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ANNIE M. KNOTT, CSD
It should not be forgotten that it sometimes seems difficult to reconcile certain passages of Scripture with other texts; for instance, this from Proverbs: "In the way of righteousness is life; and in the pathway thereof there is no death;" then this from Paul: "I am in a strait betwixt two, having a desire to depart, and be with Christ; which is far better." Right here it may be well to ponder our revered Leader's statement: "Even Christ cannot reconcile Truth to error, for Truth and error are irreconcilable" (Science and Health, p. 19). This does not signify that either of these texts expresses error. On the contrary, as understood in Science, they both point to the same truth. Paul must have known that in the way of righteousness, the Christ-way, there is no death. Jesus had declared this in no uncertain terms, but it would seem that the apostle himself was uncertain as to whether he would most quickly reach the full spiritual consciousness of being by continuing his present labor for humanity, or by giving the proof of deathless Life in the way the Master had done. He was pressing on that he might prove "the power of his [Christ's] resurrection;" and yet with noble humility he acknowledged that he had not yet attained to this in its fulness. He tells his brethren, however, to "joy, and rejoice" with him if he were "offered upon the sacrifice and service" of their glorious faith in man's immortality. In both the Old Testament and the New many passages are to be found which seem contradictory and irreconcilable, but this is only because some of these deal with the mortal belief in life as separate from God, hence material. This sense of life is doomed to annihilation, indeed it never had nor can it have any reality; while the Life which is God can never know death. Christian Scientists, however, learn that, like the apostle, they must "die daily" to all which is unlike God, all which is unspiritual; then they too can say: "For to me to live is Christ, and to die [in this way] is gain." As this is done, the mortal sense of Scripture and of all things, of ourselves and others, is put off with all that is corruptible, and immortality is put on. Christ Jesus, speaking for the Father, said: "He is not a God of the dead, but of the living: for all live unto him." To God, who is Life, there can be no death, and there is no inconsistency in the Scriptures when their statements are understood in the light of Truth, interpreted by divine Principle. Especially is this true when we apply their inspired teachings in the overcoming of sin and disease, as we learn how to do in Science and Health and our Leader's other writings, all the while keeping in view the apostle's declaration of "the power of an endless life." In this way all that is based on Truth is reconciled, brought to agreement.
Christian Science Sentinel, December 21, 1912 |
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