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Science
and Health
Chapter VIII
Footsteps
of Truth
Remember,
Lord, the reproach of Thy servants; how I do bear
in my bosom the reproach of all the mighty people;
wherewith Thine enemies have reproached, O Lord;
wherewith they have reproached the footsteps of
Thine anointed.
PSALMS.
The
best sermon ever preached is Truth practised and
demonstrated by the destruction of sin, sickness,
and death. Knowing this and knowing too that one
affection would be supreme in us and take the lead
in our lives, Jesus said, "No man can serve two
masters."
We
cannot build safely on false foundations. Truth
makes a new creature, in whom old things pass away
and "all things are become new." Passions,
selfishness, false appetites, hatred, fear, all
sensuality, yield to spirituality, and the
superabundance of being is on the side of God,
good.
We
cannot fill vessels already full. They must first
be emptied. Let us disrobe error. Then, when the
winds of God blow, we shall not hug our tatters
close about us.
The
way to extract error from mortal mind is to pour in
truth through flood-tides of Love. Christian
perfection is won on no other basis.
Grafting
holiness upon unholiness, supposing that sin can be
forgiven when it is not forsaken, is as foolish as
straining out gnats and swallowing
camels.
The
scientific unity which exists between God and man
must be wrought out in life-practice, and God's
will must be universally done.
If
men would bring to bear upon the study of the
Science of Mind half the faith they bestow upon the
so-called pains and pleasures of material sense,
they would not go on from bad to worse, until
disciplined by the prison and the scaffold; but the
whole human family would be redeemed through the
merits of Christ, through the perception and
acceptance of Truth. For this glorious result
Christian Science lights the torch of spiritual
understanding.
Outside
of this Science all is mutable; but immortal man,
in accord with the divine Principle of his being,
God, neither sins, suffers, nor dies. The days of
our pilgrimage will multiply instead of diminish,
when God's kingdom comes on earth; for the true way
leads to Life instead of to death, and earthly
experience discloses the finity of error and the
infinite capacities of Truth, in which God gives
man dominion over all the earth.
Our
beliefs about a Supreme Being contradict the
practice growing out of them. Error abounds where
Truth should "much more abound." We admit that God
has almighty power, is "a very present help in
trouble;" and yet we rely on a drug or hypnotism to
heal disease, as if senseless matter or erring
mortal mind had more power than omnipotent
Spirit.
Common
opinion admits that a man may take cold in the act
of doing good, and that this cold may produce fatal
pulmonary disease; as though evil could overbear
the law of Love, and check the reward for doing
good. In the Science of Christianity, Mind
omnipotence has all-power, assigns sure
rewards to righteousness, and shows that matter can
neither heal nor make sick, create nor
destroy.
If
God were understood instead of being merely
believed, this understanding would establish
health. The accusation of the rabbis, "He made
himself the Son of God," was really the
justification of Jesus, for to the Christian the
only true spirit is Godlike. This thought incites
to a more exalted worship and self-abnegation.
Spiritual perception brings out the possibilities
of being, destroys reliance on aught but God, and
so makes man the image of his Maker in deed and in
truth.
We
are prone to believe either in more than one
Supreme Ruler or in some power less than God. We
imagine that Mind can be imprisoned in a sensuous
body. When the material body has gone to ruin, when
evil has overtaxed the belief of life in matter and
destroyed it, then mortals believe that the
deathless Principle, or Soul, escapes from matter
and lives on; but this is not true. Death is not a
stepping-stone to Life, immortality, and bliss. The
so-called sinner is a suicide. Sin kills the sinner
and will continue to kill him so long as he sins.
The foam and fury of illegitimate living and of
fearful and doleful dying should disappear on the
shore of time; then the waves of sin, sorrow, and
death beat in vain.
God,
divine good, does not kill a man in order to give
him eternal Life, for God alone is man's life. God
is at once the centre and circumference of being.
It is evil that dies; good dies not.
All
forms of error support the false conclusions that
there is more than one Life; that material history
is as real and living as spiritual history; that
mortal error is as conclusively mental as immortal
Truth; and that there are two separate,
antagonistic entities and beings, two powers,
namely, Spirit and matter, resulting
in a third person (mortal man) who carries out the
delusions of sin, sickness, and death.
The
first power is admitted to be good, an intelligence
or Mind called God. The so-called second power,
evil, is the unlikeness of good. It cannot
therefore be mind, though so called. The third
power, mortal man, is a supposed mixture of the
first and second antagonistic powers, intelligence
and non-intelligence, of Spirit and
matter.
Such
theories are evidently erroneous. They can never
stand the test of Science. Judging them by their
fruits, they are corrupt. When will the ages
understand the Ego, and realize only one God, one
Mind or intelligence?
False
and self-assertive theories have given sinners the
notion that they can create what God cannot,
namely, sinful mortals in God's image, thus
usurping the name without the nature of the image
or reflection of divine Mind; but in Science it can
never be said that man has a mind of his own,
distinct from God, the all Mind.
The
belief that God lives in matter is pantheistic. The
error, which says that Soul is in body, Mind is in
matter, and good is in evil, must unsay it and
cease from such utterances; else God will continue
to be hidden from humanity, and mortals will sin
without knowing that they are sinning, will lean on
matter instead of Spirit, stumble with lameness,
drop with drunkenness, consume with disease,
all because of their blindness, their false sense
concerning God and man.
When
will the error of believing that there is life in
matter, and that sin, sickness, and death are
creations of God, be unmasked? When will it be
understood that matter has neither intelligence,
life, nor sensation, and that the opposite belief
is the prolific source of all suffering? God
created all through Mind, and made all perfect and
eternal. Where then is the necessity for recreation
or procreation?
Befogged
in error (the error of believing that matter can be
intelligent for good or evil), we can catch clear
glimpses of God only as the mists disperse, or as
they melt into such thinness that we perceive the
divine image in some word or deed which indicates
the true idea, the supremacy and reality of
good, the nothingness and unreality of
evil.
When
we realize that there is one Mind, the divine law
of loving our neighbor as ourselves is unfolded;
whereas a belief in many ruling minds hinders man's
normal drift towards the one Mind, one God, and
leads human thought into opposite channels where
selfishness reigns.
Selfishness
tips the beam of human existence towards the side
of error, not towards Truth. Denial of the oneness
of Mind throws our weight into the scale, not of
Spirit, God, good, but of matter.
When
we fully understand our relation to the Divine, we
can have no other Mind but His, no other
Love, wisdom, or Truth, no other sense of Life, and
no consciousness of the existence of matter or
error.
The
power of the human will should be exercised only in
subordination to Truth; else it will misguide the
judgment and free the lower propensities. It is the
province of spiritual sense to govern man.
Material, erring, human thought acts injuriously
both upon the body and through it.
Will-power
is capable of all evil. It can never heal the sick,
for it is the prayer of the unrighteous; while the
exercise of the sentiments hope, faith, love
is the prayer of the righteous. This prayer,
governed by Science instead of the senses, heals
the sick.
In
the scientific relation of God to man, we find that
whatever blesses one blesses all, as Jesus showed
with the loaves and the fishes, Spirit, not
matter, being the source of supply.
Does
God send sickness, giving the mother her child for
the brief space of a few years and then taking it
away by death? Is God creating anew what He has
already created? The Scriptures are definite on
this point, declaring that His work was
finished, nothing is new to God, and that it
was good.
Can
there be any birth or death for man, the spiritual
image and likeness of God? Instead of God sending
sickness and death, He destroys them, and brings to
light immortality. Omnipotent and infinite Mind
made all and includes all. This Mind does not make
mistakes and subsequently correct them. God does
not cause man to sin, to be sick, or to
die.
There
are evil beliefs, often called evil spirits; but
these evils are not Spirit, for there is no evil in
Spirit. Because God is Spirit, evil becomes more
apparent and obnoxious proportionately as we
advance spiritually, until it disappears from our
lives. This fact proves our position, for every
scientific statement in Christianity has its proof.
Error of statement leads to error in
action.
God
is not the creator of an evil mind. Indeed, evil is
not Mind. We must learn that evil is the awful
deception and unreality of existence. Evil is not
supreme; good is not helpless; nor are the
so-called laws of matter primary, and the law of
Spirit secondary. Without this lesson, we lose
sight of the perfect Father, or the divine
Principle of man.
Body
is not first and Soul last, nor is evil mightier
than good. The Science of being repudiates
self-evident impossibilities, such as the
amalgamation of Truth and error in cause or effect.
Science separates the tares and wheat in time of
harvest.
There
is but one primal cause. Therefore there can be no
effect from any other cause, and there can be no
reality in aught which does not proceed from this
great and only cause. Sin, sickness, disease, and
death belong not to the Science of being. They are
the errors, which presuppose the absence of Truth,
Life, or Love.
