Mary Baker Eddy
Christian Science ~ 16 books by Mary Baker Eddy
5 ~ Unity of Good ~ Chpt 12 ~ Credo ~ Subtitles
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1 | 1 | 48 | Do you believe in God? |
SHOW ALL | Do you believe in God? 6 I believe more in Him than do most Christians, for I have no faith in any other thing or being. He sustains my individuality. Nay, more — He is my individuality 9 and my Life. Because He lives, I live. He heals all my ills, destroys my iniquities, deprives death of its sting, and robs the grave of its victory. 12 To me God is All. He is best understood as Supreme Being, as infinite and conscious Life, as the affectionate Father and Mother of all He creates; but this divine 15 Parent no more enters into His creation than the human father enters into his child. His creation is not the Ego, but the reflection of the Ego. The Ego is God Himself, 18 the infinite Soul. I believe that of which I am conscious through the understanding, however faintly able to demonstrate Truth 21 and Love. |
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2 | 2 | 49 | Do you believe in man? |
SHOW ALL | Unity of Good – Credo 1 Do you believe in man? I believe in the individual man, for I understand that 3 man is as definite and eternal as God, and that man is coexistent with God, as being the eternally divine idea. This is demonstrable by the simple appeal to human 6 consciousness. But I believe less in the sinner, wrongly named man. The more I understand true humanhood, the more I see it 9 to be sinless, — as ignorant of sin as is the perfect Maker. To me the reality and substance of being are good, and nothing else. Through the eternal reality of existence I 12 reach, in thought, a glorified consciousness of the only living God and the genuine man. So long as I hold evil in consciousness, I cannot be wholly good. 15 You cannot simultaneously serve the mammon of materiality and the God of spirituality. There are not two realities of being, two opposite states of existence. 18 One should appear real to us, and the other unreal, or we lose the Science of being. Standing in no basic Truth, we make "the worse appear the better reason," and the un- 21 real masquerades as the real, in our thought. Evil is without Principle. Being destitute of Principle, it is devoid of Science. Hence it is undemonstrable, with- 24 out proof. This gives me a clearer right to call evil a nega- tion, than to affirm it to be something which God sees and knows, but which He straightway commands mortals to 27 shun or relinquish, lest it destroy them. This notion of Unity of Good – Credo 50 1 the destructibility of Mind implies the possibility of its defilement; but how can infinite Mind be defiled? |
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3 | 3 | 50 | Do you believe in matter? |
SHOW ALL | 3 Do you believe in matter? I believe in matter only as I believe in evil, that it is something to be denied and destroyed to human conscious- 6 ness, and is unknown to the Divine. We should watch and pray that we enter not into the temptation of panthe- istic belief in matter as sensible mind. We should sub- 9 jugate it as Jesus did, by a dominant understanding of Spirit. At best, matter is only a phenomenon of mortal mind, 12 of which evil is the highest degree; but really there is no such thing as mortal mind, — though we are compelled to use the phrase in the endeavor to express the underlying 15 thought. In reality there are no material states or stages of con- sciousness, and matter has neither Mind nor sensation. 18 Like evil, it is destitute of Mind, for Mind is God. The less consciousness of evil or matter mortals have, the easier it is for them to evade sin, sickness, and death, 21 — which are but states of false belief, — and awake from the troubled dream, a consciousness which is without Mind or Maker. 24 Matter and evil cannot be conscious, and consciousness should not be evil. Adopt this rule of Science, and you will discover the material origin, growth, maturity, and 27 death of sinners, as the history of man, disappears, and the Unity of Good – Credo 51 1 everlasting facts of being appear, wherein man is the re- flection of immutable good. 3 Reasoning from false premises, — that Life is material, that immortal Soul is sinful, and hence that sin is eternal, — the reality of being is neither seen, felt, heard, nor un- 6 derstood. Human philosophy and human reason can never make one hair white or black, except in belief; whereas the demonstration of God, as in Christian Science, 9 is gained through Christ as perfect manhood. In pantheism the world is bereft of its God, whose place is ill supplied by the pretentious usurpation, by 12 matter, of the heavenly sovereignty. |
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4 | 4 | 51 | What say you of woman? |
