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Science
and Health
Chapter VII
Physiology
Therefore
I say unto you, Take no thought for your life, what
ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for
your body, what ye shall put on. Is not the life
more than meat, and the body than raiment?
JESUS.
He
sent His word, and healed them, and delivered them
from their destructions.
PSALMS.
Physiology
is one of the apples from "the tree of knowledge."
Evil declared that eating this fruit would open
man's eyes and make him as a god. Instead of so
doing, it closed the eyes of mortals to man's
God-given dominion over the earth.
To
measure intellectual capacity by the size of the
brain and strength by the exercise of muscle, is to
subjugate intelligence, to make mind mortal, and to
place this so-called mind at the mercy of material
organization and non-intelligent matter.
Obedience
to the so-called physical laws of health has not
checked sickness. Diseases have multiplied, since
man-made material theories took the place of
spiritual truth.
You
say that indigestion, fatigue, sleeplessness, cause
distressed stomachs and aching heads. Then you
consult your brain in order to remember what has
hurt you, when your remedy lies in forgetting the
whole thing; for matter has no sensation of its
own, and the human mind is all that can produce
pain.
As
a man thinketh, so is he. Mind is all that feels,
acts, or impedes action. Ignorant of this, or
shrinking from its implied responsibility, the
healing effort is made on the wrong side, and thus
the conscious control over the body is
lost.
The
Mohammedan believes in a pilgrimage to Mecca for
the salvation of his soul. The popular doctor
believes in his prescription, and the pharmacist
believes in the power of his drugs to save a man's
life. The Mohammedan's belief is a religious
delusion; the doctor's and pharmacist's is a
medical mistake.
The
erring human mind is inharmonious in itself. From
it arises the inharmonious body. To ignore God as
of little use in sickness is a mistake. Instead of
thrusting Him aside in times of bodily trouble, and
waiting for the hour of strength in which to
acknowledge Him, we should learn that He can do all
things for us in sickness as in health.
Failing
to recover health through adherence to physiology
and hygiene, the despairing invalid often drops
them, and in his extremity and only as a last
resort, turns to God. The invalid's faith in the
divine Mind is less than in drugs, air, and
exercise, or he would have resorted to Mind first.
The balance of power is conceded to be with matter
by most of the medical systems; but when Mind at
last asserts its mastery over sin, disease, and
death, then is man found to be harmonious and
immortal.
Should
we implore a corporeal God to heal the sick out of
His personal volition, or should we understand the
infinite divine Principle which heals? If we rise
no higher than blind faith, the Science of healing
is not attained, and Soul-existence, in the place
of sense-existence, is not comprehended. We
apprehend Life in divine Science only as we live
above corporeal sense and correct it. Our
proportionate admission of the claims of good or of
evil determines the harmony of our existence,
our health, our longevity, and our
Christianity.
We
cannot serve two masters nor perceive divine
Science with the material senses. Drugs and hygiene
cannot successfully usurp the place and power of
the divine source of all health and perfection. If
God made man both good and evil, man must remain
thus. What can improve God's work? Again, an error
in the premise must appear in the conclusion. To
have one God and avail yourself of the power of
Spirit, you must love God supremely.
The
"flesh lusteth against the Spirit." The flesh and
Spirit can no more unite in action, than good can
coincide with evil. It is not wise to take a
halting and half-way position or to expect to work
equally with Spirit and matter, Truth and error.
There is but one way namely, God and His
idea which leads to spiritual being. The
scientific government of the body must be attained
through the divine Mind. It is impossible to gain
control over the body in any other way. On this
fundamental point, timid conservatism is absolutely
inadmissible. Only through radical reliance on
Truth can scientific healing power be
realized.
Substituting
good words for a good life, fair seeming for
straightforward character, is a poor shift for the
weak and worldly, who think the standard of
Christian Science too high for them.
If
the scales are evenly adjusted, the removal of a
single weight from either scale gives preponderance
to the opposite. Whatever influence you cast on the
side of matter, you take away from Mind, which
would otherwise outweigh all else. Your belief
militates against your health, when it ought to be
enlisted on the side of health. When sick
(according to belief) you rush after drugs, search
out the material so-called laws of health, and
depend upon them to heal you, though you have
already brought yourself into the slough of disease
through just this false belief.
Because
man-made systems insist that man becomes sick and
useless, suffers and dies, all in consonance with
the laws of God, are we to believe it? Are we to
believe an authority which denies God's spiritual
command relating to perfection, an authority
which Jesus proved to be false? He did the will of
the Father. He healed sickness in defiance of what
is called material law, but in accordance with
God's law, the law of Mind.
I
have discerned disease in the human mind, and
recognized the patient's fear of it, months before
the so-called disease made its appearance in the
body. Disease being a belief, a latent illusion of
mortal mind, the sensation would not appear if the
error of belief was met and destroyed by
truth.
Here
let a word be noticed which will be better
understood hereafter,
chemicalization. By chemicalization I mean
the process which mortal mind and body undergo in
the change of belief from a material to a spiritual
basis.
Whenever
an aggravation of symptoms has occurred through
mental chemicalization, I have seen the mental
signs, assuring me that danger was over, before the
patient felt the change; and I have said to the
patient, "You are healed," sometimes to his
discomfiture, when he was incredulous. But it
always came about as I had foretold.
I
name these facts to show that disease has a mental,
mortal origin, that faith in rules of health
or in drugs begets and fosters disease by
attracting the mind to the subject of sickness, by
exciting fear of disease, and by dosing the body in
order to avoid it. The faith reposed in these
things should find stronger supports and a higher
home. If we understood the control of Mind over
body, we should put no faith in material
means.
Science
not only reveals the origin of all disease as
mental, but it also declares that all disease is
cured by divine Mind. There can be no healing
except by this Mind, however much we trust a drug
or any other means towards which human faith or
endeavor is directed. It is mortal mind, not
matter, which brings to the sick whatever good they
may seem to receive from materiality. But the sick
are never really healed except by means of the
divine power. Only the action of Truth, Life, and
Love can give harmony.