The
spiritual reality is the scientific fact in all
things. The spiritual fact, repeated in the action
of man and the whole universe, is harmonious and is
the ideal of Truth. Spiritual facts are not
inverted; the opposite discord, which bears no
resemblance to spirituality, is not real. The only
evidence of this inversion is obtained from
suppositional error, which affords no proof of God,
Spirit, or of the spiritual creation. Material
sense defines all things materially, and has a
finite sense of the infinite.
The
Scriptures say, "In Him we live, and move, and have
our being." What then is this seeming power,
independent of God, which causes disease and cures
it? What is it but an error of belief, a law
of mortal mind, wrong in every sense, embracing
sin, sickness, and death? It is the very antipode
of immortal Mind, of Truth, and of spiritual law.
It is not in accordance with the goodness of God's
character that He should make man sick, then leave
man to heal himself; it is absurd to suppose that
matter can both cause and cure disease, or that
Spirit, God, produces disease and leaves the remedy
to matter.
John
Young of Edinburgh writes: "God is the father of
mind, and of nothing else." Such an utterance is
"the voice of one crying in the wilderness" of
human beliefs and preparing the way of Science. Let
us learn of the real and eternal, and prepare for
the reign of Spirit, the kingdom of heaven,
the reign and rule of universal harmony, which
cannot be lost nor remain forever
unseen.
Mind,
not matter, is causation. A material body only
expresses a material and mortal mind. A mortal man
possesses this body, and he makes it harmonious or
discordant according to the images of thought
impressed upon it. You embrace your body in your
thought, and you should delineate upon it thoughts
of health, not of sickness. You should banish all
thoughts of disease and sin and of other beliefs
included in matter. Man, being immortal, has a
perfect indestructible life. It is the mortal
belief which makes the body discordant and diseased
in proportion as ignorance, fear, or human
will governs mortals.
Mind,
supreme over all its formations and governing them
all, is the central sun of its own systems of
ideas, the life and light of all its own vast
creation; and man is tributary to divine Mind. The
material and mortal body or mind is not the
man.
The
world would collapse without Mind, without the
intelligence which holds the winds in its grasp.
Neither philosophy nor skepticism can hinder the
march of the Science which reveals the supremacy of
Mind. The immanent sense of Mind-power enhances the
glory of Mind. Nearness, not distance, lends
enchantment to this view.
The
compounded minerals or aggregated substances
composing the earth, the relations which
constituent masses hold to each other, the
magnitudes, distances, and revolutions of the
celestial bodies, are of no real importance, when
we remember that they all must give place to the
spiritual fact by the translation of man and the
universe back into Spirit. In proportion as this is
done, man and the universe will be found harmonious
and eternal.
Material
substances or mundane formations, astronomical
calculations, and all the paraphernalia of
speculative theories, based on the hypothesis of
material law or life and intelligence resident in
matter, will ultimately vanish, swallowed up in the
infinite calculus of Spirit.
Spiritual
sense is a conscious, constant capacity to
understand God. It shows the superiority of faith
by works over faith in words. Its ideas are
expressed only in "new tongues;" and these are
interpreted by the translation of the spiritual
original into the language which human thought can
comprehend.
The
Principle and proof of Christianity are discerned
by spiritual sense. They are set forth in Jesus'
demonstrations, which show by his healing
the sick, casting out evils, and destroying death,
"the last enemy that shall be destroyed,"
his disregard of matter and its so-called
laws.
Knowing
that Soul and its attributes were forever
manifested through man, the Master healed the sick,
gave sight to the blind, hearing to the deaf, feet
to the lame, thus bringing to light the scientific
action of the divine Mind on human minds and bodies
and giving a better understanding of Soul and
salvation. Jesus healed sickness and sin by one and
the same metaphysical process.
The
expression mortal mind is really a solecism,
for Mind is immortal, and Truth pierces the error
of mortality as a sunbeam penetrates the cloud.
Because, in obedience to the immutable law of
Spirit, this so-called mind is self-destructive, I
name it mortal. Error soweth the wind and reapeth
the whirlwind.
What
is termed matter, being unintelligent, cannot say,
"I suffer, I die, I am sick, or I am well." It is
the so-called mortal mind which voices this and
appears to itself to make good its claim. To mortal
sense, sin and suffering are real, but immortal
sense includes no evil nor pestilence. Because
immortal sense has no error of sense, it has no
sense of error; therefore it is without a
destructive element.
If
brain, nerves, stomach, are intelligent, if
they talk to us, tell us their condition, and
report how they feel, then Spirit and
matter, Truth and error, commingle and produce
sickness and health, good and evil, life and death;
and who shall say whether Truth or error is the
greater?
The
sensations of the body must either be the
sensations of a so-called mortal mind or of matter.
Nerves are not mind. Is it not provable that Mind
is not mortal and that matter has no
sensation? Is it not equally true that matter does
not appear in the spiritual understanding of
being?
The
sensation of sickness and the impulse to sin seem
to obtain in mortal mind. When a tear starts, does
not this so-called mind produce the effect seen in
the lachrymal gland? Without mortal mind, the tear
could not appear; and this action shows the nature
of all so-called material cause and
effect.
It
should no longer be said in Israel that "the
fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children's
teeth are set on edge." Sympathy with error should
disappear. The transfer of the thoughts of one
erring mind to another, Science renders
impossible.
If
it is true that nerves have sensation, that matter
has intelligence, that the material organism causes
the eyes to see and the ears to hear, then, when
the body is dematerialized, these faculties must be
lost, for their immortality is not in Spirit;
whereas the fact is that only through
dematerialization and spiritualization of thought
can these faculties be conceived of as
immortal.
Nerves
are not the source of pain or pleasure. We suffer
or enjoy in our dreams, but this pain or pleasure
is not communicated through a nerve. A tooth which
has been extracted sometimes aches again in belief,
and the pain seems to be in its old place. A limb
which has been amputated has continued in belief to
pain the owner. If the sensation of pain in the
limb can return, can be prolonged, why cannot the
limb reappear?
Why
need pain, rather than pleasure, come to this
mortal sense? Because the memory of pain is more
vivid than the memory of pleasure. I have seen an
unwitting attempt to scratch the end of a finger
which had been cut off for months. When the nerve
is gone, which we say was the occasion of pain, and
the pain still remains, it proves sensation to be
in the mortal mind, not in matter. Reverse the
process; take away this so-called mind instead of a
piece of the flesh, and the nerves have no
sensation.
Mortals
have a modus of their own, undirected and
unsustained by God. They produce a rose through
seed and soil, and bring the rose into contact with
the olfactory nerves that they may smell it. In
legerdemain and credulous frenzy, mortals believe
that unseen spirits produce the flowers. God alone
makes and clothes the lilies of the field, and this
He does by means of Mind, not matter.
Because
all the methods of Mind are not understood, we say
the lips or hands must move in order to convey
thought, that the undulations of the air convey
sound, and possibly that other methods involve
so-called miracles. The realities of being, its
normal action, and the origin of all things are
unseen to mortal sense; whereas the unreal and
imitative movements of mortal belief, which would
reverse the immortal modus and action, are styled
the real. Whoever contradicts this mortal mind
supposition of reality is called a deceiver, or is
said to be deceived. Of a man it has been said, "As
he thinketh in his heart, so is he;" hence as a man
spiritually understandeth, so is he in
truth.
Mortal
mind conceives of something as either liquid or
solid, and then classifies it materially. Immortal
and spiritual facts exist apart from this mortal
and material conception. God, good, is
self-existent and self-expressed, though
indefinable as a whole. Every step towards goodness
is a departure from materiality, and is a tendency
towards God, Spirit. Material theories partially
paralyze this attraction towards infinite and
eternal good by an opposite attraction towards the
finite, temporary, and discordant.
Sound
is a mental impression made on mortal belief. The
ear does not really hear. Divine Science reveals
sound as communicated through the senses of Soul
through spiritual understanding.
Mozart
experienced more than he expressed. The rapture of
his grandest symphonies was never heard. He was a
musician beyond what the world knew. This was even
more strikingly true of Beethoven, who was so long
hopelessly deaf. Mental melodies and strains of
sweetest music supersede conscious sound. Music is
the rhythm of head and heart. Mortal mind is the
harp of many strings, discoursing either discord or
harmony according as the hand, which sweeps over
it, is human or divine.
Before
human knowledge dipped to its depths into a false
sense of things, into belief in material
origins which discard the one Mind and true source
of being, it is possible that the
impressions from Truth were as distinct as sound,
and that they came as sound to the primitive
prophets. If the medium of hearing is wholly
spiritual, it is normal and
indestructible.
If
Enoch's perception had been confined to the
evidence before his material senses, he could never
have "walked with God," nor been guided into the
demonstration of life eternal.
Adam,
represented in the Scriptures as formed from dust,
is an object-lesson for the human mind. The
material senses, like Adam, originate in matter and
return to dust, are proved non-intelligent.
They go out as they came in, for they are still the
error, not the truth of being. When it is learned
that the spiritual sense, and not the material,
conveys the impressions of Mind to man, then being
will be understood and found to be
harmonious.
