Message for 1901

Message to The Mother Church, Boston, Massachusetts, June, 1901 by



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BELOVED brethren, to-day I extend my heart-and-hand-fellowship to the faithful, to those whose hearts have been beating through the mental avenues of mankind for God and humanity; and rest assured you can never lack God’s outstretched arm so long as you are in His service. Our first communion in the new century finds Christian Science more extended, more rapidly advancing, better appreciated, than ever before, and nearer the whole world’s acceptance.

To-day you meet to commemorate in unity the life of our Lord, and to rise higher and still higher in the individual consciousness most essential to your growth and usefulness; to add to your treasures of thought the great realities of being, which constitute mental and physical perfection. The baptism of the Spirit, and the refreshment and invigoration of the human in communion with the Divine, have brought you hither.

All that is true is a sort of necessity, a portion of the primal reality of things. Truth comes from a deep sincerity that must always characterize heroic hearts; it is the better side of man’s nature developing itself.

As Christian Scientists you seek to define God to your own consciousness by feeling and applying the nature and practical possibilities of divine Love: to gain the absolute


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and supreme certainty that Christianity is now what Christ Jesus taught and demonstrated – health, holiness, immortality. The highest spiritual Christianity in individual lives is indispensable to the acquiring of greater power in the perfected Science of healing all manner of diseases.

We know the healing standard of Christian Science was and is traduced by trying to put into the old garment the new-old cloth of Christian healing. To attempt to twist the fatal magnetic element of human will into harmony with divine power, or to substitute good words for good deeds, a fair seeming for right being, may suit the weak or the worldly who find the standard of Christ’s healing too high for them. Absolute certainty in the practice of divine metaphysics constitutes its utility, since it has a divine and demonstrable Principle and rule – if some fall short of Truth, others will attain it, and these are they who will adhere to it. The feverish pride of sects and systems is the death’s-head at the feast of Love, but Christianity is ever storming sin in its citadels, blessing the poor in spirit and keeping peace with God.

What Jesus’ disciples of old experienced, his followers of to-day will prove, namely, that a departure from the direct line in Christ costs a return under difficulties; darkness, doubt, and unrequited toil will beset all their returning footsteps. Only a firm foundation in Truth can give a fearless wing and a sure reward.

The history of Christian Science explains its rapid growth. In my church of over twenty-one thousand six hundred and thirty-one communicants (two thousand four hundred and ninety-six of whom have been added since


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last November) there spring spontaneously the higher hope, and increasing virtue, fervor, and fidelity. The special benediction of our Father-Mother God rests upon this hour: “Blessed are ye when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake.”


GOD IS THE INFINITE PERSON


We hear it said the Christian Scientists have no God because their God is not a person. Let us examine this. The loyal Christian Scientists absolutely adopt Webster’s definition of God, “A Supreme Being,” and the Standard dictionary’s definition of God, “The one Supreme Being, self-existent and eternal.” Also, we accept God, emphatically, in the higher definition derived from the Bible, and this accords with the literal sense of the lexicons: “God is Spirit,” “God is Love.” Then, to define Love in divine Science we use this phrase for God – divine Principle. By this we mean Mind, a permanent, fundamental, intelligent, divine Being, called in Scripture, Spirit, Love.

It is sometimes said: “God is Love, but this is no argument that Love is God; for God is light, but light is not God.” The first proposition is correct, and is not lost by the conclusion, for Love expresses the nature of God; but the last proposition does not illustrate the first, as light, being matter, loses the nature of God, Spirit, deserts its premise, and expresses God only in metaphor, therefore it is illogical and the conclusion is not properly drawn. It is logical that because God is Love, Love is divine Prin-


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ciple; then Love as either divine Principle or Person stands for God – for both have the nature of God. In logic the major premise must be convertible to the minor.

In mathematics four times three is twelve, and three times four is twelve. To depart from the rule of mathematics destroys the proof of mathematics; just as a departure from the Principle and rule of divine Science destroys the ability to demonstrate Love according to Christ, healing the sick; and you lose its susceptibility of scientific proof.

God is the author of Science – neither man nor matter can be. The Science of God must be, is, divine, predicated of Principle and demonstrated as divine Love; and Christianity is divine Science, else there is no Science and no Christianity.

We understand that God is personal in a scientific sense, but is not corporeal nor anthropomorphic. We understand that God is not finite; He is the infinite Person, but not three persons in one person. Christian Scientists are theists and monotheists. Those who misjudge us because we understand that God is the infinite One instead of three, should be able to explain God’s personality rationally. Christian Scientists consistently conceive of God as One because He is infinite; and as triune, because He is Life, Truth, Love, and these three are one in essence and in office.

If in calling God “divine Principle,” meaning divine Love, more frequently than Person, we merit the epithet “godless,” we naturally conclude that he breaks faith with


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his creed, or has no possible conception of ours, who believes that three persons are defined strictly by the word Person, or as One; for if Person is God, and he believes three persons constitute the Godhead, does not Person here lose the nature of one God, lose monotheism, and become less coherent than the Christian Scientist’s sense of Person as one divine infinite triune Principle, named in the Bible Life, Truth, Love? – for each of these possesses the nature of all, and God omnipotent, omnipresent, omniscient.

Man is person; therefore divine metaphysics discriminates between God and man, the creator and the created, by calling one the divine Principle of all. This suggests another query: Do Christian Scientists believe in personality? They do, but their personality is defined spiritually, not materially – by Mind, not by matter. We do not blot out the material race of Adam, but leave all sin to God’s fiat – self-extinction, and to the final manifestation of the real spiritual man and universe. We believe, according to the Scriptures, that God is infinite Spirit or Person, and man is His image and likeness: therefore man reflects Spirit, not matter.

We are not transcendentalists to the extent of extinguishing anything that is real, good, or true; for God and man in divine Science, or the logic of Truth, are coexistent and eternal, and the nature of God must be seen in man, who is His eternal image and likeness. The theological God as a Person necessitates a creed to explain both His person and nature, whereas God explains Himself in Christian Science. Is the human person,


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as defined by Christian Science, more transcendental than theology’s three divine persons, that live in the Father and have no separate identity? Who says the God of theology is a Person, and the God of Christian Science is not a person, hence no God? Here is the departure. Person is defined differently by theology, which reckons three as one and the infinite in a finite form, and Christian Science, which reckons one as one and this one infinite.

Can the infinite Mind inhabit a finite form? Is the God of theology a finite or an infinite Person? Is He one Person, or three persons? Who can conceive either of three persons as one person, or of three infinites? We hear that God is not God except He be a Person, and this Person contains three persons: yet God must be One although He is three. Is this pure, specific Christianity? and is God in Christian Science no God because He is not after this model of personality?

The logic of divine Science being faultless, its consequent Christianity is consistent with Christ’s hillside sermon, which is set aside to some degree, regarded as impracticable for human use, its theory even seldom named.

God is Person in the infinite scientific sense of Him, but He can neither be one nor infinite in the corporeal or anthropomorphic sense.

Our departure from theological personality is, that God’s personality must be as infinite as Mind is. We believe in God as the infinite Person; but lose all conceivable idea of Him as a finite Person with an infinite Mind. That God is either inconceivable, or is manlike, is not my sense of Him. In divine Science He is “altogether lovely,” and


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consistently conceivable as the personality of infinite Love, infinite Spirit, than whom there is none other.

Scholastic theology makes God manlike; Christian Science makes man Godlike. The trinity of the Godhead in Christian Science being Life, Truth, Love, constitutes the individuality of the infinite Person or divine intelligence called God.

Again, God being infinite Mind, He is the all-wise, all knowing, all-loving Father-Mother, for God made man in His own image and likeness, and made them male and female as the Scriptures declare; then does not our heavenly Parent – the divine Mind – include within this Mind the thoughts that express the different mentalities of man and woman, whereby we may consistently say, “Our Father-Mother God” ? And does not this heavenly Parent know and supply the differing needs of the individual mind even as the Scriptures declare He will?

Because Christian Scientists call their God “divine Principle,” as well as infinite Person, they have not taken away their Lord, and know not where they have laid Him. They do not believe there must be something tangible to the personal material senses in order that belief may attend their petitions to divine Love. The God whom all Christians now claim to believe in and worship cannot be conceived of on that basis; He cannot be apprehended through the material senses, nor can they gain any evidence of His presence thereby. Jesus said, “Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.”


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CHRIST IS ONE AND DIVINE


Again I reiterate this cardinal point: There is but one Christ, and Christ is divine – the Holy Ghost, or spiritual idea of the divine Principle, Love. Is this scientific statement more transcendental than the belief of our brethren, who regard Jesus as God and the Holy Ghost as the third person in the Godhead? When Jesus said, “I and my Father are one,” and “my Father is greater than I,” this was said in the sense that one ray of light is light, and it is one with light, but it is not the full-orbed sun. Therefore we have the authority of Jesus for saying Christ is not God, but an impartation of Him.

Again: Is man, according to Christian Science, more transcendental than God made him? Can he be too spiritual, since Jesus said, “Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect”? Is God Spirit? He is. Then is man His image and likeness, according to Holy Writ? He is. Then can man be material, or less than spiritual? As God made man, is he not wholly spiritual? The reflex image of Spirit is not unlike Spirit. The logic of divine metaphysics makes man none too transcendental, if we follow the teachings of the Bible.

The Christ was Jesus’ spiritual selfhood; therefore Christ existed prior to Jesus, who said, “Before Abraham was, I am.” Jesus, the only immaculate, was born of a virgin mother, and Christian Science explains that mystic saying of the Master as to his dual personality, or the spir-


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itual and material Christ Jesus, called in Scripture the Son of God and the Son of man – explains it as referring to his eternal spiritual selfhood and his temporal manhood. Christian Science shows clearly that God is the only generating or regenerating power.

The ancient worthies caught glorious glimpses of the Messiah or Christ, and their truer sense of Christ baptized them in Spirit – submerged them in a sense so pure it made seers of men, and Christian healers. This is the “Spirit of life in Christ Jesus,” spoken of by St. Paul. It is also the mysticism complained of by the rabbis, who crucified Jesus and called him a “deceiver.” Yea, it is the healing power of Truth that is persecuted to-day, the spirit of divine Love, and Christ Jesus possessed it, practised it, and taught his followers to do likewise. This spirit of God is made manifest in the flesh, healing and saving men, – it is the Christ, Comforter, “which taketh away the sin of the world;” and yet Christ is rejected of men!

The evil in human nature foams at the touch of good; it crieth out, “Let us alone; what have we to do with thee, . . . ? art thou come to destroy us? I know thee who thou art; the Holy One of God.” The Holy Spirit takes of the things of God and showeth them unto the creature; and these things being spiritual, they disturb the carnal and destroy it; they are revolutionary, reformatory, and now, as aforetime – they cast out evils and heal the sick. He of God’s household who loveth and liveth most the things of Spirit, receiveth them most; he speaketh wisely, for the spirit of his Father speaketh through him; he worketh well and healeth quickly, for the spirit giveth him


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liberty: “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”

Jesus said, “For all these things they will deliver you up to the councils” and “If they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more shall they call them of his household? Fear them not therefore: for there is nothing covered, that shall not be revealed.”

Christ being the Son of God, a spiritual, divine emana tion, Christ must be spiritual, not material. Jesus was the son of Mary, therefore the son of man only in the sense that man is the generic term for both male and female. The Christ was not human. Jesus was human, but the Christ Jesus represented both the divine and the human, God and man. The Science of divine metaphysics removes the mysticism that used to enthrall my sense of the Godhead, and of Jesus as the Son of God and the son of man. Christian Science explains the nature of God as both Father and Mother.

Theoretically and practically man’s salvation comes through “the riches of His grace” in Christ Jesus. Divine Love spans the dark passage of sin, disease, and death with Christ’s righteousness, – the atonement of Christ, whereby good destroys evil, – and the victory over self, sin, disease, and death, is won after the pattern of the mount. This is working out our own salvation, for God worketh with us, until there shall be nothing left to perish or to be punished, and we emerge gently into Life everlasting. This is what the Scriptures demand – faith according to works.

After Jesus had fulfilled his mission in the flesh as the


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Son of man, he rose to the fulness of his stature in Christ, the eternal Son of God, that never suffered and never died. And because of Jesus’ great work on earth, his demonstration over sin, disease, and death, the divine nature of Christ Jesus has risen to human apprehension, and we see the Son of man in divine Science; and he is no longer a material man, and mind is no longer in matter. Through this redemptive Christ, Truth, we are healed and saved, and that not of our selves, it is the gift of God; we are saved from the sins and sufferings of the flesh, and are the redeemed of the Lord.


THE CHRISTIAN SCIENTISTS’ PASTOR


True, I have made the Bible, and “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,” the pastor for all the churches of the Christian Science denomination, but that does not make it impossible for this pastor of ours to preach ! To my sense the Sermon on the Mount, read each Sunday without comment and obeyed throughout the week, would be enough for Christian practice. The Word of God is a powerful preacher, and it is not too spiritual to be pracical, nor too transcendental to be heard and understood. Whosoever saith there is no sermon without personal preaching, forgets what Christian Scientists do not, namely, that God is a Person, and that he should be willing to hear a sermon from his personal God!

But, my brethren, the Scripture saith, “Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unto him.” St. Paul complains of him whose god is his belly: to


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such a one our mode of worship may be intangible, for it is not felt with the fingers; but the spiritual sense drinks it in, and it corrects the material sense and heals the sinning and the sick. If St. John should tell that man that Jesus came neither eating nor drinking, and that he bap tized with the Holy Ghost and with fire, he would naturally reply, “That is too transcendental for me to believe or for my worship. That is Johnism, and only Johnites would be seen in such company.” But this is human: even the word Christian was anciently an opprobrium; hence the Scripture, “When the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?”

Though a man were begirt with the Urim and Thummim of priestly office, yet should not have charity, or should deny the validity and permanence of Christ’s command to heal in all ages, he would dishonor that office and misinterpret evangelical religion. Divine Science is not an interpolation of the Scriptures, it is redolent with health, holiness, and love. It only needs the prism of divine Science, which scholastic theology has obscured, to divide the rays of Truth, and bring out the entire hues of God. The lens of Science magnifies the divine power to human sight; and we then see the allness of Spirit, therefore the nothingness of matter.


NO REALITY IN EVIL OR SIN


Incorporeal evil embodies itself in the so-called corporeal, and thus is manifest in the flesh. Evil is neither quality nor quantity: it is not intelligence, a person or a


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principle, a man or a woman, a place or a thing, and God never made it. The outcome of evil, called sin, is another nonentity that belittles itself until it annihilates its own embodiment: this is the only annihilation. The visible sin should be invisible: it ought not to be seen, felt, or acted: and because it ought not, we must know it is not, and that sin is a lie from the beginning, – an illusion, nothing, and only an assumption that nothing is something. It is not well to maintain the position that sin is sin and can take possession of us and destroy us, but well that we take possession of sin with such a sense of its nullity as destroys it. Sin can have neither entity, verity, nor power thus regarded, and we verify Jesus’ words, that evil, alias devil, sin, is a lie – therefore is nothing and the father of nothingness. Christian Science lays the axe at the root of sin, and destroys it on the very basis of nothingness. When man makes something of sin it is either because he fears it or loves it. Now, destroy the conception of sin as something, a reality, and you destroy the fear and the love of it; and sin disappears. A man’s fear, unconquered, conquers him, in whatever direction.

In Christian Science it is plain that God removes the punishment for sin only as the sin is removed – never punishes it only as it is destroyed, and never afterwards; hence the hope of universal salvation. It is a sense of sin, and not a sinful soul, that is lost. Soul is immortal, but sin is mortal. To lose the sense of sin we must first detect the claim of sin; hold it invalid, give it the lie, and then we get the victory, sin disappears, and its unreality is proven. So long as we indulge the presence or believe in


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the power of sin, it sticks to us and has power over us. Again: To assume there is no reality in sin, and yet com mit sin, is sin itself, that clings fast to iniquity. The Publican’s wail won his humble desire, while the Pharisee’s self-righteousness crucified Jesus.

Do Christian Scientists believe that evil exists? We answer, Yes and No! Yes, inasmuch as we do know that evil, as a false claim, false entity, and utter falsity, does exist in thought; and No, as something that enjoys, suffers, or is real. Our only departure from ecclesiasticism on this subject is, that our faith takes hold of the fact that evil cannot be made so real as to frighten us and so master us, or to make us love it and so hinder our way to holiness. We regard evil as a lie, an illusion, therefore as unreal as a mirage that misleads the traveller on his way home.

It is self-evident that error is not Truth; then it follows that it is untrue; and if untrue, unreal; and if unreal, to conceive of error as either right or real is sin in itself. To be delivered from believing in what is unreal, from fearing it, following it, or loving it, one must watch and pray that he enter not into temptation – even as one guards his door against the approach of thieves. Wrong is thought before it is acted; you must control it in the first instance, or it will control you in the second. To overcome all wrong, it must become unreal to us: and it is good to know that wrong has no divine authority; therefore man is its master. I rejoice in the scientific apprehension of this grand verity.

The evil-doer receives no encouragement from my


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declaration that evil is unreal, when I declare that he must awake from his belief in this awful unreality, repent and forsake it, in order to understand and demonstrate its unreality. Error uncondemned is not nullified. We must condemn the claim of error in every phase in order to prove it false, therefore unreal.

The Christian Scientist has enlisted to lessen sin, disease, and death, and he overcomes them through Christ, Truth, teaching him that they cannot overcome us. The resistance to Christian Science weakens in proportion as one understands it and demonstrates the Science of Christianity.

A sinner ought not to be at ease, or he would never quit sinning. The most deplorable sight is to contemplate the infinite blessings that divine Love bestows on mortals, and their ingratitude and hate, filling up the measure of wickedness against all light. I can conceive of little short of the old orthodox hell to waken such a one from his deluded sense; for all sin is a deluded sense, and dis-ease in sin is better than ease. Some mortals may even need to hear the following thunderbolt of Jonathan Edwards: —

“It is nothing but God’s mere pleasure that keeps you from being this moment swallowed up in everlasting destruction. He is of purer eyes than to bear to have you in His sight. There is no other reason to be given why you have not gone to hell since you have sat here in the house of God, provoking His pure eyes by your sinful, wicked manner of attending His solemn worship. Yea, there is nothing else that is to be given as a reason why you do


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not at this moment drop down into hell, but that God’s hand has held you up.”


FUTURE PUNISHMENT OF SIN


My views of a future and eternal punishment take in a poignant present sense of sin and its suffering, punishing itself here and hereafter till the sin is destroyed. St. John’s types of sin scarcely equal the modern nondescripts, whereby the demon of this world, its lusts, falsi ties, envy, and hate, supply sacrilegious gossip with the verbiage of hades. But hatred gone mad becomes imbecile – outdoes itself and commits suicide. Then let the dead bury its dead, and surviving defamers share our pity. In the Greek devil is named serpentliarthe god of this world; and St. Paul defines this world’s god as dishonesty, craftiness, handling the word of God deceitfully. The original text defines devil as accuser, calumniator; therefore, according to Holy Writ these qualities are objectionable, and ought not to proceed from the individual, the pulpit, or the press. The Scriptures once refer to an evil spirit as dumb, but in its origin evil was loquacious, and was supposed to outtalk Truth and to carry a most vital point. Alas! if now it is permitted license, under sanction of the gown, to handle with garrulity age and Christianity! Shall it be said of this century that its greatest discoverer is a woman to whom men go to mock, and go away to pray? Shall the hope for our race commence with one truth told and one hundred falsehoods told about it?


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The present self-inflicted sufferings of mortals from sin, disease, and death should suffice so to awaken the suf ferer from the mortal sense of sin and mind in matter as to cause him to return to the Father’s house penitent and saved; yea, quickly to return to divine Love, the author and finisher of our faith, who so loves even the repentant prodigal – departed from his better self and struggling to return – as to meet the sad sinner on his way and to welcome him home.


MEDICINE


Had not my first demonstrations of Christian Science or metaphysical healing exceeded that of other methods, they would not have arrested public attention and started the great Cause that to-day commands the respect of our best thinkers. It was that I healed the deaf, the blind, the dumb, the lame, the last stages of consumption, pneumonia, etc., and restored the patients in from one to three interviews, that started the inquiry, What is it? And when the public sentiment would allow it, and I had overcome a difficult stage of the work, I would put patients into the hands of my students and retire from the comparative ease of healing to the next more difficult stage of action for our Cause.

From my medical practice I had learned that the dynamics of medicine is Mind. In the highest attenuations of homoeopathy the drug is utterly expelled, hence it must be mind that controls the effect; and this attenuation in some cases healed where the allopathic doses would not.


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When the “mother tincture” of one grain of the drug was attenuated one thousand degrees less than in the beginning, that was my favorite dose.

The weak criticisms and woeful warnings concerning Christian Science healing are less now than were the sneers forty years ago at the medicine of homoeopathy; and the medicine of Mind is more honored and respected to-day than the old-time medicine of matter. Those who laugh at or pray against transcendentalism and the Christian Scientist’s religion or his medicine, should know the danger of questioning Christ Jesus’ healing, who administered no remedy apart from Mind, and taught his disciples none other. Christian Science seems transcendental because the substance of Truth transcends the evidence of the five personal senses, and is discerned only through divine Science.

If God created drugs for medical use, Jesus and his disciples would have used them and named them for that purpose, for he came to do “the will of the Father. ” The doctor who teaches that a human hypothesis is above a demonstration of healing, yea, above the grandeur of our great master Metaphysician’s precept and example, and that of his followers in the early centuries, should read this Scripture: “The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.”

The divine Life, Truth, Love – whom men call God is the Christian Scientists’ healer; and if God destroys the popular triad – sin, sickness, and death – remember it is He who does it and so proves their nullity.

Christians and clergymen pray for sinners; they believe


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that God answers their prayers, and that prayer is a divinely appointed means of grace and salvation. They believe that divine power, besought, is given to them in times of trouble, and that He worketh with them to save sinners. I love this doctrine, for I know that prayer brings the seeker into closer proximity with divine Love, and thus he finds what he seeks, the power of God to heal and to save. Jesus said, “Ask, and ye shall receive;” and if not immediately, continue to ask, and because of your often coming it shall be given unto you; and he illustrated his saying by a parable.

The notion that mixing material and spiritual means, either in medicine or in religion, is wise or efficient, is proven false. That animal natures give force to character is egregious nonsense – a flat departure from Jesus’ practice and proof. Let us remember that the great Metaphysician healed the sick, raised the dead, and commanded even the winds and waves, which obeyed him through spiritual ascendency alone.


MENTAL MALPRACTICE


From ordinary mental practice to Christian Science is a long ascent, but to go from the use of inanimate drugs to any susceptible misuse of the human mind, such as mesmerism, hypnotism, and the like, is to subject mankind unwarned and undefended to the unbridled individual human will. The currents of God flow through no such channels.

The whole world needs to know that the milder forms


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of animal magnetism and hypnotism are yielding to its aggressive features. We have no moral right and no authority in Christian Science for influencing the thoughts of others, except it be to serve God and benefit mankind. Man is properly self-governed, and he should be guided by no other mind than Truth, the divine Mind. Christian Science gives neither moral right nor might to harm either man or beast. The Christian Scientist is alone with his own being and with the reality of things. The mental malpractitioner is not, cannot be, a Christian Scientist; he is disloyal to God and man; he has every opportunity to mislead the human mind, and he uses it. People may listen complacently to the suggestion of the inaudible falsehood, not knowing what is hurting them or that they are hurt. This mental bane could not bewilder, darken, or misguide consciousness, physically, morally, or spiritually, if the individual knew what was at work and his power over it.

This unseen evil is the sin of sins; it is never forgiven. Even the agony and death that it must sooner or later cause the perpetrator, cannot blot out its effects on himself till he suffers up to its extinction and stops practising it. The crimes committed under this new-old régime of necromancy or diabolism are not easily reckoned. At present its mystery protects it, but its hidden modus and flagrance will finally be known, and the laws of our land will handle its thefts, adulteries, and murders, and will pass sentence on the darkest and deepest of human crimes.

Christian Scientists are not hypnotists, they are not


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mortal mind-curists, nor faith-curists; they have faith, but they have Science, understanding, and works as well. They are not the addenda, the et ceteras, or new editions of old errors; but they are what they are, namely, students of a demonstrable Science leading the ages.


QUESTIONABLE METAPHYSICS


In an article published in the New York Journal, Rev.- writes: “To the famous Bishop Berkeley of the Church of England may be traced many of the ideas about the spiritual world which are now taught in Christian Science.”

This clergyman gives it as his opinion that Christian Science will be improved in its teaching and authorship after Mrs. Eddy has gone. I am sorry for my critic, who reckons hopefully on the death of an individual who loves God and man; such foreseeing is not foreknowing, and exhibits a startling ignorance of Christian Science, and a manifest unfitness to criticise it or to compare its literature. He begins his calculation erroneously; for Life is the Principle of Christian Science and of its results. Death is neither the predicate nor postulate of Truth, and Christ came not to bring death but life into the world. Does this critic know of a better way than Christ’s whereby to benefit the race? My faith assures me that God knows more than any man on this subject, for did He not know all things and results I should not have known Christian Science, or felt the incipient touch of divine Love which inspired it.


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That God is good, that Truth is true, and Science is Science, who can doubt; and whosoever demonstrates the truth of these propositions is to some extent a Christian Scientist. Is Science material? No! It is the Mind of God – and God is Spirit. Is Truth material? No! Therefore I do not try to mix matter and Spirit, since Science does not and they will not mix. I am a spiritual homoeopathist in that I do not believe in such a compound. Truth and Truth is not a compound; Spirit and Spirit is not: but Truth and error, Spirit and matter, are compounds and opposites; so if one is true, the other is false. If Truth is true, its opposite, error, is not; and if Spirit is true and infinite, it hath no opposite; therefore matter cannot be a reality.

I begin at the feet of Christ and with the numeration table of Christian Science. But I do not say that one added to one is three, or one and a half, nor say this to accommodate popular opinion as to the Science of Christianity. I adhere to my text, that one and one are two all the way up to the infinite calculus of the infinite God. The numeration table of Christian Science, its divine Principle and rules, are before the people, and the different religious sects and the differing schools of medicine are discussing them as if they understood its Principle and rules before they have learned its numeration table, and insist that the public receive their sense of the Science, or that it receive no sense whatever of it.

Again: Even the numeration table of Christian Science is not taught correctly by those who have departed from its absolute simple statement as to Spirit and matter, and


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that one and two are neither more nor less than three; and losing the numeration table and the logic of Christian Science, they have little left that the sects and faculties can grapple. If Christian Scientists only would admit that God is Spirit and infinite, yet that God has an oppo site and that the infinite is not all; that God is good and infinite, yet that evil exists and is real, – thence it would follow that evil must either exist in good, or exist outside of the infinite, – they would be in peace with the schools.

This departure, however, from the scientific statement, the divine Principle, rule, or demonstration of Christian Science, results as would a change of the denominations of mathematics; and you cannot demonstrate Christian Science except on its fixed Principle and given rule, according to the Master’s teaching and proof. He was ultra; he was a reformer; he laid the axe at the root of all error, amalgamation, and compounds. He used no material medicine, nor recommended it, and taught his disciples and followers to do likewise; therefore he demonstrated his power over matter, sin, disease, and death, as no other person has ever demonstrated it.

