Christian Science In Tremont Temple.
From the platform of the Monday lectureship
in Tremont Temple, on Monday, March 16, 1885,
as will be seen by what follows. Reverend Mary
Baker G. Eddy was presented to Mr. Cook’s audience,
and allowed ten minutes in which to reply to his
public letter con-demning her doctrines; which reply
was taken in full by a shorthand reporter who was
present, and is transcribed below.
Mrs. Eddy responding, said:-
As the time so kindly allotted me
is insufficient for even a synopsis of Christian Science,
I shall confine my-self to questions and answers.
Am I a spiritualist?
I am not, and never was. I understand
the impossi- bility of intercommunion between
the so-called dead and living. There have always
attended my life phenomena of an uncommon order, which
spiritualists have mis-called mediumship; but
I clearly understand that no human agencies were employed,-that
the divine Mind reveals itself to humanity through
spiritual law. And to such as are “waiting
for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body,”
Christian Science reveals the in-
finitude of divinity and the way of
man’s salvation from sickness and death,
as wrought out by Jesus, who robbed the grave of victory
and death of its sting. I understand that God
is an ever-present help in all times of trouble,-
have found Him so; and would have no other gods, no
remedies in drugs, no material medicine.
Do I believe in a personal God?
I believe in God as the Supreme Being.
I know not what the person of omnipotence and omnipresence
is, or what the infinite includes; therefore, I worship
that of which I can conceive, first, as a loving
Father and Mother; then, as thought ascends the scale
of being to diviner consciousness, God becomes to
me, as to the apostle who declared it, “God
is Love,”-divine Prin-ciple,-which
I worship; and “after the manner of my
fathers, so worship I God.”
Do I believe in the atonement of Christ?
I do; and this atonement becomes more
to me since it includes man’s redemption from
sickness as well as from sin. I reverence and
adore Christ as never before.
It brings to my sense, and to the
sense of all who enter-tain this understanding of
the Science of God, a whole salvation.
How is the healing done in Christian Science?
This answer includes too much to give
you any con- clusive idea in a brief explanation.
I can name some means by which it is not done.
It is not one mind acting upon another
mind; it is not the transference of human images of
thought to other minds; it is not supported by the
evidence before the personal senses,-Science
contradicts this evidence; it is not of the flesh,
but of the Spirit. It is Christ come
to destroy the power of the flesh;
it is Truth over error; that understood, gives
man ability to rise above the evi-dence of the senses,
take hold of the eternal energies of Truth, and destroy
mortal discord with immortal har-mony,-the
grand verities of being. It is not one mortal
thought transmitted to another’s thought
from the human mind that holds within itself all evil.
Our Master said of one of his students,
“He is a devil,” and repudiated the idea
of casting out devils through Beelzebub. Erring
human mind is by no means a de- sirable or efficacious
healer. Such suppositional healing I deprecate.
It is in no way allied to divine power. All human
control is animal magnetism, more despicable than
all other methods of treating disease.
Christian Science is not a remedy
of faith alone, but combines faith with understanding,
through which we may touch the hem of His garment;
and know that om-nipotence has all power. “I
am the Lord, and there is none else, there is no God
beside me.”
Is there a personal man?
The Scriptures inform us that man
was made in the image and likeness of God. I
commend the Icelandic translation: “He
created man in the image and likeness of Mind, in
the image and likeness of Mind created He him.”
To my sense, we have not seen all of man; he
is more than personal sense can cognize, who is the
image and likeness of the infinite. I have not
seen a perfect man in mind or body,-and
such must be the personality of him who is the true
likeness: the lost image is not this personality,
and corporeal man is this lost image; hence,
it doth not appear what is the real personality of
man. The only cause for making this
question of personality a point, or
of any importance, is that man’s perfect
model should be held in mind, whereby to improve his
present condition; that his contemplation regarding
himself should turn away from inharmony, sick-ness,
and sin, to that which is the image of his Maker.
Science And The Senses.
Substance of my Address at the National Convention
in Chicago,
June 13, 1888
The National Christian Scientist Association
has brought us together to minister and to be ministered
unto; mutually to aid one another in finding
ways and means for helping the whole human family;
to quicken and extend the interest already felt in
a higher mode of medicine; to watch with eager joy
the individual growth of Christian Scientists, and
the progress of our common Cause in Chicago,-the
miracle of the Occident. We come to strengthen
and perpetuate our organizations and institutions;
and to find strength in union,-strength
to build up, through God’s right hand, that pure
and undefiled religion whose Science demonstrates
God and the perfectibility of man. This
purpose is immense, and it must begin with individual
growth, a “consum-mation devoutly to be
wished.” The lives of all re-formers attest
the authenticity of their mission, and call the world
to acknowledge its divine Principle. Truly
is it written:-
“Thou must be true thyself,
if thou the truth would’st teach; Thy heart
must overflow, if thou another’s heart would’st
reach.”
Science is absolute and final.
It is revolutionary in its very nature; for it
upsets all that is not upright. It annuls false
evidence, and saith to the five material senses, “Having
eyes ye see not, and ears ye hear not; neither can
you understand.” To weave one thread of
Science through the looms of time, is a miracle
in itself. The risk is stupendous. It cost
Galileo, what? This awful price: the temporary
loss of his self-respect. His fear overcame his
loyalty; the courage of his convictions fell before
it. Fear is the weapon in the hands of tyrants.
Men and women of the nineteenth century,
are you called to voice a higher order of Science?
Then obey this call. Go, if you must, to the
dungeon or the scaf-fold, but take not back the words
of Truth. How many are there ready to suffer
for a righteous cause, to stand a long siege, take
the front rank, face the foe, and be in the battle
every day?