We
bow down to matter, and entertain finite thoughts
of God like the pagan idolater. Mortals are
inclined to fear and to obey what they consider a
material body more than they do a spiritual God.
All material knowledge, like the original "tree of
knowledge," multiplies their pains, for mortal
illusions would rob God, slay man, and meanwhile
would spread their table with cannibal tidbits and
give thanks.
How
transient a sense is mortal sight, when a wound on
the retina may end the power of light and lens! But
the real sight or sense is not lost. Neither age
nor accident can interfere with the senses of Soul,
and there are no other real senses. It is evident
that the body as matter has no sensation of its
own, and there is no oblivion for Soul and its
faculties. Spirit's senses are without pain, and
they are forever at peace. Nothing can hide from
them the harmony of all things and the might and
permanence of Truth.
If
Spirit, Soul, could sin or be lost, then being and
immortality would be lost, together with all the
faculties of Mind; but being cannot be lost while
God exists. Soul and matter are at variance from
the very necessity of their opposite natures.
Mortals are unacquainted with the reality of
existence, because matter and mortality do not
reflect the facts of Spirit.
Spiritual
vision is not subordinate to geometric altitudes.
Whatever is governed by God, is never for an
instant deprived of the light and might of
intelligence and Life.
We
are sometimes led to believe that darkness is as
real as light; but Science affirms darkness to be
only a mortal sense of the absence of light, at the
coming of which darkness loses the appearance of
reality. So sin and sorrow, disease and death, are
the suppositional absence of Life, God, and flee as
phantoms of error before truth and love.
With
its divine proof, Science reverses the evidence of
material sense. Every quality and condition of
mortality is lost, swallowed up in immortality.
Mortal man is the antipode of immortal man in
origin, in existence, and in his relation to
God.
Because
he understood the superiority and immortality of
good, Socrates feared not the hemlock poison. Even
the faith of his philosophy spurned physical
timidity. Having sought man's spiritual state, he
recognized the immortality of man. The ignorance
and malice of the age would have killed the
venerable philosopher because of his faith in Soul
and his indifference to the body.
Who
shall say that man is alive to-day, but may be dead
to-morrow? What has touched Life, God, to such
strange issues? Here theories cease, and Science
unveils the mystery and solves the problem of man.
Error bites the heel of truth, but cannot kill
truth. Truth bruises the head of error
destroys error. Spirituality lays open siege to
materialism. On which side are we
fighting?
The
understanding that the Ego is Mind, and that there
is but one Mind or intelligence, begins at once to
destroy the errors of mortal sense and to supply
the truth of immortal sense. This understanding
makes the body harmonious; it makes the nerves,
bones, brain, etc., servants, instead of masters.
If man is governed by the law of divine Mind, his
body is in submission to everlasting Life and Truth
and Love. The great mistake of mortals is to
suppose that man, God's image and likeness, is both
matter and Spirit, both good and evil.
If
the decision were left to the corporeal senses,
evil would appear to be the master of good, and
sickness to be the rule of existence, while health
would seem the exception, death the inevitable, and
life a paradox. Paul asked: "What concord hath
Christ with Belial?" (2 Corinthians vi.
15.)
When
you say, "Man's body is material," I say with Paul:
Be "willing rather to be absent from the body, and
to be present with the Lord." Give up your material
belief of mind in matter, and have but one Mind,
even God; for this Mind forms its own likeness. The
loss of man's identity through the understanding
which Science confers is impossible; and the notion
of such a possibility is more absurd than to
conclude that individual musical tones are lost in
the origin of harmony.
Medical
schools may inform us that the healing work of
Christian Science and Paul's peculiar Christian
conversion and experience, which prove Mind
to be scientifically distinct from matter,
are indications of unnatural mental and bodily
conditions, even of catalepsy and hysteria; yet if
we turn to the Scriptures, what do we read? Why,
this: "If a man keep my saying, he shall never see
death!" and "Henceforth know we no man after the
flesh!"
That
scientific methods are superior to others, is seen
by their effects. When you have once conquered a
diseased condition of the body through Mind, that
condition never recurs, and you have won a point in
Science. When mentality gives rest to the body, the
next toil will fatigue you less, for you are
working out the problem of being in divine
metaphysics; and in proportion as you understand
the control which Mind has over so-called matter,
you will be able to demonstrate this control. The
scientific and permanent remedy for fatigue is to
learn the power of Mind over the body or any
illusion of physical weariness, and so destroy this
illusion, for matter cannot be weary and
heavy-laden.
You
say, "Toil fatigues me." But what is this
me? Is it muscle or mind? Which is tired and
so speaks? Without mind, could the muscles be
tired? Do the muscles talk, or do you talk for
them? Matter is nonintelligent. Mortal mind does
the false talking, and that which affirms
weariness, made that weariness.
You
do not say a wheel is fatigued; and yet the body is
as material as the wheel. If it were not for what
the human mind says of the body, the body, like the
inanimate wheel, would never be weary. The
consciousness of Truth rests us more than hours of
repose in unconsciousness.
The
body is supposed to say, "I am ill." The reports of
sickness may form a coalition with the reports of
sin, and say, "I am malice, lust, appetite, envy,
hate." What renders both sin and sickness difficult
of cure is, that the human mind is the sinner,
disinclined to self-correction, and believing that
the body can be sick independently of mortal mind
and that the divine Mind has no jurisdiction over
the body.
Why
pray for the recovery of the sick, if you are
without faith in God's willingness and ability to
heal them? If you do believe in God, why do you
substitute drugs for the Almighty's power, and
employ means which lead only into material ways of
obtaining help, instead of turning in time of need
to God, divine Love, who is an ever-present
help?
Treat
a belief in sickness as you would sin, with sudden
dismissal. Resist the temptation to believe in
matter as intelligent, as having sensation or
power.
The
Scriptures say, "They that wait upon the Lord . . .
shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk,
and not faint." The meaning of that passage is not
perverted by applying it literally to moments of
fatigue, for the moral and physical are as one in
their results. When we wake to the truth of being,
all disease, pain, weakness, weariness, sorrow,
sin, death, will be unknown, and the mortal dream
will forever cease. My method of treating fatigue
applies to all bodily ailments, since Mind should
be, and is, supreme, absolute, and
final.
In
mathematics, we do not multiply when we should
subtract, and then say the product is correct. No
more can we say in Science that muscles give
strength, that nerves give pain or pleasure, or
that matter governs, and then expect that the
result will be harmony. Not muscles, nerves, nor
bones, but mortal mind makes the whole body "sick,
and the whole heart faint;" whereas divine Mind
heals.
When
this is understood, we shall never affirm
concerning the body what we do not wish to have
manifested. We shall not call the body weak, if we
would have it strong; for the belief in feebleness
must obtain in the human mind before it can be made
manifest on the body, and the destruction of the
belief will be the removal of its effects. Science
includes no rule of discord, but governs
harmoniously. "The wish," says the poet, "is ever
father to the thought."
We
may hear a sweet melody, and yet misunderstand the
science that governs it. Those who are healed
through metaphysical Science, not comprehending the
Principle of the cure, may misunderstand it, and
impute their recovery to change of air or diet, not
rendering to God the honor due to Him alone. Entire
immunity from the belief in sin, suffering, and
death may not be reached at this period, but we may
look for an abatement of these evils; and this
scientific beginning is in the right
direction.
We
hear it said: "I exercise daily in the open air. I
take cold baths, in order to overcome a
predisposition to take cold; and yet I have
continual colds, catarrh, and cough." Such
admissions ought to open people's eyes to the
inefficacy of material hygiene, and induce
sufferers to look in other directions for cause and
cure.
Instinct
is better than misguided reason, as even nature
declares. The violet lifts her blue eye to greet
the early spring. The leaves clap their hands as
nature's untired worshippers. The snowbird sings
and soars amid the blasts; he has no catarrh from
wet feet, and procures a summer residence with more
ease than a nabob. The atmosphere of the earth,
kinder than the atmosphere of mortal mind, leaves
catarrh to the latter. Colds, coughs, and contagion
are engendered solely by human theories.
Mortal
mind produces its own phenomena, and then charges
them to something else, like a kitten
glancing into the mirror at itself and thinking it
sees another kitten.
A
clergyman once adopted a diet of bread and water to
increase his spirituality. Finding his health
failing, he gave up his abstinence, and advised
others never to try dietetics for growth in
grace.
The
belief that either fasting or feasting makes men
better morally or physically is one of the fruits
of "the tree of the knowledge of good and evil,"
concerning which God said, "Thou shalt not eat of
it." Mortal mind forms all conditions of the mortal
body, and controls the stomach, bones, lungs,
heart, blood, etc., as directly as the volition or
will moves the hand.
I
knew a person who when quite a child adopted the
Graham system to cure dyspepsia. For many years, he
ate only bread and vegetables, and drank nothing
but water. His dyspepsia increasing, he decided
that his diet should be more rigid, and thereafter
he partook of but one meal in twenty-four hours,
this meal consisting of only a thin slice of bread
without water. His physician also recommended that
he should not wet his parched throat until three
hours after eating. He passed many weary years in
hunger and weakness, almost in starvation, and
finally made up his mind to die, having exhausted
the skill of the doctors, who kindly informed him
that death was indeed his only alternative. At this
point Christian Science saved him, and he is now in
perfect health without a vestige of the old
complaint.