Bishop Berkeley published a book in 1710 entitled “Treatise Concerning the Principle of Human Knowledge.” Its object was to deny, on received principles of philosophy, the reality of an external material world. In later publications he declared physical substance to be “only the constant relation between phenomena connected by association and conjoined by the operations of the universal mind, nature being nothing more than conscious


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experience. Matter apart from conscious mind is an impossible and unreal concept.” He denies the existence of matter, and argues that matter is not without the mind, but within it, and that that which is generally called matter is only an impression produced by divine power on the mind by means of invariable rules styled the laws of nature. Here he makes God the cause of all the ills of mortals and the casualties of earth.

Again, while descanting on the virtues of tar-water, he writes: “I esteem my having taken this medicine the greatest of all temporal blessings, and am convinced that under Providence I owe my life to it.” Making matter more potent than Mind, when the storms of disease beat against Bishop Berkeley’s metaphysics and personality he fell, and great was the fall – from divine metaphysics to tar-water !

Christian Science is more than two hundred years old. It dates beyond Socrates, Leibnitz, Berkeley, Darwin, or Huxley. It is as old as God, although its earthly advent is called the Christian era.

I had not read one line of Berkeley’s writings when I published my work Science and Health, the Christian Science textbook.

In contradistinction to his views I found it necessary to follow Jesus’ teachings, and none other, in order to demonstrate the divine Science of Christianity – the metaphysics of Christ – healing all manner of diseases. Philosophy, materia medica, and scholastic theology were inadequate to prove the doctrine of Jesus, and I relinquished the form to attain the spirit or mystery of


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godliness. Hence the mysticism, so called, of my writings becomes clear to the godly.

Building on the rock of Christ’s teachings, we have a superstructure eternal in the heavens, omnipotent on earth, encompassing time and eternity. The stone which the builders reject is apt to be the cross, which they reject and whereby is won the crown and the head of the corner.

A knowledge of philosophy and of medicine, the scholasticism of a bishop, and the metaphysics (so called) which mix matter and mind, – certain individuals call aids to divine metaphysics, and regret their lack in my books, which because of their more spiritual import heal the sick ! No Christly axioms, practices, or parables are alluded to or required in such metaphysics, and the demonstration of matter minus, and God all, ends in some specious folly.

The great Metaphysician, Christ Jesus, denounced all such gilded sepulchres of his time and of all time. He never recommended drugs, he never used them. What, then, is our authority in Christianity for metaphysics based on materialism? He demonstrated what he taught. Had he taught the power of Spirit, and along with this the power of matter, he would have been as contradictory as the blending of good and evil, and the latter superior, which Satan demanded in the beginning, and which has since been avowed to be as real, and matter as useful, as the infinite God, – good, – which, if indeed Spirit and infinite, excludes evil and matter. Jesus likened such self-contradictions to a kingdom divided against itself, that cannot stand.


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The unity and consistency of Jesus’ theory and practice give my tired sense of false philosophy and material theology rest. The great teacher, preacher, and demonstrator of Christianity is the Master, who founded his system of metaphysics only on Christ, Truth, and supported it by his words and deeds.

The five personal senses can have only a finite sense of the infinite: therefore the metaphysician is sensual that combines matter with Spirit. In one sentence he declaims against matter, in the next he endows it with a life-giving quality not to be found in God! and turns away from Christ’s purely spiritual means to the schools and matter for help in times of need.

I have passed through deep waters to preserve Christ’s vesture unrent; then, when land is reached and the world aroused, shall the word popularity be pinned to the seamless robe, and they cast lots for it? God forbid! Let it be left to such as see God – to the pure in spirit, and the meek that inherit the earth; left to them of a sound faith and charity, the greatest of which is charity – spiritual love. St. Paul said: “Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.”

Before leaving this subject of the old metaphysicians, allow me to add I have read little of their writings. I was not drawn to them by a native or an acquired taste for what was problematic and self-contradictory. What I have given to the world on the subject of metaphysical healing or Christian Science is the result of my own ob-


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servation, experience, and final discovery, quite independent of all other authors except the Bible.

My critic also writes: “The best contributions that have been made to the literature of Christian Science have been by Mrs. Eddy’s followers. I look to see some St. Paul arise among the Christian Scientists who will interpret their ideas and principles more clearly, and apply them more rationally to human needs.”

My works are the first ever published on Christian Science, and nothing has since appeared that is correct on this subject the basis whereof cannot be traced to some of those works. The application of Christian Science is healing and reforming mankind. If any one as yet has healed hopeless cases, such as I have in one to three interviews with the patients, I shall rejoice in being informed thereof. Or if a modern St. Paul could start thirty years ago without a Christian Scientist on earth, and in this interval number one million, and an equal number of sick healed, also sinners reformed and the habits and appetites of mankind corrected, why was it not done? God is no respecter of persons.

I have put less of my own personality into Christian Science than others do in proportion, as I have taken out of its metaphysics all matter and left Christian Science as it is, purely spiritual, Christlike – the Mind of God and not of man – born of the Spirit and not matter. Professor Agassiz said: “Every great scientific truth goes through three stages. First, people say it conflicts with the Bible. Next, they say it has been discovered before. Lastly, they say they had always believed it.” Having


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passed through the first two stages, Christian Science must be approaching the last stage of the great naturalist’s prophecy.

It is only by praying, watching, and working for the kingdom of heaven within us and upon earth, that we enter the strait and narrow way, whereof our Master said, “and few there be that find it.” Of the ancient writers since the first century of the Christian era perhaps none lived a more devout Christian life up to his highest understanding than St. Augustine. Some of his writings have been translated into almost every Christian tongue, and are classed with the choicest memorials of devotion both in Catholic and Protestant oratories.

Sacred history shows that those who have followed exclusively Christ’s teaching, have been scourged in the synagogues and persecuted from city to city. But this is no cause for not following it; and my only apology for trying to follow it is that I love Christ more than all the world, and my demonstration of Christian Science in healing has proven to me beyond a doubt that Christ, Truth, is indeed the way of salvation from all that worketh or maketh a lie. As Jesus said: “It is enough for the disciple that he be as his master.” It is well to know that even Christ Jesus, who was not popular among the worldlings in his age, is not popular with them in this age; hence the inference that he who would be popular if he could, is not a student of Christ Jesus.

After a hard and successful career reformers usually are handsomely provided for. Has the thought come to


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Christian Scientists, Have we housed, fed, clothed, or visited a reformer for that purpose? Have we looked after or even known of his sore necessities ? Gifts he needs not. God has provided the means for him while he was providing ways and means for others. But mortals in the advancing stages of their careers need the watchful and tender care of those who want to help them. The aged reformer should not be left to the mercy of those who are not glad to sacrifice for him even as he has sacrificed for others all the best of his earthly years.

I say this not because reformers are not loved, but because well-meaning people sometimes are inapt or selfish in showing their love. They are like children that go out from the parents who nurtured them, toiled for them, and enabled them to be grand coworkers for mankind, children who forget their parents’ increasing years and needs, and whenever they return to the old home go not to help mother but to recruit themselves. Or, if they attempt to help their parents, and adverse winds are blowing, this is no excuse for waiting till the wind shifts. They should remember that mother worked and won for them by facing the winds. All honor and success to those who honor their father and mother. The individual who loves most, does most, and sacrifices most for the reformer, is the individual who soonest will walk in his footsteps. To aid my students in starting under a tithe of my own difficulties, I allowed them for several years fifty cents on every book of mine that they sold. “With this percentage,” students wrote me, “quite quickly we have regained our tuition for the college course.”


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Christian Scientists are persecuted even as all other religious denominations have been, since ever the primi tive Christians, “of whom the world was not worthy.” We err in thinking the object of vital Christianity is only the bequeathing of itself to the coming centuries. The successive utterances of reformers are essential to its propagation. The magnitude of its meaning forbids headlong haste, and the consciousness which is most imbued struggles to articulate itself.

Christian Scientists are practically non-resistants; they are too occupied with doing good, observing the Golden Rule, to retaliate or to seek redress; they are not quacks, giving birth to nothing and death to all, – but they are leaders of a reform in religion and in medicine, and they have no craft that is in danger.

Even religion and therapeutics need regenerating. Philanthropists, and the higher class of critics in theology and materia medica, recognize that Christian Science kindles the inner genial life of a man, destroying all lower considerations. No man or woman is roused to the establishment of a new-old religion by the hope of ease, pleasure, or recompense, or by the stress of the appetites and passions. And no emperor is obeyed like the man “clouting his own cloak” – working alone with God, yea, like the clear, far-seeing vision, the calm courage, and the great heart of the unselfed Christian hero.

I counsel Christian Scientists under all circumstances to obey the Golden Rule, and to adopt Pope’s axiom: “An honest, sensible, and well-bred man will not insult me, and no other can.” The sensualist and world-wor-


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shipper are always stung by a clear elucidation of truth, of right, and of wrong.

The only opposing element that sects or professions can encounter in Christian Science is Truth opposed to all error, specific or universal. This opposition springs from the very nature of Truth, being neither personal nor human, but divine. Every true Christian in the near future will learn and love the truths of Christian Science that now seem troublesome. Jesus said, “I came not to send peace but a sword.”

Has God entrusted me with a message to mankind? then I cannot choose but obey. After a long acquaintance with the communicants of my large church, they regard me with no vague, fruitless, inquiring wonder. I can use the power that God gives me in no way except in the interest of the individual and the community. To this verity every member of my church would bear loving testimony.


MY CHILDHOOD’S CHURCH HOME


Among the list of blessings infinite I count these dear: Devout orthodox parents; my early culture in the Congregational Church; the daily Bible reading and family prayer; my cradle hymn and the Lord’s Prayer, repeated at night; my early association with distinguished Christian clergymen, who held fast to whatever is good, used faithfully God’s Word, and yielded up graciously what He took away. It was my fair fortune to be often taught by some grand old divines, among whom were the Rev.


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Abraham Burnham of Pembroke, N. H., Rev. Nathaniel Bouton, D. D., of Concord, N. H., Congregationalists; Rev. Mr. Boswell, of Bow, N. H., Baptist; Rev. Enoch Corser, and Rev. Corban Curtice, Congregationalists; and Father Hinds, Methodist Elder. I became early a child of the Church, an eager lover and student of vital Christianity. Why I loved Christians of the old sort was I could not help loving them. Full of charity and good works, busy about their Master’s business, they had no time or desire to defame their fellow-men. God seemed to shield the whole world in their hearts, and they were willing to renounce all for Him. When infidels assailed them, however, the courage of their convictions was seen. They were heroes in the strife; they armed quickly, aimed deadly, and spared no denunciation. Their convictions were honest, and they lived them; and the sermons their lives preached caused me to love their doctrines.

The lives of those old-fashioned leaders of religion explain in a few words a good man. They fill the ecclesiastic measure, that to love God and keep His commandments is the whole duty of man. Such churchmen and the Bible, especially the First Commandment of the Decalogue, and Ninety-first Psalm, the Sermon on the Mount, and St. John’s Revelation, educated my thought many years, yea, all the way up to its preparation for and reception of the Science of Christianity. I believe, if those venerable Christians were here to-day, their sanctified souls would take in the spirit and understanding of Christian Science through the flood-gates of Love; with them Love was the governing impulse of every action; their


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piety was the all-important consideration of their being, the original beauty of holiness that to-day seems to be fading so sensibly from our sight.

To plant for eternity, the “accuser” or “calumniator” must not be admitted to the vineyard of our Lord, and the hand of love must sow the seed. Carlyle writes: “Quackery and dupery do abound in religion; above all, in the more advanced decaying stages of religion, they have fearfully abounded; but quackery was never the originating influence in such things; it was not the health and life of religion, but their disease, the sure precursor that they were about to die.”

Christian Scientists first and last ask not to be judged on a doctrinal platform, a creed, or a diploma for scientific guessing. But they do ask to be allowed the rights of conscience and the protection of the constitutional laws of their land; they ask to be known by their works, to be judged (if at all) by their works. We admit that they do not kill people with poisonous drugs, with the lance, or with liquor, in order to heal them. Is it for not killing them thus, or is it for healing them through the might and majesty of divine power after the manner taught by Jesus, and which he enjoined his students to teach and practise, that they are maligned? The richest and most positive proof that a religion in this century is just what it was in the first centuries is that the same reviling it received then it receives now, and from the same motives which actuate one sect to persecute another in advance of it.

Christian Scientists are harmless citizens that do not kill people either by their practice or by preventing the


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early employment of an M.D. Why? Because the effect of prayer, whereby Christendom saves sinners, is quite as salutary in the healing of all manner of diseases. The Bible is our authority for asserting this, in both cases. The interval that detains the patient from the attendance of an M.D., occupied in prayer and in spiritual obedience to Christ’s mode and means of healing, cannot be fatal to the patient, and is proven to be more pathological than the M.D.’s material prescription. If this be not so, where shall we look for the standard of Christianity? Have we misread the evangelical precepts and the canonical writings of the Fathers, or must we have a new Bible and a new system of Christianity, originating not in God, but a creation of the schools – a material religion, proscriptive, intolerant, wantonly bereft of the Word of God.

Give us, dear God, again on earth the lost chord of Christ; solace us with the song of angels rejoicing with them that rejoice; that sweet charity which seeketh not her own but another’s good, yea, which knoweth no evil.

Finally, brethren, wait patiently on God; return blessing for cursing; be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good; be steadfast, abide and abound in faith, understanding, and good works; study the Bible and the textbook of our denomination; obey strictly the laws that be, and follow your Leader only so far as she follows Christ. Godliness or Christianity is a human necessity: man cannot live without it; he has no intelligence, health, hope, nor happiness without godliness. In the words of the Hebrew writers: “Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In


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all thy ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct thy paths;” “and He shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light, and thy judgment as the noonday.”

The question oft presents itself, Are we willing to sacrifice self for the Cause of Christ, willing to bare our bosom to the blade and lay ourselves upon the altar? Christian Science appeals loudly to those asleep upon the hill-tops of Zion. It is a clarion call to the reign of righteousness, to the kingdom of heaven within us and on earth, and Love is the way alway.


O the Love divine that plucks us From the human agony! O the Master’s glory won thus, Doth it dawn on you and me?

And the bliss of blotted-out sin And the working hitherto Shall we share it – do we walk in Patient faith the way thereto?

Christian Science versus Pantheism

by


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PASTOR’S MESSAGE TO THE MOTHER CHURCH, ON THE OCCASION OF THE JUNE COMMUNION, 1898



SUBJECT: Not Pantheism, but Christian Science


BELOVED brethren, since last you gathered at the feast of our Passover, the winter winds have come and gone; the rushing winds of March have shrieked and hummed their hymns; the frown and smile of April, the laugh of May, have fled; and the roseate blush of joyous June is here and ours.

In unctuous unison with nature, mortals are hoping and working, putting off outgrown, wornout, or soiled garments — the pleasures and pains of sensation and the sackcloth of waiting — for the springtide of Soul. For what a man seeth he hopeth not for, but hopeth for what he hath not seen, and waiteth patiently the appearing thereof. The night is far spent, and day is not distant in the horizon of Truth — even the day when all people shall know and acknowledge one God and one Christianity.


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CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NOT PANTHEISM


At this period of enlightenment, a declaration from the pulpit that Christian Science is pantheism is anomalous to those who know whereof they speak — who know that Christian Science is Science, and therefore is neither hypothetical nor dogmatical, but demonstrable, and looms above the mists of pantheism higher than Mt. Ararat above the deluge.


ANALYSIS OF “PANTHEISM”


According to Webster the word “pantheism” is derived from two Greek words meaning “all” and “god.” Webster’s derivation of the English word “pantheism” is most suggestive. His uncapitalized word “god” gives the meaning of pantheism as a human opinion of “gods many,” or mind in matter. “The doctrine that the universe, conceived of as a whole, is God; that there is no God but the combined forces and laws which are manifested in the existing universe.”

The Standard Dictionary has it that pantheism is the doctrine of the deification of natural causes, conceived as one personified nature, to which the religious sentiment is directed.

Pan is a Greek prefix, but it might stand, in the term pantheism, for the mythological deity of that name; and theism for a belief concerning Deity in theology. However, Pan in imagery is preferable to pantheism in theology.


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The mythical deity may please the fancy, while pantheism suits not at all the Christian sense of religion. Pan, as a deity, is supposed to preside over sylvan solitude, and is a horned and hoofed animal, half goat and half man, that poorly presents the poetical phase of the genii of forests.(1)

My sense of nature’s rich glooms is, that loneness lacks but one charm to make it half divine — a friend, with whom to whisper, “Solitude is sweet.” Certain moods of mind find an indefinable pleasure in stillness, soft, silent as the storm’s sudden hush; for nature’s stillness is voiced with a hum of harmony, the gentle murmur of early morn, the evening’s closing vespers, and lyre of bird and brooklet.


“O sacred solitude! divine retreat! Choice of the prudent! envy of the great! By thy pure stream, or in thy evening shade, We court fair wisdom, that celestial maid.”


Theism is the belief in the personality and infinite mind of one supreme, holy, self-existent God, who reveals Himself supernaturally to His creation, and whose laws are not reckoned as science. In religion, it is a belief in one God, or in many gods. It is opposed to atheism and


 (1) In Roman mythology (one of my girlhood studies), Pan stood for “universal nature proceeding from the divine Mind and providence, of which heaven, earth, sea, the eternal fire, are so many members.” Pan was the god of shepherds and hunters, leader of the nymphs, president of the mountains, patron of country life, and guardian of flocks and herds. His pipe of seven reeds denotes the celestial harmony of the seven planets; his shepherd’s crook, that care and providence by which he governs the universe; his spotted skin, the stars; his goat’s feet, the solidity of the earth; his man-face, the celestial world.


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monotheism, but agrees with certain forms of pantheism and polytheism. It is the doctrine that the universe owes its origin and continuity to the reason, intellect, and will of a self-existent divine Being, who possesses all wisdom, goodness, and power, and is the creator and preserver of man.

A theistic theological belief may agree with physics and anatomy that reason and will are properly classified as mind, located in the brain; also, that the functions of these faculties depend on conditions of matter, or brain, for their proper exercise. But reason and will are human; God is divine. In academics and in religion it is patent that will is capable of use and of abuse, of right and wrong action, while God is incapable of evil; that brain is matter, and that there are many so-called minds; that He is the creator of man, but that man also is a creator, making two creators; but God is Mind and one.


GOD — NOT HUMAN DEVICES — THE PRESERVER OF MAN


God, Spirit, is indeed the preserver of man. Then, in the words of the Hebrew singer, “Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and why art thou disquieted within me? hope thou in God: for I shall yet praise Him, who is the health of my countenance, and my God. . . . Who forgiveth all thine iniquities; who healeth all thy diseases.” This being the case, what need have we of drugs, hygiene, and medical therapeutics, if these are not man’s preservers? By admitting self-evident affirmations and then contra-


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dicting them, monotheism is lost and pantheism is found in scholastic theology. Can a single quality of God, Spirit, be discovered in matter? The Scriptures plainly declare, “The Word was God;” and “all things were made by Him,” — the Word. What, then, can matter create, or how can it exist?


JESUS’ DEFINITION OF EVIL


Did God create evil? or is evil self-existent, and so possessed of the nature of God, good? Since evil is not self-made, who or what hath made evil? Our Master gave the proper answer for all time to this hoary query. He said of evil: “Ye are of your father, the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth [God], because here is no truth [reality] in him [evil] . When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it [a lie].”

Jesus’ definition of devil (evil) explains evil. It shows that evil is both liar and lie, a delusion and illusion. Therefore we should neither believe the lie, nor believe that it hath embodiment or power; in other words, we should not believe that a lie, nothing, can be something, but deny it and prove its falsity. After this manner our Master cast out evil, healed the sick, and saved sinners. Knowing that evil is a lie, and, as the Scripture declares, brought sin, sickness, and death into the world, Jesus treated the lie summarily. He denied it, cast it out of mortal mind, and thus healed sickness and sin. His treatment of evil


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and disease, Science will restore and establish, — first, because it was more effectual than all other means; and, second, because evil and disease will never disappear in any other way.

Finally, brethren, let us continue to denounce evil as the illusive claim that God is not supreme, and continue to fight it until it disappears, — but not as one that beateth the mist, but lifteth his head above it and putteth his foot upon a lie.


EVIL, AS PERSONIFIED BY THE SERPENT


Mosaic theism introduces evil, first, in the form of a talking serpent, contradicting the word of God and thereby obtaining social prestige, a large following, and changing the order and harmony of God’s creation. But the higher criticism is not satisfied with this theism, and asks, If God is infinite good, what and where is evil? And if Spirit made all that was made, how can matter be an intelligent creator or coworker with God? Again: Did one Mind, or two minds, enter into the Scriptural allegory, in the colloquy between good and evil, God and a serpent? — and if two minds, what becomes of theism in Christianity? For if God, good, is Mind, and evil also is mind, the Christian religion has at least two Gods. If Spirit is sovereign, how can matter be force or law; and if God, good, is omnipotent, what power hath evil?

It is plain that elevating evil to the altitude of mind gives it power, and that the belief in more than one spirit, if


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Spirit, God, is infinite, breaketh the First Commandment in the Decalogue.

Science shows that a plurality of minds, or intelligent matter, signifies more than one God, and thus prevents the demonstration that the healing Christ, Truth, gave and gives in proof of the omnipotence of one divine, infinite Principle.

Does not the theism or belief, that after God, Spirit, had created all things spiritually, a material creation took place, and God, the preserver of man, declared that man should die, lose the character and sovereignty of Jehovah, and hint the gods of paganism?


THEISTIC RELIGIONS


We know of but three theistic religions, the Mosaic, the Christian, and the Mohammedan. Does not each of these religions mystify the absolute oneness and infinity of God, Spirit?

A close study of the Old and New Testaments in connection with the original text indicates, in the third chapter of Genesis, a lapse in the Mosaic religion, wherein theism seems meaningless, or a vague apology for contradictions. It certainly gives to matter and evil reality and power, intelligence and law, which implies Mind, Spirit, God; and the logical sequence of this error is idolatry — other gods.

Again: The hypothesis of mind in matter, or more than one Mind, lapses into evil dominating good, matter governing Mind, and makes sin, disease, and death inevitable,


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despite of Mind, or by the consent of Mind! Next, it follows that the disarrangement of matter causes a man to be mentally deranged; and the Babylonian sun god, moon god, and sin god find expression in sun worship, lunacy, sin, and mortality.

Does not the belief that Jesus, the man of Galilee, is God, imply two Gods, one the divine, infinite Person, the other a human finite personality? Does not the belief that Mary was the mother of God deny the self-existence of God? and does not the doctrine that Mohammed is the only prophet of God infringe the sacredness of one Christ Jesus?


SCIENTIFIC CHRISTIANITY MEANS ONE GOD


Christianity, as taught and demonstrated in the first century by our great Master, virtually annulled the socalled laws of matter, idolatry, pantheism, and polytheism. Christianity then had one God and one law, namely, divine Science. It said, “Call no man your father upon the earth, for one is your Father, which is in heaven.” Speaking of himself, Jesus said, “My Father is greater than I.” Christianity, as he taught and demonstrated it, must ever rest on the basis of the First Commandment and love for man.

The doctrines that embrace pantheism, polytheism, and paganism are admixtures of matter and Spirit, truth and error, sickness and sin, life and death. They make man the servant of matter, living by reason of it, suffering because of it, and dying in consequence of it. They con-


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stantly reiterate the belief of pantheism, that mind “sleeps in the mineral, dreams in the animal, and wakes in man.”

“Infinite Spirit” means one God and His creation, and no reality in aught else. The term “spirits” means more than one Spirit; — in paganism they stand for gods; in spiritualism they imply men and women; and in Christianity they signify a good Spirit and an evil spirit.

Is there a religion under the sun that hath demonstrated one God and the four first rules pertaining thereto, namely, “Thou shalt have no other gods before me;” “Love thy neighbor as thyself;” “Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect;” “Whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die.” (John xi. 26.)

What mortal to-day is wise enough to do himself no harm, to hinder not the attainment of scientific Christianity? Whoever demonstrates the highest humanity, — long-suffering, self-surrender, and spiritual endeavor to bless others, — ought to be aided, not hindered, in his holy mission. I would kiss the feet of such a messenger, for to help such a one is to help one’s self. The demonstration of Christianity blesses all mankind. It loves one’s neighbor as one’s self; it loves its enemies — and this love benefits its enemies (though they believe it not), and rewards its possessor; for, “If ye love them which love you, what reward have ye?”


MAN THE TRUE IMAGE OF GOD


From a material standpoint, the best of people sometimes object to the philosophy of Christian Science, on the


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ground that it takes away man’s personality and makes man less than man. But what saith the apostle? — even this: “If a man think himself to be something, when he is nothing, he deceiveth himself.” The great Nazarene Prophet said, “By their fruits ye shall know them :” then, if the effects of Christian Science on the lives of men be thus judged, we are sure the honest verdict of humanity will attest its uplifting power, and prevail over the opposite notion that Christian Science lessens man’s individuality.

The students at the Massachusetts Metaphysical College, generally, were the average man and woman. But after graduation, the best students in the class averred that they were stronger and better than before it. With twelve lessons or less, the present and future of those students had wonderfully broadened and brightened before them, thus proving the utility of what they had been taught. Christian Scientists heal functional, organic, chronic, and acute diseases that M.D.’s have failed to heal; and, better still, they reform desperate cases of intemperance, tobacco using, and immorality, which, we regret to say, other religious teachers are unable to effect. All this is accomplished by the grace of God, — the effect of God understood. A higher manhood is manifest, and never lost, in that individual who finds the highest joy, — therefore no pleasure in loathsome habits or in sin, and no necessity for disease and death. Whatever promotes statuesque being, health, and holiness does not degrade man’s personality. Sin, sickness, appetites, and passions, constitute no part of man, but obscure man. Therefore it


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required the divinity of our Master to perceive the real man, and to cast out the unreal or counterfeit. It caused St. Paul to write, — “Lie not one to another, seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds; and have put on the new man, which is renewed in knowledge after the image of Him that created him.”

Was our Master mistaken in judging a cause by its effects? Shall the opinions, systems, doctrines, and dogmas of men gauge the animus of man? or shall his stature in Christ, Truth, declare him? Governed by the divine Principle of his being, man is perfect. When will the schools allow mortals to turn from clay to Soul for the model? The Science of being, understood and obeyed, will demonstrate man to be superior to the best churchmember or moralist on earth, who understands not this Science. If man is spiritually fallen, it matters not what he believes; he is not upright, and must regain his native spiritual stature in order to be in proper shape, as certainly as the man who falls physically needs to rise again.

Mortals, content with something less than perfection — the original standard of man — may believe that evil develops good, and that whatever strips off evil’s disguise belittles man’s personality. But God enables us to know that evil is not the medium of good, and that good supreme destroys all sense of evil, obliterates the lost image that mortals are content to call man, and demands man’s unfallen spiritual perfectibility.

