God is Soul
God is Soul ~ Treatment
Soul ~ Term For God ~ Treatment
God is incorporeal, divine, supreme, infinite Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love. ~ SH 465 ~ Mary Baker Eddy
How does Soul & its related qualities connect and interact in one grand network with all 7 terms for God?
Treatment ~ MP3 ~ 34 min
Soul ~ Definitions
This Topic will be Added Later
Soul ~ words underlined by Helen Wright
Soul ~ Science and Health 14 ~ Recapitulation ~ What are Spirits and Souls?
Chapt 14 Recapitulation ~ Pgs 466:7-31 Article by Mary Baker Eddy Real versus Unreal Question. — What are spirits and souls? Answer. — To human belief, they are personalities constituted of mind and matter, life and death, truth and error, good and evil; but these contrasting pairs of terms represent contraries, as Christian Science reveals, which neither dwell together nor assimilate. Truth is immortal; error is mortal. Truth is limitless; error is limited. Truth is intelligent; error is non-intelligent. Moreover, Truth is real, and error is unreal. This last statement contains the point you will most reluctantly admit, although first and last it is the most important to understand. Mankind Redeemed The term souls or spirits is as improper as the termgods. Soul or Spirit signifies Deity and nothing else. There is no finite soul nor spirit. Soul or Spirit means only one Mind, and cannot be rendered in the plural. Heathen mythology and Jewish theology have perpetuated the fallacy that intelligence, soul, and life can be in matter; and idolatry and ritualism are the outcome of all man-made beliefs. The Science of Christianity comes with fan in hand to separate the chaff from the wheat. Science will declare God aright, and Christianity will demonstrate this declaration and its divine Principle, making mankind better physically, morally, and spiritually.
Soul As we go through the ideas characterizing Soul we again make a list of epitomes showing what Science and Health says or infers Soul is, what Soul does, what Soul has, what Soul deals with, and how Soul interprets itself, followed by an alphabetical listing of terms characterizing Soul. Soul ~ Your Divinity Revealed ~ Chpt 6
Subtitle List for Science and Health Topics for Soul
Pgs 300 to 302 - Subtitle List What Soul Is What Soul Does What Soul Has What Soul Deals With Soul Interprets Itself Words Mrs. Eddy Uses to Describe Soul Opposites to Soul Complete list of references on pgs 300-302
Soul ~ Quotations
Topic In This Section To Be Added Later
Soul ~ Identity ~ Network of 7 ~ 53 mins MP3
SCIENCE & HEALTH ~ Chpt 14 Recapitulation ~ Pg 475 Mary Baker Eddy PDF Question. — WHAT IS MAN ? Answer. — MAN IS NOT MATTER; he is not made up of brain, blood, bones, and other material elements.
FLESHLY FACTORS UNREAL The Scriptures inform us that man is made in the image and likeness of God. Matter is not that likeness. The likeness of Spirit cannot be so unlike Spirit. Man is spiritual and perfect; and because he is spiritual and perfect, he must be so understood in Christian Science. Man is idea, the image, of Love; he is not physique. He is the compound idea of God, including all right ideas; the generic term for all that reflects God's image and likeness; the conscious identity of being as found in Science, in which man is the reflection of God, or Mind, and therefore is eternal; that which has no separate mind from God; that which has not a single quality underived from Deity; that which possesses no life, intelligence, nor creative power of his own, but reflects spiritually all that belongs to his Maker. And God said: “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.” MAN UNFALLEN Man is incapable of sin, sickness, and death. The real man cannot depart from holiness, nor can God, by whom man is evolved, engender the capacity or freedom to sin. A