He
learned that suffering and disease were the
self-imposed beliefs of mortals, and not the facts
of being; that God never decreed disease,
never ordained a law that fasting should be a means
of health. Hence semi-starvation is not acceptable
to wisdom, and it is equally far from Science, in
which being is sustained by God, Mind. These
truths, opening his eyes, relieved his stomach, and
he ate without suffering, "giving God thanks;" but
he never enjoyed his food as he had imagined he
would when, still the slave of matter, he thought
of the flesh-pots of Egypt, feeling childhood's
hunger and undisciplined by self-denial and divine
Science.
This
new-born understanding, that neither food nor the
stomach, without the consent of mortal mind, can
make one suffer, brings with it another lesson,
that gluttony is a sensual illusion, and
that this phantasm of mortal mind disappears as we
better apprehend our spiritual existence and ascend
the ladder of life.
This
person learned that food affects the body only as
mortal mind has its material methods of working,
one of which is to believe that proper food
supplies nutriment and strength to the human
system. He learned also that mortal mind makes a
mortal body, whereas Truth regenerates this fleshly
mind and feeds thought with the bread of
Life.
Food
had less power to help or to hurt him after he had
availed himself of the fact that Mind governs man,
and he also had less faith in the so-called
pleasures and pains of matter. Taking less thought
about what he should eat or drink, consulting the
stomach less about the economy of living and God
more, he recovered strength and flesh rapidly. For
many years he had been kept alive, as was believed,
only by the strictest adherence to hygiene and
drugs, and yet he continued ill all the while. Now
he dropped drugs and material hygiene, and was
well.
He
learned that a dyspeptic was very far from being
the image and likeness of God, far from
having "dominion over the fish of the sea, and over
the fowl of the air, and over the cattle," if
eating a bit of animal flesh could overpower him.
He finally concluded that God never made a
dyspeptic, while fear, hygiene, physiology, and
physics had made him one, contrary to His
commands.
In
seeking a cure for dyspepsia consult matter not at
all, and eat what is set before you, "asking no
question for conscience sake." We must destroy the
false belief that life and intelligence are in
matter, and plant ourselves upon what is pure and
perfect. Paul said, "Walk in the Spirit, and ye
shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh." Sooner or
later we shall learn that the fetters of man's
finite capacity are forged by the illusion that he
lives in body instead of in Soul, in matter instead
of in Spirit.
Matter
does not express Spirit. God is infinite
omnipresent Spirit. If Spirit is all and is
everywhere, what and where is matter? Remember that
truth is greater than error, and we cannot put the
greater into the less. Soul is Spirit, and Spirit
is greater than body. If Spirit were once within
the body, Spirit would be finite, and therefore
could not be Spirit.
The
question, "What is Truth," convulses the world.
Many are ready to meet this inquiry with the
assurance which comes of understanding; but more
are blinded by their old illusions, and try to
"give it pause." "If the blind lead the blind, both
shall fall into the ditch."
The
efforts of error to answer this question by some
ology are vain. Spiritual rationality and
free thought accompany approaching Science, and
cannot be put down. They will emancipate humanity,
and supplant unscientific means and so-called
laws.
Peals
that should startle the slumbering thought from its
erroneous dream are partially unheeded; but the
last trump has not sounded, or this would not be
so. Marvels, calamities, and sin will much more
abound as truth urges upon mortals its resisted
claims; but the awful daring of sin destroys sin,
and foreshadows the triumph of truth. God will
overturn, until "He come whose right it is."
Longevity is increasing and the power of sin
diminishing, for the world feels the alterative
effect of truth through every pore.
As
the crude footprints of the past disappear from the
dissolving paths of the present, we shall better
understand the Science which governs these changes,
and shall plant our feet on firmer ground. Every
sensuous pleasure or pain is self-destroyed through
suffering. There should be painless progress,
attended by life and peace instead of discord and
death.
In
the record of nineteen centuries, there are sects
many but not enough Christianity. Centuries ago
religionists were ready to hail an anthropomorphic
God, and array His vicegerent with pomp and
splendor; but this was not the manner of truth's
appearing. Of old the cross was truth's central
sign, and it is to-day. The modern lash is less
material than the Roman scourge, but it is equally
as cutting. Cold disdain, stubborn resistance,
opposition from church, state laws, and the press,
are still the harbingers of truth's full-orbed
appearing.
A
higher and more practical Christianity,
demonstrating justice and meeting the needs of
mortals in sickness and in health, stands at the
door of this age, knocking for admission. Will you
open or close the door upon this angel visitant,
who cometh in the quiet of meekness, as he came of
old to the patriarch at noonday?
Truth
brings the elements of liberty. On its banner is
the Soul-inspired motto, "Slavery is abolished."
The power of God brings deliverance to the captive.
No power can withstand divine Love. What is this
supposed power, which opposes itself to God? Whence
cometh it? What is it that binds man with iron
shackles to sin, sickness, and death? Whatever
enslaves man is opposed to the divine government.
Truth makes man free.
You
may know when first Truth leads by the fewness and
faithfulness of its followers. Thus it is that the
march of time bears onward freedom's banner. The
powers of this world will fight, and will command
their sentinels not to let truth pass the guard
until it subscribes to their systems; but Science,
heeding not the pointed bayonet, marches on. There
is always some tumult, but there is a rallying to
truth's standard.
The
history of our country, like all history,
illustrates the might of Mind, and shows human
power to be proportionate to its embodiment of
right thinking. A few immortal sentences, breathing
the omnipotence of divine justice, have been potent
to break despotic fetters and abolish the
whipping-post and slave market; but oppression
neither went down in blood, nor did the breath of
freedom come from the cannon's mouth. Love is the
liberator.
Legally
to abolish unpaid servitude in the United States
was hard; but the abolition of mental slavery is a
more difficult task. The despotic tendencies,
inherent in mortal mind and always germinating in
new forms of tyranny, must be rooted out through
the action of the divine Mind.
Men
and women of all climes and races are still in
bondage to material sense, ignorant how to obtain
their freedom. The rights of man were vindicated in
a single section and on the lowest plane of human
life, when African slavery was abolished in our
land. That was only prophetic of further steps
towards the banishment of a world-wide slavery,
found on higher planes of existence and under more
subtle and depraving forms.
The
voice of God in behalf of the African slave was
still echoing in our land, when the voice of the
herald of this new crusade sounded the keynote of
universal freedom, asking a fuller acknowledgment
of the rights of man as a Son of God, demanding
that the fetters of sin, sickness, and death be
stricken from the human mind and that its freedom
be won, not through human warfare, not with bayonet
and blood, but through Christ's divine
Science.
God
has built a higher platform of human rights, and He
has built it on diviner claims. These claims are
not made through code or creed, but in
demonstration of "on earth peace, good-will toward
men." Human codes, scholastic theology, material
medicine and hygiene, fetter faith and spiritual
understanding. Divine Science rends asunder these
fetters, and man's birthright of sole allegiance to
his Maker asserts itself.
I
saw before me the sick, wearing out years of
servitude to an unreal master in the belief that
the body governed them, rather than
Mind.
The
lame, the deaf, the dumb, the blind, the sick, the
sensual, the sinner, I wished to save from the
slavery of their own beliefs and from the
educational systems of the Pharaohs, who to-day, as
of yore, hold the children of Israel in bondage. I
saw before me the awful conflict, the Red Sea and
the wilderness; but I pressed on through faith in
God, trusting Truth, the strong deliverer, to guide
me into the land of Christian Science, where
fetters fall and the rights of man are fully known
and acknowledged.
I
saw that the law of mortal belief included all
error, and that, even as oppressive laws are
disputed and mortals are taught their right to
freedom, so the claims of the enslaving senses must
be denied and superseded. The law of the divine
Mind must end human bondage, or mortals will
continue unaware of man's inalienable rights and in
subjection to hopeless slavery, because some public
teachers permit an ignorance of divine power,
an ignorance that is the foundation of
continued bondage and of human
suffering.
Discerning
the rights of man, we cannot fail to foresee the
doom of all oppression. Slavery is not the
legitimate state of man. God made man free. Paul
said, "I was free born." All men should be free.
"Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is
liberty." Love and Truth make free, but evil and
error lead into captivity.
Christian
Science raises the standard of liberty and cries:
"Follow me! Escape from the bondage of sickness,
sin, and death!" Jesus marked out the way. Citizens
of the world, accept the "glorious liberty of the
children of God," and be free! This is your divine
right. The illusion of material sense, not divine
law, has bound you, entangled your free limbs,
crippled your capacities, enfeebled your body, and
defaced the tablet of your being.