Whatever
teaches man to have other laws and to acknowledge
other powers than the divine Mind, is
anti-Christian. The good that a poisonous drug
seems to do is evil, for it robs man of reliance on
God, omnipotent Mind, and according to belief,
poisons the human system. Truth is not the basis of
theogony. Modes of matter form neither a moral nor
a spiritual system. The discord which calls for
material methods is the result of the exercise of
faith in material modes, faith in matter
instead of in Spirit.
Did
Jesus understand the economy of man less than
Graham or Cutter? Christian ideas certainly present
what human theories exclude the Principle of
man's harmony. The text, "Whosoever liveth and
believeth in me shall never die," not only
contradicts human systems, but points to the
self-sustaining and eternal Truth.
The
demands of Truth are spiritual, and reach the body
through Mind. The best interpreter of man's needs
said: "Take no thought for your life, what ye shall
eat, or what ye shall drink."
If
there are material laws which prevent disease, what
then causes it? Not divine law, for Jesus healed
the sick and cast out error, always in opposition,
never in obedience, to physics.
Spiritual
causation is the one question to be considered, for
more than all others spiritual causation relates to
human progress. The age seems ready to approach
this subject, to ponder somewhat the supremacy of
Spirit, and at least to touch the hem of Truth's
garment.
The
description of man as purely physical, or as both
material and spiritual, but in either case
dependent upon his physical organization, is
the Pandora box, from which all ills have gone
forth, especially despair. Matter, which takes
divine power into its own hands and claims to be a
creator, is a fiction, in which paganism and lust
are so sanctioned by society that mankind has
caught their moral contagion.
Through
discernment of the spiritual opposite of
materiality, even the way through Christ, Truth,
man will reopen with the key of divine Science the
gates of Paradise which human beliefs have closed,
and will find himself unfallen, upright, pure, and
free, not needing to consult almanacs for the
probabilities either of his life or of the weather,
not needing to study brainology to learn how much
of a man he is.
Mind's
control over the universe, including man, is no
longer an open question, but is demonstrable
Science. Jesus illustrated the divine Principle and
the power of immortal Mind by healing sickness and
sin and destroying the foundations of
death.
Mistaking
his origin and nature, man believes himself to be
combined matter and Spirit. He believes that Spirit
is sifted through matter, carried on a nerve,
exposed to ejection by the operation of matter. The
intellectual, the moral, the spiritual, yea,
the image of infinite Mind, subject to
non-intelligence!
No
more sympathy exists between the flesh and Spirit
than between Belial and Christ.
The
so-called laws of matter are nothing but false
beliefs that intelligence and life are present
where Mind is not. These false beliefs are the
procuring cause of all sin and disease. The
opposite truth, that intelligence and life are
spiritual, never material, destroys sin, sickness,
and death.
The
fundamental error lies in the supposition that man
is a material outgrowth and that the cognizance of
good or evil, which he has through the bodily
senses, constitutes his happiness or
misery.
Theorizing
about man's development from mushrooms to monkeys
and from monkeys into men amounts to nothing in the
right direction and very much in the
wrong.
Materialism
grades the human species as rising from matter
upward. How then is the material species
maintained, if man passes through what we call
death and death is the Rubicon of spirituality?
Spirit can form no real link in this supposed chain
of material being. But divine Science reveals the
eternal chain of existence as uninterrupted and
wholly spiritual; yet this can be realized only as
the false sense of being disappears.
If
man was first a material being, he must have passed
through all the forms of matter in order to become
man. If the material body is man, he is a portion
of matter, or dust. On the contrary, man is the
image and likeness of Spirit; and the belief that
there is Soul in sense or Life in matter obtains in
mortals, alias mortal mind, to which the
apostle refers when he says that we must "put off
the old man."
What
is man? Brain, heart, blood, bones, etc., the
material structure? If the real man is in the
material body, you take away a portion of the man
when you amputate a limb; the surgeon destroys
manhood, and worms annihilate it. But the loss of a
limb or injury to a tissue is sometimes the
quickener of manliness; and the unfortunate cripple
may present more nobility than the statuesque
athlete, teaching us by his very
deprivations, that "a man's a man, for a'
that."
When
we admit that matter (heart, blood, brain, acting
through the five physical senses) constitutes man,
we fail to see how anatomy can distinguish between
humanity and the brute, or determine when man is
really man and has progressed farther than
his animal progenitors.
When
the supposition, that Spirit is within what it
creates and the potter is subject to the clay, is
individualized, Truth is reduced to the level of
error, and the sensible is required to be made
manifest through the insensible.
What
is termed matter manifests nothing but a material
mentality. Neither the substance nor the
manifestation of Spirit is obtainable through
matter. Spirit is positive. Matter is Spirit's
contrary, the absence of Spirit. For positive
Spirit to pass through a negative condition would
be Spirit's destruction.
Anatomy
declares man to be structural. Physiology continues
this explanation, measuring human strength by bones
and sinews, and human life by material law. Man is
spiritual, individual, and eternal; material
structure is mortal.
Phrenology
makes man knavish or honest according to the
development of the cranium; but anatomy,
physiology, phrenology, do not define the image of
God, the real immortal man.
Human
reason and religion come slowly to the recognition
of spiritual facts, and so continue to call upon
matter to remove the error which the human mind
alone has created.
The
idols of civilization are far more fatal to health
and longevity than are the idols of barbarism. The
idols of civilization call into action less faith
than Buddhism in a supreme governing intelligence.
The Esquimaux restore health by incantations as
consciously as do civilized practitioners by their
more studied methods.
Is
civilization only a higher form of idolatry, that
man should bow down to a flesh-brush, to flannels,
to baths, diet, exercise, and air? Nothing save
divine power is capable of doing so much for man as
he can do for himself.
