenched in the divine
essence, that omnipotent Love which annihilates hate,
that Life which knows no death.
"Who hath believed our report?"
Who understands these sayings? He to whom the arm of the
Lord is revealed. He loves them from whom divine Science
removes human weakness by divine strength, and who unveil
the Messiah, whose name is Wonderful.
Man has no underived power. That
selfhood is false which opposes itself to God, claims
another father, and denies spiritual sonship; but as many as
receive the knowledge of God in Science must reflect, in
some degree, the power of Him who gave and giveth man
dominion over all the earth.
As soldiers of the cross we must
be brave, and let Science declare the immortal status of
man, and deny the evidence of the material senses, which
testify that man dies.
As the image of God, or Life, man
forever reflects and embodies Life, not death. The material
senses testify falsely. They presuppose that God is good and
that man is evil, that Deity is deathless, but that man
dies, losing the divine likeness.
Science and material sense
conflict at all points, from the revolution of the earth to
the fall of a sparrow. It is mortality only that dies.
To say that you and I, as
mortals, will not enter this dark shadow of material sense,
called death, is to assert what we have not proved;
but man in Science never dies. Material sense, or the belief
of life in matter, must perish, in order to prove man
deathless.
As Truth supersedes error, and
bears the fruits of Love, this understanding of Truth
subordinates the belief in death, and demonstrates Life as
imperative in the divine order of being.
Jesus declares that they who
believe his sayings will never die; therefore mortals can no
more receive everlasting life by believing in death, than
they can become perfect by believing in imperfection and
living imperfectly.
Life is God, and God is good.
Hence Life abides in man, if man abides in good, if he lives
in God, who holds Life by a spiritual and not by a material
sense of being.
A sense of death is not requisite
to a proper or true sense of Life, but beclouds it. Death
can never alarm or even appear to him who fully understands
Life. The death-penalty comes through our ignorance of Life,
of that which is without beginning and without end,
and is the punishment of this ignorance.
Holding a material sense of Life,
and lacking the spiritual sense of it, mortals die, in
belief, and regard all things as temporal. A sense material
apprehends nothing strictly belonging to the nature and
office of Life. It conceives and beholds nothing but
mortality, and has but a feeble concept of immortality.
In order to reach the true
knowledge and consciousness of Life, we must learn it of
good. Of evil we can never learn it, because sin shuts out
the real sense of Life, and brings in an unreal sense of
suffering and death.
Knowledge of evil, or belief in
it, involves a loss of the true sense of good, God; and to
know death, or to believe in it, involves a temporary loss
of God, the infinite and only Life.
Resurrection from the dead (that
is, from the belief in death) must come to all sooner or
later; and they who have part in this resurrection are they
upon whom the second death has no power.
The sweet and sacred sense of the
permanence of man's unity with his Maker can illumine our
present being with a continual presence and power of good,
opening wide the portal from death into Life; and when this
Life shall appear "we shall be like Him," and we shall go to
the Father, not through death, but through Life; not through
error, but through Truth.
All Life is Spirit, and Spirit
can never dwell in its antagonist, matter. Life, therefore,
is deathless, because God cannot be the opposite of Himself.
In Christian Science there is no matter; hence matter
neither lives nor dies. To the senses, matter appears to
both live and die, and these phenomena appear to go on ad
infinitum; but such a theory implies perpetual
disagreement with Spirit.
Life, God, being everywhere, it
must follow that death can be nowhere; because there is no
place left for it.
Soul, Spirit, is deathless.
Matter, sin, and death are not the outcome of Spirit,
holiness, and Life. What then are matter, sin, and death?
They can be nothing except the results of material
consciousness; but material consciousness can have no real
existence, because it is not a living that is to say,
a divine and intelligent reality.
That man must be vicious before
he can be virtuous, dying before he can be deathless,
material before he can be spiritual, is an error of the
senses; for the very opposite of this error is the genuine
Science of being.
Man, in Science, is as perfect
and immortal now, as when "the morning stars sang together,
and all the sons of God shouted for joy."