If
God had instituted material laws to govern man,
disobedience to which would have made man ill,
Jesus would not have disregarded those laws by
healing in direct opposition to them and in
defiance of all material conditions.
The
transmission of disease or of certain
idiosyncrasies of mortal mind would be impossible
if this great fact of being were learned,
namely, that nothing inharmonious can enter being,
for Life is God. Heredity is a prolific
subject for mortal belief to pin theories upon; but
if we learn that nothing is real but the right, we
shall have no dangerous inheritances, and fleshly
ills will disappear.
The
enslavement of man is not legitimate. It will cease
when man enters into his heritage of freedom, his
God-given dominion over the material senses.
Mortals will some day assert their freedom in the
name of Almighty God. Then they will control their
own bodies through the understanding of divine
Science. Dropping their present beliefs, they will
recognize harmony as the spiritual reality and
discord as the material unreality.
If
we follow the command of our Master, "Take no
thought for your life," we shall never depend on
bodily conditions, structure, or economy, but we
shall be masters of the body, dictate its terms,
and form and control it with Truth.
There
is no power apart from God. Omnipotence has
all-power, and to acknowledge any other power is to
dishonor God. The humble Nazarene overthrew the
supposition that sin, sickness, and death have
power. He proved them powerless. It should have
humbled the pride of the priests, when they saw the
demonstration of Christianity excel the influence
of their dead faith and ceremonies.
If
Mind is not the master of sin, sickness, and death,
they are immortal, for it is already proved that
matter has not destroyed them, but is their basis
and support.
We
should hesitate to say that Jehovah sins or
suffers; but if sin and suffering are realities of
being, whence did they emanate? God made all that
was made, and Mind signifies God, infinity,
not finity. Not far removed from infidelity is the
belief which unites such opposites as sickness and
health, holiness and unholiness, calls both the
offspring of spirit, and at the same time admits
that Spirit is God, virtually declaring Him
good in one instance and evil in
another.
By
universal consent, mortal belief has constituted
itself a law to bind mortals to sickness, sin, and
death. This customary belief is misnamed material
law, and the individual who upholds it is mistaken
in theory and in practice. The so-called law of
mortal mind, conjectural and speculative, is made
void by the law of immortal Mind, and false law
should be trampled under foot.
If
God causes man to be sick, sickness must be good,
and its opposite, health, must be evil, for all
that He makes is good and will stand forever. If
the transgression of God's law produces sickness,
it is right to be sick; and we cannot if we would,
and should not if we could, annul the decrees of
wisdom. It is the transgression of a belief of
mortal mind, not of a law of matter nor of divine
Mind, which causes the belief of sickness. The
remedy is Truth, not matter, the truth that
disease is unreal.
If
sickness is real, it belongs to immortality; if
true, it is a part of Truth. Would you attempt with
drugs, or without, to destroy a quality or
condition of Truth? But if sickness and sin are
illusions, the awakening from this mortal dream, or
illusion, will bring us into health, holiness, and
immortality. This awakening is the forever coming
of Christ, the advanced appearing of Truth, which
casts out error and heals the sick. This is the
salvation which comes through God, the divine
Principle, Love, as demonstrated by
Jesus.
It
would be contrary to our highest ideas of God to
suppose Him capable of first arranging law and
causation so as to bring about certain evil
results, and then punishing the helpless victims of
His volition for doing what they could not avoid
doing. Good is not, cannot be, the author of
experimental sins. God, good, can no more produce
sickness than goodness can cause evil and health
occasion disease.
Does
wisdom make blunders which must afterwards be
rectified by man? Does a law of God produce
sickness, and can man put that law under his feet
by healing sickness? According to Holy Writ, the
sick are never really healed by drugs, hygiene, or
any material method. These merely evade the
question. They are soothing syrups to put children
to sleep, satisfy mortal belief, and quiet
fear.
We
think that we are healed when a disease disappears,
though it is liable to reappear; but we are never
thoroughly healed until the liability to be ill is
removed. So-called mortal mind or the mind of
mortals being the remote, predisposing, and the
exciting cause of all suffering, the cause of
disease must be obliterated through Christ in
divine Science, or the so-called physical senses
will get the victory.
Unless
an ill is rightly met and fairly overcome by Truth,
the ill is never conquered. If God destroys not
sin, sickness, and death, they are not destroyed in
the mind of mortals, but seem to this so-called
mind to be immortal. What God cannot do, man need
not attempt. If God heals not the sick, they are
not healed, for no lesser power equals the infinite
All-power; but God, Truth, Life, Love, does heal
the sick through the prayer of the
righteous.
If
God makes sin, if good produces evil, if truth
results in error, then Science and Christianity are
helpless; but there are no antagonistic powers nor
laws, spiritual or material, creating and governing
man through perpetual warfare. God is not the
author of mortal discords. Therefore we accept the
conclusion that discords have only a fabulous
existence, are mortal beliefs which divine Truth
and Love destroy.
To
hold yourself superior to sin, because God made you
superior to it and governs man, is true wisdom. To
fear sin is to misunderstand the power of Love and
the divine Science of being in man's relation to
God, to doubt His government and distrust
His omnipotent care. To hold yourself superior to
sickness and death is equally wise, and is in
accordance with divine Science. To fear them is
impossible, when you fully apprehend God and know
that they are no part of His creation.
Man,
governed by his Maker, having no other Mind,
planted on the Evangelist's statement that "all
things were made by Him [the Word of God];
and without Him was not anything made that was
made," can triumph over sin, sickness, and
death.
Many
theories relative to God and man neither make man
harmonious nor God lovable. The beliefs we commonly
entertain about happiness and life afford no
scatheless and permanent evidence of either.
Security for the claims of harmonious and eternal
being is found only in divine Science.
Scripture
informs us that "with God all things are possible,"
all good is possible to Spirit; but our
prevalent theories practically deny this, and make
healing possible only through matter. These
theories must be untrue, for the Scripture is true.
Christianity is not false, but religions which
contradict its Principle are false.
In
our age Christianity is again demonstrating the
power of divine Principle, as it did over nineteen
hundred years ago, by healing the sick and
triumphing over death. Jesus never taught that
drugs, food, air, and exercise could make a man
healthy, or that they could destroy human life; nor
did he illustrate these errors by his practice. He
referred man's harmony to Mind, not to matter, and
never tried to make of none effect the sentence of
God, which sealed God's condemnation of sin,
sickness, and death.
In
the sacred sanctuary of Truth are voices of solemn
import, but we heed them not. It is only when the
so-called pleasures and pains of sense pass away in
our lives, that we find unquestionable signs of the
burial of error and the resurrection to spiritual
life.
There
is neither place nor opportunity in Science for
error of any sort. Every day makes its demands upon
us for higher proofs rather than professions of
Christian power. These proofs consist solely in the
destruction of sin, sickness, and death by the
power of Spirit, as Jesus destroyed them. This is
an element of progress, and progress is the law of
God, whose law demands of us only what we can
certainly fulfil.
In
the midst of imperfection, perfection is seen and
acknowledged only by degrees. The ages must slowly
work up to perfection. How long it must be before
we arrive at the demonstration of scientific being,
no man knoweth, not even "the Son but the
Father;" but the false claim of error continues its
delusions until the goal of goodness is assiduously
earned and won.
Already
the shadow of His right hand rests upon the hour.
Ye who can discern the face of the sky, the
sign material, how much more should ye
discern the sign mental, and compass the
destruction of sin and sickness by overcoming the
thoughts which produce them, and by understanding
the spiritual idea which corrects and destroys
them. To reveal this truth was our Master's mission
to all mankind, including the hearts which rejected
him.
When
numbers have been divided according to a fixed
rule, the quotient is not more unquestionable than
the scientific tests I have made of the effects of
truth upon the sick. The counter fact relative to
any disease is required to cure it. The utterance
of truth is designed to rebuke and destroy error.
Why should truth not be efficient in sickness,
which is solely the result of inharmony?
Spiritual
draughts heal, while material lotions interfere
with truth, even as ritualism and creed hamper
spirituality. If we trust matter, we distrust
Spirit.
Whatever
inspires with wisdom, Truth, or Love be it
song, sermon, or Science blesses the human
family with crumbs of comfort from Christ's table,
feeding the hungry and giving living waters to the
thirsty.
We
should become more familiar with good than with
evil, and guard against false beliefs as watchfully
as we bar our doors against the approach of thieves
and murderers. We should love our enemies and help
them on the basis of the Golden Rule; but avoid
casting pearls before those who trample them under
foot, thereby robbing both themselves and
others.
If
mortals would keep proper ward over mortal mind,
the brood of evils which infest it would be cleared
out. We must begin with this so-called mind and
empty it of sin and sickness, or sin and sickness
will never cease. The present codes of human
systems disappoint the weary searcher after a
divine theology, adequate to the right education of
human thought.
Sin
and disease must be thought before they can be
manifested. You must control evil thoughts in the
first instance, or they will control you in the
second. Jesus declared that to look with desire on
forbidden objects was to break a moral precept. He
laid great stress on the action of the human mind,
unseen to the senses.