SHOW ALL | What say you of woman? Man is the generic term for all humanity. Woman is 15 the highest species of man, and this word is the generic term for all women; but not one of all these individualities is an Eve or an Adam. They have none of them lost their 18 harmonious state, in the economy of God's wisdom and government. The Ego is divine consciousness, eternally radiating 21 throughout all space in the idea of God, good, and not of His opposite, evil. The Ego is revealed as Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; but the full Truth is found only in 24 divine Science, where we see God as Life, Truth, and Love. In the scientific relation of man to God, man is reflected not as human soul, but as the divine ideal, whose 27 Soul is not in body, but is God, — the divine Principle of Unity of Good – Credo 52 1 man. Hence Soul is sinless and immortal, in contradis- tinction to the supposition that there can be sinful souls or 3 immortal sinners. This Science of God and man is the Holy Ghost, which reveals and sustains the unbroken and eternal harmony 6 of both God and the universe. It is the kingdom of heaven, the ever-present reign of harmony, already with us. Hence the need that human consciousness should become divine, 9 in the coincidence of God and man, in contradistinction to the false consciousness of both good and evil, God and devil, — of man separated from his Maker. This is the 12 precious redemption of soul, as mortal sense, through Christ's immortal sense of Truth, which presents Truth's spiritual idea, man and woman. |
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5 | 5 | 52 | What say you of evil? |
SHOW ALL | 15 What say you of evil? God is not the so-called ego of evil; for evil, as a sup- position, is the father of itself, — of the material world, 18 the flesh, and the devil. From this falsehood arise the self-destroying elements of this world, its unkind forces, its tempests, lightnings, earthquakes, poisons, rabid 21 beasts, fatal reptiles, and mortals. Why are earth and mortals so elaborate in beauty, color, and form, if God has no part in them? By the law of 24 opposites. The most beautiful blossom is often poisonous, and the most beautiful mansion is sometimes the home of vice. The senses, not God, Soul, form the condition of 27 beautiful evil, and the supposed modes of self-conscious Unity of Good – Credo 53 1 matter, which make a beautiful lie. Now a lie takes its pattern from Truth, by reversing Truth. So evil and all 3 its forms are inverted good. God never made them; but the lie must say He made them, or it would not be evil. Being a lie, it would be truthful to call itself a lie; and by 6 calling the knowledge of evil good, and greatly to be de- sired, it constitutes the lie an evil. The reality and individuality of man are good and God- 9 made, and they are here to be seen and demonstrated; it is only the evil belief that renders them obscure. Matter and evil are anti-Christian, the antipodes of 12 Science. To say that Mind is material, or that evil is Mind, is a misapprehension of being, — a mistake which will die of its own delusion; for being self-contradictory, 15 it is also self-destructive. The harmony of man's being is not built on such false foundations, which are no more logical, philosophical, or scientific than would be the as- 18 sertion that the rule of addition is the rule of subtraction, and that sums done under both rules would have one quotient. 21 Man's individuality is not a mortal mind or sinner; or else he has lost his true individuality as a perfect child of God. Man's Father is not a mortal mind and a sinner; 24 or else the immortal and unerring Mind, God, is not his Father; but God is man's origin and loving Father, hence that saying of Jesus, "Call no man your father 27 upon the earth: for one is your Father, which is in heaven." Unity of Good – Credo 54 1 The bright gold of Truth is dimmed by the doctrine of mind in matter. 3 To say there is a false claim, called sickness, is to admit all there is of sickness; for it is nothing but a false claim. To be healed, one must lose sight of a false claim. If the 6 claim be present to the thought, then disease becomes as tangible as any reality. To regard sickness as a false claim, is to abate the fear of it; but this does not destroy 9 the so-called fact of the claim. In order to be whole, we must be insensible to every claim of error. As with sickness, so is it with sin. To admit that sin 12 has any claim whatever, just or unjust, is to admit a dan- gerous fact. Hence the fact must be denied; for if sin's claim be allowed in any degree, then sin destroys the 15 at-one-ment, or oneness with God, — a unity which sin recognizes as its most potent and deadly enemy. If God knows sin, even as a false claimant, then ac- 18 quaintance with that claimant becomes legitimate to mortals, and this knowledge would not be forbidden; but God forbade man to know evil at the very beginning, 21 when Satan held it up before man as something desirable and a distinct addition to human wisdom, because the knowledge of evil would make man a god, — a representa- 24 tion that God both knew and admitted the dignity of evil. Which is right, — God, who condemned the knowledge of sin and disowned its acquaintance, or the serpent, who 27 pushed that claim with the glittering audacity of diabolical and sinuous logic? |