The
footsteps of thought, rising above material
standpoints, are slow, and portend a long night to
the traveller; but the angels of His presence
the spiritual intuitions that tell us when
"the night is far spent, the day is at hand"
are our guardians in the gloom. Whoever opens the
way in Christian Science is a pilgrim and stranger,
marking out the path for generations yet
unborn.
The
thunder of Sinai and the Sermon on the Mount are
pursuing and will overtake the ages, rebuking in
their course all error and proclaiming the kingdom
of heaven on earth. Truth is revealed. It needs
only to be practised.
Mortal
belief is all that enables a drug to cure mortal
ailments. Anatomy admits that mind is somewhere in
man, though out of sight. Then, if an individual is
sick, why treat the body alone and administer a
dose of despair to the mind? Why declare that the
body is diseased, and picture this disease to the
mind, rolling it under the tongue as a sweet morsel
and holding it before the thought of both physician
and patient? We should understand that the cause of
disease obtains in the mortal human mind, and its
cure comes from the immortal divine Mind. We should
prevent the images of disease from taking form in
thought, and we should efface the outlines of
disease already formulated in the minds of
mortals.
When
there are fewer prescriptions, and less thought is
given to sanitary subjects, there will be better
constitutions and less disease. In old times who
ever heard of dyspepsia, cerebro-spinal meningitis,
hay-fever, and rose-cold?
What
an abuse of natural beauty to say that a rose, the
smile of God, can produce suffering! The joy of its
presence, its beauty and fragrance, should uplift
the thought, and dissuade any sense of fear or
fever. It is profane to fancy that the perfume of
clover and the breath of new-mown hay can cause
glandular inflammation, sneezing, and nasal
pangs.
If
a random thought, calling itself dyspepsia, had
tried to tyrannize over our forefathers, it would
have been routed by their independence and
industry. Then people had less time for
selfishness, coddling, and sickly after-dinner
talk. The exact amount of food the stomach could
digest was not discussed according to Cutter nor
referred to sanitary laws. A man's belief in those
days was not so severe upon the gastric juices.
Beaumont's "Medical Experiments" did not govern the
digestion.
Damp
atmosphere and freezing snow empurpled the plump
cheeks of our ancestors, but they never indulged in
the refinement of inflamed bronchial tubes. They
were as innocent as Adam, before he ate the fruit
of false knowledge, of the existence of tubercles
and troches, lungs and lozenges.
"Where
ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise," says
the English poet, and there is truth in his
sentiment. The action of mortal mind on the body
was not so injurious before inquisitive modern Eves
took up the study of medical works and unmanly
Adams attributed their own downfall and the fate of
their offspring to the weakness of their
wives.
The
primitive custom of taking no thought about food
left the stomach and bowels free to act in
obedience to nature, and gave the gospel a chance
to be seen in its glorious effects upon the body. A
ghastly array of diseases was not paraded before
the imagination. There were fewer books on
digestion and more "sermons in stones, and good in
everything." When the mechanism of the human mind
gives place to the divine Mind, selfishness and
sin, disease and death, will lose their
foothold.
Human
fear of miasma would load with disease the air of
Eden, and weigh down mankind with superimposed and
conjectural evils. Mortal mind is the worst foe of
the body, while divine Mind is its best
friend.
Should
all cases of organic disease be treated by a
regular practitioner, and the Christian Scientist
try truth only in cases of hysteria, hypochondria,
and hallucination? One disease is no more real than
another. All disease is the result of education,
and disease can carry its ill-effects no farther
than mortal mind maps out the way. The human mind,
not matter, is supposed to feel, suffer, enjoy.
Hence decided types of acute disease are quite as
ready to yield to Truth as the less distinct type
and chronic form of disease. Truth handles the most
malignant contagion with perfect
assurance.
Human
mind produces what is termed organic disease as
certainly as it produces hysteria, and it must
relinquish all its errors, sicknesses, and sins. I
have demonstrated this beyond all cavil. The
evidence of divine Mind's healing power and
absolute control is to me as certain as the
evidence of my own existence.
Mortal
mind and body are one. Neither exists without the
other, and both must be destroyed by immortal Mind.
Matter, or body, is but a false concept of mortal
mind. This so-called mind builds its own
superstructure, of which the material body is the
grosser portion; but from first to last, the body
is a sensuous, human concept.
In
the Scriptural allegory of the material creation,
Adam or error, which represents the erroneous
theory of life and intelligence in matter, had the
naming of all that was material. These names
indicated matter's properties, qualities, and
forms. But a lie, the opposite of Truth, cannot
name the qualities and effects of what is termed
matter, and create the so-called laws of the flesh,
nor can a lie hold the preponderance of power in
any direction against God, Spirit and
Truth.
If
a dose of poison is swallowed through mistake, and
the patient dies even though physician and patient
are expecting favorable results, does human belief,
you ask, cause this death? Even so, and as directly
as if the poison had been intentionally
taken.
In
such cases a few persons believe the potion
swallowed by the patient to be harmless, but the
vast majority of mankind, though they know nothing
of this particular case and this special person,
believe the arsenic, the strychnine, or whatever
the drug used, to be poisonous, for it is set down
as a poison by mortal mind. Consequently, the
result is controlled by the majority of opinions,
not by the infinitesimal minority of opinions in
the sick-chamber.
Heredity
is not a law. The remote cause or belief of disease
is not dangerous because of its priority and the
connection of past mortal thoughts with present.
The predisposing cause and the exciting cause are
mental.
Perhaps
an adult has a deformity produced prior to his
birth by the fright of his mother. When wrested
from human belief and based on Science or the
divine Mind, to which all things are possible, that
chronic case is not difficult to cure.
Mortal
mind, acting from the basis of sensation in matter,
is animal magnetism; but this so-called mind, from
which comes all evil, contradicts itself, and must
finally yield to the eternal Truth, or the divine
Mind, expressed in Science. In proportion to our
understanding of Christian Science, we are freed
from the belief of heredity, of mind in matter or
animal magnetism; and we disarm sin of its
imaginary power in proportion to our spiritual
understanding of the status of immortal
being.