The grand realism that man is the true image of God, not fallen or inverted, is demonstrated by Christian Science. And because Christ’s dear demand, “Be ye therefore


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perfect,” is valid, it will be found possible to fulfil it. Then also will it be learned that good is not educed from evil, but comes from the rejection of evil and its modus operandi. Our scholarly expositor of the Scriptures, Lyman Abbott, D.D., writes, “God, Spirit, is ever in universal nature.” Then, we naturally ask, how can Spirit be constantly passing out of mankind by death — for the universe includes man?


THE GRANDEUR OF CHRISTIANITY


This closing century, and its successors, will make strong claims on religion, and demand that the inspired Scriptural commands be fulfilled. The altitude of Christianity openeth, high above the so-called laws of matter, a door that no man can shut; it showeth to all peoples the way of escape from sin, disease, and death; it lifteth the burden of sharp experience from off the heart of humanity, and so lighteth the path that he who entereth it may run and not weary, and walk, not wait by the roadside, — yea, pass gently on without the alterative agonies whereby the way-seeker gains and points the path.

The Science of Christianity is strictly monotheism, — it has ONE GOD. And this divine infinite Principle, noumenon and phenomena, is demonstrably the self-existent Life, Truth, Love, substance, Spirit, Mind, which includes all that the term implies, and is all that is real and eternal. Christian Science is irrevocable — unpierced by bold conjecture’s sharp point, by bald philosophy, or by man’s inventions. It is divinely true, and every hour


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in time and in eternity will witness more steadfastly to its practical truth. And Science is not pantheism, but Christian Science.

Chief among the questions herein, and nearest my heart, is this: When shall Christianity be demonstrated according to Christ, in these words: “Neither shall they say, Lo, here! or, lo there! for, behold, the kingdom of God is within you”?


EXHORTATION


Beloved brethren, the love of our loving Lord was never more manifest than in its stern condemnation of all error, wherever found. I counsel thee, rebuke and exhort one another. Love all Christian churches for the gospel’s sake; and be exceedingly glad that the churches are united in purpose, if not in method, to close the war between flesh and Spirit, and to fight the good fight till God’s will be witnessed and done on earth as in heaven.

Sooner or later all shall know Him, recognize the great truth that Spirit is infinite, and find life in Him in whom we do “live, and move, and have our being” — life in Life, all in All. Then shall all nations, peoples, and tongues, in the words of St Paul, have “one God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all.” (Ephesians iv. 6.)

Have I wearied you with the mysticism of opposites? Truly there is no rest in them, and I have only traversed my subject that you may prove for yourselves the unsub-


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stantial nature of whatever is unlike good, weigh a sigh, and rise into the rest of righteousness with its triumphant train.

Once more I write, Set your affections on things above; love one another; commune at the table of our Lord in one spirit; worship in spirit and in truth; and if daily adoring, imploring, and living the divine Life, Truth, Love, thou shalt partake of the bread that cometh down from heaven, drink of the cup of salvation, and be baptized in Spirit.


PRAYER FOR COUNTRY AND CHURCH


Pray for the prosperity of our country, and for her victory under arms; that justice, mercy, and peace continue to characterize her government, and that they shall rule all nations. Pray that the divine presence may still guide and bless our chief magistrate, those associated with his executive trust, and our national judiciary; give to our congress wisdom, and uphold our nation with the right arm of His righteousness.

In your peaceful homes remember our brave soldiers, whether in camp or in battle.(1) Oh, may their love of country, and their faithful service thereof, be unto them lifepreservers! May the divine Love succor and protect them, as at Manila, where brave men, led by the dauntless Dewey, and shielded by the power that saved them, sailed victoriously through the jaws of death and blotted out the Spanish squadron.

Great occasion have we to rejoice that our nation, which


 (1) `


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fed her starving foe, — already murdering her peaceful seamen and destroying millions of her money, — will be as formidable in war as she has been compassionate in peace.

May our Father-Mother God, who in times past hath spread for us a table in the wilderness and “in the midst of our enemies,” establish us in the most holy faith, plant our feet firmly on Truth, the rock of Christ, the “substance of things hoped for” — and fill us with the life and understanding of God, and good will towards men.

MARY BAKER EDDY

Message for 1902

Message to The Mother Church, Boston, Massachusetts, June 15, 1902 by


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The Old and the New Commandment

BELOVED brethren, another year of God’s loving providence for His people in times of persecution has marked the history of Christian Science. With no special effort to achieve this result, our church communicants constantly increase in number, unity, steadfastness. Two thousand seven hundred and eighty-four members have been added to our church during the year ending June, 1902, making total twenty-four thousand two hundred and seventy-eight members; while our branch churches are multiplying everywhere and blossoming as the rose. Evil, though combined in formidable conspiracy, is made to glorify God. The Scripture declares, “The wrath of man shall praise Thee: the remainder of wrath shalt Thou restrain.”

Whatever seems calculated to displace or discredit the ordinary systems of religious beliefs and opinions wrestling only with material observation, has always met with opposition and detraction; this ought not so to be, for a system that honors God and benefits mankind should be welcomed and sustained. While Christian Science, engaging the attention of philosopher and sage, is circling

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the globe, only the earnest, honest investigator sees through the mist of mortal strife this daystar, and whither it guides.

To live and let live, without clamor for distinction or recognition; to wait on divine Love; to write truth first on the tablet of one’s own heart, — this is the sanity and perfection of living, and my human ideal. The Science of man and the universe, in contradistinction to all error, is on the way, and Truth makes haste to meet and to welcome it. It is purifying all peoples, religions, ethics, and learning, and making the children our teachers.

Within the last decade religion in the United States has passed from stern Protestantism to doubtful liberalism. God speed the right! The wise builders will build on the stone at the head of the corner; and so Christian Science, the little leaven hid in three measures of meal, — ethics, medicine, and religion, — is rapidly fermenting, and en lightening the world with the glory of untrammelled truth. The present modifications in ecclesiasticism are an outcome of progress; dogmatism, relegated to the past, gives place to a more spiritual manifestation, wherein Christ is Alpha and Omega. It was an inherent characteristic of my nature, a kind of birthmark, to love the Church; and the Church once loved me. Then why not remain friends, or at least agree to disagree, in love, — part fair foes. I never left the Church, either in heart or in doctrine; I but began where the Church left off. When the churches and I round the gospel of grace, in the circle of love, we shall meet again, never to part. I have always taught the student to overcome evil with good, used no

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other means myself; and ten thousand loyal Christian Scientists to one disloyal, bear testimony to this fact.

The loosening cords of non-Christian religions in the Orient are apparent. It is cause for joy that among the educated classes Buddhism and Shintoism are said to be regarded now more as a philosophy than as a religion.

I rejoice that the President of the United States has put an end, at Charleston, to any lingering sense of the North’s half-hostility to the South, thus reinstating the old national family pride and joy in the sisterhood of States.

Our nation’s forward step was the inauguration of home rule in Cuba, — our military forces withdrawing, and leaving her in the enjoyment of self-government under improved laws. It is well that our government, in its brief occupation of that pearl of the ocean, has so improved her public school system that her dusky children are learning to read and write.

The world rejoices with our sister nation over the close of the conflict in South Africa; now, British and Boer may prosper in peace, wiser at the close than the beginning of war. The dazzling diadem of royalty will sit easier on the brow of good King Edward, — the muffled fear of death and triumph canker not his coronation, and woman’s thoughts — the joy of the sainted Queen, and the lay of angels — hallow the ring of state.

It does not follow that power must mature into oppression; indeed, right is the only real potency; and the only true ambition is to serve God and to help the race. Envy is the atmosphere of hell. According to Holy Writ, the first lie and leap into perdition began with “Believe in

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me.” Competition in commerce, deceit in councils, dishonor in nations, dishonesty in trusts, begin with “Who shall be greatest?” I again repeat, Follow your Leader, only so far as she follows Christ.

I cordially congratulate our Board of Lectureship, and Publication Committee, on their adequacy and correct analysis of Christian Science. Let us all pray at this Communion season for more grace, a more fulfilled life and spiritual understanding, bringing music to the ear, rapture to the heart- a fathomless peace between Soul and sense — and that our works be as worthy as our words.

My subject to-day embraces the First Commandment in the Hebrew Decalogue, and the new commandment in the gospel of peace, both ringing like soft vesper chimes adown the corridors of time, and echoing and reechoing through the measureless rounds of eternity.

God as Love

The First Commandment, “Thou shalt have no other gods before me,” is a law never to be abrogated — a divine statute for yesterday, and to-day, and forever. I shall briefly consider these two commandments in a few of their infinite meanings, applicable to all periods — past, present, and future.

Alternately transported and alarmed by abstruse problems of Scripture, we are liable to turn from them as impractical, or beyond the ken of mortals, — and past finding out. Our thoughts of the Bible utter our lives.

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As silent night foretells the dawn and din of morn; as the dulness of to-day prophesies renewed energy for to-morrow, — so the pagan philosophies and tribal religions of yesterday but foreshadowed the spiritual dawn of the twentieth century — religion parting with its materiality.

Christian Science stills all distress over doubtful interpretations of the Bible; it lights the fires of the Holy Ghost, and floods the world with the baptism of Jesus. It is this ethereal flame, this almost unconceived light of divine Love, that heaven husbands in the First Commandment.

For man to be thoroughly subordinated to this commandment, God must be intelligently considered and understood. The ever-recurring human question and wonder, What is God? can never be answered satisfactorily by human hypotheses or philosophy. Divine metaphysics and St. John have answered this great question forever in these words: “God is Love.” This absolute definition of Deity is the theme for time and for eternity; it is iterated in the law of God, reiterated in the gospel of Christ, voiced in the thunder of Sinai, and breathed in the Sermon on the Mount. Hence our Master’s saying, “Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil.”

Since God is Love, and infinite, why should mortals conceive of a law, propound a question, formulate a doctrine, or speculate on the existence of anything which is an antipode of infinite Love and the manifestation thereof ? The sacred command, “Thou shalt have no other gods before me,” silences all questions on this subject, and for-

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ever forbids the thought of any other reality, since it is impossible to have aught unlike the infinite.

The knowledge of life, substance, or law, apart or other than God — good — is forbidden. The curse of Love and Truth was pronounced upon a lie, upon false knowledge, the fruits of the flesh not Spirit. Since knowledge of evil, of something besides God, good, brought death into the world on the basis of a lie, Love and Truth destroy this knowledge, — and Christ, Truth, demonstrated and continues to demonstrate this grand verity, saving the sinner and healing the sick. Jesus said a lie fathers itself, thereby showing that God made neither evil nor its consequences. Here all human woe is seen to obtain in a false claim, an untrue consciousness, an impossible creation, yea, something that is not of God. The Christianization of mortals, whereby the mortal concept and all it includes is obliterated, lets in the divine sense of being, fulfils the law in righteousness, and consummates the First Commandment, “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.” All Christian faith, hope, and prayer, all devout desire, virtually petition, Make me the image and likeness of divine Love.

Through Christ, Truth, divine metaphysics points the way, demonstrates heaven here, — the struggle over, and victory on the side of Truth. In the degree that man becomes spiritually minded he becomes Godlike. St. Paul writes: “For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life and peace.” Divine Science fulfils the law and the gospel, wherein God is infinite Love, including nothing unlovely, producing nothing unlike

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Himself, the true nature of Love intact and eternal. Divine metaphysics concedes no origin or causation apart from God. It accords all to God, Spirit, and His infinite manifestations of love — man and the universe.

In the first chapter of Genesis, matter, sin, disease, and death enter not into the category of creation or consciousness. Minus this spiritual understanding of Scripture, of God and His creation, neither philosophy, nature, nor grace can give man the true idea of God — divine Love sufficiently to fulfil the First Commandment.

The Latin omni, which signifies all, used as an English prefix to the words potence, presence, science, signifies allpower, all-presence, all-science. Use these words to define God, and nothing is left to consciousness but Love, without beginning and without end, even the forever I am, and All, than which there is naught else. Thus we have Scriptural authority for divine metaphysics — spiritual man and the universe coexistent with God. No other logical conclusion can be drawn from the premises, and no other scientific proposition can be Christianly entertained.

Love One Another

Here we proceed to another Scriptural passage which serves to confirm Christian Science. Christ Jesus saith, “A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you.” It is obvious that he called his disciples’ special attention to his new commandment. And wherefore? Because it emphasizes the

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apostle’s declaration, “God is Love,” — it elucidates Christianity, illustrates God, and man as His likeness, and commands man to love as Jesus loved.

The law and the gospel concur, and both will be fulfilled. Is it necessary to say that the likeness of God, Spirit, is spiritual, and the likeness of Love is loving? When loving, we learn that “God is Love;” mortals hating, or unloving, are neither Christians nor Scientists. The new commandment of Christ Jesus shows what true spirituality is, and its harmonious effects on the sick and the sinner. No person can heal or reform mankind unless he is actuated by love and good will towards men. The coincidence between the law and the gospel, between the old and the new commandment, confirms the fact that God and Love are one. The spiritually minded are inspired with tenderness, Truth, and Love. The life of Christ Jesus, his words and his deeds, demonstrate Love. We have no evidence of being Christian Scientists except we possess this inspiration, and its power to heal and to save. The energy that saves sinners and heals the sick is divine: and Love is the Principle thereof. Scientific Christianity works out the rule of spiritual love; it makes man active, it prompts perpetual goodness, for the ego, or I, goes to the Father, whereby man is Godlike. Love, purity, meekness, coexist in divine Science. Lust, hatred, revenge, coincide in material sense. Christ Jesus reckoned man in Science, having the kingdom of heaven within him. He spake of man not as the offspring of Adam, a departure from God, or His lost likeness, but as God’s child. Spiritual love makes man conscious that God is his Father, and the con-

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sciousness of God as Love gives man power with untold furtherance. Then God becomes to him the All-presence – quenching sin; the All-power — giving life, health, holiness; the All-science — all law and gospel.

Jesus commanded, “Follow me; and let the dead bury their dead;” in other words, Let the world, popularity, pride, and ease concern you less, and love thou. When the full significance of this saying is understood, we shall have better practitioners, and Truth will arise in human thought with healing in its wings, regenerating mankind and fulfilling the apostle’s saying: “For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death.” Loving chords set discords in harmony. Every condition implied by the great Master, every promise fulfilled, was loving and spiritual, urging a state of consciousness that leaves the minor tones of so-called material life and abides in Christlikeness.

The unity of God and man is not the dream of a heated brain; it is the spirit of the healing Christ, that dwelt forever in the bosom of the Father, and should abide forever in man. When first I heard the life-giving sound thereof, and knew not whence it came nor whither it tended, it was the proof of its divine origin, and healing power, that opened my closed eyes.

Did the age’s thinkers laugh long over Morse’s discovery of telegraphy? Did they quarrel long with the inventor of a steam engine? Is it cause for bitter comment and personal abuse that an individual has met the need of mankind with some new-old truth that counteracts ignorance and superstition? Whatever enlarges man’s

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facilities for knowing and doing good, and subjugates matter, has a fight with the flesh. Utilizing the capacities of the human mind uncovers new ideas, unfolds spiritual forces, the divine energies, and their power over matter, molecule, space, time, mortality; and mortals cry out, “Art thou come hither to torment us before the time?” then dispute the facts, call them false or in advance of the time, and reiterate, Let me alone. Hence the footprints of a reformer are stained with blood. Rev. Hugh Black writes truly: “The birthplace of civilization is not Athens, but Calvary.”

When the human mind is advancing above itself towards the Divine, it is subjugating the body, subduing matter, taking steps outward and upwards. This upward tendency of humanity will finally gain the scope of Jacob’s vision, and rise from sense to Soul, from earth to heaven.

Religions in general admit that man becomes finally spiritual. If such is man’s ultimate, his predicate tending thereto is correct, and inevitably spiritual. Wherefore, then, smite the reformer who finds the more spiritual way, shortens the distance, discharges burdensome baggage, and increases the speed of mortals’ transit from matter to Spirit — yea, from sin to holiness? This is indeed our sole proof that Christ, Truth, is the way. The old and recurring martyrdom of God’s best witnesses is the infirmity of evil, the modus operandi of human error, carnality, opposition to God and His power in man. Persecuting a reformer is like sentencing a man for communicating with foreign nations in other ways than by walking every step over the land route, and swimming the

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ocean with a letter in his hand to leave on a foreign shore. Our heavenly Father never destined mortals who seek for a better country to wander on the shores of time disappointed travellers, tossed to and fro by adverse circumstances, inevitably subject to sin, disease, and death. Divine Love waits and pleads to save mankind — and awaits with warrant and welcome, grace and glory, the earth-weary and heavy-laden who find and point the path to heaven.

Envy or abuse of him who, having a new idea or a more spiritual understanding of God, hastens to help on his fellow-mortals, is neither Christian nor Science. If a postal service, a steam engine, a submarine cable, a wireless telegraph, each in turn has helped mankind, how much more is accomplished when the race is helped onward by a new-old message from God, even the knowledge of salvation from sin, disease, and death.

The world’s wickedness gave our glorified Master a bitter cup — which he drank, giving thanks, then gave it to his followers to drink. Therefore it is thine, advancing Christian, and this is thy Lord’s benediction upon it: “Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your reward in heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you.”

Of old the Jews put to death the Galilean Prophet, the best Christian on earth, for the truths he said and did: while to-day Jew and Christian can unite in doctrine and in practice on the very basis of his words and works. The Jew

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believes that the Messiah or the Christ has not yet come; the Christian believes that Christ is come and is God. Here Christian Science intervenes, explains these doctrinal points, cancels the disagreement, and settles the whole question on the basis that Christ is the Messiah, the true spir itual idea, and this ideal of God is now and forever, here and everywhere. The Jew who believes in the First Commandment is a monotheist, he has one omnipresent God: thus the Jew unites with the Christian idea that God is come, and is ever present. The Christian who believes in the First Commandment is a monotheist: thus he virtually unites with the Jew’s belief in one God, and that Jesus Christ is not God, as he himself declared, but is the Son of God. This declaration of Christ, understood, conflicts not at all with another of his sayings: “I and my Father are one,” — that is, one in quality, not in quantity. As a drop of water is one with the ocean, a ray of light one with the sun, even so God and man, Father and son, are one in being. The Scripture reads: “For in Him we live, and move, and have our being.”

Here allow me to interpolate some matters of business that ordinarily find no place in my Message. It is a privilege to acquaint communicants with the financial transactions of this church, so far as I know them, and especially before making another united effort to purchase more land and enlarge our church edifice so as to seat the large number who annually favor us with their presence on Communion Sunday.

When founding the institutions and early movements of the Cause of Christian Science, I furnished the money from

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my own private earnings to meet the expenses involved. In this endeavor self was forgotten, peace sacrificed, Christ and our Cause my only incentives, and each success incurred a sharper fire from enmity.

During the last seven years I have transferred to The Mother Church, of my personal property and funds, to the value of about one hundred and twenty thousand dollars; and the net profits from the business of The Christian Science Publishing Society (which was a part of this transfer) yield this church a liberal income. I receive no personal benefit therefrom except the privilege of publishing my books in their publishing house, and desire none other.

The land on which to build The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, had been negotiated for, and about one half the price paid, when a loss of funds occurred, and I came to the rescue, purchased the mortgage on the lot corner of Falmouth and Caledonia (now Norway) Streets; paying for it the sum of $4,963.50 and interest, through my legal counsel. After the mortgage had expired and the note therewith became due, legal proceedings were instituted by my counsel advertising the property in the Boston newspapers,and giving opportunity for those who had previously negotiated for the property to redeem the land by paying the amount due on the mortgage. But no one offering the price I had paid for it, nor to take the property off my hands, the mortgage was foreclosed, and the land legally conveyed to me, by my counsel. This land, now valued at twenty thousand dollars, I afterwards gave to my church through trustees, who were to be known as “The Christian Science Board of Directors.” A copy of this deed is pub-

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lished in our Church Manual. About five thousand dollars had been paid on the land when I redeemed it. The only interest I retain in this property is to save it for my church. I can neither rent, mortgage, nor sell this church edifice nor the land whereon it stands.

I suggest as a motto for every Christian Scientist, — a living and life-giving spiritual shield against the powers of darkness, —

“Great not like Cæsar, stained with blood,
But only great as I am good.”

The only genuine success possible for any Christian — and the only success I have ever achieved — has been accomplished on this solid basis. The remarkable growth and prosperity of Christian Science are its legitimate fruit. A successful end could never have been compassed on any other foundation, — with truths so counter to the common convictions of mankind to present to the world. From the beginning of the great battle every forward step has been met (not by mankind, but by a kind of men) with mockery, envy, rivalry, and falsehood — as achievement after achievement has been blazoned on the forefront of the world and recorded in heaven. The popular philosophies and religions have afforded me neither favor nor protection in the great struggle. Therefore, I ask: What has shielded and prospered preeminently our great Cause, but the outstretched arm of infinite Love? This pregnant question, answered frankly and honestly, should forever silence all private criticisms, all unjust public aspersions, and afford an open field and fair play.

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In the eighties, anonymous letters mailed to me contained threats to blow up the hall where I preached; yet I never lost my faith in God, and neither informed the police of these letters nor sought the protection of the laws of my country. I leaned on God, and was safe.

Healing all manner of diseases without charge, keeping a free institute, rooming and boarding indigent students that I taught “without money and without price,” I struggled on through many years; and while dependent on the income from the sale of Science and Health, my publisher paid me not one dollar of royalty on its first edition. Those were days wherein the connection between justice and being approached the mythical. Before entering upon my great life-work, my income from literary sources was ample, until, declining dictation as to what I should write, I became poor for Christ’s sake. My husband, Colonel Glover, of Charleston, South Carolina, was considered wealthy, but much of his property was in slaves, and I declined to sell them at his decease in 1844, for I could never believe that a human being was my property.

Six weeks I waited on God to suggest a name for the book I had been writing. Its title, Science and Health, came to me in the silence of night, when the steadfast stars watched over the world, — when slumber had fled, — and I rose and recorded the hallowed suggestion. The following day I showed it to my literary friends, who advised me to drop both the book and the title. To this, however, I gave no heed, feeling sure that God had led me to write that book, and had whispered that name to my waiting hope and prayer. It was to me the “still, small voice” that came to

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Elijah after the earthquake and the fire. Six months thereafter Miss Dorcas Rawson of Lynn brought to me Wyclif’s translation of the New Testament, and pointed out that identical phrase, “Science and Health,” which is rendered in the Authorized Version “knowledge of salvation.” This was my first inkling of Wyclif’s use of that combination of words, or of their rendering. To-day I am the happy possessor of a copy of Wyclif, the invaluable gift of two Christian Scientists, — Mr. W. Nicholas Miller, K. C., and Mrs. F. L. Miller, of London, England.

Godlikeness

St. Paul writes: “Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord.” To attain peace and holiness is to recognize the divine presence and allness. Jesus said: “I am the way.” Kindle the watchfires of unselfed love, and they throw a light upon the uncomplaining agony in the life of our Lord; they open the enigmatical seals of the angel, standing in the sun, a glorified spiritual idea of the ever-present God — in whom there is no darkness, but all is light, and man’s immortal being. The meek might, sublime patience, wonderful works, and opening not his mouth in self-defense against false witnesses, express the life of Godlikeness. Fasting, feasting, or penance, — merely outside forms of religion, — fail to elucidate Christianity: they reach not the heart nor renovate it; they never destroy one iota of hypocrisy, pride, self-will, envy, or hate. The mere form of godliness,

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coupled with selfishness, worldliness, hatred, and lust, are knells tolling the burial of Christ.

Jesus said, “If ye love me, keep my commandments.” He knew that obedience is the test of love; that one gladly obeys when obedience gives him happiness. Selfishly, or otherwise, all are ready to seek and obey what they love. When mortals learn to love aright; when they learn that man’s highest happiness, that which has most of heaven in it, is in blessing others, and self-immolation — they will obey both the old and the new commandment, and receive the reward of obedience.

Many sleep who should keep themselves awake and waken the world. Earth’s actors change earth’s scenes; and the curtain of human life should be lifted on reality, on that which outweighs time; on duty done and life perfected, wherein joy is real and fadeless. Who of the world’s lovers ever found her true? It is wise to be willing to wait on God, and to be wiser than serpents; to hate no man, to love one’s enemies, and to square accounts with each passing hour. Then thy gain outlives the sun, for the sun shines but to show man the beauty of holiness and the wealth of love. Happiness consists in being and in doing good; only what God gives, and what we give ourselves and others through His tenure, confers happiness: conscious worth satisfies the hungry heart, and nothing else can. Consult thy everyday life; take its answer as to thy aims, motives, fondest purposes, and this oracle of years will put to flight all care for the world’s soft flattery or its frown. Patience and resignation are the pillars of peace that, like the sun beneath the horizon, cheer the heart susceptible of light with prom-

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ised joy. Be faithful at the temple gate of conscience, wakefully guard it; then thou wilt know when the thief cometh.

The constant spectacle of sin thrust upon the pure sense of the immaculate Jesus made him a man of sorrows. He lived when mortals looked ignorantly, as now, on the might of divine power manifested through man; only to mock, wonder, and perish. Sad to say, the cowardice and self-seeking of his disciples helped crown with thorns the life of him who broke not the bruised reed and quenched not the smoking flax, — who caused not the feeble to fall, nor spared through false pity the consuming tares. Jesus was compassionate, true, faithful to rebuke, ready to forgive. He said, “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.” “Love one another, as I have loved you.” No estrangement, no emulation, no deceit, enters into the heart that loves as Jesus loved. It is a false sense of love that, like the summer brook, soon gets dry. Jesus laid down his life for mankind; what more could he do ? Beloved, how much of what he did are we doing? Yet he said, “The works that I do shall he do.” When this prophecy of the great Teacher is fulfilled we shall have more effective healers and less theorizing; faith without proof loses its life, and it should be buried. The ignoble conduct of his disciples towards their Master, showing their unfitness to follow him, ended in the downfall of genuine Christianity, about the year 325, and the violent death of all his disciples save one.

The nature of Jesus made him keenly alive to the

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injustice, ingratitude, treachery, and brutality that he received. Yet behold his love! So soon as he burst the bonds of the tomb he hastened to console his unfaithful followers and to disarm their fears. Again: True to his divine nature, he rebuked them on the eve of his ascension, called one a “fool” — then, lifting up his hands and blessing them, he rose from earth to heaven.

The Christian Scientist cherishes no resentment; he knows that that would harm him more than all the malice of his foes. Brethren, even as Jesus forgave, forgive thou. I say it with joy, — no person can commit an offense against me that I cannot forgive. Meekness is the armor of a Christian, his shield and his buckler. He entertains angels who listens to the lispings of repentance seen in a tear — happier than the conqueror of a world. To the burdened and weary, Jesus saith: “Come unto me.” O glorious hope! there remaineth a rest for the righteous, a rest in Christ, a peace in Love. The thought of it stills complaint; the heaving surf of life’s troubled sea foams itself away, and underneath is a deep-settled calm.

Are earth’s pleasures, its ties and its treasures, taken away from you? It is divine Love that doeth it, and sayeth, “Ye have need of all these things.” A danger besets thy path? — a spiritual behest, in reversion, awaits you.

