Trustees under the Will of Mary
Baker G. Eddy
Boston, U.S.A.
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BELOVED brethren, another year of God's
loving providence for His people in times of persecution has |
3 |
marked the history of Christian Science.
With no special effort to achieve this result, our church communicants
constantly increase in number, unity, steadfastness. Two |
6 |
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 |
9 |
seventy-eight members; while our branch
churches are multiplying everywhere and blossoming as the rose. Evil,
though combined in formidable conspiracy, is made to |
12 |
glorify God. The Scripture declares, "The
wrath of man shall praise Thee: the remainder of wrath shalt Thou
restrain." |
15 |
Whatever seems calculated to displace or
discredit the ordinary systems of religious beliefs and opinions
wrest- ling only with material observation, has always met with |
18 |
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 |
3 |
it guides.
To live and let
live, without clamor for distinction or recognition; to wait on divine
Love; to write truth first |
6 |
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, |
9 |
is on the way, and Truth makes haste to
meet and to wel- come it. It is purifying all peoples, religions, ethics,
and learning, and making the children our teachers. |
2 |
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 |
5 |
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- |
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lightening the world with the glory of
untrammelled truth. The present modifications in ecclesiasticism are an
out- come of progress; dogmatism, relegated to the past, gives |
21 |
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; |
24 |
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 doc- |
27 |
trine; 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 |
30 |
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.
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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 |
6 |
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 |
9 |
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 |
12 |
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 |
15 |
occupation of that pearl of the ocean, has
so improved her public school system that her dusky children are
learning to read and write. |
18 |
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 |
21 |
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 |
24 |
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 oppres- |
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sion; 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 |
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first lie and leap into perdition began
with "Believe in
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me." Competition in commerce, deceit in
councils, dis- honor in nations, dishonesty in trusts, begin with "Who |
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shall be greatest?" I again repeat, Follow
your Leader, only so far as she follows Christ.
I cordially
congratulate our Board of Lectureship, and |
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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 |
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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 |
12 |
our words.
My subject to-day
embraces the First Commandment in the Hebrew Decalogue, and the new
commandment in |
15 |
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 |
21 |
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, |
24 |
and future.
Alternately
transported and alarmed by abstruse problems of Scripture, we are liable
to turn from them as |
27 |
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, |
3 |
- so the pagan philosophies and tribal
religions of yester- day but foreshadowed the spiritual dawn of the
twentieth century - religion parting with its materiality. |
6 |
Christian Science stills all distress over
doubtful inter- pretations of the Bible; it lights the fires of the
Holy Ghost, and floods the world with the baptism of Jesus. |
9 |
It is this ethereal flame, this almost
unconceived light of divine Love, that heaven husbands in the First
Com- mandment. |
12 |
For man to be thoroughly subordinated to
this com- mandment, God must be intelligently considered and
understood. The ever-recurring human question and |
15 |
wonder, What is God? can never be answered
satisfac- torily by human hypotheses or philosophy. Divine meta-
physics and St. John have answered this great question |
18 |
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 |
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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 |
24 |
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 doc- |
27 |
trine, 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 |
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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 im- possible to have aught unlike the infinite.
|
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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 knowl- |
6 |
edge, 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 de- |
9 |
stroy 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 |
12 |
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 |
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creation, yea, something that is not of
God. The Chris- tianization of mortals, whereby the mortal concept and
all it includes is obliterated, lets in the divine sense of |
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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 |
21 |
devout desire, virtually petition, Make me
the image and likeness of divine Love.
Through Christ,
Truth, divine metaphysics points the |
24 |
way, demonstrates heaven here, - the
struggle over, and victory on the side of Truth. In the degree that man
be- comes spiritually minded he becomes Godlike. St. Paul |
27 |
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, |
30 |
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 |
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God. It accords all to God, Spirit, and
His infinite mani- festations of love - man and the universe.
In the first chapter
of Genesis, matter, sin, disease, and |
6 |
death enter not into the category of
creation or conscious- ness. Minus this spiritual understanding of
Scripture, of God and His creation, neither philosophy, nature, nor |
9 |
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 |
12 |
prefix to the words potence, presence,
science, signifies all- power, all-presence, all-science. Use these
words to define God, and nothing is left to consciousness but Love,
without |
15 |
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 |
18 |
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 |
21 |
entertained.
LOVE ONE ANOTHER
Here we proceed to
another Scriptural passage which |
24 |
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 |
27 |
called his disciples' special attention to
his new command- ment. 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 |
3 |
commands man to love as Jesus loved.