Ignorant
of the methods and the basis of metaphysical
healing, you may attempt to unite with it
hypnotism, spiritualism, electricity; but none of
these methods can be mingled with metaphysical
healing.
Whoever
reaches the understanding of Christian Science in
its proper signification will perform the sudden
cures of which it is capable; but this can be done
only by taking up the cross and following Christ in
the daily life.
Science
can heal the sick, who are absent from their
healers, as well as those present, since space is
no obstacle to Mind. Immortal Mind heals what eye
hath not seen; but the spiritual capacity to
apprehend thought and to heal by the Truth-power,
is won only as man is found, not in
self-righteousness, but reflecting the divine
nature.
Every
medical method has its advocates. The preference of
mortal mind for a certain method creates a demand
for that method, and the body then seems to require
such treatment. You can even educate a healthy
horse so far in physiology that he will take cold
without his blanket, whereas the wild animal, left
to his instincts, sniffs the wind with delight. The
epizootic is a humanly evolved ailment, which a
wild horse might never have.
Treatises
on anatomy, physiology, and health, sustained by
what is termed material law, are the promoters of
sickness and disease. It should not be proverbial,
that so long as you read medical works you will be
sick.
The
sedulous matron studying her Jahr with
homoeopathic pellet and powder in hand, ready to
put you into a sweat, to move the bowels, or to
produce sleep is unwittingly sowing the
seeds of reliance on matter, and her household may
erelong reap the effect of this mistake.
Descriptions
of disease given by physicians and advertisements
of quackery are both prolific sources of sickness.
As mortal mind is the husbandman of error, it
should be taught to do the body no harm and to
uproot its false sowing.
The
patient sufferer tries to be satisfied when he sees
his would-be healers busy, and his faith in their
efforts is somewhat helpful to them and to himself;
but in Science one must understand the
resuscitating law of Life. This is the seed within
itself bearing fruit after its kind, spoken of in
Genesis.
Physicians
should not deport themselves as if Mind were
non-existent, nor take the ground that all
causation is matter, instead of Mind. Ignorant that
the human mind governs the body, its phenomenon,
the invalid may unwittingly add more fear to the
mental reservoir already overflowing with that
emotion.
Doctors
should not implant disease in the thoughts of their
patients, as they so frequently do, by declaring
disease to be a fixed fact, even before they go to
work to eradicate the disease through the material
faith which they inspire. Instead of furnishing
thought with fear, they should try to correct this
turbulent element of mortal mind by the influence
of divine Love which casteth out fear.
When
man is governed by God, the ever-present Mind who
understands all things, man knows that with God all
things are possible. The only way to this living
Truth, which heals the sick, is found in the
Science of divine Mind as taught and demonstrated
by Christ Jesus.
To
reduce inflammation, dissolve a tumor, or cure
organic disease, I have found divine Truth more
potent than all lower remedies. And why not, since
Mind, God, is the source and condition of all
existence? Before deciding that the body, matter,
is disordered, one should ask, "Who art thou that
repliest to Spirit? Can matter speak for itself, or
does it hold the issues of life?" Matter, which can
neither suffer nor enjoy, has no partnership with
pain and pleasure, but mortal belief has such a
partnership.
When
you manipulate patients, you trust in electricity
and magnetism more than in Truth; and for that
reason, you employ matter rather than Mind. You
weaken or destroy your power when you resort to any
except spiritual means.
It
is foolish to declare that you manipulate patients
but that you lay no stress on manipulation. If this
be so, why manipulate? In reality you manipulate
because you are ignorant of the baneful effects of
magnetism, or are not sufficiently spiritual to
depend on Spirit. In either case you must improve
your mental condition till you finally attain the
understanding of Christian Science.
If
you are too material to love the Science of Mind
and are satisfied with good words instead of
effects, if you adhere to error and are afraid to
trust Truth, the question then recurs, "Adam, where
art thou?" It is unnecessary to resort to aught
besides Mind in order to satisfy the sick that you
are doing something for them, for if they are
cured, they generally know it and are
satisfied.
"Where
your treasure is, there will your heart be also."
If you have more faith in drugs than in Truth, this
faith will incline you to the side of matter and
error. Any hypnotic power you may exercise will
diminish your ability to become a Scientist, and
vice versa. The act of healing the sick
through divine Mind alone, of casting out error
with Truth, shows your position as a Christian
Scientist.
The
demands of God appeal to thought only; but the
claims of mortality, and what are termed laws of
nature, appertain to matter. Which, then, are we to
accept as legitimate and capable of producing the
highest human good? We cannot obey both physiology
and Spirit, for one absolutely destroys the other,
and one or the other must be supreme in the
affections. It is impossible to work from two
standpoints. If we attempt it, we shall presently
"hold to the one, and despise the
other."
The
hypotheses of mortals are antagonistic to Science
and cannot mix with it. This is clear to those who
heal the sick on the basis of Science.
Mind's
government of the body must supersede the so-called
laws of matter. Obedience to material law prevents
full obedience to spiritual law, the law
which overcomes material conditions and puts matter
under the feet of Mind. Mortals entreat the divine
Mind to heal the sick, and forthwith shut out the
aid of Mind by using material means, thus working
against themselves and their prayers and denying
man's God-given ability to demonstrate Mind's
sacred power. Pleas for drugs and laws of health
come from some sad incident, or else from ignorance
of Christian Science and its transcendent
power.
To
admit that sickness is a condition over which God
has no control, is to presuppose that omnipotent
power is powerless on some occasions. The law of
Christ, or Truth, makes all things possible to
Spirit; but the so-called laws of matter would
render Spirit of no avail, and demand obedience to
materialistic codes, thus departing from the basis
of one God, one lawmaker. To suppose that God
constitutes laws of inharmony is a mistake;
discords have no support from nature or divine law,
however much is said to the contrary.