mortal sinner is not God's man. Mortals are the counterfeits of immortals. They are the children of the wicked one, or the one evil, which declares that man begins in dust or as a material embryo. In divine Science, God and the real man are inseparable as divine Principle and idea. MORTALS ARE NOT IMMORTALS Error, urged to its final limits, is self-destroyed. Error will cease to claim that soul is in body, that life and intelligence are in matter, and that this matter is man. God is the Principle of man, and man is the idea of God. Hence man is not mortal nor material. Mortals will disappear, and immortals, or the children of God, will appear as the only and eternal verities of man. Mortals are not fallen children of God. They never had a perfect state of being, which may subsequently be regained. They were, from the beginning of mortal history, “conceived in sin and brought forth in iniquity.” Mortality is finally swallowed up in immortality. Sin, sickness, and death must disappear to give place to the facts which belong to immortal man. IMPERISHABLE IDENTITY Learn this, O mortal, and earnestly seek the spiritual status of man, which is outside of all material selfhood. Remember that the Scriptures say of mortal man: “As for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth. For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone; and the place thereof shall know it no more.” THE KINGDOM WITHIN When speaking of God's children, not the children of men, Jesus said, “The kingdom of God is within you;” that is, Truth and Love reign in the real man, showing that man in God's image is unfallen and eternal. Jesus beheld in Science the perfect man, who appeared to him where sinning mortal man appears to mortals. In this perfect man the Saviour saw God's own likeness, and this correct view of man healed the sick. Thus Jesus taught that the kingdom of God is intact, universal, and that man is pure and holy. Man is not a material habitation for Soul; he is himself spiritual. Soul, being Spirit, is seen in nothing imperfect nor material. MATERIAL BODY NEVER GOD's IDEA Whatever is material is mortal. To the five corporeal senses, man appears to be matter and mind united; but Christian Science reveals man as the idea of God, and declares the corporeal senses to be mortal and erring illusions. Divine Science shows it to be impossible that a material body, though mind, should be man, — the genuine and perfect man, the immortal idea of being, indestructible and eternal. Were it otherwise, man would be annihilated. Show all

Identity ~ Good, Bad & Ugly
1. Network of all 7 terms for God
2. Holier than thou - Jesus was servant, not God
3. Good, bad, ugly - identity
4. Parables of Jesus - impersonal
5. Conversation - yea, yea, nay, nay - Jesus
6. Race to gain perfection or compete with person ?
7. Vision by Mary Baker Eddy - Focus
8. Science & Health pgs 115-116
9. Clara Barton - Standard of Christian Science
10. Albert Einstein - problem solving via higher level
11. Robert Putnam - Bible Lessons & Council of Nicaea
12. Frederick Rawson - Instant healing, 5 words
13. Rolf Witzsche - System of Christian Science,
Christ & Christmas interprepation.
What is it ?
IT WAS AN ANTI-INTELLECTUAL and a theoretical movement, emphasizing the will of the charismatic dictator as the sole source of inspiration of a people and a nation, as well as a vision of annihilation of all enemies of the Aryan Volk as the one and ONLY GOAL FOR NAZI POLICY ~ excerpt.
Who is Involved ?
THE ROOTS OF NAZISM ~ Nazism had peculiarly German roots. It can be partly traced to the Prussian tradition as developed under Frederick William I (1688–1740), Frederick the Great (1712–68), and Otto von Bismarck (1815–98), which regarded the militant spirit and the discipline of the Prussian army as the model for all individual and civic life.