Evil
thoughts and aims reach no farther and do no more
harm than one's belief permits. Evil thoughts,
lusts, and malicious purposes cannot go forth, like
wandering pollen, from one human mind to another,
finding unsuspected lodgment, if virtue and truth
build a strong defence. Better suffer a doctor
infected with smallpox to attend you than to be
treated mentally by one who does not obey the
requirements of divine Science.
The
teachers of schools and the readers in churches
should be selected with as direct reference to
their morals as to their learning or their correct
reading. Nurseries of character should be strongly
garrisoned with virtue. School-examinations are
one-sided; it is not so much academic education, as
a moral and spiritual culture, which lifts one
higher. The pure and uplifting thoughts of the
teacher, constantly imparted to pupils, will reach
higher than the heavens of astronomy; while the
debased and unscrupulous mind, though adorned with
gems of scholarly attainment, will degrade the
characters it should inform and elevate.
Physicians,
whom the sick employ in their helplessness, should
be models of virtue. They should be wise spiritual
guides to health and hope. To the tremblers on the
brink of death, who understand not the divine Truth
which is Life and perpetuates being, physicians
should be able to teach it. Then when the soul is
willing and the flesh weak, the patient's feet may
be planted on the rock Christ Jesus, the true idea
of spiritual power.
Clergymen,
occupying the watchtowers of the world, should
uplift the standard of Truth. They should so raise
their hearers spiritually, that their listeners
will love to grapple with a new, right idea and
broaden their concepts. Love of Christianity,
rather than love of popularity, should stimulate
clerical labor and progress. Truth should emanate
from the pulpit, but never be strangled there. A
special privilege is vested in the ministry. How
shall it be used? Sacredly, in the interests of
humanity, not of sect.
Is
it not professional reputation and emolument rather
than the dignity of God's laws, which many leaders
seek? Do not inferior motives induce the infuriated
attacks on individuals, who reiterate Christ's
teachings in support of his proof by example that
the divine Mind heals sickness as well as
sin?
A
mother is the strongest educator, either for or
against crime. Her thoughts form the embryo of
another mortal mind, and unconsciously mould it,
either after a model odious to herself or through
divine influence, "according to the pattern showed
to thee in the mount." Hence the importance of
Christian Science, from which we learn of the one
Mind and of the availability of good as the remedy
for every woe.
Children
should obey their parents; insubordination is an
evil, blighting the buddings of self-government.
Parents should teach their children at the earliest
possible period the truths of health and holiness.
Children are more tractable than adults, and learn
more readily to love the simple verities that will
make them happy and good.
Jesus
loved little children because of their freedom from
wrong and their receptiveness of right. While age
is halting between two opinions or battling with
false beliefs, youth makes easy and rapid strides
towards Truth.
A
little girl, who had occasionally listened to my
explanations, badly wounded her finger. She seemed
not to notice it. On being questioned about it she
answered ingenuously, "There is no sensation in
matter." Bounding off with laughing eyes, she
presently added, "Mamma, my finger is not a bit
sore."
It
might have been months or years before her parents
would have laid aside their drugs, or reached the
mental height their little daughter so naturally
attained. The more stubborn beliefs and theories of
parents often choke the good seed in the minds of
themselves and their offspring. Superstition, like
"the fowls of the air," snatches away the good seed
before it has sprouted.
Children
should be taught the Truth-cure, Christian Science,
among their first lessons, and kept from discussing
or entertaining theories or thoughts about
sickness. To prevent the experience of error and
its sufferings, keep out of the minds of your
children either sinful or diseased thoughts. The
latter should be excluded on the same principle as
the former. This makes Christian Science early
available.
Some
invalids are unwilling to know the facts or to hear
about the fallacy of matter and its supposed laws.
They devote themselves a little longer to their
material gods, cling to a belief in the life and
intelligence of matter, and expect this error to do
more for them than they are willing to admit the
only living and true God can do. Impatient at your
explanation, unwilling to investigate the Science
of Mind which would rid them of their complaints,
they hug false beliefs and suffer the delusive
consequences.
Motives
and acts are not rightly valued before they are
understood. It is well to wait till those whom you
would benefit are ready for the blessing, for
Science is working changes in personal character as
well as in the material universe.
To
obey the Scriptural command, "Come out from among
them, and be ye separate," is to incur society's
frown; but this frown, more than flatteries,
enables one to be Christian. Losing her crucifix,
the Roman Catholic girl said, "I have nothing left
but Christ." "If God be for us, who can be against
us?"
To
fall away from Truth in times of persecution, shows
that we never understood Truth. From out the bridal
chamber of wisdom there will come the warning, "I
know you not." Unimproved opportunities will rebuke
us when we attempt to claim the benefits of an
experience we have not made our own, try to reap
the harvest we have not sown, and wish to enter
unlawfully into the labors of others. Truth often
remains unsought, until we seek this remedy for
human woe because we suffer severely from
error.
Attempts
to conciliate society and so gain dominion over
mankind, arise from worldly weakness. He who leaves
all for Christ forsakes popularity and gains
Christianity.
Society
is a foolish juror, listening only to one side of
the case. Justice often comes too late to secure a
verdict. People with mental work before them have
no time for gossip about false law or testimony. To
reconstruct timid justice and place the fact above
the falsehood, is the work of time.
The
cross is the central emblem of history. It is the
lodestar in the demonstration of Christian healing,
the demonstration by which sin and sickness
are destroyed. The sects, which endured the lash of
their predecessors, in their turn lay it upon those
who are in advance of creeds.
Take
away wealth, fame, and social organizations, which
weigh not one jot in the balance of God, and we get
clearer views of Principle. Break up cliques, level
wealth with honesty, let worth be judged according
to wisdom, and we get better views of
humanity.
The
wicked man is not the ruler of his upright
neighbor. Let it be understood that success in
error is defeat in Truth. The watchword of
Christian Science is Scriptural: "Let the wicked
forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his
thoughts."
To
ascertain our progress, we must learn where our
affections are placed and whom we acknowledge and
obey as God. If divine Love is becoming nearer,
dearer, and more real to us, matter is then
submitting to Spirit. The objects we pursue and the
spirit we manifest reveal our standpoint, and show
what we are winning.
Mortal
mind is the acknowledged seat of human motives. It
forms material concepts and produces every
discordant action of the body. If action proceeds
from the divine Mind, action is harmonious. If it
comes from erring mortal mind, it is discordant and
ends in sin, sickness, death. Those two opposite
sources never mingle in fount or stream. The
perfect Mind sends forth perfection, for God is
Mind. Imperfect mortal mind sends forth its own
resemblances, of which the wise man said, "All is
vanity."
Nature
voices natural, spiritual law and divine Love, but
human belief misinterprets nature. Arctic regions,
sunny tropics, giant hills, winged winds, mighty
billows, verdant vales, festive flowers, and
glorious heavens, all point to Mind, the
spiritual intelligence they reflect. The floral
apostles are hieroglyphs of Deity. Suns and planets
teach grand lessons. The stars make night
beautiful, and the leaflet turns naturally towards
the light.
In
the order of Science, in which the Principle is
above what it reflects, all is one grand concord.
Change this statement, suppose Mind to be governed
by matter or Soul in body, and you lose the keynote
of being, and there is continual discord. Mind is
perpetual motion. Its symbol is the sphere. The
rotations and revolutions of the universe of Mind
go on eternally.
Mortals
move onward towards good or evil as time glides on.
If mortals are not progressive, past failures will
be repeated until all wrong work is effaced or
rectified. If at present satisfied with
wrong-doing, we must learn to loathe it. If at
present content with idleness, we must become
dissatisfied with it. Remember that mankind must
sooner or later, either by suffering or by Science,
be convinced of the error that is to be
overcome.
In
trying to undo the errors of sense one must pay
fully and fairly the utmost farthing, until all
error is finally brought into subjection to Truth.
The divine method of paying sin's wages involves
unwinding one's snarls, and learning from
experience how to divide between sense and
Soul.
"Whom
the Lord loveth He chasteneth." He, who knows God's
will or the demands of divine Science and obeys
them, incurs the hostility of envy; and he who
refuses obedience to God, is chastened by
Love.
Sensual
treasures are laid up "where moth and rust doth
corrupt." Mortality is their doom. Sin breaks in
upon them, and carries off their fleeting joys. The
sensualist's affections are as imaginary,
whimsical, and unreal as his pleasures. Falsehood,
envy, hypocrisy, malice, hate, revenge, and so
forth, steal away the treasures of Truth. Stripped
of its coverings, what a mocking spectacle is
sin!
The
Bible teaches transformation of the body by the
renewal of Spirit. Take away the spiritual
signification of Scripture, and that compilation
can do no more for mortals than can moonbeams to
melt a river of ice. The error of the ages is
preaching without practice.
The
substance of all devotion is the reflection and
demonstration of divine Love, healing sickness and
destroying sin. Our Master said, "If ye love me,
keep my commandments."