The great Master triumphed in furnace fires. Then, Christian Scientists, trust, and trusting, you will find divine Science glorifies the cross and crowns the association with our Saviour in his life of love. There is no redundant drop in the cup that our Father permits us. Christ

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walketh over the wave; on the ocean of events, mounting the billow or going down into the deep, the voice of him who stilled the tempest saith, “It is I; be not afraid.” Thus he bringeth us into the desired haven, the kingdom of Spirit; and the hues of heaven, tipping the dawn of everlasting day, joyfully whisper, “No drunkards within, no sorrow, no pain; and the glory of earth’s woes is risen upon you, rewarding, satisfying, glorifying thy unfaltering faith and good works with the fulness of divine Love.”

’T was God who gave that word of might
    Which swelled creation’s lay, —
“Let there be light, and there was light,” —
    That swept the clouds away;
’T was Love whose finger traced aloud
    A bow of promise on the cloud.

Beloved brethren, are you ready to join me in this proposition, namely, in 1902 to begin omitting our annual gathering at Pleasant View, — thus breaking any seeming connection between the sacrament in our church and a pilgrimage to Concord ? I shall be the loser by this change, for it gives me great joy to look into the faces of my dear church-members; but in this, as all else, I can bear the cross, while gratefully appreciating the privilege of meeting you all occasionally in the metropolis of my native State, whose good people welcome Christian Scientists.

Chapter 20 — General Miscellany

From Miscellany by




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1             [Boston Herald, Sunday, May 15, 1898]


       THE UNITED STATES TO GREAT BRITAIN


3     HAIL, brother! fling thy banner
       To the billows and the breeze;
       We proffer thee warm welcome
6        With our hand, though not our knees.


       Lord of the main and manor!
       Thy palm, in ancient day,
9     Didst rock the country’s cradle
       That wakes thy laureate’s lay.


       The hoar fight is forgotten;
12       Our eagle, like the dove,
       Returns to bless a bridal
       Betokened from above.


15    List, brother! angels whisper
       To Judah’s sceptred race, —
       “Thou of the self-same spirit,
18       Allied by nations’ grace,


       “Wouldst cheer the hosts of heaven;
       For Anglo-Israel, lo!
21    Is marching under orders;
       His hand averts the blow.”


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1     Brave Britain, blest America!
       Unite your battle-plan;
3     Victorious, all who live it, —
       The love for God and man.



       TO THE PUBLIC


6     The following views of the Rev. Mary Baker Eddy
       upon the subject of the Trinity, are known to us to be
       those uniformly held and expressed by her. A reference
9     to her writings will fully corroborate this statement. —


       EDITOR Sentinel.
       The contents of the last lecture of our dear brother,
12    on the subject “The Unknown God Made Known,”
       were unknown to me till after the lecture was delivered
       in Boston, April 5.

15    The members of the Board of Lectureship are not
       allowed to consult me relative to their subjects or the
       handling thereof, owing to my busy life, and they seek a
18    higher source for wisdom and guidance. The talented
       author of this lecture has a heart full of love towards
       God and man. For once he may have overlooked the
21    construction that people unfamiliar with his broad
       views and loving nature might put on his comparisons
       and ready humor. But all Christian Scientists deeply
24    recognize the oneness of Jesus — that he stands alone
       in word and deed, the visible discoverer, founder, de-
       monstrator, and great Teacher of Christianity, whose
27    sandals none may unloose.

       The Board of Lectureship is absolutely inclined to
       be, and is instructed to be, charitable towards all, and


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1     hating none. The purpose of its members is to sub-
       serve the interest of mankind, and to cement the bonds
3     of Christian brotherhood, whose every link leads up-
       ward in the chain of being. The cardinal points of
       Christian Science cannot be lost sight of, namely — one
6     God, supreme, infinite, and one Christ Jesus.

       The Board of Lectureship is specially requested to be
       wise in discoursing on the great subject of Christian
9     Science.

       MARY BAKER EDDY



       FAST DAY IN NEW HAMPSHIRE, 1899


12    Along the lines of progressive Christendom, New
       Hampshire’s advancement is marked. Already Massa-
       chusetts has exchanged Fast Day, and all that it for-
15    merly signified, for Patriots’ Day, and the observance
       of the holiday illustrates the joy, grace, and glory of lib-
       erty. We read in Holy Writ that the disciples of St.
18    John the Baptist said to the great Master, “Why do we
       and the Pharisees fast oft, but thy disciples fast not?”
       And he answered them in substance: My disciples
21    rejoice in their present Christianity and have no cause
       to mourn; only those who have not the Christ, Truth,
       within them should wear sackcloth.

24    Jesus said to his disciples, “This kind goeth not out but
       by prayer and fasting,” but he did not appoint a fast.
       Merely to abstain from eating was not sufficient to meet
27    his demand. The animus of his saying was: Silence
       appetites, passion, and all that wars against Spirit and
       spiritual power. The fact that he healed the sick man
30    without the observance of a material fast confirms this


Page 340


1     conclusion. Jesus attended feasts, but we have no record
       of his observing appointed fasts.

3     St. Paul’s days for prayer were every day and every
       hour. He said, “Pray without ceasing.” He classed
       the usage of special days and seasons for religious ob-
6     servances and precedents as belonging not to the Chris-
       tian era, but to traditions, old-wives’ fables, and endless
       genealogies.

9     The enlightenment, the erudition, the progress of relig-
       ion and medicine in New Hampshire, are in excess of
       other States, as witness her schools, her churches, and
12    her frown on class legislation. In many of the States
       in our Union a simple board of health, clad in a little
       brief authority, has arrogated to itself the prerogative
15    of making laws for the State on the practice of medicine!
       But this attempt is shorn of some of its shamelessness by
       the courts immediately annulling such bills and pluck-
18    ing their plumes through constitutional interpretations.
       Not the tradition of the elders, nor a paltering, timid,
       or dastardly policy, is pursued by the leaders of our rock-
21    ribbed State.

       That the Governor of New Hampshire has suggested to
       his constituents to recur to a religious observance which
24    virtually belongs to the past, should tend to enhance their
       confidence in his intention to rule righteously the affairs
       of state. However, Jesus’ example in this, as in all else,
27    suffices for the Christian era. The dark days of our fore-
       fathers and their implorations for peace and plenty have
       passed, and are succeeded by our time of abundance, even
30    the full beneficence of the laws of the universe which
       man’s diligence has utilized. Institutions of learning and
       progressive religion light their fires in every home.


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1     I have one innate joy, and love to breathe it to the
       breeze as God’s courtesy. A native of New Hampshire,
3     a child of the Republic, a Daughter of the Revolution, I
       thank God that He has emblazoned on the escutcheon
       of this State, engraven on her granite rocks, and lifted
6     to her giant hills the ensign of religious liberty — “Free-
       dom to worship God.”



       SPRING GREETING


9     Beloved brethren all over our land and in every land,
       accept your Leader’s Spring greeting, while


       The bird of hope is singing
12       A lightsome lay, a cooing call,
       And in her heart is beating
       A love for all —
15       ” ‘Tis peace not power I seek,
       ‘Tis meet that man be meek.”


       [New York Herald, May 1, 1901]



18                       [Extract]


       MRS. EDDY TALKS


       Christian Science has been so much to the fore of late
21    that unusual public interest centres in the personality
       of Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, the Founder of the cult.
       The granting of interviews is not usual, hence it was
24    a special favor that Mrs. Eddy received the Herald
       correspondent.

       It had been raining all day and was damp without, so
27    the change from the misty air outside to the pleasant


Page 342


1     warmth within the ample, richly furnished house was
       agreeable. Seated in the large parlor, I became aware
3     of a white-haired lady slowly descending the stairs.
       She entered with a gracious smile, walking uprightly and
       with light step, and after a kindly greeting took a seat
6     on a sofa. It was Mrs. Eddy. There was no mis-
       taking that. Older in years, white-haired and frailer,
       but Mrs. Eddy herself. The likeness to the portraits
9     of twenty years ago, so often seen in reproductions, was
       unmistakable. There is no mistaking certain lines that
       depend upon the osseous structure; there is no mistaking
12    the eyes — those eyes the shade of which is so hard to
       catch, whether blue-gray or grayish brown, and which
       are always bright. And when I say frail, let it not be
15    understood that I mean weak, for weak she was not.
       When we were snugly seated in the other and smaller
       parlor across the hall, which serves as a library, Mrs.
18    Eddy sat back to be questioned.

       “The continuity of The Church of Christ, Scientist,”
       she said, in her clear voice, “is assured. It is growing
21    wonderfully. It will embrace all the churches, one by
       one, because in it alone is the simplicity of the oneness
       of God; the oneness of Christ and the perfecting of man
24    stated scientifically.”

       “How will it be governed after all now concerned in
       its government shall have passed on?”

27    “It will evolve scientifically. Its essence is evangelical.
       Its government will develop as it progresses.”

       “Will there be a hierarchy, or will it be directed by a
30    single earthly ruler?”

       “In time its present rules of service and present ruler-
       ship will advance nearer perfection.”


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1     It was plain that the answers to questions would be
       in Mrs. Eddy’s own spirit. She has a rapt way of talk-
3     ing, looking large-eyed into space, and works around a
       question in her own way, reaching an answer often
       unexpectedly after a prolonged exordium. She explained:
6     “No present change is contemplated in the rulership.
       You would ask, perhaps, whether my successor will be a
       woman or a man. I can answer that. It will be a man.”

9     “Can you name the man?”

       “I cannot answer that now.”

       Here, then, was the definite statement that Mrs. Eddy’s
12    immediate successor would, like herself, be the ruler.


       Not a Pope or a Christ


       “I have been called a pope, but surely I have sought
15    no such distinction. I have simply taught as I learned
       while healing the sick. It was in 1866 that the light of
       the Science came first to me. In 1875 I wrote my book.
18    It brought down a shower of abuse upon my head, but
       it won converts from the first. I followed it up, teaching
       and organizing, and trust in me grew. I was the mother,
21    but of course the term pope is used figuratively.

       “A position of authority,” she went on, “became
       necessary. Rules were necessary, and I made a code of
24    by-laws, but each one was the fruit of experience and the
       result of prayer. Entrusting their enforcement to others,
       I found at one time that they had five churches under
27    discipline. I intervened. Dissensions are dangerous in
       an infant church. I wrote to each church in tenderness,
       in exhortation, and in rebuke, and so brought all back to
30    union and love again. If that is to be a pope, then you


Page 344


1     can judge for yourself. I have even been spoken of as a
       Christ, but to my understanding of Christ that is impos-
3     sible. If we say that the sun stands for God, then all his
       rays collectively stand for Christ, and each separate ray
       for men and women. God the Father is greater than
6     Christ, but Christ is ‘one with the Father,’ and so the
       mystery is scientifically explained. There can be but
       one Christ.”

9     “And the soul of man?”

       “It is not the spirit of God, inhabiting clay and then
       withdrawn from it, but God preserving individuality and
12    personality to the end. I hold it absurd to say that when
       a man dies, the man will be at once better than he was
       before death. How can it be? The individuality of him
15    must make gradual approaches to Soul’s perfection.”

       “Do you reject utterly the bacteria theory of the
       propagation of disease?”

18    “Oh,” with a prolonged inflection, “entirely. If I
       harbored that idea about a disease, I should think myself
       in danger of catching it.”


21            About Infectious Diseases


       “Then as to the laws — the health laws of the States
       on the question of infectious and contagious diseases.
24    How does Christian Science stand as to them?”

       “I say, ‘Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s.’
       We cannot force perfection on the world. Were vaccina-
27    tion of any avail, I should tremble for mankind; but,
       knowing it is not, and that the fear of catching small-
       pox is more dangerous than any material infection, I
30    say: Where vaccination is compulsory, let your children


Page 345


1     be vaccinated, and see that your mind is in such a state
       that by your prayers vaccination will do the children no
3     harm. So long as Christian Scientists obey the laws, I
       do not suppose their mental reservations will be thought
       to matter much. But every thought tells, and Christian
6     Science will overthrow false knowledge in the end.”

       “What is your attitude to science in general? Do you
       oppose it?”

9      “Not,” with a smile, “if it is really science.”

       “Well, electricity, engineering, the telephone, the steam
       engine — are these too material for Christian Science?”

12    “No; only false science — healing by drugs. I was a
       sickly child. I was dosed with drugs until they had no
       effect on me. The doctors said I would live if the drugs
15    could be made to act on me. Then homoeopathy came
       like blessed relief to me, but I found that when I pre-
       scribed pellets without any medication they acted just
18    the same and healed the sick. How could I believe in
       a science of drugs?”

       “But surgery?”

21    “The work done by the surgeon is the last healing that
       will be vouchsafed to us, or rather attained by us, as we
       near a state of spiritual perfection. At present I am
24    conservative about advice on surgical cases.”

       “But the pursuit of modern material inventions?”

       “Oh, we cannot oppose them. They all tend to newer,
27    finer, more etherealized ways of living. They seek the finer
       essences. They light the way to the Church of Christ.
       We use them, we make them our figures of speech.
30    They are preparing the way for us.”

       We talked on many subjects, some only of which are
       here touched upon, and her views, strictly and always


Page 346


1     from the standpoint of Christian Science, were continu-
       ally surprising. She talks as one who has lived with her
3     subject for a lifetime, — an ordinary lifetime; and so
       far from being puzzled by any question, welcomes it as
       another opportunity for presenting another view of her
6     religion.

       Those who have been anticipating nature and declaring
       Mrs. Eddy non-existent may learn authoritatively from
9     the Herald that she is in the flesh and in health. Soon
       after I reached Concord on my return from Pleasant
       View, Mrs. Eddy’s carriage drove into town and made
12    several turns about the court-house before returning.
       She was inside, and as she passed me the same ex-
       pression of looking forward, thinking, thinking, was on
15    her face.

       CONCORD, N. H.,
       Tuesday, April 30, 1901



       MRS. EDDY’S SUCCESSOR


       In a recent interview which appeared in the columns
       of the New York Herald, the Rev. Mary Baker Eddy,
21    Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, stated that
       her successor would be a man. Various conjectures
       having arisen as to whether she had in mind any particu-
24    lar person when the statement was made, Mrs. Eddy
       gave the following to the Associated Press, May 16,
       1901: —


27    “I did say that a man would be my future successor.
       By this I did not mean any man to-day on earth.

       “Science and Health makes it plain to all Christian
30    Scientists that the manhood and womanhood of God


Page 347


1     have already been revealed in a degree through Christ
       Jesus and Christian Science, His two witnesses. What
3     remains to lead on the centuries and reveal my successor,
       is man in the image and likeness of the Father-Mother
       God, man the generic term for mankind.”



       GIFT OF A LOVING-CUP


       The Executive Members of The Mother Church of
       Christ, Scientist, will please accept my heartfelt acknowl-
9     edgment of their beautiful gift to me, a loving-cup, pre-
       sented July 16, 1903. The exquisite design of boughs
       encircling this cup, illustrated by Keats’ touching couplet,


12       Ah happy, happy boughs, that cannot shed
       Your leaves, nor ever bid the Spring adieu!


       would almost suggest that nature had reproduced her
15    primal presence, bough, bird, and song, to salute me.
       The twelve beautiful pearls that crown this cup call to
       mind the number of our great Master’s first disciples, and
18    the parable of the priceless pearl which purchases our
       field of labor in exchange for all else.

       I shall treasure my loving-cup with all its sweet
21    associations.


       [Special contribution to “Bohemia.” A symposium]



       FUNDAMENTAL CHRISTIAN SCIENCE


24    Most thinkers concede that Science is the law of God;
       that matter is not a law-maker; that man is not the
       author of Science, and that a phenomenon is chimerical,
27    unless it be the manifestation of a fixed Principle whose
       noumenon is God and whose phenomenon is Science.


Page 348


1     My discovery that mankind is absolutely healed of so-
       called disease and injuries by other than drugs, surgery,
3     hygiene, electricity, magnetism, or will-power, induced a
       deep research, which proved conclusively that all effect
       must be the offspring of a universal cause. I sought this
6     cause, not within but ab extra, and I found it was God
       made manifest in the flesh, and understood through divine
       Science. Then I was healed, and the greatest of all ques-
9     tions was solved sufficiently to give a reason for the hope
       that was within me.

       The religious departure from divine Science sprang from
12    the belief that the man Jesus, rather than his divine Prin-
       ciple, God, saves man, and that materia medica heals him.
       The writer’s departure from such a religion was based upon
15    her discovery that neither man nor materia medica, but
       God, heals and saves mankind.

       Here, however, was no stopping-place, since Science
18    demanded a rational proof that the divine Mind heals
       the sick and saves the sinner. God unfolded the way, the
       demonstration thereof was made, and the certainty of its
21    value to the race firmly established. I had found unmis-
       takably an actual, unfailing causation, enshrined in the
       divine Principle and in the laws of man and the universe,
24    which, never producing an opposite effect, demonstrated
       Christianity and proved itself Science, for it healed the
       sick and reformed the sinner on a demonstrable Principle
27    and given rule. The human demonstrator of this Science
       may mistake, but the Science remains the law of God —
       infallible, eternal. Divine Life, Truth, Love is the basic
30    Principle of all Science, it solves the problem of being;
       and nothing that worketh ill can enter into the solution
       of God’s problems.


Page 349


1     God is Mind, and divine Mind was first chronologi-
       cally, is first potentially, and is the healer to whom all
3     things are possible. A scientific state of health is a
       consciousness of health, holiness, immortality — a con-
       sciousness gained through Christ, Truth; while disease
6     is a mental state or error that Truth destroys. It is self-
       evident that matter, or the body, cannot cause disease,
       since disease is in a sense susceptible of both ease and
9     dis-ease, and matter is not sensible. Kant, Locke, Berke-
       ley, Tyndall, and Spencer afford little aid in understand-
       ing divine metaphysics or its therapeutics. Christian
12    Science is a divine largess, a gift of God — understood
       by and divinely natural to him who sits at the feet of
       Jesus clothed in truth, who is putting off the hypothesis
15    of matter because he is conscious of the allness of God —
       “looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith.”
       Thus the great Way-shower, invested with glory, is under-
18    stood, and his words and works illustrate “the way, the
       truth, and the life.”
~        Divine modes or manifestations are natural, beyond
21    the so-called natural sciences and human philosophy,
       because they are spiritual, and coexist with the God of
       nature in absolute Science. The laws of God, or divine
24    Mind, obtain not in material phenomena, or phenomenal
       evil, which is lawless and traceable to mortal mind —
       human will divorced from Science.

27    Inductive or deductive reasoning is correct only as it
       is spiritual, induced by love and deduced from God,
       Spirit; only as it makes manifest the infinite nature,
30    including all law and supplying all the needs of man.
       Wholly hypothetical, inductive reasoning reckons creation
       as its own creator, seeks cause in effect, and from atom


Page 350


1     and dust draws its conclusions of Deity and man, law and
       gospel, leaving science at the beck of material phenomena,
3     or leaving it out of the question. To begin with the
       divine noumenon, Mind, and to end with the phenom-
       enon, matter, is minus divine logic and plus human hy-
6     pothesis, with its effects, sin, disease, and death. It was
       in this dilemma that revelation, uplifting human reason,
       came to the writer’s rescue, when calmly and rationally,
9     though faintly, she spiritually discerned the divine idea
       of the cosmos and Science of man.



       WHITHER?


12    Father, did’st not Thou the dark wave treading
       Lift from despair the struggler with the sea?
       And heed’st Thou not the scalding tear man’s shedding,
15    And know’st Thou not the pathway glad and free?


       This weight of anguish which they blindly bind
       On earth, this bitter searing to the core of love;
18    This crushing out of health and peace, mankind —
       Thou all, Thou infinite — dost doom above.


       Oft mortal sense is darkened unto death
21    (The Stygian shadow of a world of glee);
       The old foundations of an early faith
       Sunk from beneath man, whither shall he flee?


24    To Love divine, whose kindling mighty rays
       Brighten the horoscope of crumbling creeds,
       Dawn Truth delightful, crowned with endless days,
27    And Science ripe in prayer, in word, and deeds.


Page 351



       A LETTER FROM OUR LEADER


       With our Leader’s kind permission, the Sentinel is
3     privileged to publish her letter of recent date, addressed
       to Mr. John C. Higdon of St. Louis, Mo. This letter
       is especially interesting on account of its beautiful tribute
6     to Free Masonry.


       Beloved Student: — Your interesting letter was handed
       to me duly. This is my earliest moment in which to
9     answer it.

       “Know Thyself,” the title of your gem quoted, is
       indeed a divine command, for the morale of Free Masonry
12    is above ethics — it touches the hem of his garment
       who spake divinely.

       It was truly Masonic, tender, grand in you to remember
15    me as the widow of a Mason. May you and I and all
       mankind meet in that hour of Soul where are no part-
       ings, no pain.

18                    Lovingly yours in Christ,
       MARY BAKER EDDY

       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
21            February 9, 1906



       TAKE NOTICE


       I have not read Gerhardt C. Mars’ book, “The Inter-
24    pretation of Life,” therefore I have not endorsed it, and
       any assertions to the contrary are false. Christian Scien-
       tists are not concerned with philosophy; divine Science
27    is all they need, or can have in reality.

       MARY BAKER EDDY

       BOX G, BROOKLINE, MASS.,
30            June 24, 1908


Page 352



       RECOGNITION OF BLESSINGS


       REVEREND MARY BAKER EDDY,
3      Chestnut Hill, Mass.


       Beloved Leader: — Informally assembled, we, the ushers
       of your church, desire to express our recognition of the
6     blessings that have come to us through the peculiar priv-
       ileges we enjoy in this church work. We are prompted
       to acknowledge our debt of gratitude to you for your
9     life of spirituality, with its years of tender ministry, yet
       we know that the real gratitude is what is proved in
       better lives.

12    It is our earnest prayer that we may so reflect in our
       thoughts and acts the teachings of Christian Science that
       our daily living may be a fitting testimony of the efficacy
15    of our Cause in the regeneration of mankind.

       THE USHERS OF THE MOTHER CHURCH

       BOSTON, MASS., October 9, 1908


       Mrs. Eddy’s Reply


       Beloved Ushers of The Mother Church of Christ, Sci-
       entist: — I thank you not only for your tender letter to
21    me, but for ushering into our church the hearers and the
       doers of God’s Word.

       MARY BAKER EDDY

24    BOX G, BROOKLINE, MASS.,
       October 12, 1908



       MRS. EDDY’S THANKS


27    Beloved Christian Scientists: — Accept my thanks for
       your successful plans for the first issue of The Christian
       Science Monitor. My desire is that every Christian


Page 353


1     Scientist, and as many others as possible, subscribe for
       and read our daily newspaper.

3                              MARY BAKER EDDY

       BOX G, BROOKLINE, MASS.,
       November 16, 1908



6     [Extract from the leading Editorial in Vol. 1, No. 1, of The
       Christian Science Monitor, November 25, 1908]


       SOMETHING IN A NAME


9     I have given the name to all the Christian Science
       periodicals. The first was The Christian Science Jour-
       nal, designed to put on record the divine Science of
12    Truth; the second I entitled Sentinel, intended to hold
       guard over Truth, Life, and Love; the third, Der Herold
       der Christian Science, to proclaim the universal activity
15    and availability of Truth; the next I named Monitor,
       to spread undivided the Science that operates unspent.
       The object of the Monitor is to injure no man, but to
18    bless all mankind.

       MARY BAKER EDDY



       ARTICLE XXII, SECTION 17


21    MRS. EDDY’S ROOM. — SECTION 17. The room in
       The Mother Church formerly known as “Mother’s
       Room” shall hereafter be closed to visitors.


24    There is nothing in this room now of any special in-
       terest. “Let the dead bury their dead,” and the spiritual
       have all place and power.

27                             MARY BAKER EDDY


Page 354



       TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
       In view of complaints from the field, because of alleged
3     misrepresentations by persons offering Bibles and other
       books for sale which they claim have been endorsed by
       me, it is due the field to state that I recommend nothing
6     but what is published or sold by The Christian Science
       Publishing Society. Christian Scientists are under no
       obligation to buy books for which my endorsement is
9     claimed.

       MARY BAKER EDDY

       BOX G, BROOKLINE, MASS.,
12           April 28, 1909



       EXTEMPORE


       JANUARY 1, 1910


15                          I
       O blessings infinite!
       O glad New Year!
18       Sweet sign and substance
       Of God’s presence here.


       II
21       Give us not only angels’ songs,
       But Science vast, to which belongs
       The tongue of angels
24            And the song of songs.


       MARY BAKER EDDY


       [The above lines were written extemporaneously by
27    Mrs. Eddy on New Year’s morning. The members of her


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1     household were with her at the time, and it was gratifying
       to them, as it will be to the field, to see in her spiritualized
3     thought and mental vigor a symbol of the glad New Year
       on which we have just entered. — EDITOR Sentinel.



       MEN IN OUR RANKS


6     A letter from a student in the field says there is a grave
       need for more men in Christian Science practice.

       I have not infrequently hinted at this. However, if
9     the occasion demands it, I will repeat that men are very
       important factors in our field of labor for Christian
       Science. The male element is a strong supporting arm
12    to religion as well as to politics, and we need in our ranks
       of divine energy, the strong, the faithful, the untiring
       spiritual armament.

15                            MARY BAKER EDDY

       CHESTNUT HILL, MASS.,
       February 7, 1910



       A PÆAN OF PRAISE


       “Behind a frowning providence
       He hides a shining face.”


21    The Christian Scientists at Mrs. Eddy’s home are
       the happiest group on earth. Their faces shine with
       the reflection of light and love; their footsteps are not
24    weary; their thoughts are upward; their way is onward,
       and their light shines. The world is better for this
       happy group of Christian Scientists; Mrs. Eddy is hap-
27    pier because of them; God is glorified in His reflection
       of peace, love, joy.


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1     Whenwill mankind awake to know their present owner-
       ship of all good, and praise and love the spot where God
3     dwells most conspicuously in His reflection of love and
       leadership ? When will the world waken to the privilege
       of knowing God, the liberty and glory of His presence,
6     — where


       “He plants His footsteps in the sea
       And rides upon the storm.”


9                             MARY BAKER EDDY

       CHESTNUT HILL, MASS.,
       April 20, 1910



       A STATEMENT BY MRS. EDDY


       Editor Christian Science Sentinel: — In reply to in-
       quiries, will you please state that within the last five
15    years I have given no assurance, no encouragement nor
       consent to have my picture issued, other than the ones
       now and heretofore presented in Science and Health.

18                                  MARY BAKER EDDY

       CHESTNUT HILL, MASS.,
       July 18, 1910



       THE WAY OF WISDOM


       No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one,
       and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the
24    other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon. — MATTHEW 6: 24.


       The infinite is one, and this one is Spirit; Spirit is
       God, and this God is infinite good.

27    This simple statement of oneness is the only possible
       correct version of Christian Science. God being infinite,


Page 357


1     He is the only basis of Science; hence materiality is wholly
       apart from Christian Science, and is only a “Suffer it to
3     be so now” until we arrive at the spiritual fulness of God,
       Spirit, even the divine idea of Christian Science, —
       Christ, born of God, the offspring of Spirit, — wherein
6     matter has neither part nor portion, because matter is the
       absolute opposite of spiritual means, manifestation, and
       demonstration. The only incentive of a mistaken sense
9     is malicious animal magnetism, — the name of all evil, —
       and this must be understood.