Can
the agriculturist, according to belief, produce a
crop without sowing the seed and awaiting its
germination according to the laws of nature? The
answer is no, and yet the Scriptures inform us that
sin, or error, first caused the condemnation of man
to till the ground, and indicate that obedience to
God will remove this necessity. Truth never made
error necessary, nor devised a law to perpetuate
error.
The
supposed laws which result in weariness and disease
are not His laws, for the legitimate and only
possible action of Truth is the production of
harmony. Laws of nature are laws of Spirit; but
mortals commonly recognize as law that which hides
the power of Spirit. Divine Mind rightly demands
man's entire obedience, affection, and strength. No
reservation is made for any lesser loyalty.
Obedience to Truth gives man power and strength.
Submission to error superinduces loss of
power.
Truth
casts out all evils and materialistic methods with
the actual spiritual law, the law which
gives sight to the blind, hearing to the deaf,
voice to the dumb, feet to the lame. If Christian
Science dishonors human belief, it honors spiritual
understanding; and the one Mind only is entitled to
honor.
The
so-called laws of health are simply laws of mortal
belief. The premises being erroneous, the
conclusions are wrong. Truth makes no laws to
regulate sickness, sin, and death, for these are
unknown to Truth and should not be recognized as
reality.
Belief
produces the results of belief, and the penalties
it affixes last so long as the belief and are
inseparable from it. The remedy consists in probing
the trouble to the bottom, in finding and casting
out by denial the error of belief which produces a
mortal disorder, never honoring erroneous belief
with the title of law nor yielding obedience to it.
Truth, Life, and Love are the only legitimate and
eternal demands on man, and they are spiritual
lawgivers, enforcing obedience through divine
statutes.
Controlled
by the divine intelligence, man is harmonious and
eternal. Whatever is governed by a false belief is
discordant and mortal. We say man suffers from the
effects of cold, heat, fatigue. This is human
belief, not the truth of being, for matter cannot
suffer. Mortal mind alone suffers, not
because a law of matter has been transgressed, but
because a law of this so-called mind has been
disobeyed. I have demonstrated this as a rule of
divine Science by destroying the delusion of
suffering from what is termed a fatally broken
physical law.
A
woman, whom I cured of consumption, always breathed
with great difficulty when the wind was from the
east. I sat silently by her side a few moments. Her
breath came gently. The inspirations were deep and
natural. I then requested her to look at the
weather-vane. She looked and saw that it pointed
due east. The wind had not changed, but her thought
of it had and so her difficulty in breathing had
gone. The wind had not produced the difficulty. My
metaphysical treatment changed the action of her
belief on the lungs, and she never suffered again
from east winds, but was restored to
health.
No
system of hygiene but Christian Science is purely
mental. Before this book was published, other books
were in circulation, which discussed "mental
medicine" and "mind-cure," operating through the
power of the earth's magnetic currents to regulate
life and health. Such theories and such systems of
so-called mind-cure, which have sprung up, are as
material as the prevailing systems of medicine.
They have their birth in mortal mind, which puts
forth a human conception in the name of Science to
match the divine Science of immortal Mind, even as
the necromancers of Egypt strove to emulate the
wonders wrought by Moses. Such theories have no
relationship to Christian Science, which rests on
the conception of God as the only Life, substance,
and intelligence, and excludes the human mind as a
spiritual factor in the healing work.
Jesus
cast out evil and healed the sick, not only without
drugs, but without hypnotism, which is the reverse
of ethical and pathological Truth-power.
Erroneous
mental practice may seem for a time to benefit the
sick, but the recovery is not permanent. This is
because erroneous methods act on and through the
material stratum of the human mind, called brain,
which is but a mortal consolidation of material
mentality and its suppositional
activities.
A
patient under the influence of mortal mind is
healed only by removing the influence on him of
this mind, by emptying his thought of the false
stimulus and reaction of will-power and filling it
with the divine energies of Truth.
Christian
Science destroys material beliefs through the
understanding of Spirit, and the thoroughness of
this work determines health. Erring human
mind-forces can work only evil under whatever name
or pretence they are employed; for Spirit and
matter, good and evil, light and darkness, cannot
mingle.
Evil
is a negation, because it is the absence of truth.
It is nothing, because it is the absence of
something. It is unreal, because it presupposes the
absence of God, the omnipotent and omnipresent.
Every mortal must learn that there is neither power
nor reality in evil.
Evil
is self-assertive. It says: "I am a real entity,
overmastering good." This falsehood should strip
evil of all pretensions. The only power of evil is
to destroy itself. It can never destroy one iota of
good. Every attempt of evil to destroy good is a
failure, and only aids in peremptorily punishing
the evil-doer. If we concede the same reality to
discord as to harmony, discord has as lasting a
claim upon us as has harmony. If evil is as real as
good, evil is also as immortal. If death is as real
as Life, immortality is a myth. If pain is as real
as the absence of pain, both must be immortal; and
if so, harmony cannot be the law of
being.
Mortal
mind is ignorant of self, or it could never be
self-deceived. If mortal mind knew how to be
better, it would be better. Since it must believe
in something besides itself, it enthrones matter as
deity. The human mind has been an idolater from the
beginning, having other gods and believing in more
than the one Mind.
As
mortals do not comprehend even mortal existence,
how ignorant must they be of the all-knowing Mind
and of His creations.
Here
you may see how so-called material sense creates
its own forms of thought, gives them material
names, and then worships and fears them. With pagan
blindness, it attributes to some material god or
medicine an ability beyond itself. The beliefs of
the human mind rob and enslave it, and then impute
this result to another illusive personification,
named Satan.
The
valves of the heart, opening and closing for the
passage of the blood, obey the mandate of mortal
mind as directly as does the hand, admittedly moved
by the will. Anatomy allows the mental cause of the
latter action, but not of the former.
We
say, "My hand hath done it." What is this my
but mortal mind, the cause of all materialistic
action? All voluntary, as well as miscalled
involuntary, action of the mortal body is
governed by this so-called mind, not by matter.