NAZISM TOTALITARIAN MOVEMENT LED BY ADOLF HITLER as head of the Nazi Party in Germany. In its intense nationalism, mass appeal, and dictatorial rule, Nazism shared many elements with Italian fascism. However, Nazism was FAR MORE EXTREME both in its ideas and in its practice. In almost every respect it was an anti-intellectual and a theoretical movement, emphasizing the will of the charismatic dictator as the sole source of inspiration of a people and a nation, as well as a vision of annihilation of all enemies of the Aryan Volk as the ONE AND ONLY GOAL of Nazi policy. THE ROOTS OF NAZISM Nazism had peculiarly German roots. It can be partly traced to the Prussian tradition as developed under Frederick William I (1688–1740), Frederick the Great (1712–68), and Otto von Bismarck (1815–98), which regarded the militant spirit and the discipline of the Prussian army as the model for all individual and civic life. To it was added the tradition of political romanticism, with its sharp hostility to rationalism and to the principles underlying the French Revolution, its emphasis on instinct and the past, and its proclamation of the rights of Friedrich Nietzsche’s exceptional individual (the Übermensch [“Superman”]) over all universal law and rules. These two traditions were later reinforced by the 19th-century adoration of science and of the laws of nature, which seemed to operate independently of all concepts of good and evil. Further reinforcements came from such 19th-century intellectual figures as the comte de Gobineau (1816–82), Richard Wagner (1813–83), and Houston Stewart Chamberlain (1855–1927), all of whom greatly influenced early Nazism with their claims of the racial and cultural superiority of the “Nordic” (Germanic) peoples over all other Europeans and all other races. Hitler’s intellectual viewpoint was influenced during his youth not only by these currents in the German tradition but also by specific Austrian movements that professed various political sentiments, notably those of pan-Germanic expansionism and anti-Semitism. Hitler’s ferocious nationalism, his contempt of Slavs, and his hatred of Jews can largely be explained by his bitter experiences as an unsuccessful artist living a threadbare existence on the streets of Vienna, the capital of the multiethnic Austro-Hungarian Empire. This intellectual preparation would probably not have been sufficient for the growth of Nazism in Germany but for that country’s defeat in World War I. The defeat and the resulting disillusionment, pauperization, and frustration—particularly among the lower middle classes—paved the way for the success of the propaganda of Hitler and the Nazis. The Treaty of Versailles (1919), the formal settlement of World War I drafted without German participation, alienated many Germans with its imposition of harsh monetary and territorial reparations. The significant resentment expressed toward the peace treaty gave Hitler a starting point. Because German representatives (branded the “November criminals” by Nazis) agreed to cease hostilities and did not unconditionally surrender in the armistice of November 11, 1918, there was a widespread feeling—particularly in the military—that Germany’s defeat had been orchestrated by diplomats at the Versailles meetings. From the beginning, Hitler’s propaganda of revenge for this “traitorous” act, through which the German people had been “stabbed in the back,” and his call for rearmament had strong appeal within military circles, which regarded the peace only as a temporary setback in Germany’s expansionist program. The ruinous inflation of the German currency in 1923 wiped out the savings of many middle-class households and led to further public alienation and dissatisfaction. Hitler added to Pan-Germanic aspirations the almost mystical fanaticism of a faith in the mission of the German race and the fervour of a social revolutionary gospel. This gospel was most fully expressed in Hitler’s personal testament Mein Kampf (1925–27; “My Struggle”), in which he outlined both his practical aims and his theories of race and propaganda. Posing as a bulwark against communism, Hitler exploited the fears aroused in Germany and worldwide by the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia and the consolidation of communist power in the Soviet Union. Thus, he was able to secure the support of many conservative elements that misunderstood the totalitarian character of his movement. Hitler’s most important individual contribution to the theory and practice of Nazism was his deep understanding of mass psychology and mass propaganda. He stressed the fact that all propaganda must hold its intellectual level at the capacity of the least intelligent of those at whom it is directed and that its truthfulness is much less important than its success. According to Hitler: It is part of a great leader’s genius to make even widely separated adversaries appear as if they belonged to but one category, because among weakly and undecided characters the recognition of various enemies all too easily marks the beginning of doubt of one’s own rightness. Hitler found this common denominator in the Jewish people, whom he identified with both Bolshevism and a kind of cosmic evil. Jews were to be discriminated against not according to their religion but according to their “race.” Nazism declared Jews—whatever their educational and social achievements—to be forever fundamentally different from and inimical to Germans. Nazism attempted to reconcile conservative, nationalist ideology with a socially radical doctrine. In so doing, it became a profoundly revolutionary movement—albeit a largely negative one. Rejecting rationalism, liberalism, democracy, the rule of law, human rights, and all movements of international cooperation and peace, it stressed instinct, the subordination of the individual to the state, and the necessity of blind and unswerving obedience to leaders appointed from above. It also emphasized the inequality of humans and races and the right of the strong to rule the weak; sought to purge or suppress competing political, religious, and social institutions; advanced an ethic of hardness and ferocity; and partly destroyed class distinctions by drawing into the movement misfits and failures from all social classes. Although socialism was traditionally an internationalist creed, the radical wing of Nazism knew that a mass base existed for policies that were simultaneously anticapitalist and nationalist. However, after Hitler secured power, this radical strain was