       I have crowned The Mother Church building with the
12    spiritual modesty of Christian Science, which is its jewel.
       When my dear brethren in New York desire to build
       higher,—to enlarge their phylacteries and demonstrate
15    Christian Science to a higher extent, — they must begin
       on a wholly spiritual foundation, than which there is no
       other, and proportionably estimate their success and
18    glory of achievement only as they build upon the rock of
       Christ, the spiritual foundation. This will open the way,
       widely and impartially, to their never-ending success, —
21    to salvation and eternal Christian Science.

       Spirit is infinite; therefore Spirit is all. “There is no
       matter” is not only the axiom of true Christian Science,
24    but it is the only basis upon which this Science can be
       demonstrated.



       A LETTER BY MRS. EDDY


27    MRS. AUGUSTA E. STETSON, NEW YORK CITY


       Beloved Student: — I have just finished reading your
       interesting letter. I thank you for acknowledging me as
30    your Leader, and I know that every true follower of


Page 358


1     Christian Science abides by the definite rules which de-
       monstrate the true following of their Leader; therefore,
3     if you are sincere in your protestations and are doing as
       you say you are, you will be blessed in your obedience.

       The Scriptures say, “Watch and pray, that ye enter
6     not into temptation.” You are aware that animal mag-
       netism is the opposite of divine Science, and that this
       opponent is the means whereby the conflict against
9     Truth is engendered and developed. Beloved ! you need
       to watch and pray that the enemy of good cannot separate
       you from your Leader and best earthly friend.

12    You have been duly informed by me that, however
       much I desire to read all that you send to me, I have not
       the time to do so. The Christian Science Publishing
15    Society will settle the question whether or not they shall
       publish your poems. It is part of their duties to relieve
       me of so much labor.

18    I thank you for the money you send me which was
       given you by your students. I shall devote it to a worthy
       and charitable purpose.

21    Mr. Adam Dickey is my secretary, through whom all
       my business is transacted.

       Give my best wishes and love to your dear students
24    and church.

       Lovingly your teacher and Leader,

       MARY BAKER EDDY

27    BOX G, BROOKLINE, MASS.,
       July 12, 1909



       TAKE NOTICE


30    I approve the By-laws of The Mother Church, and
       require the Christian Science Board of Directors to main-


Page 359


1     tain them and sustain them. These Directors do not
       act contrary to the rules of the Church Manual, neither
3     do they trouble me with their difficulties with individ-
       uals in their own church or with the members of branch
       churches.

6     My province as a Leader — as the Discoverer and
       Founder of Christian Science — is not to interfere in
       cases of discipline, and I hereby publicly declare that I
9     am not personally involved in the affairs of the church in
       any other way than through my written and published
       rules, all of which can be read by the individual who
12    desires to inform himself of the facts.

       MARY BAKER EDDY

       BROOKLINE, MASS.,
15     October 12, 1909



       A LETTER FROM MRS. EDDY


       In the Sentinel of July 31, 1909, there appeared under
18    the heading “None good but one,” a number of quota-
       tions from a composite letter, dated July 19, which had
       been written to Mrs. Augusta E. Stetson by twenty-four
21    of her students who then occupied offices in the building
       of First Church of Christ, Scientist, of New York, and
       were known as “the practitioners.” This letter was for-
24    warded to Mrs. Eddy by Mrs. Stetson with the latter’s
       unqualified approval. Upon receipt of this letter Mrs.
       Eddy wrote to Mrs. Stetson as follows: —


27    My Dear Student: — Awake and arise from this temp-
       tation produced by animal magnetism upon yourself,
       allowing your students to deify you and me. Treat your-
30    self for it and get your students to help you rise out of it.


Page 360


1     It will be your destruction if you do not do this. Answer
       this letter immediately.

3                        As ever, lovingly your teacher,

       MARY BAKER EDDY

       BROOKLINE, MASS.,
6     July 23, 1909



       A LETTER BY MRS. EDDY (1)


       TO THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES, FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
9                        NEW YORK CITY


       Beloved Brethren: — In consideration of the present
       momentous question at issue in First Church of Christ,
12    Scientist, New York City, I am constrained to say, if I
       can settle this church difficulty amicably by a few words,
       as many students think I can, I herewith cheerfully
15    subscribe these words of love: —

       My beloved brethren in First Church of Christ, Sci-
       entist, New York City, I advise you with all my soul to
18    support the Directors of The Mother Church, and unite
       with those in your church who are supporting The Mother
       Church Directors. Abide in fellowship with and obedi-
21    ence to The Mother Church, and in this way God will
       bless and prosper you. This I know, for He has proved
       it to me for forty years in succession.

24                       Lovingly yours,

       MARY BAKER EDDY

       BROOKLINE, MASS.,
27           November 13, 1909



       A LETTER BY MRS. EDDY


       My Dear Student: — Your favor of the 10th instant is
30    at hand. God is above your teacher, your healer, or any


       (1) The text here given is that of the original letter as sent by Mrs. Eddy, and
       published in the Christian Science Sentinel of November 20, 1909. This letter was
       republished in the Sentinel of December 4, 1909, at Mrs. Eddy’s request, with
       the words “in Truth” inserted after the word “Abide.”


Page 361


1     earthly friend. Follow the directions of God as simplified
       in Christian Science, and though it be through deserts
3     He will direct you into the paths of peace.

       I do not presume to give you personal instruction as
       to your relations with other students. All I say is stated
6     in Christian Science to be used as a model. Please find
       it there, and do not bring your Leader into a personal
       conflict.

9     I have not seen Mrs. Stetson for over a year, and have
       not written to her since August 30, 1909.

       Sincerely yours,

12                           MARY BAKER EDDY

       BROOKLINE, MASS.,
       December 11, 1909



       A TELEGRAM AND MRS. EDDY’S REPLY


       [Telegram]


       MRS. MARY BAKER EDDY,
18           Chestnut Hill, Mass.


       Beloved Leader: — We rejoice that our church has
       promptly made its demonstration by action at its annual
21    meeting in accordance with your desire for a truly demo-
       cratic and liberal government.

       BOARD OF TRUSTEES,
24            FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,
       NEW YORK, N. Y.,
       CHARLES DEAN, Chairman,
27                           ARTHUR O. PROBST, Clerk

       NEW YORK, N. Y.,
       January 19, 1910


Page 362


       Mrs. Eddy’s Reply


       CHARLES A. DEAN, CHAIRMAN BOARD of TRUSTEES,
3             FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, NEW YORK CITY


       Beloved Brethren: — I rejoice with you in the victory of
       right over wrong, of Truth over error.

6                        MARY BAKER EDDY

       CHESTNUT HILL, MASS.,
       January 20, 1910



       A LETTER AND MRS. EDDY’S REPLY


       MRS. MARY BAKER EDDY,
       Chestnut Hill, Mass.


12    Revered Leader, Counsellor, and Friend: — The Trustees
       and Readers of all the Christian Science churches and
       societies of Greater New York, for the first time gath-
15    ered in one place with one accord, to confer harmoniously
       and unitedly in promoting and enlarging the activities
       of the Cause of Christian Science in this community, as
18    their first act send you their loving greetings.

       With hearts filled with gratitude to God, we rejoice in
       your inspired leadership, in your wise counselling. We
21    revere and cherish your friendship, and assure you that
       it is our intention to take such action as will unite the
       churches and societies in this field in the bonds of Chris-
24    tian love and fellowship, thus demonstrating practical
       Christianity.

       Gratefully yours,

27       FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,
       SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,


Page 363


1        THIRD CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,
       FOURTH CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,
3        FIFTH CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,
       SIXTH CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,
       FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, Brooklyn,
6        FOURTH CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, Brooklyn,
       FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, Staten Island,
       CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY, Bronx,
9        CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY, Flushing, L. I.,

       By the Committee

       NEW YORK, N. Y.,
12     February 5, 1910


       Mrs. Eddy’s Reply


       This proof that sanity and Science govern the Christian
15    Science churches in Greater New York is soul inspiring.

       MARY BAKER EDDY



       [The Christian Science Journal, July, 1895. Reprinted in Christian
18    Science Sentinel, November 13, 1909]“`        TO THE MEMBERS OF THE CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST ASSOCIATION
21    My address before the Christian Scientist Associa-


       tion has been misrepresented and evidently misunder-
       stood by some students. The gist of the whole subject
24    was not to malpractise unwittingly. In order to be
       sure that one is not doing this, he must avoid naming,
       in his mental treatment, any other individual but the
27    patient whom he is treating, and practise only to heal.
       Any deviation from this direct rule is more or less


Page 364


1     dangerous. No mortal is infallible, — hence the Scrip-
       ture, “Judge no man.”


       . . .


3     The rule of mental practice in Christian Science is
       strictly to handle no other mentality but the mind of
       your patient, and treat this mind to be Christly. Any
6     departure from this golden rule is inadmissible. This
       mental practice includes and inculcates the command-
       ment, “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.”
9     Animal magnetism, hypnotism, etc., are disarmed by
       the practitioner who excludes from his own conscious-
       ness, and that of his patients, all sense of the realism
12    of any other cause or effect save that which cometh
       from God. And he should teach his students to defend
       themselves from all evil, and to heal the sick, by
15    recognizing the supremacy and allness of good. This
       epitomizes what heals all manner of sickness and dis-
       ease, moral or physical.

       MARY BAKER EDDY



       [Christian Science Sentinel, February 15, 1908]


       CONCORD, N. H., TO MRS. EDDY, AND MRS. EDDY’S REPLY


       THE ESTEEM IN WHICH MRS. EDDY IS HELD IN CONCORD HAS
       BEEN OFFICIALLY EXPRESSED IN THE FOLLOWING PREAMBLE
24    AND RESOLUTIONS, WHICH WERE UNANIMOUSLY ADOPTED BY
       THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN AND COMMON COUNCIL OF THAT
       CITY AND THUS HAVE BECOME A PART OF CONCORD’S RECORDS


27       Concord, New Hampshire, to Rev. Mary Baker G.
       Eddy


       Whereas, Rev. Mary Baker G. Eddy has decided to
30    make her home in Massachusetts, after a residence of
       nineteen years in Concord, and


Page 365


1     Whereas, her residence here has been the source of so
       much good to the city, and

3     Whereas, the most kindly and helpful relations have
       ever existed between Mrs. Eddy and Concord and Con-
       cord people,

6     Be It Resolved, That the City of Concord, through its
       Board of Aldermen and Common Council, in joint
       convention, convey to Mrs. Eddy,

9      1. Its appreciation of her life in its midst,

       2. Its regrets over her departure, and

       3. The hope that though absent she will always
12    cherish a loving regard for the city, near which she was
       born, and for its people, among whom she has lived for
       so many years.

15    Be It Resolved, That the Mayor and City Clerk be
       authorized and instructed to sign and attest this testi-
       monial in behalf of the City Council.

18    Done this tenth day of February, nineteen hundred
       and eight.

       CHARLES R. CORNING, Mayor
21    Attest: HENRY E. CHAMBERLAIN, City Clerk


       Mrs. Eddy’s Reply
       TO THE HONORABLE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL,
24            CONCORD, N. H.
       Gentlemen: — I have not only the pleasure, but the
       honor of replying to the City Council of Concord, in
27    joint convention assembled, and to Alderman Cressy,
       for the kindly resolutions passed by your honorable
       body, and for which I thank you deeply. Lest I should
30    acknowledge more than I deserve of praise, I leave their
       courteous opinions to their good judgment.


Page 366


1     My early days hold rich recollections of associations
       with your churches and institutions, and memory has a
3     distinct model in granite of the good folk in Concord,
       which, like the granite of their State, steadfast and
       enduring, has hinted this quality to other states and
6     nations all over the world.

       My home influence, early education, and church
       experience, have unquestionably ripened into the fruits
9     of my present religious experience, and for this I prize
       them. May I honor this origin and deserve the con-
       tinued friendship and esteem of the people in my native
12    State.

       Sincerely yours,

       MARY BAKER G. EDDY

15    BOX G, BROOKLINE, MASS.,
       February 13, 1908

Chapter 19 — A Memorable Coincidence and Historical Facts

From Miscellany by




Click here to play the audio as you read:





Page 326



       [The Christian Science Journal]


1     WE are glad to publish the following interesting
       letter and enclosures received from our Leader.
3     That legislatures and courts are thus declaring the liberties
       of Christian Scientists is most gratifying to our people; not
       because a favor has been extended, but because their
6     inherent rights are recognized in an official and authori-
       tative manner. It is especially gratifying to them that
       the declaration of this recognition should be coincident
9     in the Southern and Northern States in which Mrs. Eddy
       has made her home.


       MRS. EDDY’S LETTER


12    Dear Editor: — I send for publication in our periodicals
       the following deeply interesting letter from Elizabeth Earl
       Jones of Asheville, N. C., — the State where my husband,
15    Major George W. Glover, passed on and up, the State
       that so signally honored his memory, where with wet eyes
       the Free Masons laid on his bier the emblems of a master
18    Mason, and in long procession with tender dirge bore his
       remains to their last resting-place. Deeply grateful, I
       recognize the divine hand in turning the hearts of the noble


Page 327


1     Southrons of North Carolina legally to protect the practice
       of Christian Science in that State.
3     Is it not a memorable coincidence that, in the Court of
       New Hampshire, my native State, and in the Legislature
       of North Carolina, they have the same year, in 1903, made
6     it legal to practise Christian Science in these States?

       MARY BAKER EDDY

       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
9             October 16, 1903



       MISS ELIZABETH EARL JONES’ LETTER


       Beloved Leader: — I know the enclosed article will make
12    your heart glad, as it has made glad the hearts of all the
       Christian Scientists in North Carolina. This is the result
       of the work done at last winter’s term of our Legislature,
15    when a medical bill was proposed calculated to limit or
       stop the practice of Christian Science in our State. An
       amendment was obtained by Miss Mary Hatch Harrison
18    and a few other Scientists who stayed on the field until the
       last. After the amendment had been passed, an old law,
       or rather a section of an act in the Legislature regulating
21    taxes, was changed as follows, because the representa-
       tive men of our dear State did not wish to be “discour-
       teous to the Christian Scientists.” The section formerly
24    read, “pretended healers,” but was changed to read as
       follows: “All other professionals who practise the art of
       healing,” etc.

27    We thank our heavenly Father for this dignified
       legal protection and recognition, and look forward to
       the day, not far distant, when the laws of every State
30    will dignify the ministry of Christ as taught and prac-
       tised in Christian Science, and as lived by our dear,


Page 328


1     dear Leader, even as God has dignified, blessed, and
       prospered it, and her.

3                     With devoted love,

       ELIZABETH EARL JONES

       105 BAILEY ST., ASHEVILLE, N. C.,
6            October 11, 1903


       The following article, copied from the Raleigh (N. C.)
       News and Observer, is the one referred to in Miss Jones’
9     letter: —


       The Christian Science people, greatly pleased at the
       law affecting them passed by the last Legislature, are
12    apt also to be pleased with the fact that the law recog-
       nizes them as healers, and that it gives them a license
       to heal. This license of five dollars annually, required
15    of physicians, has been required of them, and how this
       came about in Kinston is told in the Kinston Free Press
       as follows: —


18    Sheriff Wooten issued licenses yesterday to two
       Christian Science healers in this city. This is probably
       the first to be issued to the healers of this sect in the
21    State.

       Upon the request of a prominent healer of the church,
       the section of the machinery act of the Legislature cover-
24    ing it was shown, whereupon application for license was
       made and obtained.

       The section, after enumerating the different professions
27    for which a license must be obtained to carry them on in
       this State, further says, “and all other professionals who
       practise the art of healing for pay, shall pay a license fee
30    of five dollars.”


Page 329


1     This was construed to include the healers of the Chris-
       tian Science church, and license was accordingly taken
3     out.

       The idea prevails that the last General Assembly of
       North Carolina relieved the healers of this sect from paying
6     this fee, but this is not so. The board only excused them
       from a medical examination before a board of medical
       examiners.


9     Mrs. Eddy’s reference to the death of her husband,
       Major George W. Glover, gives especial interest to the
       following letter from Newbern, N. C., which appeared
12    in the Wilmington (N. C.) Dispatch, October 24, 1903.
       Mrs. Eddy has in her possession photographed copies of
       the notice of her husband’s death and of her brother’s
15    letter, taken from the Wilmington (N. C.) Chronicle as
       they appear in that paper in the issues of July 3 and
       August 21, 1844, respectively. The photographs are ver-
18    ified by the certificate of a notary public and were pre-
       sented to Mrs. Eddy by Miss Harrison.



       MISS MARY HATCH HARRISON’S LETTER


21    To the Editor: — At no better time than now, when the
       whole country is recognizing the steady progress of Chris-
       tian Science and admitting its interest in the movement,
24    as shown by the fair attitude of the press everywhere,
       could we ask you to give your readers the following com-
       munication. It will put before them some interesting
27    facts concerning Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, and some in-
       cidents of her life in North and South Carolina which
       might not have been known but for a criticism of this


Page 330


1     good woman which was published in your paper in
       August, 1901.

3     I presume we should not be surprised that a noteworthy
       follower of our Lord should be maligned, since the great
       Master himself was scandalized, and he prophesied that
6     his followers would be so treated. The calumniator who
       informed you in this instance locates Mrs. Eddy in Wil-
       mington in 1843, thus contradicting his own statement,
9     since Mrs. Eddy was not then a resident of Wilmington.
       A local Christian Scientist of your city, whose womanhood
       and Christianity are appreciated by all, assisted by a
12    Mason of good standing there and a Christian Scientist of
       Charleston, S. C., carefully investigated the points con-
       cerning Major Glover’s history which are questioned by
15    this critic, and has found Mrs. Eddy’s statements, rela-
       ting to her husband (who she states was of Charleston,
       S. C., not of Wilmington, but who died there while on
18    business in 1844, not in 1843, as claimed in your issue) are
       sustained by Masonic records in each place as well as
       by Wilmington newspapers of that year. In “Retro-
21    spection and Introspection” (p. 19) Mrs. Eddy says of
       this circumstance: —

       “My husband was a Free Mason, being a member in St.
24    Andrew’s Lodge, No. 10, and of Union Chapter, No. 3, of
       Royal Arch Masons. He was highly esteemed and sin-
       cerely lamented by a large circle of friends and acquaint-
27    ances, whose kindness and sympathy helped to support me
       in this terrible bereavement. A month later I returned to
       New Hampshire, where, at the end of four months, my
30    babe was born. Colonel Glover’s tender devotion to his
       young bride was remarked by all observers. With his
       parting breath he gave pathetic directions to his brother


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1     Masons about accompanying her on her sad journey to
       the North. Here it is but justice to record, they per-
3     formed their obligations most faithfully.”

       Such watchful solicitude as Mrs. Eddy received at the
       hands of Wilmington’s best citizens, among whom she
6     remembers the Rev. Mr. Reperton, a Baptist clergyman,
       and the Governor of the State, who accompanied her to
       the train on her departure, indicates her irreproachable
9     standing in your city at that time.

       The following letter of thanks, copied from the Wil-
       mington Chronicle of August 21, 1844, testifies to the love
12    and respect entertained for Mrs. Eddy by Wilmington’s
       best men, whose Southern chivalry would have scorned
       to extend such unrestrained hospitality to an unworthy
15    woman as quickly as it would have punished the assail-
       ant of a good woman: —



       A CARD


18    Through the columns of your paper, will you permit
       me, in behalf of the relatives and friends of the late
       Major George W. Glover of Wilmington and his be-
21    reaved lady, to return our thanks and express the feeling
       of gratitude we owe and cherish towards those friends of
       the deceased who so kindly attended him during his last
24    sickness, and who still extended their care and sympathy
       to the lone, feeble, and bereaved widow after his decease.
       Much has often been said of the high feeling of honor
27    and the noble generosity of heart which characterized the
       people of the South, yet when we listen to Mrs. Glover
       (my sister) whilst recounting the kind attention paid to
30    the deceased during his late illness, the sympathy ex-
       tended to her after his death, and the assistance volun-


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1     teered to restore her to her friends at a distance of more
       than a thousand miles, the power of language would be
3     but beggared by an attempt at expressing the feelings of
       a swelling bosom. The silent gush of grateful tears alone
       can tell the emotions of the thankful heart, — words are
6     indeed but a meagre tribute for so noble an effort in be-
       half of the unfortunate, yet it is all we can award: will our
       friends at Wilmington accept it as a tribute of grateful
9     hearts? Many thanks are due Mr. Cooke, who engaged
       to accompany her only to New York, but did not desert
       her or remit his kind attention until he saw her in the
12    fond embrace of her friends.

       Your friend and obedient servant,
       (Signed) GEORGE S. BAKER

15    SANBORNTON BRIDGE, N. H.,
       August 12, 1844


       The paper containing this card is now in the Young
18    Men’s Christian Association at Wilmington.

       The facts regarding Major Glover’s membership in
       St. Andrew’s Lodge, No. 10, were brought to light in a
21    most interesting way. A Christian Scientist in Charles-
       ton was requested to look up the records of this lodge,
       as we had full confidence that it would corroborate Mrs.
24    Eddy’s claims. After frequent searchings and much in-
       terviewing with Masonic authorities, it was learned that
       the lodge was no longer in existence, and that during the
27    Civil War many Masonic records were transferred to
       Columbia, where they were burned; but on repeated
       search a roll of papers recording the death of George
30    Washington Glover in 1844 and giving best praises to
       his honorable record and Christian character was found;


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1     and said record, with the seal of the Grand Secretary,
       is now in the possession of the chairman of the Christian
3     Science publication committee.

       In the records of St. John’s Lodge, Wilmington, as
       found by one of your own citizens, a Mason, it is shown
6     that on the twenty-eighth day of June, 1844, a special
       meeting was convened for the purpose of paying the last
       tribute of respect to Brother George W. Glover, who
9     died on the night of the twenty-seventh. The minutes
       record this further proceeding: —

       “A procession was formed, which moved to the resi-
12    dence of the deceased, and from thence to the Episcopal
       burying-ground, where the body was interred with the
       usual ceremonies. The procession then returned to the
15    lodge, which was closed in due form.”

       It has never been claimed by Mrs. Eddy nor by any
       Christian Scientists that Major Glover’s remains were
18    carried North.

       The Wilmington Chronicle of July 3, 1844, records that
       this good man, then known as Major George W. Glover,
21    died on Thursday night, the twenty-seventh of June. The
       Chronicle states: “His end was calm and peaceful, and to
       those friends who attended him during his illness he gave
24    the repeated assurance of his willingness to die, and of his
       full reliance for salvation on the merits of a crucified Re-
       deemer. His remains were interred with Masonic honors.
27    He has left an amiable wife, to whom he had been united
       but the brief space of six months, to lament this
       irreparable loss.”

30    From the Chronicle, dated September 25, 1844, we copy
       the following: “We are assured that reports of unusual
       sickness in Wilmington are in circulation.” This periodi-


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1     cal then forthwith strives to give the impression that the
       rumor is not true. It is reasonable to infer from news-
3     paper reports of that date that some insidious disease
       was raging at that time.

       The allegation that copies of Mrs. Eddy’s book, “Retro-
6     spection and Introspection,” are few, and that efforts are
       being made to buy them up because she has contradicted
       herself, is without foundation. They are advertised in
9     every weekly issue of the Christian Science Sentinel, and
       still contain the original account of her husband’s demise
       at Wilmington.

12    May it not be, since this critic places certain circum-
       stances in 1843, which records show really existed in 1844,
       that the woman whom he had in mind is some other one?
15    We can state Mrs. Eddy’s teaching on the unreality of
       evil in no better terms than to quote her own words.
       Nothing could be further from her meaning than that evil
18    could be indulged in while being called unreal. She
       declares in her Message to The Mother Church [1901]:
       “To assume there is no reality in sin, and yet commit
21    sin, is sin itself, that clings fast to iniquity. The Pub-
       lican’s wail won his humble desire, while the Pharisee’s
       self-righteousness crucified Jesus.”

24                    MARY HATCH HARRISON



       MAJOR GLOVER’S RECORD AS A MASON


       Of further interest in this matter is the following ex-
27    tract from an editorial obituary which appeared in 1845 in
       the Freemason’s Monthly Magazine, published by the
       late Charles W. Moore, Grand Secretary of the Grand
30    Lodge of Massachusetts: —


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1     Died at Wilmington, N. C., on the 27th June last,
       Major George W. Glover, formerly of Concord, N. H.

3     Brother Glover resided in Charleston, S. C., and was
       made a Mason in “St. Andrew’s Lodge, No. 10.” He was
       soon exalted to the degree of a Royal Arch Mason in
6     “Union Chapter, No. 3,” and retained his membership
       in both till his decease. He was devotedly attached
       to Masonry, faithful as a member and officer of the
9     Lodge and Chapter, and beloved by his brothers and
       companions, who mourn his early death.


       Additional facts regarding Major Glover, his illness and
12    death, are that he was for a number of years a resident of
       Charleston, S. C., where he erected a fine dwelling-house,
       the drawings and specifications of which were kept by his
15    widow for many years after his death. While at Wilming-
       ton, N. C., in June, 1844, Mr. Glover was attacked with
       yellow fever of the worst type, and at the end of nine days
18    he passed away. This was the second case of the dread
       disease in that city, and in the hope of allaying the excite-
       ment which was fast arising, the authorities gave the cause
21    of death as bilious fever, but they refused permission to
       take the remains to Charleston.

       On the third day of her husband’s illness, Mrs. Glover
24    (now Mrs. Eddy) sent for the distinguished physician who
       attended cases of this terrible disease as an expert (Dr.
       McRee we think it was), and was told by him that he could
27    not conceal the fact that the case was one of yellow fever
       in its worst form, and nothing could save the life of
       her husband. In these nine days and nights of agony
30    the young wife prayed incessantly for her husband’s
       recovery, and was told by the expert physician that


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1     but for her prayers the patient would have died on
       the seventh day.

3     The disease spread so rapidly that Mrs. Glover (Mrs.
       Eddy) was afraid to have her brother, George S. Baker,
       come to her after her husband’s death, to take her back to
6     the North. Although he desired to go to her assistance,
       she declined on this ground, and entrusted herself to the
       care of her husband’s Masonic brethren, who faithfully
9     performed their obligation to her. She makes grateful
       acknowledgment of this in her book, “Retrospection and
       Introspection.” In this book (p. 20) she also states,
12    “After returning to the paternal roof I lost all my hus-
       band’s property, except what money I had brought
       with me; and remained with my parents until after
15    my mother’s decease.” Mr. Glover had made no will
       previous to his last illness, and then the seizure of dis-
       ease was so sudden and so violent that he was unable
18    to make a will.

       These letters and extracts are of absorbing interest to
       Christian Scientists as amplification of the facts given by
21    Mrs. Eddy in “Retrospection and Introspection.”

Chapter 18 — Authorship of Science and Health

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Page 317



1     THE following statement, which was published in
       the Sentinel of December 1, 1906, exactly defin-
3     ing her relations with the Rev. James Henry Wiggin of
       Boston, was made by Mrs. Eddy in refutation of allega-
       tions in the public press to the effect that Mr. Wiggin
6     had a share in the authorship of “Science and Health
       with Key to the Scriptures.”