There is no involuntary action. The divine Mind
includes all action and volition, and man in
Science is governed by this Mind. The human mind
tries to classify action as voluntary and
involuntary, and suffers from the
attempt.
If
you take away this erring mind, the mortal material
body loses all appearance of life or action, and
this so-called mind then calls itself dead; but the
human mind still holds in belief a body, through
which it acts and which appears to the human mind
to live, a body like the one it had before
death. This body is put off only as the mortal,
erring mind yields to God, immortal Mind, and man
is found in His image.
What
is termed disease does not exist. It is neither
mind nor matter. The belief of sin, which has grown
terrible in strength and influence, is an
unconscious error in the beginning, an
embryonic thought without motive; but afterwards it
governs the so-called man. Passion, depraved
appetites, dishonesty, envy, hatred, revenge ripen
into action, only to pass from shame and woe to
their final punishment.
Mortal
existence is a dream of pain and pleasure in
matter, a dream of sin, sickness, and death; and it
is like the dream we have in sleep, in which every
one recognizes his condition to be wholly a state
of mind. In both the waking and the sleeping dream,
the dreamer thinks that his body is material and
the suffering is in that body.
The
smile of the sleeper indicates the sensation
produced physically by the pleasure of a dream. In
the same way pain and pleasure, sickness and care,
are traced upon mortals by unmistakable
signs.
Sickness
is a growth of error, springing from mortal
ignorance or fear. Error rehearses error. What
causes disease cannot cure it. The soil of disease
is mortal mind, and you have an abundant or scanty
crop of disease, according to the seedlings of
fear. Sin and the fear of disease must be uprooted
and cast out.
When
darkness comes over the earth, the physical senses
have no immediate evidence of a sun. The human eye
knows not where the orb of day is, nor if it
exists. Astronomy gives the desired information
regarding the sun. The human or material senses
yield to the authority of this science, and they
are willing to leave with astronomy the explanation
of the sun's influence over the earth. If the eyes
see no sun for a week, we still believe that there
is solar light and heat. Science (in this instance
named natural) raises the human thought above the
cruder theories of the human mind, and casts out a
fear.
In
like manner mortals should no more deny the power
of Christian Science to establish harmony and to
explain the effect of mortal mind on the body,
though the cause be unseen, than they should deny
the existence of the sunlight when the orb of day
disappears, or doubt that the sun will reappear.
The sins of others should not make good men
suffer.
We
call the body material; but it is as truly mortal
mind, according to its degree, as is the material
brain which is supposed to furnish the evidence of
all mortal thought or things. The human mortal
mind, by an inevitable perversion, makes all things
start from the lowest instead of from the highest
mortal thought. The reverse is the case with all
the formations of the immortal divine Mind. They
proceed from the divine source; and so, in tracing
them, we constantly ascend in infinite
being.
From
mortal mind comes the reproduction of the species,
first the belief of inanimate, and then of
animate matter. According to mortal thought, the
development of embryonic mortal mind commences in
the lower, basal portion of the brain, and goes on
in an ascending scale by evolution, keeping always
in the direct line of matter, for matter is the
subjective condition of mortal mind.
Next
we have the formation of so-called embryonic mortal
mind, afterwards mortal men or mortals, all
this while matter is a belief, ignorant of itself,
ignorant of what it is supposed to produce. The
mortal says that an inanimate unconscious seedling
is producing mortals, both body and mind; and yet
neither a mortal mind nor the immortal Mind is
found in brain or elsewhere in matter or in
mortals.
This
embryonic and materialistic human belief called
mortal man in turn fills itself with thoughts of
pain and pleasure, of life and death, and arranges
itself into five so-called senses, which presently
measure mind by the size of a brain and the bulk of
a body, called man.
Human
birth, growth, maturity, and decay are as the grass
springing from the soil with beautiful green
blades, afterwards to wither and return to its
native nothingness. This mortal seeming is
temporal; it never merges into immortal being, but
finally disappears, and immortal man, spiritual and
eternal, is found to be the real man.
The
Hebrew bard, swayed by mortal thoughts, thus swept
his lyre with saddening strains on human
existence:
As
for man, his days are as grass:
As a flower of the field, so he flourisheth.
For the wind passeth over it, and it is
gone;
And the place thereof shall know it no
more.
When
hope rose higher in the human heart, he
sang:
As
for me, I will behold Thy face in
righteousness:
I shall be satisfied, when I awake, with Thy
likeness.
. . . . . .
.
For
with Thee is the fountain of life; In Thy light
shall we see light.
The
brain can give no idea of God's man. It can take no
cognizance of Mind. Matter is not the organ of
infinite Mind.
As
mortals give up the delusion that there is more
than one Mind, more than one God, man in God's
likeness will appear, and this eternal man will
include in that likeness no material
element.
As
a material, theoretical life-basis is found to be a
misapprehension of existence, the spiritual and
divine Principle of man dawns upon human thought,
and leads it to "where the young child was,"
even to the birth of a new-old idea, to the
spiritual sense of being and of what Life includes.
Thus the whole earth will be transformed by Truth
on its pinions of light, chasing away the darkness
of error.
The
human thought must free itself from self-imposed
materiality and bondage. It should no longer ask of
the head, heart, or lungs: What are man's prospects
for life? Mind is not helpless. Intelligence is not
mute before non-intelligence.
By
its own volition, not a blade of grass springs up,
not a spray buds within the vale, not a leaf
unfolds its fair outlines, not a flower starts from
its cloistered cell.
The
Science of being reveals man and immortality as
based on Spirit. Physical sense defines mortal man
as based on matter, and from this premise infers
the mortality of the body.
The
illusive senses may fancy affinities with their
opposites; but in Christian Science, Truth never
mingles with error. Mind has no affinity with
matter, and therefore Truth is able to cast out the
ills of the flesh. Mind, God, sends forth the aroma
of Spirit, the atmosphere of intelligence. The
belief that a pulpy substance under the skull is
mind is a mockery of intelligence, a mimicry of
Mind.