In no other one thing seemed Jesus
of Nazareth more divine than in his faith in the immortality
of his words. He said, “Heaven and earth
shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away;”
and they have not. The winds of time sweep clean
the centuries, but they can never bear into oblivion
his words. They still live, and to-morrow speak
louder than to-day. They are to-day as the
voice of one crying in the wilderness, “Make
straight God’s paths; make way for health, holiness,
universal harmony, and come up hither.”
The gran-deur of the word, the power of Truth,
is again casting out evils and healing the sick; and
it is whispered, “This is Science.”
Jesus taught by the wayside, in humble homes.
He
spake of Truth and Love to artless
listeners and dull disciples. His immortal
words were articulated in a decaying language, and
then left to the providence of God. Christian
Science was to interpret them; and woman, “last
at the cross,” was to awaken the dull senses,
intoxicated with pleasure or pain, to the infinite
meaning of those words.
Past, present, future, will show the
word and might of Truth-healing the sick
and reclaiming the sinner- so long as there
remains a claim of error for Truth to deny or
to destroy. Love’s labors are not lost.
The five personal senses, that grasp neither the meaning
nor the magnitude of self-abnegation, may lose sight
thereof; but Science voices unselfish love, unfolds
infinite good, leads on irresistible forces, and will
finally show the fruits of Love. Human reason
is inaccurate; and the scope of the senses is inadequate
to grasp the word of Truth, and teach the eternal.
Science speaks when the senses are
silent, and then the evermore of Truth is triumphant.
The spiritual mon- itor understood is coincidence
of the divine with the human, the acme of Christian
Science. Pure humanity, friendship, home, the
interchange of love, bring to earth a foretaste of
heaven. They unite terrestrial and celes-tial
joys, and crown them with blessings infinite.
The Christian Scientist loves man
more because he loves God most. He understands
this Principle,-Love. Who is sufficient
for these things? Who remembers that patience,
forgiveness, abiding faith, and affection, are the
symptoms by which our Father indicates the dif-
ferent stages of man’s recovery from sin and
his en-trance into Science? Who knows how the
feeble lips
are made eloquent, how hearts are
inspired, how heal- ing becomes spontaneous, and
how the divine Mind is understood and demonstrated?
He alone knows these wonders who is departing from
the thraldom of the senses and accepting spiritual
truth,-that which blesses its adoption
by the refinement of joy and the dismissal of sorrow.
Christian Science and the senses are
at war. It is a revolutionary struggle.
We already have had two in this nation; and they began
and ended in a contest for the true idea, for
human liberty and rights. Now cometh a third
struggle; for the freedom of health, holiness, and
the attainment of heaven.
The scientific sense of being which
establishes har-mony, enters into no compromise with
finiteness and feebleness. It undermines
the foundations of mortality, of physical law, breaks
their chains, and sets the captive free, opening the
doors for them that are bound.
He who turns to the body for evidence,
bases his con-clusions on mortality, on imperfection;
but Science saith to man, “God hath all-power.”
The Science of omnipotence demonstrates
but one power, and this power is good, not evil; not
matter, but Mind. This virtually destroys matter
and evil, in-cluding sin and disease.
If God is All, and God is good, it
follows that all must be good; and no other power,
law, or intelligence can exist. On this proof
rest premise and conclusion in Science, and the facts
that disprove the evidence of the senses.
God is individual Mind. This
one Mind and His individuality comprise the elements
of all forms and
individualities, and prophesy the
nature and stature of Christ, the ideal man.
A corporeal God, as often defined
by lexicographers and scholastic theologians, is only
an infinite finite being, an unlimited man,-a
theory to me inconceivable. If the unlimited
and immortal Mind could originate in a limited body,
Mind would be chained to finity, and the infinite
forever finite.
In this limited and lower sense God
is not personal. His infinity precludes the possibility
of corporeal person- ality. His being is
individual, but not physical.
God is like Himself and like nothing
else. He is uni-versal and primitive. His
character admits of no degrees of comparison.
God is not part, but the whole. In His individuality
I recognize the loving, divine Father-Mother
God. Infinite personality must be incorporeal.
God’s ways are not ours.
His pity is expressed in modes above the human.
His chastisements are the manifestations of Love.
The sympathy of His eternal Mind is fully expressed
in divine Science, which blots out all our iniquities
and heals all our diseases. Human pity often
brings pain.
Science supports harmony, denies suffering,
and de-stroys it with the divinity of Truth.
Whatever seems mate-rial, seems thus only to the
material senses, and is but the subjective state
of mortal and material thought.
Science has inaugurated the irrepressible
conflict be-tween sense and Soul. Mortal thought
wars with this sense as one that beateth the air,
but Science outmasters it, and ends the warfare.
This proves daily that “one on God’s
side is a majority.”
Science defines omnipresence
as universality, that which
precludes the presence of evil.
This verity annuls the tes- timony of the
senses, which say that sin is an evil power, and substance
is perishable. Intelligent Spirit, Soul, is substance,
far more impregnable and solid than matter; for one
is temporal, while the other is eternal, the ultimate
and predicate of being.
Mortality, materiality, and destructive
forces, such as sin, disease, and death, mortals virtually
name substance; but these are the substance
of things not hoped for. For lack of knowing
what substance is, the senses say vaguely:
“The substance of life is sorrow and mortality;
for who knoweth the substance of good?” In Science,
form and individuality are never lost, thoughts are
outlined, indi-vidualized ideas, which dwell
forever in the divine Mind as tangible, true substance,
because eternally conscious. Unlike mortal mind,
which must be ever in bondage, the eternal Mind is
free, unlimited, and knows not the temporal.
Neither does the temporal know the
eternal. Mortal man, as mind or matter, is neither
the pattern nor Maker of immortal man. Any
inference of the divine derived from the human, either
as mind or body, hides the actual power, presence,
and individuality of God.