The law and the
gospel concur, and both will be ful- filled. Is it necessary to say that
the likeness of God, Spirit, |
6 |
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 |
9 |
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 |
12 |
by love and good will towards men. The
coincidence be- tween the law and the gospel, between the old and the
new commandment, confirms the fact that God and Love are |
5 |
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 |
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being Christian Scientists except we
possess this inspira- tion, and its power to heal and to save. The energy
that saves sinners and heals the sick is divine: and Love is the |
21 |
Principle thereof. Scientific Christianity
works out the rule of spiritual love; it makes man active, it
prompts per- petual goodness, for the ego, or I, goes to the Father, |
24 |
whereby man is Godlike. Love,
purity, meekness, co- exist in divine Science. Lust, hatred, revenge,
coincide in material sense. Christ Jesus reckoned man in Science, |
27 |
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 |
30 |
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 |
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- 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 |
6 |
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 |
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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 |
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Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me
free from the law of sin and death." Loving chords set discords in har-
mony. Every condition implied by the great Master, |
15 |
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. |
18 |
The unity of God and man is not the dream
of a heated brain; it is the spirit of the healing Christ, that dwelt for-
ever in the bosom of the Father, and should abide forever |
21 |
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 |
24 |
opened my closed eyes.
Did the age's
thinkers laugh long over Morse's dis- covery of telegraphy? Did they
quarrel long with the |
27 |
inventor of a steam engine? Is it cause for
bitter com- ment and personal abuse that an individual has met the
need of mankind with some new-old truth that counteracts |
30 |
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 |
3 |
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, |
6 |
"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 foot- |
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prints of a reformer are stained with
blood. Rev. Hugh Black writes truly: "The birthplace of civilization is not
Athens, but Calvary." |
12 |
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 ten- |
5 |
dency 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 |
18 |
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, |
21 |
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 |
24 |
sole proof that Christ, Truth, is the way.
The old and recurring martyrdom of God's best witnesses is the in-
firmity of evil, the modus operandi of human error, |
27 |
carnality, opposition to God and His power
in man. Persecuting a reformer is like sentencing a man for com-
municating with foreign nations in other ways than by |
30 |
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 |
3 |
for a better country to wander on the
shores of time dis- appointed travellers, tossed to and fro by adverse
circum- stances, inevitably subject to sin, disease, and death. |
6 |
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 |
9 |
to heaven.
Envy or abuse of him
who, having a new idea or a more spiritual understanding of God, hastens to
help on his |
12 |
fellow-mortals, is neither Christian nor
Science. If a postal service, a steam engine, a submarine cable, a
wire- less telegraph, each in turn has helped mankind, how |
15 |
much more is accomplished when the race is
helped on- ward by a new-old message from God, even the knowl- edge of
salvation from sin, disease, and death. |
18 |
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, advanc- |
21 |
ing Christian, and this is thy Lord's
benediction upon it: "Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and per-
secute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you |
24 |
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." |
27 |
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 |
30 |
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. |
3 |
Here Christian Science intervenes, explains
these doctrinal points, cancels the disagreement, and settles the whole
ques- tion on the basis that Christ is the Messiah, the true spir- |
6 |
itual idea, and this ideal of God is
now and forever, here and everywhere. The Jew
who believes in the First Command- ment is a monotheist, he has one
omnipresent God: thus |
9 |
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 |
12 |
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 |
15 |
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 |
18 |
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." |
21 |
Here allow me to interpolate some matters
of business that ordinarily find no place in my Message. It is a privi-
lege to acquaint communicants with the financial transac- |
24 |
tions 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 |
27 |
who annually favor us with their presence
on Communion Sunday.
When founding the
institutions and early movements of |
30 |
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 |
3 |
and our Cause my only incentives, and each
success in- curred a sharper fire from enmity.
During the last
seven years I have transferred to The |
6 |
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 Sci- |
9 |
ence 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 |
12 |
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 |
15 |
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; |
18 |
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 |
21 |
my counsel advertising the property in the
Boston news- papers,and giving opportunity for those who had
previously negotiated for the property to redeem the land by paying |
24 |
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 |
27 |
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 |
30 |
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 |
3 |
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. |
6 |
I suggest as a motto for every Christian
Scientist, - a living and life-giving spiritual shield against the powers
of darkness, -
"Great not
like Caesar, stained with blood, But only great as I am good."