With Christ, Life was not merely
a sense of existence, but a sense of might and ability to
subdue material conditions. No wonder "people were
astonished at his doctrine; for he taught them as one having
authority, and not as the scribes."
As defined by Jesus, Life had no
beginning; nor was it the result of organization, or of an
infusion of power into matter. To him, Life was Spirit.
Truth, defiant of error or
matter, is Science, dispelling a false sense and leading man
into the true sense of selfhood and Godhood; wherein the
mortal does not develop the immortal, nor the material the
spiritual, but wherein true manhood and womanhood go forth
in the radiance of eternal being and its perfections,
unchanged and unchangeable.
This generation seems too
material for any strong demonstration over death, and hence
cannot bring out the infinite reality of Life,
namely, that there is no death, but only Life. The present
mortal sense of being is too finite for anchorage in
infinite good, God, because mortals now believe in the
possibility that Life can be evil.
The achievement of this ultimatum
of Science, complete triumph over death, requires time and
immense spiritual growth.
I have by no means spoken of
myself, I cannot speak of myself as "sufficient for
these things." I insist only upon the fact, as it exists in
divine Science, that man dies not, and on the words of the
Master in support of this verity, words which can
never "pass away till all be fulfilled."
Because of these profound reasons
I urge Christians to have more faith in living than in
dying. I exhort them to accept Christ's promise, and unite
the influence of their own thoughts with the power of his
teachings, in the Science of being. This will interpret the
divine power to human capacity, and enable us to
apprehend, or lay hold upon, "that for which," as
Paul says in the third chapter of Philippians, we are also
"apprehended of [or grasped by] Christ Jesus,"
the ever-present Life which knows no death, the
omnipresent Spirit which knows no matter.
Personal
Statements
Many misrepresentations are made
concerning my doctrines, some of which are as unkind and
unjust as they are untrue; but I can only repeat the
Master's words: "They know not what they do."
The foundations of these
assertions, like the structure raised thereupon, are vain
shadows, repeating if the popular couplet may be so
paraphrased
The
old, old story,
Of Satan and his lie.
In the days of Eden, humanity was
misled by a false personality, a talking snake,
according to Biblical history. This pretender taught
the opposite of Truth. This abortive ego, this fable of
error, is laid bare in Christian Science.
Human theories call, or miscall,
this evil a child of God. Philosophy would multiply and
subdivide personality into everything that exists, whether
expressive or not expressive of the Mind which is God. Human
wisdom says of evil, "The Lord knows it!" thus carrying out
the serpent's assurance: "In the day ye eat thereof
[when you, lie, get the floor], then your eyes shall
be opened [you shall be conscious matter], and ye
shall be as gods, knowing good and evil [you shall
believe a lie, and this lie shall seem truth]."
Bruise the head of this serpent,
as Truth and "the woman" are doing in Christian Science, and
it stings your heel, rears its crest proudly, and goes on
saying, "Am I not myself? Am I not mind and matter, person
and thing?" We should answer: "Yes! you are indeed yourself,
and need most of all to be rid of this self, for it is very
far from God's likeness."
The egotist must come down and
learn, in humility, that God never made evil. An evil ego,
and his assumed power, are falsities. These falsities need a
denial. The falsity is the teaching that matter can be
conscious; and conscious matter implies pantheism. This
pantheism I unveil. I try to show its all-pervading presence
in certain forms of theology and philosophy, where it
becomes error's affirmative to Truth's negative. Anatomy and
physiology make mind-matter a habitant of the cerebellum,
whence it telegraphs and telephones over its own body, and
goes forth into an imaginary sphere of its own creation and
limitation, until it finally dies in order to better itself.
But Truth never dies, and death is not the goal which Truth
seeks.
The evil ego has but the
visionary substance of matter. It lacks the substance of
Spirit, Mind, Life, Soul. Mortal mind is
self-creative and self-sustained, until it becomes
non-existent. It has no origin or existence in Spirit,
immortal Mind, or good. Matter is not truly conscious; and
mortal error, called mind, is not Godlike. These are
the shadowy and false, which neither think nor speak.