We
are Christian Scientists, only as we quit our
reliance upon that which is false and grasp the
true. We are not Christian Scientists until we
leave all for Christ. Human opinions are not
spiritual. They come from the hearing of the ear,
from corporeality instead of from Principle, and
from the mortal instead of from the immortal.
Spirit is not separate from God. Spirit is
God.
Erring
power is a material belief, a blind miscalled
force, the offspring of will and not of wisdom, of
the mortal mind and not of the immortal. It is the
headlong cataract, the devouring flame, the
tempest's breath. It is lightning and hurricane,
all that is selfish, wicked, dishonest, and
impure.
Moral
and spiritual might belong to Spirit, who holds the
"wind in His fists;" and this teaching accords with
Science and harmony. In Science, you can have no
power opposed to God, and the physical senses must
give up their false testimony. Your influence for
good depends upon the weight you throw into the
right scale. The good you do and embody gives you
the only power obtainable. Evil is not power. It is
a mockery of strength, which erelong betrays its
weakness and falls, never to rise.
We
walk in the footsteps of Truth and Love by
following the example of our Master in the
understanding of divine metaphysics. Christianity
is the basis of true healing. Whatever holds human
thought in line with unselfed love, receives
directly the divine power.
I
was called to visit Mr. Clark in Lynn, who had been
confined to his bed six months with hip-disease,
caused by a fall upon a wooden spike when quite a
boy. On entering the house I met his physician, who
said that the patient was dying. The physician had
just probed the ulcer on the hip, and said the bone
was carious for several inches. He even showed me
the probe, which had on it the evidence of this
condition of the bone. The doctor went out. Mr.
Clark lay with his eyes fixed and sightless. The
dew of death was on his brow. I went to his
bedside. In a few moments his face changed; its
death-pallor gave place to a natural hue. The
eyelids closed gently and the breathing became
natural; he was asleep. In about ten minutes he
opened his eyes and said: "I feel like a new man.
My suffering is all gone." It was between three and
four o'clock in the afternoon when this took
place.
I
told him to rise, dress himself, and take supper
with his family. He did so. The next day I saw him
in the yard. Since then I have not seen him, but am
informed that he went to work in two weeks. The
discharge from the sore stopped, and the sore was
healed. The diseased condition had continued there
ever since the injury was received in
boyhood.
Since
his recovery I have been informed that his
physician claims to have cured him, and that his
mother has been threatened with incarceration in an
insane asylum for saying: "It was none other than
God and that woman who healed him." I cannot attest
the truth of that report, but what I saw and did
for that man, and what his physician said of the
case, occurred just as I have narrated.
It
has been demonstrated to me that Life is God and
that the might of omnipotent Spirit shares not its
strength with matter or with human will. Reviewing
this brief experience, I cannot fail to discern the
coincidence of the spiritual idea of man with the
divine Mind.
A
change in human belief changes all the physical
symptoms, and determines a case for better or for
worse. When one's false belief is corrected, Truth
sends a report of health over the body.
Destruction
of the auditory nerve and paralysis of the optic
nerve are not necessary to ensure deafness and
blindness; for if mortal mind says, "I am deaf and
blind," it will be so without an injured nerve.
Every theory opposed to this fact (as I learned in
metaphysics) would presuppose man, who is immortal
in spiritual understanding, a mortal in material
belief.
The
authentic history of Kaspar Hauser is a useful hint
as to the frailty and inadequacy of mortal mind. It
proves beyond a doubt that education constitutes
this so-called mind, and that, in turn, mortal mind
manifests itself in the body by the false sense it
imparts. Incarcerated in a dungeon, where neither
sight nor sound could reach him, at the age of
seventeen Kaspar was still a mental infant, crying
and chattering with no more intelligence than a
babe, and realizing Tennyson's
description:
An
infant crying in the night,
An infant crying for the light,
And with no language but a cry.
His
case proves material sense to be but a belief
formed by education alone. The light which affords
us joy gave him a belief of intense pain. His eyes
were inflamed by the light. After the babbling boy
had been taught to speak a few words, he asked to
be taken back to his dungeon, and said that he
should never be happy elsewhere. Outside of dismal
darkness and cold silence he found no peace. Every
sound convulsed him with anguish. All that he ate,
except his black crust, produced violent retchings.
All that gives pleasure to our educated senses gave
him pain through those very senses, trained in an
opposite direction.
The
point for each one to decide is, whether it is
mortal mind or immortal Mind that is causative. We
should forsake the basis of matter for metaphysical
Science and its divine Principle.
Whatever
furnishes the semblance of an idea governed by its
Principle, furnishes food for thought. Through
astronomy, natural history, chemistry, music,
mathematics, thought passes naturally from effect
back to cause.
Academics
of the right sort are requisite. Observation,
invention, study, and original thought are
expansive and should promote the growth of mortal
mind out of itself, out of all that is
mortal.
It
is the tangled barbarisms of learning which we
deplore, the mere dogma, the speculative
theory, the nauseous fiction. Novels, remarkable
only for their exaggerated pictures, impossible
ideals, and specimens of depravity, fill our young
readers with wrong tastes and sentiments. Literary
commercialism is lowering the intellectual standard
to accommodate the purse and to meet a frivolous
demand for amusement instead of for improvement.
Incorrect views lower the standard of
truth.
If
materialistic knowledge is power, it is not wisdom.
It is but a blind force. Man has "sought out many
inventions," but he has not yet found it true that
knowledge can save him from the dire effects of
knowledge. The power of mortal mind over its own
body is little understood.
Better
the suffering which awakens mortal mind from its
fleshly dream, than the false pleasures which tend
to perpetuate this dream. Sin alone brings death,
for sin is the only element of
destruction.