eliminated. TOTALITARIANISM and EXPENSIONISM Working from these principles, Hitler carried his party from its inauspicious beginnings in a beer cellar in Munich to a dominant position in world politics 20 years later. The Nazi Party originated in 1919 and was led by Hitler from 1920. Through both successful electioneering and intimidation, the party came to power in Germany in 1933 and governed through totalitarian methods until 1945, when Hitler committed suicide and Germany was defeated and occupied by the Allies at the close of World War II. The history of Nazism after 1934 can be divided into two periods of about equal length. Between 1934 and 1939 the party established full control of all phases of life in Germany. With many Germans weary of party conflicts, economic and political instability, and the disorderly freedom that characterized the last years of the Weimar Republic (1919–33), Hitler and his movement gained the support and even the enthusiasm of a majority of the German population. In particular, the public welcomed the strong, decisive, and apparently effective government provided by the Nazis. Germany’s endless ranks of unemployed rapidly dwindled as the jobless were put to work in extensive public-works projects and in rapidly multiplying armaments factories. Germans were swept up in this orderly, intensely purposeful mass movement bent on restoring their country to its dignity, pride, and grandeur, as well as to dominance on the European stage. Economic recovery from the effects of the Great Depression and the forceful assertion of German nationalism were key factors in Nazism’s appeal to the German population. Further, Hitler’s continuous string of diplomatic successes and foreign conquests from 1934 through the early years of World War II secured the unqualified support of most Germans, including many who had previously opposed him. Despite its economic and political success, Nazism maintained its power by coercion and mass manipulation. The Nazi regime disseminated a continual outpouring of propaganda through all cultural and informational media. Its rallies—especially its elaborately staged Nürnberg rallies—its insignia, and its uniformed cadres were designed to impart an aura of omnipotence. The underside of its propaganda machine was its apparatus of terror, with its ubiquitous secret police and concentration camps. It fanned and focused German anti-Semitism to make the Jews a symbol of all that was hated and feared. By means of deceptive rhetoric, the party portrayed the Jews as the enemy of all classes of society. Nazism’s principal instrument of control was the unification, under Heinrich Himmler and his chief lieutenant, Reinhard Heydrich, of the SS (the uniformed police force of the Nazi Party) and all other police and security organizations. Opposition to the regime was destroyed either by outright terror or, more frequently, by the all-pervading fear of possible repression. Opponents of the regime were branded enemies of the state and of the people, and an elaborate web of informers—often members of the family or intimate friends—imposed utmost caution on all expressions and activities. Justice was no longer recognized as objective but was completely subordinated to the alleged needs and interests of the Volk. In addition to the now-debased methods of the normal judicial process, special detention camps were erected. In these camps the SS exercised supreme authority and introduced a system of sadistic brutality unrivaled in modern times. Between 1938 and 1945 Hitler’s regime attempted to expand and apply the Nazi system to territories outside the German Reich. This endeavour was confined, in 1938, to lands inhabited by German-speaking populations, but in 1939 Germany began to subjugate non-German-speaking nationalities as well. Germany’s invasion of Poland on September 1, which initiated World War II, was the logical outcome of Hitler’s plans. His first years were spent in preparing the Germans for the approaching struggle for world control and in forging the military and industrial superiority that Germany would require to fulfill its ambitions. With mounting diplomatic and military successes, his aims grew in quick progression. The first was to unite all people of German descent within their historical homeland on the basis of “self-determination.” His next step foresaw the creation, through the military conquest of Poland and other Slavic nations to the east, of a Grosswirtschaftsraum (“large economic unified space”) or a Lebensraum (“living space”), which thereby would allow Germany to acquire sufficient territory to become economically self-sufficient and militarily impregnable. There the German master race, or Herrenvolk, would rule over a hierarchy of subordinate peoples and organize and exploit them with ruthlessness and efficiency. With the initial successes of the military campaigns of 1939–41, his plan was expanded into a vision of a hemispheric order that would embrace all of Europe, western Asia, and Africa and eventually the entire world. The extravagant hopes of Nazism came to an end with Germany’s defeat in 1945, after nearly six years of war. To a certain extent World War II had repeated the pattern of World War I: great initial German military successes, the forging of a large-scale coalition against Germany as the result of German ambitions and behaviour, and the eventual loss of the war because of German overreaching. Nazism as a mass movement effectively ended on April 30, 1945, when Hitler committed suicide to avoid falling into the hands of Soviet troops completing the occupation of Berlin. Out of the ruins of Nazism arose a Germany that was divided until 1990. Remnants of Nazi ideology remained in Germany after Hitler’s suicide, and a small number of Nazi-oriented political parties and other groups were formed in West Germany from the late 1940s, though some were later banned. In the 1990s gangs of neo-Nazi youths in eastern Germany staged attacks against immigrants, desecrated Jewish cemeteries, and engaged in violent confrontations with leftists and police. In the early 21st century, small neo-Nazi parties were to be found in most European countries as well as in the United States, Canada, and several Central and South American countries. They were rare, but not unheard of, in the rest of the world.Show all
Vision ~ Mary Baker Eddy
Vision ~ Article ~ Mary Baker Eddy
Extracts from a letter which Mrs. Eddy wrote to one of her students in Denver, Colorado, who then sent it to her student, Mrs. Martha Dawson in Boise, Idaho.