All Truth is from inspiration and
revelation, from Spirit, not from flesh.
We do not see much of the real
man here, for he is God's man; while ours is man's man.
I do not deny, I maintain, the
individuality and reality of man; but I do so on a divine
Principle, not based on a human conception and birth. The
scientific man and his Maker are here; and you would be none
other than this man, if you would subordinate the fleshly
perceptions to the spiritual sense and source of being.
Jesus said, "I and my Father are
one." He taught no selfhood as existent in matter. In his
identity there is no evil. Individuality and Life were real
to him only as spiritual and good, not as material or evil.
This incensed the rabbins against Jesus, because it was an
indignity to their personality; and this personality they
regarded as both good and evil, as is still claimed by the
worldly-wise. To them evil was even more the ego than was
the good. Sin, sickness, and death were evil's concomitants.
This evil ego they believed must extend throughout the
universe, as being equally identical and self-conscious with
God. This ego was in the earthquake, thunderbolt, and
tempest.
The Pharisees fought Jesus on
this issue. It furnished the battle-ground of the past, as
it does of the present. The fight was an effort to enthrone
evil. Jesus assumed the burden of disproof by destroying
sin, sickness, and death, to sight and sense.
Nowhere in Scripture is evil
connected with good, the being of God, and with every
passing hour it is losing its false claim to existence or
consciousness. All that can exist is God and His
idea.
Credo
It is fair to ask of every one a
reason for the faith within. Though it be but to repeat my
twice-told tale, nay, the tale already told a hundred
times, yet ask, and I will answer.
Do you believe
in God?
I believe more in Him than do
most Christians, for I have no faith in any other thing or
being. He sustains my individuality. Nay, more He
is my individuality and my Life. Because He lives, I
live. He heals all my ills, destroys my iniquities, deprives
death of its sting, and robs the grave of its victory.
To me God is All. He is best
understood as Supreme Being, as infinite and conscious Life,
as the affectionate Father and Mother of all He creates; but
this divine Parent no more enters into His creation than the
human father enters into his child. His creation is not the
Ego, but the reflection of the Ego. The Ego is God Himself,
the infinite Soul.
I believe that of which I am
conscious through the understanding, however faintly able to
demonstrate Truth and Love.
Do you believe
in man?
I believe in the individual man,
for I understand that man is as definite and eternal as God,
and that man is coexistent with God, as being the eternally
divine idea. This is demonstrable by the simple appeal to
human consciousness.
But I believe less in the sinner,
wrongly named man. The more I understand true
humanhood, the more I see it to be sinless, as
ignorant of sin as is the perfect Maker.
To me the reality and substance
of being are good, and nothing else. Through the
eternal reality of existence I reach, in thought, a
glorified consciousness of the only living God and the
genuine man. So long as I hold evil in consciousness, I
cannot be wholly good.
You cannot simultaneously serve
the mammon of materiality and the God of spirituality. There
are not two realities of being, two opposite states of
existence. One should appear real to us, and the other
unreal, or we lose the Science of being. Standing in no
basic Truth, we make "the worse appear the better reason,"
and the unreal masquerades as the real, in our thought.
Evil is without Principle. Being
destitute of Principle, it is devoid of Science. Hence it is
undemonstrable, without proof. This gives me a clearer right
to call evil a negation, than to affirm it to be something
which God sees and knows, but which He straightway commands
mortals to shun or relinquish, lest it destroy them. This
notion of the destructibility of Mind implies the
possibility of its defilement; but how can infinite Mind be
defiled?
Do you
believe in matter?
I believe in matter only as I
believe in evil, that it is something to be denied and
destroyed to human consciousness, and is unknown to the
Divine. We should watch and pray that we enter not into the
temptation of pantheistic belief in matter as sensible mind.
We should subjugate it as Jesus did, by a dominant
understanding of Spirit.
At best, matter is only a
phenomenon of mortal mind, of which evil is the highest
degree; but really there is no such thing as mortal
mind, though we are compelled to use the phrase
in the endeavor to express the underlying thought.