Jesus’ personality in the flesh,
so far as material sense could discern it, was like
that of other men; but Science exchanges this
human concept of Jesus for the divine ideal, his spiritual
individuality that reflected the Im-manuel, or “God
with us.” This God was not outlined.
He was too mighty for that. He was eternal Life,
infinite Truth and Love. The individuality is
embraced in Mind, therefore is forever with the
Father. Hence the Scrip-ture, “I am a
God at hand, saith the Lord.” Even while
his personality was on earth and in
anguish, his individual being, the Christ, was
at rest in the eternal harmony. His unseen individuality,
so superior to that which was seen, was not subject
to the temptations of the flesh, to laws material,
to death, or the grave. Formed and gov- erned
by God, this individuality was safe in the substance
of Soul, the substance of Spirit,-yea, the
substance of God, the one inclusive good.
In Science all being is individual;
for individuality is endless in the calculus of forms
and numbers. Herein sin is miraculous and
supernatural; for it is not in the nature of God,
and good is forever good. Accord-ing to Christian
Science, perfection is normal,-not miraculous.
Clothed, and in its right Mind, man’s individuality
is sinless, deathless, harmonious, eternal. His
materiality, clad in a false mentality, wages feeble
fight with his individuality,-his physical
senses with his spiritual senses. The latter
move in God’s grooves of Science: the former
revolve in their own orbits, and must stand the friction
of false selfhood until self- destroyed.
In obedience to the divine nature,
man’s individuality reflects the divine law
and order of being. How shall we reach our true
selves? Through Love. The Prin-ciple of
Christian Science is Love, and its idea represents
Love. This divine Principle and idea are
demonstrated, in healing, to be God and the real man.
Who wants to be mortal, or would not
gain the true ideal of Life and recover his own individuality?
I will love, if another hates. I will gain a
balance on the side of good, my true being.
This alone gives me the forces of God wherewith to
overcome all error. On this rests the
implicit faith engendered by Christian
Science, which appeals intelligently to the facts
of man’s spirituality, in-dividuality, to disdain
the fears and destroy the discords of this material
personality.
On our Master’s individual demonstrations
over sin, sickness, and death, rested the anathema
of priesthood and the senses; yet this demonstration
is the foundation of Christian Science. His physical
sufferings, which came from the testimony of the senses,
were over when he resumed his individual spiritual
being, after showing us the way to escape from
the material body.
Science would have no conflict with
Life or common sense, if this sense were consistently
sensible. Man’s real life or existence
is in harmony with Life and its glorious phenomena.
It upholds being, and destroys the too common
sense of its opposites-death, disease, and
sin. Christian Science is an everlasting victor,
and vanquish-ment is unknown to the omnipresent Truth.
I must ever follow this line of light and battle.
Christian Science is my only ideal;
and the individual and his ideal can never be
severed. If either is misunder-stood or maligned,
it eclipses the other with the shadow cast by this
error.
Truth destroys error. Nothing
appears to the physi-cal senses but their own
subjective state of thought. The senses
join issue with error, and pity what has no right
either to be pitied or to exist, and what does not
exist in Science. Destroy the thought of sin,
sickness, death, and you destroy their existence.
“Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also
reap.”
Because God is Mind, and this Mind
is good, all is good and all is Mind. God is
the sum total of the
universe. Then what and where
are sin, sickness, and death?
Christian Science and Christian Scientists
will, must, have a history; and if I could
write the history in poor parody on Tennyson’s
grand verse, it would read thus:-
Traitors to right of them,
M. D.’s to left of them,
Priestcraft in front of them,
Volleyed and thundered!
Into the jaws of hate,
Out through the door of Love,
On to the blest above,
Marched the one
hundred.
Extract From My First Address In The Mother Church, May 26, 1895
Friends and Brethren:-Your
Sunday Lesson, com-posed of Scripture and its correlative
in “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,”
has fed you. In addì- tion, I can only
bring crumbs fallen from this table of Truth, and
gather up the fragments.
It has long been a question of earnest
import, How shall mankind worship the most adorable,
but most unadored,-and where shall begin
that praise that shall never end? Beneath, above,
beyond, methinks I hear the soft, sweet sigh
of angels answering, “So live, that your lives
attest your sincerity and resound His praise.”
Music is the harmony of being; but
the music of Soul affords the only strains that thrill
the chords of feeling and awaken the heart’s
harpstrings. Moved by mind, your many-throated
organ, in imitative tones of many
instruments, praises Him; but even
the sweetness and beauty in and of this temple
that praise Him, are earth’s accents, and must
not be mistaken for the oracles of God. Art must
not prevail over Science. Christianity is not
superfluous. Its redemptive power is seen in sore
trials, self-denials, and crucifixions of
the flesh. But these come to the rescue of mortals,
to admonish them, and plant the feet steadfastly in
Christ. As we rise above the seem-ing mists
of sense, we behold more clearly that all the heart’s
homage belongs to God.
More love is the great need of mankind.
A pure af-fection, concentric, forgetting self, forgiving
wrongs and forestalling them, should swell the lyre
of human love.
Three cardinal points must be gained
before poor humanity is regenerated and Christian
Science is dem- onstrated: (1) A proper
sense of sin; (2) repentance; (3) the understanding
of good. Evil is a negation: it never started
with time, and it cannot keep pace with eternity.
Mortals’ false senses pass through three states
and stages of human consciousness before yielding error.
The deluded sense must first be shown its falsity
through a knowledge of evil as evil, so-called.
Without a sense of one’s oft-repeated violations
of divine law, the in-dividual may become morally
blind, and this deplorable mental state is moral idiocy.
The lack of seeing one’s deformed mentality,
and of repentance therefor, deep, never to
be repented of, is retarding, and in certain mor-bid
instances stopping, the growth of Christian Scientists.
Without a knowledge of his sins, and repentance so
severe that it destroys them, no person is or can
be a Christian Scientist.
Mankind thinks either too much or
too little of sin.