My dear,
You took off your glasses and held on to your faith in them instead of holding on to your glasses and losing your faith in them. The veil that seems to be in front of your eyes is back of them. The veil is the physical senses. They cause you to worry, etc. The condition of your body only expresses a mental condition.
Eyes- Can you adjust (focus) yourself to everything that comes your way? It is the Mind or Spirit, that sees, and your eyes are only the instrument with which you see. When you are trying to do something that you do not understand you say, 'I see it now.' That is the sight or insight that sees. Seeing is understanding, and if you could see why you do not see, you could see, for the body is renewed by the renewing of the mind. You should be as unconscious of your eyes when looking at anything as you are of your tongue when talking, or your feet when dancing, and you can do that by realzing that God is your sight, and that God is the intelligence that you reflect and your eyes reflect the intelligence of God.
Do not think of me as treating your eyes to heal them directly, but as treating you to give you a clearer understanding of what God is and your relation to Him. When you see, understand, yourself as one of God's ideas instead of thinking of yourself as flesh and blood, you will not strain your eyes to see, for you will realize that it is your consciousness of God that is your real life and it is Mind that sees.
There is only one Mind but there seems to be two, one is the reflection of the other. The Divine Mind is the one, and the other is only the human sense of the Divine. One may call them the Mind of the Spirit and the mind of the flesh. The objective and the subjective, and the conscious and the subconscious, the one that knows and the one that thinks. When you gain an understanding of the Principle of sight and think of your eyes (without fear, doubt or anxiety) as improving or being perfect, that thought sinks into your inner consciousness and becomes part of your real self, and you do not think it, you KNOW IT, - for ‘As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he.’ The original ideas that come to you through the Spirit or consciousness, you know before you think, and the ideas you get from others, or through the senses, you must think before you can know. We can think or believe a lie, but we can never know it, because it is unknowable, as a child can think that two and two make five but it cannot know it because two and two are four. We think in the senses and know in the Spirit. God does not think. He knows, and we receive all that we desire when we make ourselves ready to receive it in His way. It is getting a clearer insight into understanding of what God is that heals the defects that are manifested in the eyes, or any of your physical senses. It is not the sense of sight that needs to be healed. The sense of feeling affects all the other senses, and if you are sensitive about your appearance, what people think or say about you, about climate, hot or cold, what you eat, what you wear, where you work or what you receive for it, or any other thing that displeases you, if you let it stir you up, it will go to the most sensitive or weakest place on your body, for pain is only a frown expressed on the place where the trouble is, and the only remedy for it is to realize that there is one Mind, and that 'all things work together for good for those who love God.’
The senses tell us that we should be healed because we are so faithful in our reading and then we look for results, and that puts healing first and the Principle that heals second. Matter first and Mind second. Love of the Truth makes Mind first in our affection and then health and other things we desire shall be added to us. We must get away from ourselves, absent from the body and present with the Lord. Make ourselves one with God, and then look upon our bodies as if they belong to another person.
When we see ourselves as God sees us we can then see our body as perfect as our concept of God.
Lovingly, M.B.E. Show all