One's
aim, a point beyond faith, should be to find the
footsteps of Truth, the way to health and holiness.
We should strive to reach the Horeb height where
God is revealed; and the corner-stone of all
spiritual building is purity. The baptism of
Spirit, washing the body of all the impurities of
flesh, signifies that the pure in heart see God and
are approaching spiritual Life and its
demonstration.
It
is "easier for a camel to go through the eye of a
needle," than for sinful beliefs to enter the
kingdom of heaven, eternal harmony. Through
repentance, spiritual baptism, and regeneration,
mortals put off their material beliefs and false
individuality. It is only a question of time when
"they shall all know Me [God], from the
least of them unto the greatest." Denial of the
claims of matter is a great step towards the joys
of Spirit, towards human freedom and the final
triumph over the body.
There
is but one way to heaven, harmony, and Christ in
divine Science shows us this way. It is to know no
other reality to have no other consciousness
of life than good, God and His reflection,
and to rise superior to the so-called pain and
pleasure of the senses.
Self-love
is more opaque than a solid body. In patient
obedience to a patient God, let us labor to
dissolve with the universal solvent of Love the
adamant of error, self-will,
self-justification, and self-love, which
wars against spirituality and is the law of sin and
death.
The
vesture of Life is Truth. According to the Bible,
the facts of being are commonly misconstrued, for
it is written: "They parted my raiment among them,
and for my vesture they did cast lots." The divine
Science of man is woven into one web of consistency
without seam or rent. Mere speculation or
superstition appropriates no part of the divine
vesture, while inspiration restores every part of
the Christly garment of righteousness.
The
finger-posts of divine Science show the way our
Master trod, and require of Christians the proof
which he gave, instead of mere profession. We may
hide spiritual ignorance from the world, but we can
never succeed in the Science and demonstration of
spiritual good through ignorance or
hypocrisy.
The
divine Love, which made harmless the poisonous
viper, which delivered men from the boiling oil,
from the fiery furnace, from the jaws of the lion,
can heal the sick in every age and triumph over sin
and death. It crowned the demonstrations of Jesus
with unsurpassed power and love. But the same "Mind
. . . which was also in Christ Jesus" must always
accompany the letter of Science in order to confirm
and repeat the ancient demonstrations of prophets
and apostles. That those wonders are not more
commonly repeated to-day, arises not so much from
lack of desire as from lack of spiritual
growth.
The
clay cannot reply to the potter. The head, heart,
lungs, and limbs do not inform us that they are
dizzy, diseased, consumptive, or lame. If this
information is conveyed, mortal mind conveys it.
Neither immortal and unerring Mind nor matter, the
inanimate substratum of mortal mind, can carry on
such telegraphy; for God is "of purer eyes than to
behold evil," and matter has neither intelligence
nor sensation.
Truth
has no consciousness of error. Love has no sense of
hatred. Life has no partnership with death. Truth,
Life, and Love are a law of annihilation to
everything unlike themselves, because they declare
nothing except God.
Sickness,
sin, and death are not the fruits of Life. They are
inharmonies which Truth destroys. Perfection does
not animate imperfection. Inasmuch as God is good
and the fount of all being, He does not produce
moral or physical deformity; therefore such
deformity is not real, but is illusion, the mirage
of error. Divine Science reveals these grand facts.
On their basis Jesus demonstrated Life, never
fearing nor obeying error in any form.
If
we were to derive all our conceptions of man from
what is seen between the cradle and the grave,
happiness and goodness would have no abiding-place
in man, and the worms would rob him of the flesh;
but Paul writes: "The law of the Spirit of life in
Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin
and death."
Man
undergoing birth, maturity, and decay is like the
beasts and vegetables, subject to laws of
decay. If man were dust in his earliest stage of
existence, we might admit the hypothesis that he
returns eventually to his primitive condition; but
man was never more nor less than man.
If
man flickers out in death or springs from matter
into being, there must be an instant when God is
without His entire manifestation, when there
is no full reflection of the infinite
Mind.
Man
in Science is neither young nor old. He has neither
birth nor death. He is not a beast, a vegetable,
nor a migratory mind. He does not pass from matter
to Mind, from the mortal to the immortal, from evil
to good, or from good to evil. Such admissions cast
us headlong into darkness and dogma. Even
Shakespeare's poetry pictures age as infancy, as
helplessness and decadence, instead of assigning to
man the everlasting grandeur and immortality of
development, power, and prestige.
The
error of thinking that we are growing old, and the
benefits of destroying that illusion, are
illustrated in a sketch from the history of an
English woman, published in the London medical
magazine called The Lancet.
Disappointed
in love in her early years, she became insane and
lost all account of time. Believing that she was
still living in the same hour which parted her from
her lover, taking no note of years, she stood daily
before the window watching for her lover's coming.
In this mental state she remained young. Having no
consciousness of time, she literally grew no older.
Some American travellers saw her when she was
seventy-four, and supposed her to be a young woman.
She had no care-lined face, no wrinkles nor gray
hair, but youth sat gently on cheek and brow. Asked
to guess her age, those unacquainted with her
history conjectured that she must be under
twenty.
This
instance of youth preserved furnishes a useful
hint, upon which a Franklin might work with more
certainty than when he coaxed the enamoured
lightning from the clouds. Years had not made her
old, because she had taken no cognizance of passing
time nor thought of herself as growing old. The
bodily results of her belief that she was young
manifested the influence of such a belief. She
could not age while believing herself young, for
the mental state governed the physical.
Impossibilities
never occur. One instance like the foregoing proves
it possible to be young at seventy-four; and the
primary of that illustration makes it plain that
decrepitude is not according to law, nor is it a
necessity of nature, but an illusion.
The
infinite never began nor will it ever end. Mind and
its formations can never be annihilated. Man is not
a pendulum, swinging between evil and good, joy and
sorrow, sickness and health, life and death. Life
and its faculties are not measured by calendars.
The perfect and immortal are the eternal likeness
of their Maker. Man is by no means a material germ
rising from the imperfect and endeavoring to reach
Spirit above his origin. The stream rises no higher
than its source.
The
measurement of life by solar years robs youth and
gives ugliness to age. The radiant sun of virtue
and truth coexists with being. Manhood is its
eternal noon, undimmed by a declining sun. As the
physical and material, the transient sense of
beauty fades, the radiance of Spirit should dawn
upon the enraptured sense with bright and
imperishable glories.
Never
record ages. Chronological data are no part of the
vast forever. Time-tables of birth and death are so
many conspiracies against manhood and womanhood.
Except for the error of measuring and limiting all
that is good and beautiful, man would enjoy more
than threescore years and ten and still maintain
his vigor, freshness, and promise. Man, governed by
immortal Mind, is always beautiful and grand. Each
succeeding year unfolds wisdom, beauty, and
holiness.
Life
is eternal. We should find this out, and begin the
demonstration thereof. Life and goodness are
immortal. Let us then shape our views of existence
into loveliness, freshness, and continuity, rather
than into age and blight.
Acute
and chronic beliefs reproduce their own types. The
acute belief of physical life comes on at a remote
period, and is not so disastrous as the chronic
belief.
I
have seen age regain two of the elements it had
lost, sight and teeth. A woman of eighty-five, whom
I knew, had a return of sight. Another woman at
ninety had new teeth, incisors, cuspids, bicuspids,
and one molar. One man at sixty had retained his
full set of upper and lower teeth without a
decaying cavity.
Beauty,
as well as truth, is eternal; but the beauty of
material things passes away, fading and fleeting as
mortal belief. Custom, education, and fashion form
the transient standards of mortals. Immortality,
exempt from age or decay, has a glory of its own,
the radiance of Soul. Immortal men and women
are models of spiritual sense, drawn by perfect
Mind and reflecting those higher conceptions of
loveliness which transcend all material
sense.
Comeliness
and grace are independent of matter. Being
possesses its qualities before they are perceived
humanly. Beauty is a thing of life, which dwells
forever in the eternal Mind and reflects the charms
of His goodness in expression, form, outline, and
color. It is Love which paints the petal with
myriad hues, glances in the warm sunbeam, arches
the cloud with the bow of beauty, blazons the night
with starry gems, and covers earth with
loveliness.
The
embellishments of the person are poor substitutes
for the charms of being, shining resplendent and
eternal over age and decay.
The
recipe for beauty is to have less illusion and more
Soul, to retreat from the belief of pain or
pleasure in the body into the unchanging calm and
glorious freedom of spiritual harmony.
Love
never loses sight of loveliness. Its halo rests
upon its object. One marvels that a friend can ever
seem less than beautiful. Men and women of riper
years and larger lessons ought to ripen into health
and immortality, instead of lapsing into darkness
or gloom. Immortal Mind feeds the body with
supernal freshness and fairness, supplying it with
beautiful images of thought and destroying the woes
of sense which each day brings to a nearer
tomb.