The sensitive, sorrowing saint thinks
too much of it: the sordid sinner, or the
so-called Christian asleep, thinks too little of sin.
To allow sin of any sort is anomalous
in Christian Scientists, claiming, as they do, that
good is infinite, All. Our Master, in his definition
of Satan as a liar from the beginning, attested the
absolute powerlessness-yea, nothingness-of
evil: since a lie, being without founda-tion
in fact, is merely a falsity; spiritually, literally,
it is nothing.
Not to know that a false claim is
false, is to be in danger of believing it; hence the
utility of knowing evil aright, then reducing its
claim to its proper denominator,- nobody
and nothing. Sin should be conceived of only
as a delusion. This true conception would remove
mortals’ ignorance and its consequences,
and advance the second stage of human consciousness,
repentance. The first state, namely, the knowledge
of one’s self, the proper knowledge of evil
and its subtle workings wherein evil seems as real
as good, is indispensable; since that which is
truly conceived of, we can handle; but the misconcep-tion
of what we need to know of evil,-or the
concep-tion of it at all as something real,-costs
much. Sin needs only to be known for what it
is not; then we are its master, not servant.
Remember, and act on, Jesus’ definition
of sin as a lie. This cognomen makes it
less dangerous; for most of us would not be seen believing
in, or adhering to, that which we know to be untrue.
What would be thought of a Christian Scientist who
be-lieved in the use of drugs, while declaring that
they have no intrinsic quality and that there
is no matter? What should be thought of an individual
believing in that
which is untrue, and at the same time
declaring the unity of Truth, and its allness?
Beware of those who mis-represent facts; or
tacitly assent where they should dis-sent; or
who take me as authority for what I disapprove, or
mayhap never have thought of, and try to reverse, in-
vert, or controvert, Truth; for this is a sure
pretext of moral defilement.
Examine yourselves, and see what,
and how much, sin claims of you; and how much of this
claim you admit as valid, or comply with. The
knowledge of evil that brings on repentance is
the most hopeful stage of mortal mentality. Even
a mild mistake must be seen as a mis-take, in
order to be corrected; how much more, then, should
one’s sins be seen and repented of, before they
can be reduced to their native nothingness!
Ignorance is only blest by reason
of its nothingness; for seeing the need of somethingness
in its stead, blesses mortals. Ignorance was
the first condition of sin in the allegory of Adam
and Eve in the garden of Eden. Their mental state
is not desirable, neither is a knowledge of sin
and its consequences, repentance, per se; but,
ad-mitting the existence of both, mortals must hasten
through the second to the third stage,-the
knowledge of good; for without this the valuable sequence
of knowledge would be lacking,-even the
power to escape from the false claims of sin.
To understand good, one must discern the nothingness
of evil, and consecrate one’s life anew.
Beloved brethren, Christ, Truth, saith
unto you, “Be not afraid!”-fear
not sin, lest thereby it master you; but only fear
to sin. Watch and pray for self-knowledge;
since then, and thus, cometh repentance,-and
your superiority to a delusion is won.
Repentance is better than sacrifice.
The costly balm of Araby, poured on our Master’s
feet, had not the value of a single tear.
Beloved children, the world has need
of you,-and more as children than as men
and women: it needs your innocence, unselfishness,
faithful affection, uncontami-nated lives. You
need also to watch, and pray that you preserve these
virtues unstained, and lose them not through contact
with the world. What grander ambition is there
than to maintain in yourselves what Jesus loved, and
to know that your example, more than words, makes
morals for mankind!
Address Before The Alumni Of The Massachusetts Metaphysical College, 1895
My Beloved Students:-Weeks
have passed into months, and months into years,
since last we met; but time and space, when encompassed
by divine presence, do not separate us. Our hearts
have kept time together, and our hands have wrought
steadfastly at the same object-lesson, while leagues
have lain between us.
We may well unite in thanksgiving
for the continued progress and unprecedented prosperity
of our Cause. It is already obvious that the
world’s acceptance and the momentum of Christian
Science, increase rapidly as years glide on.
As Christian Scientists, you have
dared the perilous de-fense of Truth, and have succeeded.
You have learned how fleeting is that which men call
great; and how per-manent that which God calls good.
You have proven that the greatest
piety is scarcely sufficient to demonstrate what
you have adopted and taught; that your work, well
done, would dignify angels.
Faithfully, as meekly, you have toiled
all night; and at break of day caught much. At
times, your net has been so full that it broke:
human pride, creeping into its meshes, extended it
beyond safe expansion; then, losing hold of divine
Love, you lost your fishes, and pos-sibly blamed
others more than yourself. But those whom God
makes “fishers of men” will not pull for
the shore; like Peter, they launch into the depths,
cast their nets on the right side, compensate loss,
and gain a higher sense of the true idea. Nothing
is lost that God gives: had He filled the net,
it would not have broken.
Leaving the seed of Truth to its own
vitality, it propa- gates: the tares
cannot hinder it. Our Master said, “Heaven
and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not
pass away;” and Jesus’ faith in Truth must
not ex-ceed that of Christian Scientists who prove
its power to be immortal.
The Christianity that is merely of
sects, the pulpit, and fashionable society, is brief;
but the Word of God abideth. Plato was a pagan;
but no greater difference existed be-tween his doctrines
and those of Jesus, than to-day exists between the
Catholic and Protestant sects. I love the
orthodox church; and, in time, that church will love
Christian Science. Let me specially call the attention
of this Association to the following false beliefs
inclining mortal mind more deviously:-
The belief in anti-Christ: that
somebody in the flesh is the son of God, or is
another Christ, or is a spiritually adopted child,
or is an incarnated babe, is the evil one-
in other words, the one evil-disporting
itself with the subtleties of sin!