In reality there are no material
states or stages of consciousness, and matter has neither
Mind nor sensation. Like evil, it is destitute of Mind, for
Mind is God.
The less consciousness of evil or
matter mortals have, the easier it is for them to evade sin,
sickness, and death, which are but states of false
belief, and awake from the troubled dream, a
consciousness which is without Mind or Maker.
Matter and evil cannot be
conscious, and consciousness should not be evil. Adopt this
rule of Science, and you will discover the material origin,
growth, maturity, and death of sinners, as the history of
man, disappears, and the everlasting facts of being appear,
wherein man is the reflection of immutable good.
Reasoning from false premises,
that Life is material, that immortal Soul is sinful,
and hence that sin is eternal, the reality of being
is neither seen, felt, heard, nor understood. Human
philosophy and human reason can never make one hair white or
black, except in belief; whereas the demonstration of God,
as in Christian Science, is gained through Christ as perfect
manhood.
In pantheism the world is bereft
of its God, whose place is ill supplied by the pretentious
usurpation, by matter, of the heavenly sovereignty.
What say you
of woman?
Man is the generic term for all
humanity. Woman is the highest species of man, and this word
is the generic term for all women; but not one of all these
individualities is an Eve or an Adam. They have none of them
lost their harmonious state, in the economy of God's wisdom
and government.
The Ego is divine consciousness,
eternally radiating throughout all space in the idea of God,
good, and not of His opposite, evil. The Ego is revealed as
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; but the full Truth is found
only in divine Science, where we see God as Life, Truth, and
Love. In the scientific relation of man to God, man is
reflected not as human soul, but as the divine ideal, whose
Soul is not in body, but is God, the divine Principle
of man. Hence Soul is sinless and immortal, in
contradistinction to the supposition that there can be
sinful souls or immortal sinners.
This Science of God and man is
the Holy Ghost, which reveals and sustains the unbroken and
eternal harmony of both God and the universe. It is the
kingdom of heaven, the ever-present reign of harmony,
already with us. Hence the need that human consciousness
should become divine, in the coincidence of God and man, in
contradistinction to the false consciousness of both good
and evil, God and devil, of man separated from his
Maker. This is the precious redemption of soul, as mortal
sense, through Christ's immortal sense of Truth, which
presents Truth's spiritual idea, man and
woman.
What say you
of evil?
God is not the so-called ego of
evil; for evil, as a supposition, is the father of itself,
of the material world, the flesh, and the devil. From
this falsehood arise the self-destroying elements of this
world, its unkind forces, its tempests, lightnings,
earthquakes, poisons, rabid beasts, fatal reptiles, and
mortals.
Why are earth and mortals so
elaborate in beauty, color, and form, if God has no part in
them? By the law of opposites. The most beautiful blossom is
often poisonous, and the most beautiful mansion is sometimes
the home of vice. The senses, not God, Soul, form the
condition of beautiful evil, and the supposed modes of
self-conscious matter, which make a beautiful lie. Now a lie
takes its pattern from Truth, by reversing Truth. So evil
and all its forms are inverted good. God never made them;
but the lie must say He made them, or it would not be evil.
Being a lie, it would be truthful to call itself a lie; and
by calling the knowledge of evil good, and greatly to be
desired, it constitutes the lie an evil.
The reality and individuality of
man are good and God-made, and they are here to be seen and
demonstrated; it is only the evil belief that renders them
obscure.
Matter and evil are
anti-Christian, the antipodes of Science. To say that Mind
is material, or that evil is Mind, is a misapprehension of
being, a mistake which will die of its own delusion;
for being self-contradictory, it is also self-destructive.
The harmony of man's being is not built on such false
foundations, which are no more logical, philosophical, or
scientific than would be the assertion that the rule of
addition is the rule of subtraction, and that sums done
under both rules would have one quotient.
Man's individuality is not a
mortal mind or sinner; or else he has lost his true
individuality as a perfect child of God. Man's Father is not
a mortal mind and a sinner; or else the immortal and
unerring Mind, God, is not his Father; but God is
man's origin and loving Father, hence that saying of Jesus,
"Call no man your father upon the earth: for one is your
Father, which is in heaven."