"Fear
him which is able to destroy both soul and body in
hell," said Jesus. A careful study of this text
shows that here the word soul means a false
sense or material consciousness. The command was a
warning to beware, not of Rome, Satan, nor of God,
but of sin. Sickness, sin, and death are not
concomitants of Life or Truth. No law supports
them. They have no relation to God wherewith to
establish their power. Sin makes its own hell, and
goodness its own heaven.
Such
books as will rule disease out of mortal mind,
and so efface the images and thoughts of
disease, instead of impressing them with forcible
descriptions and medical details, will help
to abate sickness and to destroy it.
Many
a hopeless case of disease is induced by a single
post mortem examination, not from
infection nor from contact with material virus, but
from the fear of the disease and from the image
brought before the mind; it is a mental state,
which is afterwards outlined on the
body.
The
press unwittingly sends forth many sorrows and
diseases among the human family. It does this by
giving names to diseases and by printing long
descriptions which mirror images of disease
distinctly in thought. A new name for an ailment
affects people like a Parisian name for a novel
garment. Every one hastens to get it. A minutely
described disease costs many a man his earthly days
of comfort. What a price for human knowledge! But
the price does not exceed the original cost. God
said of the tree of knowledge, which bears the
fruit of sin, disease, and death, "In the day that
thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely
die."
The
less that is said of physical structure and laws,
and the more that is thought and said about moral
and spiritual law, the higher will be the standard
of living and the farther mortals will be removed
from imbecility or disease.
We
should master fear, instead of cultivating it. It
was the ignorance of our forefathers in the
departments of knowledge now broadcast in the
earth, that made them hardier than our trained
physiologists, more honest than our sleek
politicians.
We
are told that the simple food our forefathers ate
helped to make them healthy, but that is a mistake.
Their diet would not cure dyspepsia at this period.
With rules of health in the head and the most
digestible food in the stomach, there would still
be dyspeptics. Many of the effeminate constitutions
of our time will never grow robust until individual
opinions improve and mortal belief loses some
portion of its error.
The
doctor's mind reaches that of his patient. The
doctor should suppress his fear of disease, else
his belief in its reality and fatality will harm
his patients even more than his calomel and
morphine, for the higher stratum of mortal mind has
in belief more power to harm man than the
substratum, matter. A patient hears the doctor's
verdict as a criminal hears his death-sentence. The
patient may seem calm under it, but he is not. His
fortitude may sustain him, but his fear, which has
already developed the disease that is gaining the
mastery, is increased by the physician's
words.
The
materialistic doctor, though humane, is an artist
who outlines his thought relative to disease, and
then fills in his delineations with sketches from
textbooks. It is better to prevent disease from
forming in mortal mind afterwards to appear on the
body; but to do this requires attention. The
thought of disease is formed before one sees a
doctor and before the doctor undertakes to dispel
it by a counter-irritant, perhaps by a
blister, by the application of caustic or croton
oil, or by a surgical operation. Again, giving
another direction to faith, the physician
prescribes drugs, until the elasticity of mortal
thought haply causes a vigorous reaction upon
itself, and reproduces a picture of healthy and
harmonious formations.
A
patient's belief is more or less moulded and formed
by his doctor's belief in the case, even though the
doctor says nothing to support his theory. His
thoughts and his patient's commingle, and the
stronger thoughts rule the weaker. Hence the
importance that doctors be Christian
Scientists.
Because
the muscles of the blacksmith's arm are strongly
developed, it does not follow that exercise has
produced this result or that a less used arm must
be weak. If matter were the cause of action, and if
muscles, without volition of mortal mind, could
lift the hammer and strike the anvil, it might be
thought true that hammering would enlarge the
muscles. The trip-hammer is not increased in size
by exercise. Why not, since muscles are as material
as wood and iron? Because nobody believes that mind
is producing such a result on the
hammer.
Muscles
are not self-acting. If mind does not move them,
they are motionless. Hence the great fact that Mind
alone enlarges and empowers man through its
mandate, by reason of its demand for and
supply of power. Not because of muscular exercise,
but by reason of the blacksmith's faith in
exercise, his arm becomes stronger.
Mortals
develop their own bodies or make them sick,
according as they influence them through mortal
mind. To know whether this development is produced
consciously or unconsciously, is of less importance
than a knowledge of the fact. The feats of the
gymnast prove that latent mental fears are subdued
by him. The devotion of thought to an honest
achievement makes the achievement possible.
Exceptions only confirm this rule, proving that
failure is occasioned by a too feeble
faith.
Had
Blondin believed it impossible to walk the rope
over Niagara's abyss of waters, he could never have
done it. His belief that he could do it gave his
thought-forces, called muscles, their flexibility
and power which the unscientific might attribute to
a lubricating oil. His fear must have disappeared
before his power of putting resolve into action
could appear.
When
Homer sang of the Grecian gods, Olympus was dark,
but through his verse the gods became alive in a
nation's belief. Pagan worship began with
muscularity, but the law of Sinai lifted thought
into the song of David. Moses advanced a nation to
the worship of God in Spirit instead of matter, and
illustrated the grand human capacities of being
bestowed by immortal Mind.
Whoever
is incompetent to explain Soul would be wise not to
undertake the explanation of body. Life is, always
has been, and ever will be independent of matter;
for Life is God, and man is the idea of God, not
formed materially but spiritually, and not subject
to decay and dust. The Psalmist said: "Thou madest
him to have dominion over the works of Thy hands.
Thou hast put all things under his
feet."
The
great truth in the Science of being, that the real
man was, is, and ever shall be perfect, is
incontrovertible; for if man is the image,
reflection, of God, he is neither inverted nor
subverted, but upright and Godlike.
The
suppositional antipode of divine infinite Spirit is
the so-called human soul or spirit, in other words
the five senses, the flesh that warreth
against Spirit. These so-called material senses
must yield to the infinite Spirit, named
God.
St.
Paul said: "For I determined not to know anything
among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified."
(I Cor. ii. 2.) Christian Science says: I am
determined not to know anything among you, save
Jesus Christ, and him glorified.
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