Even honest thinkers, not knowing
whence they come, may deem these delusions verities,
before they know it, or really look the illusions
in the face. The ages are bur- dened with
material modes. Hypnotism, microbes, X-rays,
and ex-common sense, occupy time and thought; and
error, given new opportunities, will improve them.
The most just man can neither defend the innocent
nor detect the guilty, unless he knows how
to be just; and this knowl- edge demands our
time and attention.
The mental stages of crime, which
seem to belong to the latter days, are strictly classified
in metaphysics as some of the many features and forms
of what is properly denominated, in extreme cases,
moral idiocy. I visited in his cell the
assassin of President Garfield, and found him in the
mental state called moral idiocy. He had no sense
of his crime; but regarded his act as one of simple
justice, and himself as the victim. My few words
touched him; he sank back in his chair, limp and pale;
his flip- pancy had fled. The jailer thanked
me, and said, “Other visitors have brought to
him bouquets, but you have brought what will do him
good.”
This mental disease at first shows
itself in extreme sensitiveness; then, in a loss of
self-knowledge and of self-condemnation,-a
shocking inability to see one’s own faults,
but an exaggerating sense of other people’s.
Unless this mental condition be overcome, it ends in
a total loss of moral, intellectual, and spiritual
discernment, and is characterized in this Scripture:
“The fool hath said in his heart, There
is no God.” This state of mind is the exemplification
of total depravity, and the result
of sensuous mind in matter. Mind
that is God is not in matter; and God’s
presence gives spiritual light, wherein is no darkness.
If, as is indisputably true, “God
is Spirit,” and Spirit is our Father and Mother,
and that which it includes is all that is real
and eternal, when evil seems to predomi-nate and
divine light to be obscured, free moral agency is
lost; and the Revelator’s vision, that “no
man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark,
or the name of the beast, or the number of his name,”
is imminent.
Whoever is mentally manipulating human
mind, and is not gaining a higher sense of Truth by
it, is losing in the scale of moral and spiritual
being, and may be car-ried to the depths of perdition
by his own consent. He who refuses to be influenced
by any but the divine Mind, commits his way to
God, and rises superior to sugges-tions from an evil
source. Christian Science shows that there is
a way of escape from the latter-day ultimatum of evil,
through scientific truth; so that all are without
excuse.
Already I clearly recognize that mental
malpractice, if persisted in, will end in insanity,
dementia, or moral idiocy. Thank God! this evil
can be resisted by true Christianity. Divine
Love is our hope, strength, and shield. We have
nothing to fear when Love is at the helm of thought,
but everything to enjoy on earth and in heaven.
The systematized centres of Christian
Science are life-giving fountains of truth.
Our churches, The Christian Science Journal,
and the Christian Science Quarterly, are
prolific sources of spiritual power whose intellectual,
moral, and spiritual animus is felt throughout the
land.
Our Publishing Society, and our Sunday
Lessons, are of inestimable value to all seekers
after Truth. The Com-mittee on Sunday School
Lessons cannot give too much time and attention to
their task, and should spare no research in the preparation
of the Quarterly as an educa- tional
branch.
The teachers of Christian Science
need to watch inces-santly the trend of their own
thoughts; watch that these be not secretly robbed,
and themselves misguided, and so made to misteach
others. Teachers must conform strictly to
the rules of divine Science announced in the Bible
and their textbook, “Science and Health with
Key to the Scriptures.” They must themselves
practise, and teach others to practise, the Hebrew
Decalogue, the Ser-mon on the Mount, and the
understanding and enuncia- tion of these
according to Christ.
They must always have on armor, and
resist the foe within and without. They cannot
arm too thoroughly against original sin, appearing
in its myriad forms: pass-sion, appetites, hatred,
revenge, and all the et cetera of evil.
Christian Scientists cannot watch too sedulously,
or bar their doors too closely, or pray to God too
fer-vently, for deliverance from the claims
of evil. Thus doing, Scientists will silence
evil suggestions, uncover their methods, and stop
their hidden influence upon the lives of mortals.
Rest assured that God in His wisdom will test all
mankind on all questions; and then, if found faithful,
He will deliver us from temptation and show us the
powerlessness of evil,-even its utter nothingness.
The teacher in Christian Science who
does not spe- cially instruct his pupils
how to guard against evil and its silent modes, and
to be able, through Christ, the liv-
ing Truth, to protect themselves therefrom,
is commit- ting an offense against God and humanity.
With Science and Health for their textbook, I am astounded
at the apathy of some students on the subject of sin
and mental malpractice, and their culpable ignorance
of the work- ing of these-and even
the teacher’s own deficiency in this department.
I can account for this state of mind in the teacher
only as the result of sin; otherwise, his own guilt
as a mental malpractitioner, and fear of being found
out.
The helpless ignorance of the community
on this sub-ject is pitiable, and plain to be seen.
May God enable my students to take up the cross as
I have done, and meet the pressing need of a proper
preparation of heart to prac-tise, teach, and
live Christian Science! Your means of protection
and defense from sin are, constant watchful-ness
and prayer that you enter not into temptation and
are delivered from every claim of evil, till you intelligently
know and demonstrate, in Science, that evil has neither
prestige, power, nor existence, since God, good, is
All- in-all.
The increasing necessity for relying
on God to de-fend us against the subtler forms of
evil, turns us more unreservedly to Him for help,
and thus becomes a means of grace. If one lives
rightly, every effort to hurt one will only help
that one; for God will give the ability to overcome
whatever tends to impede progress. Know this:
that you cannot overcome the baneful effects of sin
on yourself, if you in any way indulge in sin; for,
sooner or later, you will fall the victim of your own
as well as of others’ sins. Using
mental power in the right direction only, doing to
others as you would have them
do to you, will overcome evil with
good, and destroy your own sensitiveness to the
power of evil.
The God of all grace be with you,
and save you from “spiritual wickedness in high
places.”
PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
June 3, 1895
Address Before The Christian Scientist Association Of The Massachusetts
Metaphysical College, In 1893
SUBJECT: Obedience
My Beloved Students:-This
question, ever nearest to my heart, is to-day uppermost:
Are we filling the measures of life’s music
aright, emphasizing its grand strains, swelling the
harmony of being with tones whence come glad echoes?
As crescendo and diminuendo accent
music, so the varied strains of human chords express
life’s loss or gain,-loss of the pleasures
and pains and pride of life: gain of its sweet
concord, the courage of honest convictions, and final
obedience to spiritual law. The ultimate of scientific
research and attainment in divine Science is
not an argument: it is not merely say-ing, but
doing, the Word-demonstrating Truth-even
as the fruits of watchfulness, prayer, struggles, tears,
and triumph.
Obeying the divine Principle which
you profess to un- derstand and love, demonstrates
Truth. Never absent from your post, never off
guard, never ill-humored, never unready to work for
God,-is obedience; being “faith-ful
over a few things.” If in one instance obedience
be lacking, you lose the scientific rule and its reward:
namely,
to be made “ruler over many
things.” A progressive life is the
reality of Life that unfolds its immortal Prin-ciple.
The student of Christian Science must
first separate the tares from the wheat; discern
between the thought, motive, and act superinduced
by the wrong motive or the true-the God-given
intent and volition-arrest the former,
and obey the latter. This will place him on the
safe side of practice. We always know where to
look for the real Scientist, and always find him there.
I agree with Rev. Dr. Talmage, that “there
are wit, humor, and enduring vivacity among God’s
people.”
Obedience is the offspring of Love;
and Love is the Principle of unity, the basis of all
right thinking and acting; it fulfils the law.
We see eye to eye and know as we are known, reciprocate
kindness and work wisely, in proportion as we love.
It is difficult for me to carry out
a divine commission while participating in the movements,
or modus operandi, of other folks. To
point out every step to a student and then watch
that each step be taken, consumes time,-
and experiments ofttimes are costly. According
to my calendar, God’s time and mortals’
differ. The neo-phyte is inclined to be too
fast or too slow: he works somewhat in the dark;
and, sometimes out of season, he would replenish
his lamp at the midnight hour and borrow oil of the
more provident watcher. God is the fountain of
light, and He illumines one’s way when one is
obedient. The disobedient make their moves before
God makes His, or make them too late to follow Him.
Be sure that God directs your way; then,
hasten to follow under every circumstance.
Human will must be subjugated.
We cannot obey both God, good, and evil,-in
other words, the ma-terial senses, false suggestions,
self-will, selfish motives, and human policy.
We shall have no faith in evil when faith finds a
resting-place and scientific under- standing guides
man. Honesty in every condition, under every
circumstance, is the indispensable rule of obedience.
To obey the principle of mathematics ninety-nine
times in one hundred and then allow one numeral to
make incorrect your entire problem, is neither Science
nor obedience.
However keenly the human affections
yearn to for-give a mistake, and pass a friend over
it smoothly, one’s sympathy can neither atone
for error, advance individual growth, nor change this
immutable decree of Love: “Keep My
commandments.” The guerdon of meritorious
faith or trustworthiness rests on being willing to
work alone with God and for Him,-willing
to suffer patiently for error until all error is destroyed
and His rod and His staff comfort you.
Self-ignorance, self-will, self-righteousness,
lust, covet-ousness, envy, revenge, are foes to grace,
peace, and progress; they must be met manfully and
overcome, or they will uproot all happiness.
Be of good cheer; the warfare with one’s self
is grand; it gives one plenty of employment,
and the divine Principle worketh with you,-and
obedience crowns persistent effort with everlasting
victory. Every attempt of evil to harm good is
futile, and ends in the fiery punishment of the evil-doer.
Jesus said, “Not that which
goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which
cometh out of the mouth,
this defileth a man.” If
malicious suggestions whisper evil through the
mind’s tympanum, this were no apology for acting
evilly. We are responsible for our thoughts and
acts; and instead of aiding other people’s devices
by obeying them,-and then whining over
misfortune,- rise and overthrow both.
If a criminal coax the unwary man to commit a crime,
our laws punish the dupe as ac-cessory to the
fact. Each individual is responsible for himself.
Evil is impotent to turn the righteous
man from his uprightness. The nature of
the individual, more stub-born than the circumstance,
will always be found argu-ing for itself,-its
habits, tastes, and indulgences. This material
nature strives to tip the beam against the spir-itual
nature; for the flesh strives against Spirit,-against
whatever or whoever opposes evil,-and
weighs mightily in the scale against man’s high
destiny. This conclusion is not an argument either
for pessimism or for optimism, but is a plea for free
moral agency,-full exemption from all necessity
to obey a power that should be and is found powerless
in Christian Science.
Insubordination to the law of Love
even in the least, or strict obedience thereto, tests
and discriminates be-tween the real and the unreal
Scientist. Justice, a prominent statute in the
divine law, demands of all trespassers upon the
sparse individual rights which one justly reserves
to one’s self,-Would you consent that
others should tear up your landmarks, manipulate your
students, nullify or reverse your rules, countermand
your orders, steal your possessions, and escape the
penalty therefor? No! “Therefore
all things what-soever ye would that men should do
to you, do ye even
so to them.” The professors
of Christian Science must take off their shoes
at our altars; they must unclasp the material sense
of things at the very threshold of Christian Science:
they must obey implicitly each and every injunction
of the divine Principle of life’s long problem,
or repeat their work in tears. In the words of
St. Paul, “Know ye not, that to whom ye yield
your-selves servants to obey, his servants ye are
to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of
obedience unto righteousness?”