The bright gold of Truth is
dimmed by the doctrine of mind in matter.
To say there is a false
claim, called sickness, is to admit all there is of
sickness; for it is nothing but a false claim. To be healed,
one must lose sight of a false claim. If the claim be
present to the thought, then disease becomes as tangible as
any reality. To regard sickness as a false claim, is to
abate the fear of it; but this does not destroy the
so-called fact of the claim. In order to be whole, we
must be insensible to every claim of error.
As with sickness, so is it with
sin. To admit that sin has any claim whatever, just or
unjust, is to admit a dangerous fact. Hence the fact must be
denied; for if sin's claim be allowed in any degree, then
sin destroys the at-one-ment, or oneness with God,
a unity which sin recognizes as its most potent and
deadly enemy.
If God knows sin, even as a false
claimant, then acquaintance with that claimant becomes
legitimate to mortals, and this knowledge would not be
forbidden; but God forbade man to know evil at the very
beginning, when Satan held it up before man as something
desirable and a distinct addition to human wisdom, because
the knowledge of evil would make man a god, a
representation that God both knew and admitted the dignity
of evil.
Which is right, God, who
condemned the knowledge of sin and disowned its
acquaintance, or the serpent, who pushed that claim with the
glittering audacity of diabolical and sinuous logic?
Suffering
from Others' Thoughts
Jesus accepted the one fact
whereby alone the rule of Life can be demonstrated,
namely, that there is no death.
In his real self he bore no
infirmities. Though "a man of sorrows, and acquainted with
grief," as Isaiah says of him, he bore not his sins,
but ours, "in his own body on the tree." "He was
bruised for our iniquities; . . . and with his
stripes we are healed."
He was the Way-shower; and
Christian Scientists who would demonstrate "the way" must
keep close to his path, that they may win the prize. "The
way," in the flesh, is the suffering which leads out of the
flesh. "The way," in Spirit, is "the way" of Life, Truth,
and Love, redeeming us from the false sense of the flesh and
the wounds it bears. This threefold Messiah reveals the
self-destroying ways of error and the life-giving way of
Truth.
Job's faith and hope gained him
the assurance that the so-called sufferings of the flesh are
unreal. We shall learn how false are the pleasures and pains
of material sense, and behold the truth of being, as
expressed in his conviction, "Yet in my flesh shall I see
God;" that is, Now and here shall I behold God, divine Love.
The chaos of mortal mind is made
the stepping-stone to the cosmos of immortal Mind.
If Jesus suffered, as the
Scriptures declare, it must have been from the mentality of
others; since all suffering comes from mind, not from
matter, and there could be no sin or suffering in the Mind
which is God. Not his own sins, but the sins of the world,
"crucified the Lord of glory," and "put him to an open
shame."
Holding a quickened sense of
false environment, and suffering from mentality in
opposition to Truth, are significant of that state of mind
which the actual understanding of Christian Science first
eliminates and then destroys.
In the divine order of Science
every follower of Christ shares his cup of sorrows. He also
suffereth in the flesh, and from the mentality which opposes
the law of Spirit; but the divine law is supreme, for it
freeth him from the law of sin and death.
Prophets and apostles suffered
from the thoughts of others. Their conscious being was not
fully exempt from physicality and the sense of sin.
Until he awakes from his
delusion, he suffers least from sin who is a hardened
sinner. The hypocrite's affections must first be made to
fret in their chains; and the pangs of hell must lay hold of
him ere he can change from flesh to Spirit, become
acquainted with that Love which is without dissimulation and
endureth all things. Such mental conditions as ingratitude,
lust, malice, hate, constitute the miasma of earth. More
obnoxious than Chinese stenchpots are these dispositions
which offend the spiritual sense.
Anatomically considered, the
design of the material senses is to warn mortals of the
approach of danger by the pain they feel and occasion; but
as this sense disappears it foresees the impending doom and
foretells the pain. Man's refuge is in spirituality, "under
the shadow of the Almighty."