       MRS. EDDY’S STATEMENT


9     It is a great mistake to say that I employed the Rev.
       James Henry Wiggin to correct my diction. It was for
       no such purpose. I engaged Mr. Wiggin so as to avail
12    myself of his criticisms of my statement of Christian
       Science, which criticisms would enable me to explain
       more clearly the points that might seem ambiguous to
15    the reader.

       Mr. Calvin A. Frye copied my writings, and he will tell
       you that Mr. Wiggin left my diction quite out of the
18    question, sometimes saying, “I wouldn’t express it that
       way.” He often dissented from what I had written,
       but I quieted him by quoting corroborative texts of
21    Scripture.

       My diction, as used in explaining Christian Science, has
       been called original. The liberty that I have taken with


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1     capitalization, in order to express the “new tongue,” has
       well-nigh constituted a new style of language. In almost
3     every case where Mr. Wiggin added words, I have erased
       them in my revisions.

       Mr. Wiggin was not my proofreader for my book
6     “Miscellaneous Writings,” and for only two of my books.
       I especially employed him on “Science and Health with
       Key to the Scriptures,” because at that date some critics
9     declared that my book was as ungrammatical as it was
       misleading. I availed myself of the name of the former
       proofreader for the University Press, Cambridge, to
12    defend my grammatical construction, and confidently
       awaited the years to declare the moral and spiritual
       effect upon the age of “Science and Health with Key
15    to the Scriptures.”

       I invited Mr. Wiggin to visit one of my classes in the
       Massachusetts Metaphysical College, and he consented
18    on condition that I should not ask him any questions.
       I agreed not to question him just so long as he refrained
       from questioning me. He held himself well in check
21    until I began my attack on agnosticism. As I pro-
       ceeded, Mr. Wiggin manifested more and more agita-
       tion, until he could control himself no longer and,
24    addressing me, burst out with:

       “How do you know that there ever was such a man as
       Christ Jesus?”

27    He would have continued with a long argument,
       framed from his ample fund of historical knowledge,
       but I stopped him.

30    “Now, Mr. Wiggin,” I said, “you have broken our
       agreement. I do not find my authority for Christian
       Science in history, but in revelation. If there had never


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1     existed such a person as the Galilean Prophet, it would
       make no difference to me. I should still know that
3     God’s spiritual ideal is the only real man in His image
       and likeness.”

       My saying touched him, and I heard nothing further
6     from him in the class, though afterwards he wrote a
       kind little pamphlet, signed “Phare Pleigh.”

       I hold the late Mr. Wiggin in loving, grateful memory
9     for his high-principled character and well-equipped
       scholarship.



       LETTERS FROM STUDENTS


12    The following letters from students of Mrs. Eddy
       confirm her statement regarding the work which the
       Rev. Mr. Wiggin did for her, and also indicate what he
15    himself thought of that work and of Mrs. Eddy: —


       My Dear Teacher: — I am conversant with some facts
       which perhaps have not come under the observation of
18    many of your students, and considering the questions
       which have recently appeared, it may interest you to be
       advised that I have this information. On the tenth day of
21    January, 1887, I entered your Primary class at Boston.
       A few days later, in conversation with you about the
       preparation of a theme, you suggested that I call on the
24    late J. Henry Wiggin to assist me in analyzing and arrang-
       ing the topics, which I did about the twentieth of the
       above-named month. These dates are very well fixed in
27    my memory, as I considered the time an important one
       in my experience, and do so still. I also recall very
       plainly the conversation with you in general as regards
30    Mr. Wiggin. You told me that he had done some literary


Page 320


1     work for you and that he was a fine literary student and
       a good proofreader.

3     Upon calling on Mr. Wiggin, I presented my matter for
       a theme to him, and he readily consented to assist me,
       which he did. He also seemed very much pleased to
6     converse about you and your work, and I found that his
       statement of what he had done for you exactly agreed
       with what you had told me. He also expressed himself
9     freely as to his high regard for you as a Christian lady,
       as an author, and as a student of ability. Mr. Wiggin
       spoke of “Science and Health with Key to the Scrip-
12    tures” as being a very unique book, and seemed quite
       proud of his having had something to do with some
       editions. He always spoke of you as the author of this
15    book and the author of all your works. Mr. Wiggin
       did not claim to be a Christian Scientist, but was in
       a measure in sympathy with the movement, although
18    he did not endorse all the statements in your textbook;
       but his tendency was friendly.

       I called on Mr. Wiggin several times while I was in your
21    Primary class at the time above referred to, and several
       times subsequent thereto, and he always referred to you as
       the author of your works and spoke of your ability without
24    any hesitation or restriction. Our conversations were at
       times somewhat long and went into matters of detail
       regarding your work, and I am of the opinion that he
27    was proud of his acquaintance with you.

       I saw Mr. Wiggin several times after the class closed,
       and the last conversation I had with him was at the
30    time of the dedication of the first Mother Church edifice
       in 1895. I met him in the vestibule of the church
       and he spoke in a very animated manner of your


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1     grand demonstration in building this church for your
       followers. He seemed very proud to think that he had
3     been in a way connected with your work, but he always
       referred to you as the one who had accomplished this
       great work.

6     My recollections of Mr. Wiggin place him as one
       of your devoted and faithful friends, one who knew
       who and what you are, also your position as regards
9     your published works; and he always gave you that
       position without any restriction. I believe that Mr.
       Wiggin was an honest man and that he told the same
12    story to every one with whom he had occasion to talk,
       so I cannot believe that he has ever said anything
       whatever of you and your relations to your published
15    works differing from what he talked so freely in my
       presence.

       There is nothing in the circumstances which have
18    arisen recently, and the manner in which the statements
       have been made, to change my opinion one iota in this
       respect.

21    It will soon be twenty years since I first saw you and
       entered your class. During that time, from my connec-
       tion with the church, the Publishing Society, and my
24    many conversations with you, my personal knowledge of
       the authorship of your works is conclusive to me in every
       detail, and I am very glad that I was among your early
27    students and have had this experience and know of my
       own personal knowledge what has transpired during the
       past twenty years.

30    I am also pleased to have had conversations with
       people who knew you years before I did, and who have
       told me of their knowledge of your work.


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1     It is not long since I met a lady who lived in Lynn,
       and she told me she knew you when you were writing
3     Science and Health, and that she had seen the manu-
       script. These are facts which cannot be controverted
       and they must stand.

6             Your affectionate student,
       EDWARD P. BATES

       BOSTON, MASS., November 21, 1906


9     My Beloved Teacher: — I have just read your state-
       ment correcting mistakes widely published about the
       Rev. James H. Wiggin’s work for and attitude towards
12    you; also Mr. Edward P. Bates’ letter to you on the
       same subject; which reminds me of a conversation I
       had with Mr. Wiggin on Thanksgiving Day twenty
15    years ago, when a friend and I were the guests invited
       to dine with the Wiggin family.

       I had seen you the day before at the Metaphysical
18    College and received your permission to enter the next
       Primary class (Jan. 10, 1887). During the evening my
       friend spoke of my journeying from the far South, and
21    waiting months in Boston on the bare hope of a few
       days’ instruction by Mrs. Eddy in Christian Science.
       She and Mrs. Wiggin seemed inclined to banter me on
24    such enthusiasm, but Mr. Wiggin kindly helped me by
       advancing many good points in the Science, which were
       so clearly stated that I was surprised when he told me
27    he was not a Christian Scientist.

       Seeing my great interest in the subject, he told me
       of his acquaintance with you and spoke earnestly and
30    beautifully of you and your work. The exact words I
       do not recall, but the impression he left with me was


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1     entirely in accordance with what Mr. Bates has so well
       written in the above-mentioned letter. Before we left
3     that evening, Mr. Wiggin gave me a pamphlet entitled
       “Christian Science and the Bible,” by “Phare Pleigh,”
       which he said he had written in answer to an unfair
6     criticism of you and your book by some minister in the
       far West. I have his little book yet. How long must it
       be before the people find out that you have so identified
9     yourself with the truth by loving it and living it that you
       are not going to lie about anything nor willingly leave
       any false impression.

12    In loving gratitude for your living witness to Truth
       and Love,

       FLORENCE WHITESIDE

15    CHATTANOOGA, TENN.,
       December 4, 1906


       Beloved Teacher: — My heart has been too full to tell
18    you in words all that your wonderful life and sacrifice
       means to me. Neither do I now feel at all equal to ex-
       pressing the crowding thoughts of gratitude and praise
21    to God for giving this age such a Leader and teacher to
       reveal to us His way. Your crowning triumph over error
       and sin, which we have so recently witnessed, in blessing
24    those who would destroy you if God did not hold you up
       by the right hand of His righteousness, should mean to
       your older students much that they may not have been
27    able to appreciate in times past.

       I wonder if you will remember that Mr. Snider and
       myself boarded in the home of the late Rev. J. Henry
30    Wiggin during the time of our studying in the second
       class with you — the Normal class in the fall of 1887?
       We were at that time some eight days in Mr. and Mrs.


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1     Wiggin’s home. He often spoke his thoughts freely
       about you and your work, especially your book Science
3     and Health. Mr. Wiggin had somewhat of a thought
       of contempt for the unlearned, and he scorned the sug-
       gestion that Mr. Quimby had given you any idea for
6     your book, as he said you and your ideas were too
       much alike for the book to have come from any one but
       yourself. He often said you were so original and so
9     very decided that no one could be of much service to
       you, and he often hinted that he thought he could give
       a clearer nomenclature for Science and Health. I re-
12    member telling you of this, and you explained how long
       you had waited on the Lord to have those very terms
       revealed to you.

15    I am very sure that neither Mr. Wiggin nor his esti-
       mable wife had any other thought but that you were
       the author of your book, and were he here to-day he
18    would be too honorable to allow the thought to go out
       that he had helped you write it. He certainly never
       gave us the impression that he thought you needed
21    help, for we always thought that Mr. Wiggin regarded
       you as quite his literary equal, and was gratified and
       pleased in numbering you among his literary friends.
24    Everything he said conveyed this impression to us —
       that he regarded you as entirely unique and original.
       He told us laughingly why he accepted your invitation
27    to sit through your class. He said he wanted to see if
       there was one woman under the sun who could keep to
       her text. When we asked him if he found you could do
30    so, he replied “Yes,” and said that no man could have
       done so any better.

       Both Mr. and Mrs. Wiggin frequently mentioned


Page 325


1     many kindnesses you had shown them, and spoke of
       one especial day when amidst all your duties you per-
3     sonally called to inquire of his welfare (he had been
       ill) and to leave luscious hothouse fruit. One thing
       more, that I think will amuse you: Mr. Wiggin was
6     very much troubled that you had bought your house
       on Commonwealth Avenue, as he was very sure Back
       Bay property would never be worth what you then
9     paid for it. He regarded the old part of Boston in
       which he lived as having a greater future than the new
       Back Bay.

12    Years ago I offered my services to you in any capacity
       in which I could serve you, and my desire has never
       changed. Command me at any time, in any way, beloved
15    Leader.

       With increasing love and gratitude, ever faithfully your
       student,

18                       CARRIE HARVEY SNIDER

       NEW YORK, N. Y.,
       December 7, 1906

Chapter 17 — Answers to Criticisms

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1            [Letter to the New York Commercial Advertiser]


       CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND THE CHURCH


3     OVER the signature “A Priest of the Church,”
       somebody, kindly referring to my address to First
       Church of Christ, Scientist, in Concord, N. H., writes:
6     “If they [Christian Scientists] have any truth to reveal
       which has not been revealed by the church or the Bible,
       let them make it known to the world, before they claim
9     the allegiance of mankind.”

       I submit that Christian Science has been widely made
       known to the world, and that it contains the entire
12    truth of the Scriptures, as also whatever portions of truth
       may be found in creeds. In addition to this, Christian
       Science presents the demonstrable divine Principle and
15    rules of the Bible, hitherto undiscovered in the trans-
       lations of the Bible and lacking in the creeds.

       Therefore I query: Do Christians, who believe in sin,
18    and especially those who claim to pardon sin, believe
       that God is good, and that God is All? Christian
       Scientists firmly subscribe to this statement; yea, they
21    understand it and the law governing it, namely, that
       God, the divine Principle of Christian Science, is


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1     “of purer eyes than to behold evil.” On this basis they
       endeavor to cast out the belief in sin or in aught
3     besides God, thus enabling the sinner to overcome
       sin according to the Scripture, “Work out your own
       salvation with fear and trembling. For it is God which
6     worketh in you both to will and to do of His good
       pleasure.”

       Does he who believes in sickness know or declare that
9     there is no sickness or disease, and thus heal disease?
       Christian Scientists, who do not believe in the reality
       of disease, heal disease, for the reason that the divine
12    Principle of Christian Science, demonstrated, heals the
       most inveterate diseases. Does he who believes in
       death understand or aver that there is no death, and
15    proceed to overcome “the last enemy” and raise the
       dying to health? Christian Scientists raise the dying to
       health in Christ’s name, and are striving to reach the
18    summit of Jesus’ words, “If a man keep my saying, he
       shall never see death.”

       If, as this kind priest claims, these things, inseparable
21    from Christian Science, are common to his church, we
       propose that he make known his doctrine to the world,
       that he teach the Christianity which heals, and send out
24    students according to Christ’s command, “Go ye into all
       the world, and preach the gospel to every creature,”
       “Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast
27    out devils.”

       The tree is known by its fruit. If, as he implies,
       Christian Science is not a departure from the first cen-
30    tury churches, — as surely it is not, — why persecute
       it? Are the churches opening fire on their own religious
       ranks, or are they attacking a peaceable party quite


Page 301


1     their antipode? Christian Science is a reflected glory;
       it shines with borrowed rays — from Light emitting light.
3     Christian Science is the new-old Christianity, that which
       was and is the revelation of divine Love.

       The present flux in religious faith may be found to be
6     a healthy fermentation, by which the lees of religion will
       be lost, dogma and creed will pass off in scum, leaving a
       solid Christianity at the bottom — a foundation for the
9     builders. I would that all the churches on earth could
       unite as brethren in one prayer: Father, teach us the
       life of Love.

12    PLEASANT VEIW, CONCORD, N. H.,
       March 22, 1899



       [Letter to the New York World]


       FAITH IN METAPHYSICS


       Is faith in divine metaphysics insanity?

       All sin is insanity, but healing the sick is not sin.
18    There is a universal insanity which mistakes fable for
       fact throughout the entire testimony of the material
       senses. Those unfortunate people who are committed to
21    insane asylums are only so many well-defined instances
       of the baneful effects of illusion on mortal minds and
       bodies. The supposition that we can correct insanity
24    by the use of drugs is in itself a species of insanity. A
       drug cannot of itself go to the brain or affect cerebral
       conditions in any manner whatever. Drugs cannot
27    remove inflammation, restore disordered functions, or
       destroy disease without the aid of mind.

       If mind be absent from the body, drugs can produce
30    no curative effect upon the body. The mind must


Page 302


1     be, is, the vehicle of all modes of healing disease and of
       producing disease. Through the mandate of mind or
3     according to a man’s belief, can he be helped or be killed
       by a drug; but mind, not matter, produces the result in
       either case.

6     Neither life nor death, health nor disease, can be pro-
       duced on a corpse, whence mind has departed. This
       self-evident fact is proof that mind is the cause of all
9     effect made manifest through so-called matter. The
       general craze is that matter masters mind; the specific
       insanity is that brain, matter, is insane.



12              [Letter to the New York Herald]


       REPLY TO MARK TWAIN


       It is a fact well understood that I begged the students
15    who first gave me the endearing appellative “Mother,”
       not to name me thus. But without my consent, the use
       of the word spread like wildfire. I still must think the
18    name is not applicable to me. I stand in relation to
       this century as a Christian Discoverer, Founder, and
       Leader. I regard self-deification as blasphemous. I may
21    be more loved, but I am less lauded, pampered, provided
       for, and cheered than others before me — and where-
       fore? Because Christian Science is not yet popular, and
24    I refuse adulation.

       My first visit to The Mother Church after it was built
       and dedicated pleased me, and the situation was satisfac-
27    tory. The dear members wanted to greet me with escort
       and the ringing of bells, but I declined and went alone in
       my carriage to the church, entered it, and knelt in thanks
30    upon the steps of its altar. There the foresplendor of


Page 303


1     the beginnings of truth fell mysteriously upon my spirit.
       I believe in one Christ, teach one Christ, know of but
3     one Christ. I believe in but one incarnation, one Mother
       Mary. I know that I am not that one, and I have never
       claimed to be. It suffices me to learn the Science of the
6     Scriptures relative to this subject.

       Christian Scientists have no quarrel with Protestants,
       Catholics, or any other sect. Christian Scientists need to
9     be understood as following the divine Principle — God,
       Love — and not imagined to be unscientific worshippers
       of a human being.

12    In his article, of which I have seen only extracts, Mark
       Twain’s wit was not wasted in certain directions. Chris-
       tian Science eschews divine rights in human beings.
15    If the individual governed human consciousness, my
       statement of Christian Science would be disproved;
       but to demonstrate Science and its pure monotheism
18    — one God, one Christ, no idolatry, no human propa-
       ganda — it is essential to understand the spiritual idea.
       Jesus taught and proved that what feeds a few feeds
21    all. His life-work subordinated the material to the
       spiritual, and he left his legacy of truth to man-
       kind. His metaphysics is not the sport of philosophy,
24    religion, or science; rather is it the pith and finale of
       them all.

       I have not the inspiration nor the aspiration to be
27    a first or second Virgin-mother — her duplicate, ante-
       cedent, or subsequent. What I am remains to be proved
       by the good I do. We need much humility, wisdom,
30    and love to perform the functions of foreshadowing and
       foretasting heaven within us. This glory is molten in
       the furnace of affliction.


Page 304



       [Boston Journal, June 8, 1903]


       A MISSTATEMENT CORRECTED


3     I was early a pupil of Miss Sarah J. Bodwell, the
       principal of Sanbornton Academy, New Hampshire, and
       finished my course of studies under Professor Dyer
6     H. Sanborn, author of Sanborn’s Grammar. Among
       my early studies were Comstock’s Natural Philosophy,
       Chemistry, Blair’s Rhetoric, Whateley’s Logic, Watt’s
9     “On the Mind and Moral Science.” At sixteen years
       of age, I began writing for the leading newspapers, and
       for many years I wrote for the best magazines in the
12    South and North. I have lectured in large and crowded
       halls in New York City, Chicago, Boston, Portland,
       and at Waterville College, and have been invited to
15    lecture in London, England, and Edinburgh, Scotland.
       In 1883, I started The Christian Science Journal, and
       for several years was the proprietor and sole editor of
18    that periodical. In 1893, Judge S. J. Hanna became
       editor of The Christian Science Journal, and for ten
       subsequent years he knew my ability as an editor. In
21    a lecture in Chicago, he said: “Mrs. Eddy is from
       every point of view a woman of sound education and
       liberal culture.”
24    Agassiz, the celebrated naturalist and author, wisely
       said: “Every great scientific truth goes through three
       stages. First, people say it conflicts with the Bible.
27    Next, they say it has been discovered before. Lastly,
       they say they have always believed it.”
       The first attack upon me was: Mrs. Eddy misinterprets
30    the Scriptures; second, she has stolen the contents of her
       book, “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,”


Page 305


1     from one P. P. Quimby (an obscure, uneducated man),
       and that he is the founder of Christian Science. Failing
3     in these attempts, the calumniator has resorted to Ralph
       Waldo Emerson’s philosophy as the authority for Christian
       Science! Lastly, the defamer will declare as honestly (?),
6     “I have always known it.”
       In Science and Health, page 68, third paragraph, I
       briefly express myself unmistakably on the subject of
9     “vulgar metaphysics,” and the manuscripts and letters
       in my possession, which “vulgar” defamers have circu-
       lated, stand in evidence. People do not know who is
12    referred to as “an ignorant woman in New Hampshire.”
       Many of the nation’s best and most distinguished men
       and women were natives of the Granite State.
15    I am the author of the Christian Science textbook,

       “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures;” and
       the demand for this book constantly increases. I am
18    rated in the National Magazine (1903) as “standing
       eighth in a list of twenty-two of the foremost living
       authors.”

21    I claim no special merit of any kind. All that I am
       in reality, God has made me. I still wait at the cross to
       learn definitely more from my great Master, but not
24    of the Greek nor of the Roman schools — simply how to
       do his works.



       A PLEA FOR JUSTICE


27    My recent reply to the reprint of a scandal in the
       Literary Digest was not a question of “Who shall be
       greatest?” but of “Who shall be just?” Who is or is
30    not the founder of Christian Science was not the trend
       of thought, but my purpose was to lift the curtain on


Page 306


1     wrong, on falsehood which persistently misrepresents
       my character, education, and authorship, and attempts
3     to narrow my life into a conflict for fame.

       Far be it from me to tread on the ashes of the dead or
       to dissever any unity that may exist between Christian
6     Science and the philosophy of a great and good man, for
       such was Ralph Waldo Emerson; and I deem it unwise to
       enter into a newspaper controversy over a question that
9     is no longer a question. The false should be antagonized
       only for the purpose of making the true apparent. I have
       quite another purpose in life than to be thought great.
12    Time and goodness determine greatness. The greatest
       reform, with almost unutterable truths to translate,
       must wait to be transfused into the practical and
15    to be understood in the “new tongue.” Age, with
       experience-acquired patience and unselfed love, waits
       on God. Human merit or demerit will find its proper
18    level. Divinity alone solves the problem of human-
       ity, and that in God’s own time. “By their fruits ye
       shall know them.”



       REMINISCENCES


       In 1862, when I first visited Dr. Quimby of Portland,
       Me., his scribblings were descriptions of his patients, and
24    these comprised the manuscripts which in 1887 I adver-
       tised that I would pay for having published. Before his
       decease, in January, 1866, Dr. Quimby had tried to get
27    them published and had failed.

       Quotations have been published, purporting to be Dr.
       Quimby’s own words, which were written while I was his
30    patient in Portland and holding long conversations with
       him on my views of mental therapeutics. Some words in


Page 307


1     these quotations certainly read like words that I said to
       him, and which I, at his request, had added to his
3     copy when I corrected it. In his conversations with
       me and in his scribblings, the word science was not
       used at all, till one day I declared to him that back
6     of his magnetic treatment and manipulation of patients,
       there was a science, and it was the science of mind,
       which had nothing to do with matter, electricity, or
9     physics.

       After this I noticed he used that word, as well as other
       terms which I employed that seemed at first new to him.
12    He even acknowledged this himself, and startled me by
       saying what I cannot forget — it was this: “I see now
       what you mean, and I see that I am John, and that you
15    are Jesus.”

       At that date I was a staunch orthodox, and my theologi-
       cal belief was offended by his saying and I entered a de-
18    murrer which rebuked him. But afterwards I concluded
       that he only referred to the coming anew of Truth, which
       we both desired; for in some respects he was quite a seer
21    and understood what I said better than some others did.
       For one so unlearned, he was a remarkable man. Had
       his remark related to my personality, I should still think
24    that it was profane.

       At first my case improved wonderfully under his
       treatment, but it relapsed. I was gradually emerging
27    from materia medica, dogma, and creeds, and drifting
       whither I knew not. This mental struggle might have
       caused my illness. The fallacy of materia medica, its
30    lack of science, and the want of divinity in scholas-
       tic theology, had already dawned on me. My ideal-
       ism, however, limped, for then it lacked Science. But


Page 308


1     the divine Love will accomplish what all the powers
       of earth combined can never prevent being accom-
3     plished — the advent of divine healing and its divine
       Science.



       REPLY TO McClure’s Magazine


6     It is calumny on Christian Science to say that man is
       aroused to thought or action only by ease, pleasure, or
       recompense. Something higher, nobler, more imperative
9     impels the impulse of Soul.

       It becomes my duty to be just to the departed and to
       tread not ruthlessly on their ashes. The attack on me
12    and my late father and his family in McClure’s Magazine,
       January, 1907, compels me as a dutiful child and the
       Leader of Christian Science to speak.

15    McClure’s Magazine refers to my father’s “tall, gaunt
       frame” and pictures “the old man tramping doggedly
       along the highway, regularly beating the ground with a
18    huge walking-stick.” My father’s person was erect and
       robust. He never used a walking-stick. To illustrate:
       One time when my father was visiting Governor Pierce,
21    President Franklin Pierce’s father, the Governor handed
       him a gold-headed walking-stick as they were about to
       start for church. My father thanked the Governor,
24    but declined to accept the stick, saying, “I never use
       a cane.”

       Although McClure’s Magazine attributes to my father
27    language unseemly, his household law, constantly en-
       forced, was no profanity and no slang phrases. McClure’s
       Magazine also declares that the Bible was the only book
30    in his house. On the contrary, my father was a great
       reader. The man whom McClure’s Magazine characterizes


Page 309


1     as “ignorant, dominating, passionate, fearless,” was
       uniformly dignified — a well-informed, intellectual man,
3     cultivated in mind and manners. He was called upon
       to do much business for his town, making out deeds,
       settling quarrels, and even acting as counsel in a lawsuit
6     involving a question of pauperism between the towns of
       Loudon and Bow, N. H. Franklin Pierce, afterwards
       President of the United States, was the counsel for
9     Loudon and Mark Baker for Bow. Both entered their
       pleas, and my father won the suit. After it was decided,
       Mr. Pierce bowed to my father and congratulated him.
12    For several years father was chaplain of the New
       Hampshire State Militia, and as I recollect it, he was
       justice of the peace at one time. My father was a
15    strong believer in States’ rights, but slavery he regarded
       as a great sin.

       Mark Baker was the youngest of his father’s family, and
18    inherited his father’s real estate, an extensive farm situ-
       ated in Bow and Concord, N. H. It is on record that
       Mark Baker’s father paid the largest tax in the colony.
21    McClure’s Magazine says, describing the Baker home-
       stead at Bow: “The house itself was a small, square box
       building of rudimentary architecture.” My father’s
24    house had a sloping roof, after the prevailing style of
       architecture at that date.

       McClure’s Magazine states: “Alone of the Bakers, he
27    [Albert] received a liberal education. . . . Mary Baker
       passed her first fifteen years at the ancestral home at Bow.
       It was a lonely and unstimulating existence. The church
30    supplied the only social diversions, the district school
       practically all the intellectual life.”

       Let us see what were the fruits of this “lonely and


Page 310


1     unstimulating existence.” All my father’s daughters were
       given an academic education, sufficiently advanced so that
3     they all taught school acceptably at various times and
       places. My brother Albert was a distinguished lawyer.
       In addition to my academic training, I was privately
6     tutored by him. He was a member of the New Hamp-
       shire Legislature, and was nominated for Congress, but
       died before the election. McClure’s Magazine calls my
9     youngest brother, George Sullivan Baker, “a workman in
       a Tilton woolen mill.” As a matter of fact, he was joint
       partner with Alexander Tilton, and together they owned a
12    large manufacturing establishment in Tilton, N. H. His
       military title of Colonel came from appointment on the
       staff of the Governor of New Hampshire. My oldest
15    brother, Samuel D. Baker, carried on a large business in
       Boston, Mass.