Beloved students, loyal laborers are
ye that have wrought valiantly, and achieved great
guerdons in the vineyard of our Lord; but a mighty
victory is yet to be won, a great freedom for the
race; and Christian success is under arms,-with
armor on, not laid down. Let us rejoice,
however, that the clarion call of peace will at length
be heard above the din of battle, and come more sweetly
to our ear than sound of vintage bells to villagers
on the Rhine.
I recommend that this Association
hereafter meet tri- ennially; many of its members
reside a long distance from Massachusetts, and they
are members of The Mother Church who would love to
be with you on Sunday, and once in three years is
perhaps as often as they can afford to be away from
their own fields of labor.
Communion Address, January, 1896
Friends and Brethren:-The
Biblical record of the great Nazarene, whose character
we to-day commemorate, is scanty; but what is given,
puts to flight every doubt as to the immortality of
his words and works. Though
written in a decaying language, his
words can never pass away: they are inscribed
upon the hearts of men: they are engraved upon
eternity’s tablets.
Undoubtedly our Master partook of
the Jews’ feast of the Passover, and drank from
their festal wine-cup. This, however, is not the
cup to which I call your at-tention,-even
the cup of martyrdom: wherein Spirit and matter,
good and evil, seem to grapple, and the human struggles
against the divine, up to a point of discovery; namely,
the impotence of evil, and the om- nipotence
of good, as divinely attested. Anciently, the
blood of martyrs was believed to be the seed of the
Church. Stalled theocracy would make this fatal
doctrine just and sovereign, even a divine decree,
a law of Love! That the innocent shall suffer
for the guilty, is inhuman. The prophet
declared, “Thou shalt put away the guilt of
innocent blood from Israel.” This is plain:
that what-ever belittles, befogs, or belies the nature
and essence of Deity, is not divine. Who, then,
shall father or favor this sentence passed upon innocence?
thereby giving the signet of God to the arrest,
trial, and crucifixion of His beloved Son, the righteous
Nazarene,-christened by John the Baptist,
“the Lamb of God.”
Oh! shameless insult to divine royalty,
that drew from the great Master this answer to the
questions of the rabbinical rabble: “If
I tell you, ye will not believe; and if I also ask
you, ye will not answer me, nor let me go.”
Infinitely greater than human pity,
is divine Love,- that cannot be unmerciful.
Human tribunals, if just, borrow their sense of justice
from the divine Principle thereof, which punishes
the guilty, not the innocent. The Teacher of
both law and gospel construed the substitution
of a good man to suffer for evil-doers-a
crime! When foretelling his own crucifixion,
he said, “Woe unto the world because of offenses!
for it must needs be that offenses come; but woe to
that man by whom the offense cometh!”
Would Jesus thus have spoken of what
was indis-pensable for the salvation of a world
of sinners, or of the individual instrument in this
holy (?) alliance for accom-plishing such a monstrous
work? or have said of him whom God foreordained and
predestined to fulfil a divine decree, “It
were better for him that a millstone were hanged about
his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of
the sea”?
The divine order is the acme of mercy:
it is neither questionable nor assailable: it
is not evil producing good, nor good ultimating
in evil. Such an inference were impious.
Holy Writ denounces him that declares, “Let
us do evil, that good may come! whose damnation is
just.”
Good is not educed from its opposite:
and Love divine spurned, lessens not the hater’s
hatred nor the criminal’s crime; nor reconciles
justice to injustice; nor substitutes the suffering
of the Godlike for the suffering due to sin.
Neither spiritual bankruptcy nor a religious chancery
can win high heaven, or the “Well done, good
and faithful servant,... enter thou into the
joy of thy Lord.”
Divine Love knows no hate; for hate,
or the hater, is nothing: God never made it,
and He made all that was made. The hater’s
pleasures are unreal; his sufferings, self-imposed;
his existence is a parody, and he ends-
with suicide.
The murder of the just Nazarite was incited by the
same spirit that in our time massacres
our missionaries, butchers the helpless Armenians,
slaughters innocents. Evil was, and is, the illusion
of breaking the First Com-mandment, “Thou shalt
have no other gods before me:” it is either
idolizing something and somebody, or hating them:
it is the spirit of idolatry, envy, jealousy, covet-ousness,
superstition, lust, hypocrisy, witchcraft.
That man can break the forever-law
of infinite Love, was, and is, the serpent’s
biggest lie! and ultimates in a religion of pagan
priests bloated with crime; a religion that demands
human victims to be sacrificed to human passions and
human gods, or tortured to appease the anger of a
so-called god or a miscalled man or woman! The
Assyrian Merodach, or the god of sin, was the “lucky
god;” and the Babylonian Yawa, or Jehovah, was
the Jewish tribal deity. The Christian’s
God is neither, and is too pure to behold iniquity.
Divine Science has rolled away the
stone from the sepul-chre of our Lord; and there
has risen to the awakened thought the majestic atonement
of divine Love. The at-one-ment with Christ
has appeared-not through vicarious suffering,
whereby the just obtain a pardon for the unjust,-but
through the eternal law of justice; wherein sinners
suffer for their own sins, repent, forsake sin, love
God, and keep His commandments, thence to receive
the reward of righteousness: salvation from sin,
not through the death of a man, but through
a divine Life, which is our Redeemer.
Holy Writ declares that God is Love,
is Spirit; hence it follows that those who worship
Him, must worship Him spiritually,-far
apart from physical sensation such as attends eating
and drinking corporeally. It is
plain that aught unspiritual, intervening
between God and man, would tend to disturb the
divine order, and countermand the Scripture that those
who worship the Father must worship Him in spirit.
It is also plain, that we should not seek and cannot
find God in mat- ter, or through material methods;
neither do we love and obey Him by means of matter,
or the flesh,-which warreth against Spirit,
and will not be reconciled thereto.