The cross is the central emblem
of human history. Without it there is neither temptation nor
glory. When Jesus turned and said, "Who hath touched me?" he
must have felt the influence of the woman's thought; for it
is written that he felt that "virtue had gone out of him."
His pure consciousness was discriminating, and rendered this
infallible verdict; but he neither held her error by
affinity nor by infirmity, for it was detected and
dismissed.
This gospel of suffering brought
life and bliss. This is earth's Bethel in stone, its
pillow, supporting the ladder which reaches heaven.
Suffering was the confirmation of
Paul's faith. Through "a thorn in the flesh" he learned that
spiritual grace was sufficient for him.
Peter rejoiced that he was found
worthy to suffer for Christ; because to suffer with him is
to reign with him.
Sorrow is the harbinger of joy.
Mortal throes of anguish forward the birth of immortal
being; but divine Science wipes away all tears.
The only conscious existence in
the flesh is error of some sort, sin, pain, death,
a false sense of life and happiness. Mortals, if at
ease in so-called existence, are in their native element of
error, and must become dis-eased, disquieted, before
error is annihilated.
Jesus walked with bleeding feet
the thorny earth-road, treading "the winepress alone." His
persecutors said mockingly, "Save thyself, and come down
from the cross." This was the very thing he was
doing, coming down from the cross, saving himself after the
manner that he had taught, by the law of Spirit's supremacy;
and this was done through what is humanly called
agony.
Even the ice-bound hypocrite
melts in fervent heat, before he apprehends Christ as "the
way." The Master's sublime triumph over all mortal mentality
was immortality's goal. He was too wise not to be willing to
test the full compass of human woe, being "in all points
tempted like as we are, yet without sin."
Thus the absolute unreality of
sin, sickness, and death was revealed, a revelation
that beams on mortal sense as the midnight sun shines over
the Polar Sea.
The
Saviour's Mission
If there is no reality in evil,
why did the Messiah come to the world, and from what evils
was it his purpose to save humankind? How, indeed, is he a
Saviour, if the evils from which he saves are
nonentities?
Jesus came to earth; but the
Christ (that is, the divine idea of the divine Principle
which made heaven and earth) was never absent from the earth
and heaven; hence the phraseology of Jesus, who spoke of the
Christ as one who came down from heaven, yet as "the Son of
man which is in heaven." (John iii. 13.) By this we
understand Christ to be the divine idea brought to the flesh
in the son of Mary.
Salvation is as eternal as God.
To mortal thought Jesus appeared as a child, and grew to
manhood, to suffer before Pilate and on Calvary, because he
could reach and teach mankind only through this conformity
to mortal conditions; but Soul never saw the Saviour come
and go, because the divine idea is always present.
Jesus came to rescue men from
these very illusions to which he seemed to conform: from the
illusion which calls sin real, and man a sinner, needing a
Saviour; the illusion which calls sickness real, and man an
invalid, needing a physician; the illusion that death is as
real as Life. From such thoughts mortal inventions,
one and all Christ Jesus came to save men, through
ever-present and eternal good.
Mortal man is a kingdom divided
against itself. With the same breath he articulates truth
and error. We say that God is All, and there is none beside
Him, and then talk of sin and sinners as real. We call God
omnipotent and omnipresent, and then conjure up, from the
dark abyss of nothingness, a powerful presence named
evil. We say that harmony is real, and inharmony is
its opposite, and therefore unreal; yet we descant upon
sickness, sin, and death as realities.
With the tongue "bless we God,
even the Father; and therewith curse we men, who are made
after the similitude [human concept] of God. Out of
the same mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing. My brethren,
these things ought not so to be." (James iii. 9, 10.)
Mortals are free moral agents, to choose whom they would
serve. If God, then let them serve Him, and He will be unto
them All-in-all.
If God is ever present, He is
neither absent from Himself nor from the universe. Without
Him, the universe would disappear, and space, substance, and
immortality be lost. St. Paul says, "And if Christ be not
raised, your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins." (1
Corinthians xv. 17.) Christ cannot come to mortal and
material sense, which sees not God. This false sense of
substance must yield to His eternal presence, and so
dissolve. Rising above the false, to the true evidence of
Life, is the resurrection that takes hold of eternal Truth.