The
sculptor turns from the marble to his model in
order to perfect his conception. We are all
sculptors, working at various forms, moulding and
chiseling thought. What is the model before mortal
mind? Is it imperfection, joy, sorrow, sin,
suffering? Have you accepted the mortal model? Are
you reproducing it? Then you are haunted in your
work by vicious sculptors and hideous forms. Do you
not hear from all mankind of the imperfect model?
The world is holding it before your gaze
continually. The result is that you are liable to
follow those lower patterns, limit your life-work,
and adopt into your experience the angular outline
and deformity of matter models.
To
remedy this, we must first turn our gaze in the
right direction, and then walk that way. We must
form perfect models in thought and look at them
continually, or we shall never carve them out in
grand and noble lives. Let unselfishness, goodness,
mercy, justice, health, holiness, love the
kingdom of heaven reign within us, and sin,
disease, and death will diminish until they finally
disappear.
Let
us accept Science, relinquish all theories based on
sense-testimony, give up imperfect models and
illusive ideals; and so let us have one God, one
Mind, and that one perfect, producing His own
models of excellence.
Let
the "male and female" of God's creating appear. Let
us feel the divine energy of Spirit, bringing us
into newness of life and recognizing no mortal nor
material power as able to destroy. Let us rejoice
that we are subject to the divine "powers that be."
Such is the true Science of being. Any other theory
of Life, or God, is delusive and
mythological.
Mind
is not the author of matter, and the creator of
ideas is not the creator of illusions. Either there
is no omnipotence, or omnipotence is the only
power. God is the infinite, and infinity never
began, will never end, and includes nothing unlike
God. Whence then is soulless matter?
Life
is, like Christ, "the same yesterday, and to-day,
and forever." Organization and time have nothing to
do with Life. You say, "I dreamed last night." What
a mistake is that! The I is Spirit. God never
slumbers, and His likeness never dreams. Mortals
are the Adam dreamers.
Sleep
and apathy are phases of the dream that life,
substance, and intelligence are material. The
mortal nightdream is sometimes nearer the fact of
being than are the thoughts of mortals when awake.
The night-dream has less matter as its
accompaniment. It throws off some material fetters.
It falls short of the skies, but makes its mundane
flights quite ethereal.
Man
is the reflection of Soul. He is the direct
opposite of material sensation, and there is but
one Ego. We run into error when we divide Soul into
souls, multiply Mind into minds and suppose error
to be mind, then mind to be in matter and matter to
be a lawgiver, unintelligence to act like
intelligence, and mortality to be the matrix of
immortality.
Mortal
existence is a dream; mortal existence has no real
entity, but saith "It is I." Spirit is the Ego
which never dreams, but understands all things;
which never errs, and is ever conscious; which
never believes, but knows; which is never born and
never dies. Spiritual man is the likeness of this
Ego. Man is not God, but like a ray of light which
comes from the sun, man, the outcome of God,
reflects God.
Mortal
body and mind are one, and that one is called man;
but a mortal is not man, for man is immortal. A
mortal may be weary or pained, enjoy or suffer,
according to the dream he entertains in sleep. When
that dream vanishes, the mortal finds himself
experiencing none of these dream-sensations. To the
observer, the body lies listless, undisturbed, and
sensationless, and the mind seems to be
absent.
Now
I ask, Is there any more reality in the waking
dream of mortal existence than in the sleeping
dream? There cannot be, since whatever appears to
be a mortal man is a mortal dream. Take away the
mortal mind, and matter has no more sense as a man
than it has as a tree. But the spiritual, real man
is immortal.
Upon
this stage of existence goes on the dance of mortal
mind. Mortal thoughts chase one another like
snowflakes, and drift to the ground. Science
reveals Life as not being at the mercy of death,
nor will Science admit that happiness is ever the
sport of circumstance.
Error
is not real, hence it is not more imperative as it
hastens towards self-destruction. The so-called
belief of mortal mind apparent as an abscess should
not grow more painful before it suppurates, neither
should a fever become more severe before it
ends.
Fright
is so great at certain stages of mortal belief as
to drive belief into new paths. In the illusion of
death, mortals wake to the knowledge of two facts:
(1) that they are not dead; (2) that they have but
passed the portals of a new belief. Truth works out
the nothingness of error in just these ways.
Sickness, as well as sin, is an error that Christ,
Truth, alone can destroy.
We
must learn how mankind govern the body,
whether through faith in hygiene, in drugs, or in
will-power. We should learn whether they govern the
body through a belief in the necessity of sickness
and death, sin and pardon, or govern it from the
higher understanding that the divine Mind makes
perfect, acts upon the so-called human mind through
truth, leads the human mind to relinquish all
error, to find the divine Mind to be the only Mind,
and the healer of sin, disease, death. This process
of higher spiritual understanding improves mankind
until error disappears, and nothing is left which
deserves to perish or to be punished.
Ignorance,
like intentional wrong, is not Science. Ignorance
must be seen and corrected before we can attain
harmony. Inharmonious beliefs, which rob Mind,
calling it matter, and deify their own notions,
imprison themselves in what they create. They are
at war with Science, and as our Master said, "If a
kingdom be divided against itself, that kingdom
cannot stand."
Human
ignorance of Mind and of the recuperative energies
of Truth occasions the only skepticism regarding
the pathology and theology of Christian
Science.
When
false human beliefs learn even a little of their
own falsity, they begin to disappear. A knowledge
of error and of its operations must precede that
understanding of Truth which destroys error, until
the entire mortal, material error finally
disappears, and the eternal verity, man created by
and of Spirit, is understood and recognized as the
true likeness of his Maker.
The
false evidence of material sense contrasts
strikingly with the testimony of Spirit. Material
sense lifts its voice with the arrogance of reality
and says:
I
am wholly dishonest, and no man knoweth it. I can
cheat, lie, commit adultery, rob, murder, and I
elude detection by smooth-tongued villainy. Animal
in propensity, deceitful in sentiment, fraudulent
in purpose, I mean to make my short span of life
one gala day. What a nice thing is sin! How sin
succeeds, where the good purpose waits! The world
is my kingdom. I am enthroned in the gorgeousness
of matter. But a touch, an accident, the law of
God, may at any moment annihilate my peace, for all
my fancied joys are fatal. Like bursting lava, I
expand but to my own despair, and shine with the
resplendency of consuming fire.
Spirit,
bearing opposite testimony, saith:
I
am Spirit. Man, whose senses are spiritual, is my
likeness. He reflects the infinite understanding,
for I am Infinity. The beauty of holiness, the
perfection of being, imperishable glory, all
are Mine, for I am God. I give immortality to man,
for I am Truth. I include and impart all bliss, for
I am Love. I give life, without beginning and
without end, for I am Life. I am supreme and give
all, for I am Mind. I am the substance of all,
because I AM THAT I AM.
I
hope, dear reader, I am leading you into the
understanding of your divine rights, your
heaven-bestowed harmony, that, as you read,
you see there is no cause (outside of erring,
mortal, material sense which is not power) able to
make you sick or sinful; and I hope that you are
conquering this false sense. Knowing the falsity of
so-called material sense, you can assert your
prerogative to overcome the belief in sin, disease,
or death.
If
you believe in and practise wrong knowingly, you
can at once change your course and do right. Matter
can make no opposition to right endeavors against
sin or sickness, for matter is inert, mindless.
Also, if you believe yourself diseased, you can
alter this wrong belief and action without
hindrance from the body.
Do
not believe in any supposed necessity for sin,
disease, or death, knowing (as you ought to know)
that God never requires obedience to a so-called
material law, for no such law exists. The belief in
sin and death is destroyed by the law of God, which
is the law of Life instead of death, of harmony
instead of discord, of Spirit instead of the
flesh.
The
divine demand, "Be ye therefore perfect," is
scientific, and the human footsteps leading to
perfection are indispensable. Individuals are
consistent who, watching and praying, can "run, and
not be weary; . . . walk, and not faint," who gain
good rapidly and hold their position, or attain
slowly and yield not to discouragement. God
requires perfection, but not until the battle
between Spirit and flesh is fought and the victory
won. To stop eating, drinking, or being clothed
materially before the spiritual facts of existence
are gained step by step, is not legitimate. When we
wait patiently on God and seek Truth righteously,
He directs our path. Imperfect mortals grasp the
ultimate of spiritual perfection slowly; but to
begin aright and to continue the strife of
demonstrating the great problem of being, is doing
much.
During
the sensual ages, absolute Christian Science may
not be achieved prior to the change called death,
for we have not the power to demonstrate what we do
not understand. But the human self must be
evangelized. This task God demands us to accept
lovingly to-day, and to abandon so fast as
practical the material, and to work out the
spiritual which determines the outward and
actual.
If
you venture upon the quiet surface of error and are
in sympathy with error, what is there to disturb
the waters? What is there to strip off error's
disguise?
If
you launch your bark upon the ever-agitated but
healthful waters of truth, you will encounter
storms. Your good will be evil spoken of. This is
the cross. Take it up and bear it, for through it
you win and wear the crown. Pilgrim on earth, thy
home is heaven; stranger, thou art the guest of
God.
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