We turn, with sickened sense, from
a pagan Jew’s or Moslem’s misconception
of Deity, for peace; and find rest in the spiritual
ideal, or Christ. For “who is so great
a God as our God!” unchangeable, all-wise, all-just,
all-merciful; the ever-loving, ever-living Life, Truth,
Love: comforting such as mourn, opening the prison
doors to the captive, marking the unwinged bird,
pitying with more than a father’s pity; healing
the sick, cleansing the leper, raising the dead, saving
sinners. As we think thereon, man’s true
sense is filled with peace, and power; and we say,
It is well that Christian Science has taken expressive
silence wherein to muse His praise, to kiss the feet
of Jesus, adore the white Christ, and stretch out our
arms to God.
The last act of the tragedy on Calvary
rent the veil of matter, and unveiled Love’s
great legacy to mortals: Love forgiving
its enemies. This grand act crowned and still
crowns Christianity: it manumits mortals; it
translates love; it gives to suffering, inspiration;
to patience, experience; to experience, hope; to hope,
faith; to faith, understanding; and to understanding,
Love tri- umphant!
In proportion to a man’s spiritual
progress, he will
indeed drink of our Master’s
cup, and be baptized with his baptism! be purified
as by fire,-the fires of suffering; then
hath he part in Love’s atonement, for “whom
the Lord loveth He chasteneth.” Then shall
he also reign with him: he shall rise to know
that there is no sin, that there is no suffering;
since all that is real is right.
This knowledge enables him to overcome the world, the
flesh, and all evil, to have dominion over his own
sinful sense and self. Then shall he drink anew
Christ’s cup, in the kingdom of God-the
reign of righteousness- within him;
he shall sit down at the Father’s right hand:
sit down; not stand waiting and weary; but rest
on the bosom of God; rest, in the understanding of
divine Love that passeth all understanding; rest,
in that which “to know aright is Life eternal,”
and whom, not having seen, we love.
Then shall he press on to Life’s
long lesson, the eternal lore of Love; and learn forever
the infinite meanings of these short sentences:
“God is Love;” and, All that is real is
divine, for God is All-in-all.
Message To The Annual Meeting Of The Mother Church, Boston, 1896
Beloved Brethren, Children, and
Grandchildren:- Apart from the common
walks of mankind, revolving oft the hitherto untouched
problems of being, and oftener, perhaps, the
controversies which baffle it, Mother, thought-tired,
turns to-day to you; turns to her dear church, to
tell the towers thereof the remarkable achievements
that have been ours within the past few years:
the rapid transit from halls to churches, from un-
settled questions to permanence, from
danger to escape, from fragmentary discourses
to one eternal sermon; yea, from darkness to daylight,
in physics and metaphysics.
Truly, I half wish for society again;
for once, at least, to hear the soft music of our
Sabbath chimes saluting the ear in tones that
leap for joy, with love for God and man.
Who hath not learned that when alone
he has his own thoughts to guard, and when struggling
with man-kind his temper, and in society his tongue?
We also have gained higher heights; have learned
that trials lift us to that dignity of Soul which
sustains us, and finally conquers them; and that the
ordeal refines while it chastens.
Perhaps our church is not yet quite
sensible of what we owe to the strength, meekness,
honesty, and obedi-ence of the Christian Science
Board of Directors; to the able editors of The
Christian Science Journal, and to our efficient
Publishing Society.
No reproof is so potent as the silent
lesson of a good example. Works, more than
words, should characterize Christian Scientists.
Most people condemn evil-doing, evil-speaking; yet
nothing circulates so rapidly: even gold is less
current. Christian Scientists have a strong race
to run, and foes in ambush; but bear in mind that,
in the long race, honesty always defeats dishonesty.
God hath indeed smiled on my church,-this
daughter of Zion: she sitteth in high places;
and to de-ride her is to incur the penalty of which
the Hebrew bard spake after this manner: “He
that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh:
the Lord shall have them in derision.”
Hitherto, I have observed that in
proportion as this church has smiled on His “little
ones,” He has blessed her. Throughout my
entire connection with The Mother Church, I have seen,
that in the ratio of her love for others, hath His
love been bestowed upon her; watering her waste
places, and enlarging her borders.
One thing I have greatly desired,
and again earnestly request, namely, that Christian
Scientists, here and elsewhere, pray daily for themselves;
not verbally, nor on bended knee, but mentally, meekly,
and importu- nately. When a hungry heart
petitions the divine Father-Mother God for bread,
it is not given a stone,-but more grace,
obedience, and love. If this heart, humble and
trustful, faithfully asks divine Love to feed it with
the bread of heaven, health, holiness, it will be
conformed to a fitness to receive the answer
to its desire; then will flow into it the “river
of His pleasure,” the tributary of divine Love,
and great growth in Christian Science will follow,-
even that joy which finds one’s own in another’s
good.
To love, and to be loved, one must
do good to others. The inevitable condition whereby
to become blessed, is to bless others: but here,
you must so know yourself, under God’s direction,
that you will do His will even though your pearls
be downtrodden. Ofttimes the rod is His means
of grace; then it must be ours,-we cannot
avoid wielding it if we reflect Him.
Wise sayings and garrulous talk may
fall to the ground, rather than on the ear or heart
of the hearer; but a tender sentiment felt, or a kind
word spoken, at the right moment, is never wasted.
Mortal mind presents phases of charac- ter which
need close attention and examination. The human
heart, like a feather bed, needs often to be stirred,
sometimes roughly, and given a variety
of turns, else it grows hard and uncomfortable
whereon to repose.
The lessons of this so-called life
in matter are too vast and varied to learn or to teach
briefly; and especially within the limits of a letter.
Therefore I close here, with the apostle’s
injunction: “Finally, brethren, what-soever
things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever
things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever
things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report;
if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise,
think on these things. Those things, which ye
have both learned, and received, and heard, and seen
in me, do: and the God of peace shall be with
you.”
With love, Mother,
MARY BAKER G. EDDY