The only genuine success possible for any
Christian - and |
12 |
the only success I have ever achieved - has
been accom- plished on this solid basis. The remarkable growth and
prosperity of Christian Science are its legitimate fruit. A |
15 |
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 |
18 |
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 achieve- |
21 |
ment has been blazoned on the forefront of
the world and recorded in heaven. The popular philosophies and reli-
gions have afforded me neither favor nor protection in the |
24 |
great struggle. Therefore, I ask: What has
shielded and prospered preeminently our great Cause, but the out-
stretched arm of infinite Love? This pregnant question, |
27 |
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 con- tained threats to blow up the hall where I preached; yet I |
3 |
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. |
6 |
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 strug- |
9 |
gled 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 |
12 |
were days wherein the connection between
justice and be- ing approached the mythical. Before entering upon my
great life-work, my income from literary sources was ample, |
15 |
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 |
18 |
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. |
21 |
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 |
24 |
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 |
27 |
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 |
30 |
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 there- after Miss Dorcas Rawson of Lynn brought to me
Wyclif's |
3 |
translation of the New Testament, and
pointed out that identical phrase, "Science and Health," which is rendered
in the Authorized Version "knowledge of salvation." |
6 |
This was my first inkling of Wyclif's use
of that combina- tion of words, or of their rendering. To-day I am the
happy possessor of a copy of Wyclif, the invaluable gift of two |
9 |
Christian Scientists, - Mr. W. Nicholas
Miller, K. C., and Mrs. F. L. Miller, of London, England.
GODLIKENESS |
12 |
St. Paul writes: "Follow peace with all
men, and holi- ness, without which no man shall see the Lord." To attain
peace and holiness is to recognize the divine presence and |
15 |
allness. Jesus said: "I am the way." Kindle
the watch- fires of unselfed love, and they throw a light upon the un-
complaining agony in the life of our Lord; they open the |
18 |
enigmatical seals of the angel, standing in
the sun, a glori- fied spiritual idea of the ever-present God - in whom
there is no darkness, but all is light, and man's immortal being. |
21 |
The meek might, sublime patience, wonderful
works, and opening not his mouth in self-defense against false wit-
nesses, express the life of Godlikeness. Fasting, feasting, |
24 |
or penance, - merely outside forms of
religion, - fail to elucidate Christianity: they reach not the heart nor
reno- vate it; they never destroy one iota of hypocrisy, pride, |
27 |
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. |
3 |
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 |
6 |
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 |
9 |
it, is in blessing others, and
self-immolation - they will obey both the old and the new commandment, and
receive the reward of obedience. |
12 |
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 |
15 |
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, |
18 |
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 |
21 |
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 |
24 |
His tenure, confers happiness: conscious
worth satisfies the hungry heart, and nothing else can. Consult thy
every- day life; take its answer as to thy aims, motives, fondest |
27 |
purposes, and this oracle of years will put
to flight all care for the world's soft flattery or its frown. Patience and
res- ignation are the pillars of peace that, like the sun beneath |
30 |
the horizon, cheer the heart susceptible
of light with prom-
Page
18 |
1 |
ised joy. Be faithful at the temple gate of
conscience, wakefully guard it; then thou wilt know when the thief |
3 |
cometh.
The constant
spectacle of sin thrust upon the pure sense of the immaculate Jesus made
him a man of sorrows. He |
6 |
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- |
9 |
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 |
12 |
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 |
15 |
least of these my brethren, ye have done it
unto me." "Love one another, as I have loved you." No estrange- ment,
no emulation, no deceit, enters into the heart that |
18 |
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 |
21 |
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 |
24 |
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 |
27 |
him, ended in the downfall of genuine
Christianity, about the year 325, and the violent death of all his
disciples save one. |
30 |
The nature of Jesus made him keenly alive
to the
Page
19 |
1 |
injustice, ingratitude, treachery, and
brutality that he received. Yet behold his love! So soon as he burst
the |
3 |
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, |
6 |
called one a "fool" - then, lifting up his
hands and bless- ing them, he rose from earth to heaven.
The Christian
Scientist cherishes no resentment; he |
9 |
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 |
12 |
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 |
15 |
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, |
18 |
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. |
21 |
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 |
24 |
besets thy path? - a spiritual behest, in
reversion, awaits you.
The great Master
triumphed in furnace fires. Then, |
27 |
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 |
30 |
drop in the cup that our Father permits
us. Christ
Page
20 |
1 |
walketh over the wave; on the ocean of
events, mounting the billow or going down into the deep, the voice of
him |
3 |
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 |
6 |
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 |
9 |
faith and good works with the fulness of
divine Love."
'T was God
who gave that word of might Which swelled creation's lay, -
|
12 |
"Let there
be light, and there was light," - That swept the clouds away; 'T was
Love whose finger traced aloud |
15 |
A bow of
promise on the cloud.
Beloved brethren,
are you ready to join me in this prop- osition, namely, in 1902 to begin
omitting our annual |
18 |
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, |
21 |
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 meet- |
24 |
ing you all occasionally in the
metropolis of my native State, whose good people welcome Christian
Scientists. |