       Regarding the allegation by McClure’s Magazine that all
18    the family, “excepting Albert, died of cancer,” I will
       say that there was never a death in my father’s family
       reported by physician or post-mortem examination as
21    caused by cancer.

       McClure’s Magazine says that “the quarrels between
       Mary, a child ten years old, and her father, a gray-haired
24    man of fifty, frequently set the house in an uproar,”
       and adds that these “fits” were diagnosed by Dr. Ladd
       as “hysteria mingled with bad temper.” My mother
27    often presented my disposition as exemplary for her other
       children to imitate, saying, “When do you ever see
       Mary angry?” When the first edition of Science and
30    Health was published, Dr. Ladd said to Alexander Tilton:
       “Read it, for it will do you good. It does not surprise
       me, it so resembles the author.”


Page 311


1     I will relate the following incident, which occurred later
       in life, as illustrative of my disposition: —

3     While I was living with Dr. Patterson at his country
       home in North Groton, N. H., a girl, totally blind, knocked
       at the door and was admitted. She begged to be allowed
6     to remain with me, and my tenderness and sympathy were
       such that I could not refuse her. Shortly after, however,
       my good housekeeper said to me: “If this blind girl stays
9     with you, I shall have to leave; she troubles me so much.”
       It was not in my heart to turn the blind girl out, and so
       I lost my housekeeper.

12    My reply to the statement that the clerk’s book shows
       that I joined the Tilton Congregational Church at the age
       of seventeen is that my religious experience seemed to
15    culminate at twelve years of age. Hence a mistake may
       have occurred as to the exact date of my first church
       membership.

18    The facts regarding the McNeil coat-of-arms are as
       follows: —

       Fanny McNeil, President Pierce’s niece, afterwards
21    Mrs. Judge Potter, presented me my coat-of-arms, say-
       ing that it was taken in connection with her own family
       coat-of-arms. I never doubted the veracity of her gift.
24    I have another coat-of-arms, which is of my mother’s
       ancestry. When I was last in Washington, D. C., Mrs.
       Judge Potter and myself knelt in silent prayer on the
27    mound of her late father, General John McNeil, the
       hero of Lundy Lane.

       Notwithstanding that McClure’s Magazine says, “Mary
30    Baker completed her education when she finished Smith’s
       grammar and reached long division in arithmetic,” I was
       called by the Rev. R. S. Rust, D.D., Principal of the


Page 312


1     Methodist Conference Seminary at Sanbornton Bridge, to
       supply the place of his leading teacher during her tempo-
3     rary absence.

       Regarding my first marriage and the tragic death of my
       husband, McClure’s Magazine says: “He [George Wash-
6     ington Glover] took his bride to Wilmington, South Caro-
       lina, and in June, 1844, six months after his marriage, he
       died of yellow fever. He left his young wife in a miser-
9     able plight. She was far from home and entirely without
       money or friends. Glover, however, was a Free Mason,
       and thus received a decent burial. The Masons also paid
12    Mrs. Glover’s fare to New York City, where she was
       met and taken to her father’s home by her brother George.
       . . . Her position was an embarrassing one. She was a
15    grown woman, with a child, but entirely without means
       of support. . . . Mrs. Glover made only one effort at
       self-support. For a brief season she taught school.”

18    My first husband, Major George W. Glover, resided in
       Charleston, S. C. While on a business trip to Wilming-
       ton, N. C., he was suddenly seized with yellow fever and
21    died in about nine days. I was with him on this trip.
       He took with him the usual amount of money he would
       need on such an excursion. At his decease I was sur-
24    rounded by friends, and their provisions in my behalf were
       most tender. The Governor of the State and his staff,
       with a long procession, followed the remains of my be-
27    loved one to the cemetery. The Free Masons selected
       my escort, who took me to my father’s home in Tilton,
       N. H. My salary for writing gave me ample support.
30    I did open an infant school, but it was for the purpose of
       starting that educational system in New Hampshire.

       The rhyme attributed to me by McClure’s Magazine is


Page 313


1     not mine, but is, I understand, a paraphrase of a silly
       song of years ago. Correctly quoted, it is as follows, so
3     I have been told: —


       Go to Jane Glover,
       Tell her I love her
6        By the light of the moon
       I will go to her.


       The various stories told by McClure’s Magazine about
9     my father spreading the road in front of his house with
       tan-bark and straw, and about persons being hired to rock
       me, I am ignorant of. Nor do I remember any such stuff
12    as Dr. Patterson driving into Franklin, N. H., with a
       couch or cradle for me in his wagon. I only know that
       my father and mother did everything they could think of
15    to help me when I was ill.

       I was never “given to long and lonely wanderings,
       especially at night,” as stated by McClure’s Magazine. I
18    was always accompanied by some responsible individual
       when I took an evening walk, but I seldom took one. I
       have always consistently declared that I was not a medium
21    for spirits. I never was especially interested in the
       Shakers, never “dabbled in mesmerism,” never was “an
       amateur clairvoyant,” nor did “the superstitious coun-
24    try folk frequently” seek my advice. I never went
       into a trance to describe scenes far away, as McClure’s
       Magazine says.

27    My oldest sister dearly loved me, but I wounded her
       pride when I adopted Christian Science, and to a Baker
       that was a sorry offence. I was obliged to be parted
30    from my son, because after my father’s second marriage
       my little boy was not welcome in my father’s house.


Page 314


1     McClure’s Magazine calls Dr. Daniel Patterson, my
       second husband, “an itinerant dentist.” It says that
3     after my marriage we “lived for a short time at Tilton,
       then moved to Franklin . . . . During the following nine
       years the Pattersons led a roving existence. The doctor
6     practised in several towns, from Tilton to North Groton
       and then to Rumney.” When I was married to him, Dr.
       Daniel Patterson was located in Franklin, N. H. He had
9     the degree D.D.S., was a popular man, and considered a
       rarely skilful dentist. He bought a place in North Groton,
       which he fancied, for a summer home. At that time he
12    owned a house in Franklin, N. H.

       Although, as McClure’s Magazine claims, the court
       record may state that my divorce from Dr. Patterson was
15    granted on the ground of desertion, the cause neverthe-
       less was adultery. Individuals are here to-day who were
       present in court when the decision was given by the judge
18    and who know the following facts: After the evidence
       had been submitted that a husband was about to have Dr.
       Patterson arrested for eloping with his wife, the court
21    instructed the clerk to record the divorce in my favor.
       What prevented Dr. Patterson’s arrest was a letter from
       me to this self-same husband, imploring him not to do it.
24    When this husband recovered his wife, he kept her a
       prisoner in her home, and I was also the means of recon-
       ciling the couple. A Christian Scientist has told me that
27    with tears of gratitude the wife of this husband related
       these facts to her just as I have stated them. I lived
       with Dr. Patterson peaceably, and he was kind to me up
30    to the time of the divorce.

       The following affidavit by R. D. Rounsevel of Littleton,
       N. H., proprietor of the White Mountain House, Fabyans,


Page 315


1     N. H., the original of which is in my possession, is of
       interest in this connection: —


3     About the year 1874, Dr. Patterson, a dentist, boarded
       with me in Littleton, New Hampshire. During his stay,
       at different times, I had conversation with him about his
6     wife, from whom he was separated. He spoke of her being
       a pure and Christian woman, and the cause of the separa-
       tion being wholly on his part; that if he had done as he
9     ought, he might have had as pleasant and happy home as
       one could wish for.

       At that time I had no knowledge of who his wife was.
12    Later on I learned that Mary Baker G. Eddy, the Dis-
       coverer and Founder of Christian Science, was the above-
       mentioned woman.

15                       (Signed) R. D. ROUNSEVEL


       Grafton S. S. Jan’y, 1902. Then personally appeared
       R. D. Rounsevel and made oath that the within statement
18    by him signed is true.

       Before me,                (Signed) H. M. MORSE,
       Justice of the Peace


21    Who or what is the McClure “history,” so called, pre-
       senting? Is it myself, the veritable Mrs. Eddy, whom
       the New York World declared dying of cancer, or is it
24    her alleged double or dummy heretofore described?

       If indeed it be I, allow me to thank the enterprising
       historians for the testimony they have thereby given of the
27    divine power of Christian Science, which they admit has
       snatched me from the cradle and the grave, and made
       me the beloved Leader of millions of the good men and
30    women in our own and in other countries, — and all this


Page 316


1     because the truth I have promulgated has separated the
       tares from the wheat, uniting in one body those who love
3     Truth; because Truth divides between sect and Science
       and renews the heavenward impulse; because I still hear
       the harvest song of the Redeemer awakening the nations,
6     causing man to love his enemies; because “blessed are ye,
       when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall
       say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake.”

       [Christian Science Sentinel, January 19, 1907]


       A CARD


       The article in the January number of The Arena maga-
12    zine, entitled “The Recent Reckless and Irresponsible
       Attacks on Christian Science and its Founder, with a
       Survey of the Christian Science Movement,” by the
15    scholarly editor, Mr. B.O. Flower, is a grand defence of
       our Cause and its Leader. Such a dignified, eloquent
       appeal to the press in behalf of common justice and truth
18    demands public attention. It defends human rights and
       the freedom of Christian sentiments, and tends to turn
       back the foaming torrents of ignorance, envy, and malice.
21    I am pleased to find this “twentieth-century review of
       opinion” once more under Mr. Flower’s able guardianship
       and manifesting its unbiased judgment by such sound
24    appreciation of the rights of Christian Scientists and of
       all that is right.

       MARY BAKER EDDY

Chapter 16 — Tributes

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1                           [New York Mail and Express]


       MONUMENT TO BARON AND BARONESS DE HIRSCH


3     THE movement to erect a monument to the late
       Baron and Baroness de Hirsch enlists my hearty
       sympathy. They were unquestionably used in a re-
6     markable degree as instruments of divine Love.

       Divine Love reforms, regenerates, giving to human
       weakness strength, serving as admonition, instruction, and
9     governing all that really is. Divine Love is the noumenon
       and phenomenon, the Principle and practice of divine
       metaphysics. Love talked and not lived is a poor shift
12    for the weak and worldly. Love lived in a court or cot
       is God exemplified, governing governments, industries,
       human rights, liberty, life.

15    In love for man we gain the only and true sense of love
       for God, practical good, and so rise and still rise to His
       image and likeness, and are made partakers of that Mind
18    whence springs the universe.

       Philanthropy is loving, ameliorative, revolutionary; it
       wakens lofty desires, new possibilities, achievements, and
21    energies; it lays the axe at the root of the tree that
       bringeth not forth good fruit; it touches thought to
       spiritual issues, systematizes action, and insures success;


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1     it starts the wheels of right reason, revelation, justice, and
       mercy; it unselfs men and pushes on the ages. Love
3     unfolds marvellous good and uncovers hidden evil. The
       philanthropist or reformer gives little thought to self-
       defence; his life’s incentive and sacrifice need no apology.
6     The good done and the good to do are his ever-present
       reward.

       Love for mankind is the elevator of the human race;
9     it demonstrates Truth and reflects divine Love. Good is
       divinely natural. Evil is unnatural; it has no origin in
       the nature of God, and He is the Father of all.

12    The great Galilean Prophet was, is, the reformer of re-
       formers. His piety partook not of the travesties of human
       opinions, pagan mysticisms, tribal religion, Greek phi-
15    losophy, creed, dogma, or materia medica. The divine
       Mind was his only instrumentality in religion or medi-
       cine. The so-called laws of matter he eschewed; with
18    him matter was not the auxiliary of Spirit. He never
       appealed to matter to perform the functions of Spirit,
       divine Love.

21    Jesus cast out evil, disease, death, showing that all
       suffering is commensurate with sin; therefore, he cast
       out devils and healed the sick. He showed that every
24    effect or amplification of wrong will revert to the wrong-
       doer; that sin punishes itself; hence his saying, “Sin
       no more, lest a worse thing come unto thee.” Love
27    atones for sin through love that destroys sin. His rod
       is love.

       We cannot remake ourselves, but we can make the
30    best of what God has made. We can know that all is
       good because God made all, and that evil is not a
       fatherly grace.


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1     All education is work. The thing most important is
       what we do, not what we say. God’s open secret is seen
3     through grace, truth, and love.

       I enclose a check for five hundred dollars for the
       De Hirsch monument fund.



       TRIBUTES TO QUEEN VICTORIA


       MR. WILLIAM B. JOHNSON, C.S.B., Clerk


       Beloved Student: — I deem it proper that The Mother
9     Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts, the
       first church of Christian Science known on earth, should
       upon this solemn occasion congregate; that a special meet-
12    ing of its First Members convene for the sacred purpose of
       expressing our deep sympathy with the bereaved nation,
       its loss and the world’s loss, in the sudden departure of
15    the late lamented Victoria, Queen of Great Britain and
       Empress of India, — long honored, revered, beloved.
       “God save the Queen” is heard no more in England, but
18    this shout of love lives on in the heart of millions.

       With love,
       MARY BAKER EDDY

21    PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
       January 27, 1901


       It being inconvenient for me to attend the memorial
24    meeting in the South Congregational church on Sunday
       evening, February 3, I herewith send a few words of con-
       dolence, which may be read on that tender occasion.

27    I am interested in a meeting to be held in the capi-
       tal of my native State in memoriam of the late lamented
       Victoria, Queen of Great Britain and Empress of India.


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1     It betokens a love and a loss felt by the strong hearts
       of New England and the United States. When contem-
3     plating this sudden international bereavement, the near
       seems afar, the distant nigh, and the tried and true seem
       few. The departed Queen’s royal and imperial honors
6     lose their lustre in the tomb, but her personal virtues can
       never be lost. Those live on in the affection of nations.

       Few sovereigns have been as venerable, revered, and
9     beloved as this noble woman, born in 1819, married in
       1840, and deceased the first month of the new century.



       LETTER TO MRS. McKINLEY


12    My Dear Mrs. McKinley: — My soul reaches out to God
       for your support, consolation, and victory. Trust in Him
       whose love enfolds thee. “Thou wilt keep him in perfect
15    peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee: because he trusteth
       in Thee.” “Out of the depths have I cried unto Thee.”
       Divine Love is never so near as when all earthly joys seem
18    most afar.

       Thy tender husband, our nation’s chief magistrate, has
       passed earth’s shadow into Life’s substance. Through
21    a momentary mist he beheld the dawn. He awaits to
       welcome you where no arrow wounds the eagle soaring,
       where no partings are for love, where the high and holy
24    call you again to meet.

       “I knew that Thou hearest me always,” are the words of
       him who suffered and subdued sorrow. Hold this attitude
27    of mind, and it will remove the sackcloth from thy home.

       With love,
       MARY BAKER EDDY

30    PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
       September 14, 1901


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       TRIBUTE TO PRESIDENT McKINLEY


       Imperative, accumulative, holy demands rested on the
3     life and labors of our late beloved President, William
       McKinley. Presiding over the destinies of a nation
       meant more to him than a mere rehearsal of aphorisms,
6     a uniting of breaches soon to widen, a quiet assent or dis-
       sent. His work began with heavy strokes, measured
       movements, reaching from the infinitesimal to the
9     infinite. It began by warming the marble of politics
       into zeal according to wisdom, quenching the vol-
       canoes of partizanship, and uniting the interests of all
12    peoples; and it ended with a universal good overcoming
       evil.

       His home relations enfolded a wealth of affection, — a
15    tenderness not talked but felt and lived. His humanity,
       weighed in the scales of divinity, was not found wanting.
       His public intent was uniform, consistent, sympathetic,
18    and so far as it fathomed the abyss of difficulties was
       wise, brave, unselfed. May his history waken a tone
       of truth that shall reverberate, renew euphony, empha-
21    size humane power, and bear its banner into the vast
       forever.

       While our nation’s ensign of peace and prosperity
24    waves over land and sea, while her reapers are strong,
       her sheaves garnered, her treasury filled, she is suddenly
       stricken, — called to mourn the loss of her renowned
27    leader! Tears blend with her triumphs. She stops to
       think, to mourn, yea, to pray, that the God of harvests
       send her more laborers, who, while they work for their
30    own country, shall sacredly regard the liberty of other
       peoples and the rights of man.


Page 292


1     What cannot love and righteousness achieve for the
       race? All that can be accomplished, and more than his-
3     tory has yet recorded. All good that ever was written,
       taught, or wrought comes from God and human faith in
       the right. Through divine Love the right government is
6     assimilated, the way pointed out, the process shortened,
       and the joy of acquiescence consummated. May God
       sanctify our nation’s sorrow in this wise, and His rod
9     and His staff comfort the living as it did the departing.
       O may His love shield, support, and comfort the chief
       mourner at the desolate home!



       POWER OF PRAYER


       My answer to the inquiry, “Why did Christians of every
       sect in the United States fail in their prayers to save
15    the life of President McKinley,” is briefly this: Insuffi-
       cient faith or spiritual understanding, and a compound of
       prayers in which one earnest, tender desire works uncon-
18    sciously against the modus operandi of another, would
       prevent the result desired. In the June, 1901, Message
       to my church in Boston, I refer to the effect of one
21    human desire or belief unwittingly neutralizing another,
       though both are equally sincere.

       In the practice of materia medica, croton oil is not mixed
24    with morphine to remedy dysentery, for those drugs are
       supposed to possess opposite qualities and so to produce
       opposite effects. The spirit of the prayer of the righteous
27    heals the sick, but this spirit is of God, and the divine
       Mind is the same yesterday, to-day, and forever; where-
       as the human mind is a compound of faith and doubt,
30    of fear and hope, of faith in truth and faith in error.


Page 293


1     The knowledge that all things are possible to God ex-
       cludes doubt, but differing human concepts as to the
3     divine power and purpose of infinite Mind, and the so-
       called power of matter, act as the different properties of
       drugs are supposed to act — one against the other — and
6     this compound of mind and matter neutralizes itself.

       Our lamented President, in his loving acquiescence,
       believed that his martyrdom was God’s way. Hun-
9     dreds, thousands of others believed the same, and hun-
       dreds of thousands who prayed for him feared that the
       bullet would prove fatal. Even the physicians may have
12    feared this.

       These conflicting states of the human mind, of trembling
       faith, hope, and of fear, evinced a lack of the absolute
15    understanding of God’s omnipotence, and thus they pre-
       vented the power of absolute Truth from reassuring the
       mind and through the mind resuscitating the body of
18    the patient.

       The divine power and poor human sense — yea, the spirit
       and the flesh — struggled, and to mortal sense the flesh pre-
21    vailed. Had prayer so fervently offered possessed no
       opposing element, and President McKinley’s recovery
       been regarded as wholly contingent on the power of God,
24    — on the power of divine Love to overrule the pur-
       poses of hate and the law of Spirit to control matter, —
       the result would have been scientific, and the patient
27    would have recovered.

       St. Paul writes: “For the law of the Spirit of life in
       Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and
30    death.” And the Saviour of man saith: “What things
       soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive
       them, and ye shall have them.” Human governments


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1     maintain the right of the majority to rule. Christian
       Scientists are yet in a large minority on the subject of
3     divine metaphysics; but they improve the morals and the
       lives of men, and they heal the sick on the basis that God
       has all power, is omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent,
6     supreme over all.

       In a certain city the Master “did not many mighty
       works there because of their unbelief,” — because of the
9     mental counteracting elements, the startled or the un-
       righteous contradicting minds of mortals. And if he were
       personally with us to-day, he would rebuke whatever
12    accords not with a full faith and spiritual knowledge of
       God. He would mightily rebuke a single doubt of the
       ever-present power of divine Spirit to control all the con-
15    ditions of man and the universe.

       If the skilful surgeon or the faithful M.D. is not dis-
       mayed by a fruitless use of the knife or the drug, has not
18    the Christian Scientist with his conscious understanding
       of omnipotence, in spite of the constant stress of the
       hindrances previously mentioned, reason for his faith in
21    what is shown him by God’s works?



       ON THE DEATH OF POPE LEO XIII, JULY 20, 1903


       The sad, sudden announcement of the decease of Pope
24    Leo XIII, touches the heart and will move the pen of
       millions. The intellectual, moral, and religious energy
       of this illustrious pontiff have animated the Church of
27    Rome for one quarter of a century. The august ruler
       of two hundred and fifty million human beings has now
       passed through the shadow of death into the great forever.
30    The court of the Vatican mourns him; his relatives
       shed “the unavailing tear.” He is the loved and lost


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1     of many millions. I sympathize with those who mourn,
       but rejoice in knowing our dear God comforts such with
3     the blessed assurance that life is not lost; its influence
       remains in the minds of men, and divine Love holds
       its substance safe in the certainty of immortality.
6     “In Him was life; and the life was the light of men.”
       (John 1: 4.)



       A TRIBUTE TO THE BIBLE


       LETTER OF THANKS FOR THE GIFT OF A COPY OF MARTIN LUTHER’S
       TRANSLATION INTO GERMAN OF THE BIBLE, PRINTED IN
       NUREM            BERG IN 1733


12    Dear Student: — I am in grateful receipt of your time-
       worn Bible in German. This Book of books is also the
       gift of gifts; and kindness in its largest, profoundest
15    sense is goodness. It was kind of you to give it to me.
       I thank you for it.

       Christian Scientists are fishers of men. The Bible is
18    our sea-beaten rock. It guides the fishermen. It stands
       the storm. It engages the attention and enriches the
       being of all men.



       A BENEDICTION
       [Copy of Cablegram]


       COUNTESS OF DUNMORE AND FAMILY,
24     55 Lancaster Gate, West, London, England


       Divine Love is your ever-present help. You, I, and
       mankind have cause to lament the demise of Lord Dun-
27    more; but as the Christian Scientist, the servant of God
       and man, he still lives, loves, labors.

       MARY BAKER EDDY

30    PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
       August 31, 1907


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       HON. CLARENCE A. BUSKIRK’S LECTURE


       The able discourse of our “learned judge,” his flash of
3     flight and insight, lays the axe “unto the root of the
       trees,” and shatters whatever hinders the Science of
       being.
6                    MARY BAKER EDDY
       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
       October 14, 1907



       “HEAR, O ISRAEL”


       The late lamented Christian Scientist brother and the
       publisher of my books, Joseph Armstrong, C.S.D., is not
12    dead, neither does he sleep nor rest from his labors in
       divine Science; and his works do follow him. Evil has no
       power to harm, to hinder, or to destroy the real spiritual
15    man. He is wiser to-day, healthier and happier, than
       yesterday. The mortal dream of life, substance, or mind
       in matter, has been lessened, and the reward of good
18    and punishment of evil and the waking out of his Adam-
       dream of evil will end in harmony, — evil powerless, and
       God, good, omnipotent and infinite.

21                       MARY BAKER EDDY

       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
       December 10, 1907



       MISS CLARA BARTON


       In the New York American, January 6, 1908, Miss
       Clara Barton dipped her pen in my heart, and traced its
27    emotions, motives, and object. Then, lifting the curtains
       of mortal mind, she depicted its rooms, guests, standing
       and seating capacity, and thereafter gave her discovery


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1     to the press. Now if Miss Barton were not a venerable
       soldier, patriot, philanthropist, moralist, and states-
3     woman, I should shrink from such salient praise. But
       in consideration of all that Miss Barton really is,
       and knowing that she can bear the blows which may
6     follow said description of her soul-visit, I will say, Amen,
       so be it.

       MARY BAKER EDDY

9      PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
       January l0, 1908



       THERE IS NO DEATH


12    A suppositional gust of evil in this evil world is the
       dark hour that precedes the dawn. This gust blows
       away the baubles of belief, for there is in reality no evil,
15    no disease, no death; and the Christian Scientist who
       believes that he dies, gains a rich blessing of disbelief in
       death, and a higher realization of heaven.

18    My beloved Edward A. Kimball, whose clear, correct
       teaching of Christian Science has been and is an inspira-
       tion to the whole field, is here now as veritably as when
21    he visited me a year ago. If we would awaken to this
       recognition, we should see him here and realize that he
       never died; thus demonstrating the fundamental truth
24    of Christian Science.

       MARY BAKER EDDY



       MRS. EDDY’S HISTORY


27    I have not had sufficient interest in the matter to read
       or to note from others’ reading what the enemies of
       Christian Science are said to be circulating regarding my
30    history, but my friends have read Sibyl Wilbur’s book,


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1     “The Life of Mary Baker Eddy,” and request the privi-
       lege of buying, circulating, and recommending it to the
3     public. I briefly declare that nothing has occurred in my
       life’s experience which, if correctly narrated and under-
       stood, could injure me; and not a little is already re-
6     ported of the good accomplished therein, the self-sacrifice,
       etc., that has distinguished all my working years.

       I thank Miss Wilbur and the Concord Publishing Com-
9     pany for their unselfed labors in placing this book before
       the public, and hereby say that they have my permission
       to publish and circulate this work.

12                    MARY BAKER EDDY

Chapter 15 — Peace and War

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1             [Boston Herald, March, 1898]


       OTHER WAYS THAN BY WAR


3     IN reply to your question, “Should difficulties between
       the United States and Spain be settled peacefully by
       statesmanship and diplomacy, in a way honorable and
6     satisfactory to both nations?” I will say I can see no
       other way of settling difficulties between individuals and
       nations than by means of their wholesome tribunals,
9     equitable laws, and sound, well-kept treaties.

       A bullet in a man’s heart never settles the question of
       his life. The mental animus goes on, and urges that the
12    answer to the sublime question as to man’s life shall come
       from God and that its adjustment shall be according to
       His laws. The characters and lives of men determine the
15    peace, prosperity, and life of nations. Killing men is
       not consonant with the higher law whereby wrong and
       injustice are righted and exterminated.

18    Whatever weighs in the eternal scale of equity and
       mercy tips the beam on the right side, where the immortal
       words and deeds of men alone can settle all questions
21    amicably and satisfactorily. But if our nation’s rights or
       honor were seized, every citizen would be a soldier and
       woman would be armed with power girt for the hour.


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1     To coincide with God’s government is the proper in-
       centive to the action of all nations. If His purpose for
3     peace is to be subserved by the battle’s plan or by the
       intervention of the United States, so that the Cubans
       may learn to make war no more, this means and end
6     will be accomplished.

       The government of divine Love is supreme. Love rules
       the universe, and its edict hath gone forth: “Thou shalt
9     have no other gods before me,” and “Love thy neighbor
       as thyself.” Let us have the molecule of faith that
       removes mountains, — faith armed with the understand-
12    ing of Love, as in divine Science, where right reigneth.
       The revered President and Congress of our favored land
       are in God’s hands.



15            [Boston Globe, December, 1904]


       HOW STRIFE MAY BE STILLED


       Follow that which is good.

18    A Japanese may believe in a heaven for him who dies
       in defence of his country, but the steadying, elevating
       power of civilization destroys such illusions and should
21    overcome evil with good.

       Nothing is gained by fighting, but much is lost.

       Peace is the promise and reward of rightness. Gov-
24    ernments have no right to engraft into civilization the
       burlesque of uncivil economics. War is in itself an evil,
       barbarous, devilish. Victory in error is defeat in Truth.
27    War is not in the domain of good; war weakens power
       and must finally fall, pierced by its own sword.

       The Principle of all power is God, and God is Love.
30    Whatever brings into human thought or action an ele-


Page 279


1     ment opposed to Love, is never requisite, never a neces-
       sity, and is not sanctioned by the law of God, the law
3     of Love. The Founder of Christianity said: “My
       peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give
       I unto you.”