Coming and going belong to mortal consciousness. God is "the
same yesterday, and to-day, and forever."
To material sense, Jesus first
appeared as a helpless human babe; but to immortal and
spiritual vision he was one with the Father, even the
eternal idea of God, that was and is neither
young nor old, neither dead nor risen. The mutations of
mortal sense are the evening and the morning of human
thought, the twilight and dawn of earthly vision,
which precedeth the nightless radiance of divine Life. Human
perception, advancing toward the apprehension of its
nothingness, halts, retreats, and again goes forward; but
the divine Principle and Spirit and spiritual man are
unchangeable, neither advancing, retreating, nor
halting.
Our highest sense of infinite
good in this mortal sphere is but the sign and symbol, not
the substance of good. Only faith and a feeble understanding
make the earthly acme of human sense. "The life which I now
live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God."
(Galatians ii. 20.)
Christian Science is both
demonstration and fruition, but how attenuated are our
demonstration and realization of this Science! Truth, in
divine Science, is the stepping-stone to the understanding
of God; but the broken and contrite heart soonest discerns
this truth, even as the helpless sick are soonest healed by
it. Invalids say, "I have recovered from sickness;" when the
fact really remains, in divine Science, that they never were
sick.
The Christian saith, "Christ
(God) died for me, and came to save me;" yet God dies not,
and is the ever-presence that neither comes nor goes, and
man is forever His image and likeness. "The things which are
seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are
eternal." (2 Corinthians iv. 18.) This is the mystery of
godliness that God, good, is never absent, and there
is none beside good. Mortals can understand this only as
they reach the Life of good, and learn that there is no Life
in evil. Then shall it appear that the true ideal of
omnipotent and ever-present good is an ideal wherein and
wherefor there is no evil. Sin exists only as a sense, and
not as Soul. Destroy this sense of sin, and sin disappears.
Sickness, sin, or death is a false sense of Life and good.
Destroy this trinity of error, and you find Truth.
In Science, Christ never died. In
material sense Jesus died, and lived. The fleshly Jesus
seemed to die, though he did not. The Truth or Life in
divine Science undisturbed by human error, sin, and
death saith forever, "I am the living God, and man is
My idea, never in matter, nor resurrected from it." "Why
seek ye the living among the dead? He is not here, but is
risen." (Luke xxiv. 5, 6.) Mortal sense, confining itself to
matter, is all that can be buried or resurrected.
Mary had risen to discern faintly
God's ever-presence, and that of His idea, man; but her
mortal sense, reversing Science and spiritual understanding,
interpreted this appearing as a risen Christ. The I AM was
neither buried nor resurrected. The Way, the Truth, and the
Life were never absent for a moment. This trinity of Love
lives and reigns forever. Its kingdom, not apparent to
material sense, never disappeared to spiritual sense, but
remained forever in the Science of being. The so-called
appearing, disappearing, and reappearing of ever-presence,
in whom is no variableness or shadow of turning, is the
false human sense of that light which shineth in darkness,
and the darkness comprehendeth it not.
Summary
All that is, God created. If sin
has any pretense of existence, God is responsible therefor;
but there is no reality in sin, for God can no more behold
it, or acknowledge it, than the sun can coexist with
darkness. To build the individual spiritual sense, conscious
of only health, holiness, and heaven, on the foundations of
an eternal Mind which is conscious of sickness, sin, and
death, is a moral impossibility; for "other foundation can
no man lay than that is laid." (1 Corinthians iii. 11.) The
nearer we approximate to such a Mind, even if it were (or
could be) God, the more real those mind-pictures would
become to us; until the hope of ever eluding their dread
presence must yield to despair, and the haunting sense of
evil forever accompany our being.
Mortals may climb the smooth
glaciers, leap the dark fissures, scale the treacherous ice,
and stand on the summit of Mont Blanc; but they can never
turn back what Deity knoweth, nor escape from identification
with what dwelleth in the eternal Mind.
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