6     Christian Science reinforces Christ’s sayings and doings.
       The Principle of Christian Science demonstrates peace.
       Christianity is the chain of scientific being reappearing in
9     all ages, maintaining its obvious correspondence with the
       Scriptures and uniting all periods in the design of God.
       The First Commandment in the Hebrew Decalogue —
12    “Thou shalt have no other gods before me” — obeyed,
       is sufficient to still all strife. God is the divine Mind.
       Hence the sequence: Had all peoples one Mind, peace
15    would reign.

       God is Father, infinite, and this great truth, when
       understood in its divine metaphysics, will establish the
18    brotherhood of man, end wars, and demonstrate “on
       earth peace, good will toward men.”



       [Christian Science Sentinel, June 17, 1905]


       THE PRAYER FOR PEACE


       Dearly Beloved: — I request that every member of The
       Mother Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, pray each
24    day for the amicable settlement of the war between
       Russia and Japan; and pray that God bless that great
       nation and those islands of the sea with peace and
27    prosperity.

       MARY BAKER EDDY
       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
       June 13, 1905


Page 280


1     REV. MARY BAKER EDDY,
       Pleasant View, Concord, N. H.
3     Beloved Leader: — We acknowledge with rejoicing the
       receipt of your message, which again gives assurance of
       your watchful care and guidance in our behalf and of your
6     loving solicitude for the welfare of the nations and the
       peaceful tranquillity of the race. We rejoice also in this
       new reminder from you that all the things which make for
9     the establishment of a universal, loving brotherhood on
       earth may be accomplished through the righteous prayer
       which availeth much.

12                       WILLIAM B. JOHNSON, Clerk
       BOSTON, MASS., June 13, 1905



       [Christian Science Sentinel, July 1, 1905]


       “HEAR, O ISRAEL: THE LORD OUR GOD IS ONE LORD”


       I now request that the members of my church cease
       special prayer for the peace of nations, and cease in full
18    faith that God does not hear our prayers only because of
       oft speaking, but that He will bless all the inhabitants
       of the earth, and none can stay His hand nor say unto
21    Him, What doest Thou? Out of His allness He must
       bless all with His own truth and love.

       MARY BAKER EDDY
24    PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
       June 27, 1905



       [Christian Science Sentinel, July 22, 1905]


       AN EXPLANATION


       In no way nor manner did I request my church to cease
       praying for the peace of nations, but simply to pause in
30    special prayer for peace. And why this asking? Because


Page 281


1     a spiritual foresight of the nations’ drama presented
       itself and awakened a wiser want, even to know how
3     to pray other than the daily prayer of my church, —
       “Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it
       is in heaven.”

6     I cited, as our present need, faith in God’s disposal of
       events. Faith full-fledged, soaring to the Horeb height,
       brings blessings infinite, and the spirit of this orison is the
9     fruit of rightness, — “on earth peace, good will toward
       men.” On this basis the brotherhood of all peoples is
       established; namely, one God, one Mind, and “Love thy
12    neighbor as thyself,” the basis on which and by which
       the infinite God, good, the Father-Mother Love, is ours
       and we are His in divine Science.



15                          [Boston Globe, August, 1905]


       PRACTISE THE GOLDEN RULE


       [Telegram]


18    “Official announcement of peace between Russia and
       Japan seems to offer an appropriate occasion for the ex-
       pression of congratulations and views by representative
21    persons. Will you do us the kindness to wire a sentiment
       on some phase of the subject, on the ending of the war,
       the effect on the two parties to the treaty of Portsmouth,
24    the influence which President Roosevelt has exerted for
       peace, or the advancement of the cause of arbitration.”
       Mrs. Eddy’s Reply


27    TO THE EDITOR OF THE Globe:


       War will end when nations are ripe for progress. The
       treaty of Portsmouth is not an executive power, although


Page 282


1     its purpose is good will towards men. The government of
       a nation is its peace maker or breaker.

3     I believe strictly in the Monroe doctrine, in our Con-
       stitution, and in the laws of God. While I admire the
       faith and friendship of our chief executive in and for all
6     nations, my hope must still rest in God, and the Scrip-
       tural injunction, — “Look unto me, and be ye saved, all
       the ends of the earth.”

9     The Douma recently adopted in Russia is no uncer-
       tain ray of dawn. Through the wholesome chastise-
       ments of Love, nations are helped onward towards
12    justice, righteousness, and peace, which are the land-
       marks of prosperity. In order to apprehend more,
       we must practise what we already know of the Golden
15    Rule, which is to all mankind a light emitting light.

       MARY BAKER EDDY



       MRS. EDDY AND THE PEACE MOVEMENT


18    MR. HAYNE DAVIS, American Secretary,
       International Conciliation Committee,
       542 Fifth Avenue, New York City


21    Dear Mr. Davis: — Deeply do I thank you for the
       interest you manifest in the success of the Association
       for International Conciliation. It is of paramount im-
24    portance to every son and daughter of all nations under
       the sunlight of the law and gospel.

       May God guide and prosper ever this good endeavor.

27                             Most truly yours,
       MARY BAKER EDDY
       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
30       April 3, 1907


Page 283



       MRS. EDDY’S ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF APPOINTMENT
       AS FONDATEUR OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR
3             INTERNATIONAL CONCILIATION


       FIRST CHURCH OP CHRIST, SCIENTIST, NEW YORK CITY,
       MR. JOHN D. HIGGINS, Clerk


6     My Beloved Brethren: — Your appointment of me as
       Fondateur of the Association for International Concilia-
       tion is most gracious.

9     To aid in this holy purpose is the leading impetus of
       my life. Many years have I prayed and labored for the
       consummation of “on earth peace, good will toward
12    men.” May the fruits of said grand Association, preg-
       nant with peace, find their birthright in divine Science.

       Right thoughts and deeds are the sovereign remedies
15    for all earth’s woe. Sin is its own enemy. Right has its
       recompense, even though it be betrayed. Wrong may be
       a man’s highest idea of right until his grasp of goodness
18    grows stronger. It is always safe to be just.

       When pride, self, and human reason reign, injustice is
       rampant.

21    Individuals, as nations, unite harmoniously on the basis
       of justice, and this is accomplished when self is lost in
       Love — or God’s own plan of salvation. “To do justly,
24    and to love mercy, and to walk humbly” is the stand-
       ard of Christian Science.

       Human law is right only as it patterns the divine.
27    Consolation and peace are based on the enlightened sense
       of God’s government.

       Lured by fame, pride, or gold, success is danger-
30    ous, but the choice of folly never fastens on the good


Page 284


1     or the great. Because of my rediscovery of Chris-
       tian Science, and honest efforts (however meagre)
3     to help human purpose and peoples, you may have
       accorded me more than is deserved, — but ’tis sweet
       to be remembered.

6                     Lovingly yours,
       MARY BAKER EDDY
       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
9        April 22, 1907


       [Concord (N. H.) Daily Patriot]



       A CORRECTION


12    Dear Editor: — In the issue of your good paper, the
       Patriot, May 21, when referring to the Memorial service
       of the E. E. Sturtevant Post held in my church building,
15    it read, “It is said to be the first time in the history of
       the church in this country that such an event has oc-
       curred.” In your next issue please correct this mistake.
18    Since my residence in Concord, 1889, the aforesaid
       Memorial service has been held annually in some church
       in Concord, N. H.

21    When the Veterans indicated their desire to assemble
       in my church building, I consented thereto only as other
       churches had done. But here let me say that I am
24    absolutely and religiously opposed to war, whereas I do
       believe implicitly in the full efficacy of divine Love to
       conciliate by arbitration all quarrels between nations
27    and peoples.

       MARY BAKER EDDY
       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.,
30            May 28, 1907


Page 285



       TO A STUDENT


       Dear Student: — Please accept my thanks for your
3     kind invitation, on behalf of the Civic League of San
       Francisco, to attend the Industrial Peace Conference,
       and accept my hearty congratulations.

6     I cannot spare the time requisite to meet with you;
       but I rejoice with you in all your wise endeavors for
       industrial, civic, and national peace. Whatever adorns
9     Christianity crowns the great purposes of life and demon-
       strates the Science of being. Bloodshed, war, and op-
       pression belong to the darker ages, and shall be relegated
12    to oblivion.

       It is a matter for rejoicing that the best, bravest, most
       cultured men and women of this period unite with us in
15    the grand object embodied in the Association for Inter-
       national Conciliation.

       In Revelation 2: 26, St. John says: “And he that
18    overcometh, and keepeth my works unto the end, to
       him will I give power over the nations.” In the words
       of St. Paul, I repeat: —

21    “And they neither found me in the temple disputing
       with any man, neither raising up the people, neither
       in the synagogues, nor in the city: neither can they
24    prove the things whereof they now accuse me. But
       this I confess unto thee, that after the way which
       they call heresy, so worship I the God of my fathers,
27    believing all things which are written in the law and in
       the prophets.”

       Most sincerely yours,
30                       MARY BAKER EDDY
       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.


Page 286



       [The Christian Science Journal, May, 1908]


       WAR


3     For many years I have prayed daily that there be
       no more war, no more barbarous slaughtering of our
       fellow-beings; prayed that all the peoples on earth and
6     the islands of the sea have one God, one Mind; love
       God supremely, and love their neighbor as themselves.
       National disagreements can be, and should be, arbi-
9     trated wisely, fairly; and fully settled.

       It is unquestionable, however, that at this hour
       the armament of navies is necessary, for the purpose
12    of preventing war and preserving peace among nations.

Chapter 14 — Contributions to Newspapers and Magazines

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Page 264



1                    [Boston Herald, May 5, 1900]

       A WORD IN DEFENCE


3     I EVEN hope that those who are kind enough to
       speak well of me may do so honestly and not too
       earnestly, and this seldom, until mankind learn more of
6     my meaning and can speak justly of my living.


       [Boston Globe, November 29, 1900]



       CHRISTIAN SCIENCE THANKS


9     On the threshold of the twentieth century, will you
       please send through the Globe to the people of New
       England, which is the birthplace of Thanksgiving Day, a
12    sentiment on what the last Thanksgiving Day of the
       nineteenth century should signify to all mankind?



       Mrs. Eddy’s Response


15    New England’s last Thanksgiving Day of this century
       signifies to the minds of men the Bible better understood
       and Truth and Love made more practical; the First
18    Commandment of the Decalogue more imperative, and


Page 265


1     “Love thy neighbor as thyself” more possible and
       pleasurable.

3     It signifies that love, unselfed, knocks more loudly than
       ever before at the heart of humanity and that it finds
       admittance; that revelation, spiritual voice and vision,
6     are less subordinate to material sight and sound and more
       apparent to reason; that evil flourishes less, invests less
       in trusts, loses capital, and is bought at par value; that
9     the Christ-spirit will cleanse the earth of human gore;
       that civilization, peace between nations, and the brother-
       hood of man should be established, and justice plead not
12    vainly in behalf of the sacred rights of individuals, peoples,
       and nations.

       It signifies that the Science of Christianity has dawned
15    upon human thought to appear full-orbed in millennial
       glory; that scientific religion and scientific therapeutics
       are improving the morals and increasing the longevity
18    of mankind, are mitigating and destroying sin, disease,
       and death; that religion and materia medica should be
       no longer tyrannical and proscriptive; that divine Love,
21    impartial and universal, as understood in divine Sci-
       ence, forms the coincidence of the human and divine,
       which fulfils the saying of our great Master, “The king-
24    dom of God is within you;” that the atmosphere of the
       human mind, when cleansed of self and permeated with
       divine Love, will reflect this purified subjective state in
27    clearer skies, less thunderbolts, tornadoes, and extremes of
       heat and cold; that agriculture, manufacture, commerce,
       and wealth should be governed by honesty, indus-
30    try, and justice, reaching out to all classes and peoples.
       For these signs of the times we thank our Father-
       Mother God.


Page 266



       [New York World, December, 1900]


       INSUFFICIENT FREEDOM


3     To my sense, the most imminent dangers confronting
       the coming century are: the robbing of people of life and
       liberty under the warrant of the Scriptures; the claims of
6     politics and of human power, industrial slavery, and insuf-
       ficient freedom of honest competition; and ritual, creed,
       and trusts in place of the Golden Rule, “Whatsoever ye
9     would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them.”



       [Concord (N. H.) Monitor, July, 1902]


       CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND THE TIMES


12    Your article on the decrease of students in the semi-
       naries and the consequent vacancies occurring in the
       pulpits, points unmistakably to the “signs of the times”
15    of which Jesus spoke. This flux and flow in one direc-
       tion, so generally apparent, tends in one ultimate — the
       final spiritualization of all things, of all codes, modes,
18    hypotheses, of man and the universe. How can it be
       otherwise, since God is Spirit and the origin of all that
       really is, and since this great fact is to be verified by the
21    spiritualization of all?

       Since 1877, these special “signs of the times” have in-
       creased year by year. My book, “Science and Health
24    with Key to the Scriptures,” was published in 1875.
       Note, if you please, that many points in theology and
       materia medica, at that date undisturbed, are now agitated,
27    modified, and disappearing, and the more spiritual modes
       and significations are adopted.

       It is undoubtedly true that Christian Science is destined


Page 267


1     to become the one and the only religion and therapeutics
       on this planet. And why not, since Christianity is fully
3     demonstrated to be divine Science? Nothing can be cor-
       rect and continue forever which is not divinely scientific,
       for Science is the law of the Mind that is God, who is
6     the originator of all that really is. The Scripture reads:
       “All things were made by Him; and without Him was
       not any thing made that was made.” Here let us re-
9     member that God is not the Alpha and Omega of man
       and the universe; He is supreme, infinite, the great for-
       ever, the eternal Mind that hath no beginning and no
12    end, no Alpha and no Omega.



       [New York American, February, 1905]


       HEAVEN


15    Is heaven spiritual?

       Heaven is spiritual. Heaven is harmony, — infinite,
       boundless bliss. The dying or the departed enter heaven
18    in proportion to their progress, in proportion to their fit-
       ness to partake of the quality and the quantity of heaven.
       One individual may first awaken from his dream of life
21    in matter with a sense of music; another with that of
       relief from fear or suffering, and still another with a bit-
       ter sense of lost opportunities and remorse. Heaven is
24    the reign of divine Science. Material thought tends to
       obscure spiritual understanding, to darken the true con-
       ception of man’s divine Principle, Love, wherein and
27    whereby soul is emancipate and environed with ever-
       lasting Life. Our great Teacher hath said: “Behold, the
       kingdom of God is within you” — within man’s spiritual
30    understanding of all the divine modes, means, forms, ex-
       pression, and manifestation of goodness and happiness.


Page 268



       [Boston Herald, March 5, 1905]


       PREVENTION AND CURE OF DIVORCE


3     The nuptial vow should never be annulled so long as
       the morale of marriage is preserved. The frequency of
       divorce shows that the imperative nature of the mar-
6     riage relation is losing ground, — hence that some funda-
       mental error is engrafted on it. What is this error?
       If the motives of human affection are right, the affec-
9     tions are enduring and achieving. What God hath joined
       together, man cannot sunder.
       Divorce and war should be exterminated according to
12    the Principle of law and gospel, — the maintenance of
       individual rights, the justice of civil codes, and the power
       of Truth uplifting the motives of men. Two command-
15    ments of the Hebrew Decalogue, “Thou shalt not commit
       adultery” and “Thou shalt not kill,” obeyed, will elimi-
       nate divorce and war. On what hath not a “Thus saith
18    the Lord,” I am as silent as the dumb centuries without
       a living Divina.
       This time-world flutters in my thought as an unreal
21    shadow, and I can only solace the sore ills of mankind by
       a lively battle with “the world, the flesh and the devil,”
       in which Love is the liberator and gives man the victory
24    over himself. Truth, canonized by life and love, lays
       the axe at the root of all evil, lifts the curtain on the
       Science of being, the Science of wedlock, of living and of
27    loving, and harmoniously ascends the scale of life. Look
       high enough, and you see the heart of humanity warming
       and winning. Look long enough, and you see male and
30    female one — sex or gender eliminated; you see the des-
       ignation man meaning woman as well, and you see the


Page 269


1     whole universe included in one infinite Mind and reflected
       in the intelligent compound idea, image or likeness, called
3     man, showing forth the infinite divine Principle, Love,
       called God, — man wedded to the Lamb, pledged to inno-
       cence, purity, perfection. Then shall humanity have
6     learned that “they which shall be accounted worthy to
       obtain that world, and the resurrection from the dead,
       neither marry, nor are given in marriage: neither can
9     they die any more: for they are equal unto the angels;
       and are the children of God.” (Luke 20: 35, 36.) This,
       therefore, is Christ’s plan of salvation from divorce.


12       All are but parts of one stupendous whole,
       Whose body nature is, and God the Soul.
       — POPE



15                          [The Independent, November, 1906]


       HARVEST


       God hath thrust in the sickle, and He is separating the
18    tares from the wheat. This hour is molten in the furnace
       of Soul. Its harvest song is world-wide, world-known,
       world-great. The vine is bringing forth its fruit; the
21    beams of right have healing in their light. The windows
       of heaven are sending forth their rays of reality — even
       Christian Science, pouring out blessing for cursing, and
24    rehearsing: “I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes,
       and he shall not destroy the fruits of your ground.”
       “Prove me now herewith, saith the Lord of hosts, if I
27    will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you
       out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to
       receive it.”

30    The lie and the liar are self-destroyed. Truth is im-


Page 270


1     mortal. “Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: . . . for so
       persecuted they the prophets which were before you.”
3     The cycle of good obliterates the epicycle of evil.

       Because of the magnitude of their spiritual import, we
       repeat the signs of these times. In 1905, the First Con-
6     gregational Church, my first religious home in this capital
       city of Concord, N. H., kindly invited me to its one hun-
       dred and seventy-fifth anniversary; the leading editors
9     and newspapers of my native State congratulate me; the
       records of my ancestry attest honesty and valor. Divine
       Love, nearer my consciousness than before, saith: I am
12    rewarding your waiting, and “thy people shall be my
       people.”

       Let error rage and imagine a vain thing. Mary Baker
15    Eddy is not dead, and the words of those who say that she
       is are the father of their wish. Her life is proven under
       trial, and evidences “as thy days, so shall thy strength be.”
18    Those words of our dear, departing Saviour, breathing
       love for his enemies, fill my heart: “Father, forgive them;
       for they know not what they do.” My writings heal the
21    sick, and I thank God that for the past forty years I
       have returned good for evil, and that I can appeal to
       Him as my witness to the truth of this statement.

24    What we love determines what we are. I love the
       prosperity of Zion, be it promoted by Catholic, by Prot-
       estant, or by Christian Science, which anoints with
27    Truth, opening the eyes of the blind and healing the sick.
       I would no more quarrel with a man because of his religion
       than I would because of his art. The divine Principle of
30    Christian Science will ultimately be seen to control both
       religion and art in unity and harmony. God is Spirit,
       and “they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit


Page 271


1     and in truth.” If, as the Scriptures declare, God, Spirit,
       is infinite, matter and material sense are null, and there
3     are no vertebrata, mollusca, or radiata.

       When I wrote “Science and Health with Key to the
       Scriptures,” I little understood all that I indited; but
6     when I practised its precepts, healing the sick and reform-
       ing the sinner, then I learned the truth of what I had
       written. It is of comparatively little importance what a
9     man thinks or believes he knows; the good that a man does
       is the one thing needful and the sole proof of rightness.



       [The Evening Press, Grand Rapids, Mich., August, 1907]


       MRS. EDDY DESCRIBES HER HUMAN IDEAL


       In a modest, pleasantly situated home in the city of
       Concord, N. H., lives at eighty-six years of age the most
15    discussed woman in all the world. This lady with sweet
       smile and snowy hair is Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, Founder
       and Leader of Christian Science, beloved of thousands
18    of believers and followers of the thought that has made
       her famous. It was to this aged woman of world-wide
       renown that the editor of The Evening Press addressed
21    this question, requesting the courtesy of a reply: —

       “What is nearest and dearest to your heart to-day?”

       Mrs. Eddy’s reply will be read with deep interest by all
24    Americans, who, whatever their religious beliefs, cannot
       fail to be impressed by the personality of this remarkable
       woman.



       Mrs. Eddy’s Answer


       Editor of The Evening Press: — To your courtesy and
       to your question permit me to say that, insomuch as I
30    know myself, what is “nearest and dearest” to my heart


Page 272


1     is an honest man or woman — one who steadfastly and
       actively strives for perfection, one who leavens the loaf
3     of life with justice, mercy, truth, and love.

       Goodness is greatness, and the logic of events pushes
       onward the centuries; hence the Scripture, “The law of
6     the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me [man] free
       from the law of sin and death.”

       This predicate and ultimate of scientific being presents,
9     however, no claim that man is equal to God, for the finite
       is not the altitude of the infinite.

       The real man was, is, and ever shall be the divine ideal,
12    that is, God’s image and likeness; and Christian Science
       reveals the divine Principle, the example, the rule, and
       the demonstration of this idealism.

15                    Sincerely yours,
       MARY BAKER EDDY


       PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H.



       [Cosmopolitan, November, 1907]


       YOUTH AND YOUNG MANHOOD


       EDITOR’S NOTE. — The Cosmopolitan presents this month to its
21    readers a facsimile of an article sent to us by Mrs. Eddy, with the
       corrections on the manuscript reproduced in her own handwriting.
       Not only Mrs. Eddy’s own devoted followers, but the public gen-
24    erally, will be interested in this communication from the extraordi-
       nary woman who, nearly eighty-seven years of age, plays so great
       a part in the world and leads with such conspicuous success her very
27    great following.

       Mrs. Eddy writes very rarely for any publications outside of the
       Christian Science periodicals, and our readers will be interested in
30    this presentation of the thought of a mind that has had so much
       influence on this generation.

       The Cosmopolitan gives no editorial indorsement to the teachings


Page 273


1     of Christian Science, it has no religious opinions or predilections to
       put before its readers. This manuscript is presented simply as an
3     interesting and remarkable proof of Mrs. Eddy’s ability in old age
       to vindicate in her own person the value of her teachings.

       Certainly, Christian Scientists, enthusiastic in their belief, are
6     fortunate in being able to point to a Leader far beyond the allotted
       years of man, emerging triumphantly from all attacks upon her, and
       guiding with remarkable skill, determination, and energy a very
9     great organization that covers practically the civilized world.
“        King David, the Hebrew bard, sang, “I have been
       young, and now am old; yet have I not seen the right-
12    eous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread.”

       I for one accept his wise deduction, his ultimate or
       spiritual sense of thinking, feeling, and acting, and its
15    reward. This sense of rightness acquired by experience
       and wisdom, should be early presented to youth and to
       manhood in order to forewarn and forearm humanity.

18    The ultimatum of life here and hereafter is utterly
       apart from a material or personal sense of pleasure, pain,
       joy, sorrow, life, and death. The truth of life, or life in
21    truth, is a scientific knowledge that is portentous; and
       is won only by the spiritual understanding of Life as God,
       good, ever-present good, and therefore life eternal.

24    You will agree with me that the material body is mortal,
       but Soul is immortal; also that the five personal senses
       are perishable: they lapse and relapse, come and go, until
27    at length they are consigned to dust. But say you,
       “Man awakes from the dream of death in possession of
       the five personal senses, does he not?” Yes, because
30    death alone does not awaken man in God’s image
       and likeness. The divine Science of Life alone gives
“        Copyright, 1907, by Mary Baker G. Eddy. Renewed, 1935.


Page 274


1     the true sense of life and of righteousness, and demon-
       strates the Principle of life eternal; even the Life that
3     is Soul apart from the so-called life of matter or the
       material senses.

       Death alone does not absolve man from a false material
6     sense of life, but goodness, holiness, and love do this, and
       so consummate man’s being with the harmony of heaven;
       the omnipotence, omnipresence, and omniscience of Life,
9     even its all-power, all-presence, all-Science.

       Dear reader, right thinking, right feeling, and right
       acting — honesty, purity, unselfishness — in youth tend
12    to success, intellectuality, and happiness in manhood.

       To begin rightly enables one to end rightly, and thus it is
       that one achieves the Science of Life, demonstrates health,
15    holiness, and immortality.



       [Boston Herald, April, 1908]


       MRS. EDDY SENDS THANKS


18    Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy has sent the following to the
       Herald: —
       Will the dear Christian Scientists accept my thanks
21    for their magnificent gifts, and allow me to say that I am
       not fond of an abundance of material presents; but I
       am cheered and blessed when beholding Christian healing,
24    unity among brethren, and love to God and man; this
       is my crown of rejoicing, for it demonstrates Christian
       Science.

27    The Psalmist sang, “That thy way may be known
       upon earth, thy saving health among all nations.”


Page 275



1             [Minneapolis (Minn.) News]


       UNIVERSAL FELLOWSHIP


3     Christian Science can and does produce universal
       fellowship. As the sequence of divine Love it explains
       love, it lives love, it demonstrates love. The human,
6     material, so-called senses do not perceive this fact until
       they are controlled by divine Love; hence the Scripture,
       “Be still, and know that I am God.”


9     BROOKLINE, MASS.,


       May 1, 1908



       [New York Herald]


       MRS. EDDY’S OWN DENIAL THAT SHE IS ILL
       Permit me to say, the report that I am sick (and I
       trust the desire thereof) is dead, and should be buried.
15    Whereas the fact that I am well and keenly alive to the
       truth of being — the Love that is Life — is sure and stead-
       fast. I go out in my carriage daily, and have omitted
18    my drive but twice since I came to Massachusetts.
       Either my work, the demands upon my time at home, or
       the weather, is all that prevents my daily drive.

21    Working and praying for my dear friends’ and my dear
       enemies’ health, happiness, and holiness, the true sense
       of being goes on.

24    Doing unto others as we would that they do by us, is
       immortality’s self. Intrepid, self-oblivious love fulfils the
       law and is self-sustaining and eternal. With white-winged
27    charity brooding over all, spiritually understood and de-
       monstrated, let us unite in one Te Deum of praise.


       BOX G, BROOKLINE, MASS.,
30       May 15, 1908


Page 276



       [Christian Science Sentinel, May 16, 1908]


       TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN


3     Since Mrs. Eddy is watched, as one watches a criminal
       or a sick person, she begs to say, in her own behalf, that
       she is neither; therefore to be criticized or judged by
6     either a daily drive or a dignified stay at home, is super-
       fluous. When accumulating work requires it, or because
       of a preference to remain within doors she omits her
9     drive, do not strain at gnats or swallow camels over
       it, but try to be composed and resigned to the shock-
       ing fact that she is minding her own business, and rec-
12    ommends this surprising privilege to all her dear friends
       and enemies.

       MARY BAKER EDDY



15            [Boston Post, November, 1908]


       POLITICS


       Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy has always believed that those
18    who are entitled to vote should do so, and she has also
       believed that in such matters no one should seek to dictate
       the actions of others.

21    In reply to a number of requests for an expression of
       her political views, she has given out this statement: —


       I am asked, “What are your politics?” I have none, in
24    reality, other than to help support a righteous government;
       to love God supremely, and my neighbor as myself.






Love is the liberator.