Mary Baker Eddy
Christian Science ~ 16 books by Mary Baker Eddy
10 ~ Miscellaneous Writings ~ Chpt 3 ~ Questions and Answers ~ Subtitles
# | Sub# | Pg# | Topic | Tag | Subtitle | Show all | Please click SHOW ALL for complete Subtitle text |
# | Sub# | Pg# | Topic | Tag | Subtitle | Show all | Please click SHOW ALL for complete Subtitle text |
1 | 1 | 31 | What do you consider to be mental malpractice? |
SHOW ALL | 1 What do you consider to be mental malpractice? Mental malpractice is a bland denial of Truth, 3 and is the antipode of Christian Science. To mentally argue in a manner that can disastrously affect the happiness of a fellow-being — harm him 6 morally, physically, or spiritually — breaks the Golden Rule and subverts the scientific laws of being. This, therefore, is not the use but the abuse of mental treat- 9 ment, and is mental malpractice. It is needless to say that such a subversion of right is not scientific. Its claim to power is in proportion to the faith in evil, and 12 consequently to the lack of faith in good. Such false faith finds no place in, and receives no aid from, the Principle or the rules of Christian Science; for it denies 15 the grand verity of this Science, namely, that God, good, has all power. This leaves the individual no alternative but to re- 18 linquish his faith in evil, or to argue against his own convictions of good and so destroy his power to be or to do good, because he has no faith in the omnipotence 21 of God, good. He parts with his understanding of good, in order to retain his faith in evil and so succeed with his Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 32 1 wrong argument, — if indeed he desires success in this broad road to destruction. |
||
2 | 2 | 32 | How shall we demean ourselves towards the students of disloyal students? And what about that clergyman's remarks on "Christ and Christmas"? |
SHOW ALL | 3 How shall we demean ourselves towards the students of disloyal students? And what about that clergyman's remarks on "Christ and Christmas"? 6 From this question, I infer that some of my students seem not to know in what manner they should act towards the students of false teachers, or such as have strayed 9 from the rules and divine Principle of Christian Science. The query is abnormal, when "precept upon precept; line upon line" are to be found in the Scriptures, and in 12 my books, on this very subject. In Mark, ninth chapter, commencing at the thirty- third verse, you will find my views on this subject; love 15 alone is admissible towards friend and foe. My sym- pathies extend to the above-named class of students more than to many others. If I had the time to talk with all 18 students of Christian Science, and correspond with them, I would gladly do my best towards helping those un- fortunate seekers after Truth whose teacher is straying 21 from the straight and narrow path. But I have not mo- ments enough in which to give to my own flock all the time and attention that they need, — and charity must 24 begin at home. Distinct denominational and social organizations and societies are at present necessary for the individual, 27 and for our Cause. But all people can and should be just, merciful; they should never envy, elbow, slander, hate, or try to injure, but always should try to bless their 30 fellow-mortals. To the query in regard to some clergyman's com- Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 33 1 ments on my illustrated poem, I will say: It is the righteous prayer that avails with God. Whatever is wrong will 3 receive its own reward. The high priests of old caused the crucifixion of even the great Master; and thereby they lost, and he won, heaven. I love all ministers and 6 ministries of Christ, Truth. All clergymen may not understand the illustrations in "Christ and Christmas;" or that these refer not to 9 personality, but present the type and shadow of Truth's appearing in the womanhood as well as in the manhood of God, our divine Father and Mother. |
||
3 | 3 | 33 | Must I have faith in Christian Science in order to be healed by it? |
SHOW ALL | 12 Must I have faith in Christian Science in order to be healed by it? This is a question that is being asked every day. It 15 has not proved impossible to heal those who, when they began treatment, had no faith whatever in the Science, — other than to place themselves under my care, and 18 follow the directions given. Patients naturally gain con- fidence in Christian Science as they recognize the help they derive therefrom. |
||
4 | 4 | 33 | What are the advantages of your system of healing, over the ordinary methods of healing disease? |
SHOW ALL | 21 What are the advantages of your system of healing, over the ordinary methods of healing disease? Healing by Christian Science has the following ad- 24 vantages: — First: It does away with all material medicines, and recognizes the fact that, as mortal mind is the cause of 27 all "the ills that flesh is heir to," the antidote for sickness, as well as for sin, may and must be found in mortal mind's opposite, — the divine Mind. 30 Second: It is more effectual than drugs; curing where Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 34 1 these fail, and leaving none of the harmful "after effects" of these in the system; thus proving that metaphysics 3 is above physics. Third: One who has been healed by Christian Sci- ence is not only healed of the disease, but is improved 6 morally. The body is governed by mind; and mortal mind must be improved, before the body is renewed and harmonious, — since the physique is simply thought 9 made manifest. |
||
5 | 5 | 34 | Is spiritualism or mesmerism included in Christian Science? |
SHOW ALL | Is spiritualism or mesmerism included in Christian Science? 12 They are wholly apart from it. Christian Science is based on divine Principle; whereas spiritualism, so far as I understand it, is a mere speculative opinion and 15 human belief. If the departed were to communicate with us, we should see them as they were before death, and have them with us; after death, they can no more 18 come to those they have left, than we, in our present state of existence, can go to the departed or the adult can re- turn to his boyhood. We may pass on to their state 21 of existence, but they cannot return to ours. Man is im-mortal, and there is not a moment when he ceases to exist. All that are called "communications from spirits," 24 lie within the realm of mortal thought on this present plane of existence, and are the antipodes of Christian Science; the immortal and mortal are as direct opposites as light 27 and darkness. |
||
6 | 6 | 34 | Who is the Founder of mental healing? |
SHOW ALL | Who is the Founder of mental healing? The author of "Science and Health with Key to the 30 Scriptures," who discovered the Science of healing em- Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 35 1 bodied in her works. Years of practical proof, through homoeopathy, revealed to her the fact that Mind, in- 3 stead of matter, is the Principle of pathology; and subsequently her recovery, through the supremacy of Mind over matter, from a severe casualty pronounced 6 by the physicians incurable, sealed that proof with the signet of Christian Science. In 1883, a million of peo- ple acknowledge and attest the blessings of this mental 9 system of treating disease. Perhaps the following words of her husband, the late Dr. Asa G. Eddy, afford the most concise, yet complete, summary of the 12 matter: — "Mrs. Eddy's works are the outgrowths of her life. I never knew so unselfish an individual." |
||
7 | 7 | 35 | Will the book Science and Health, that you offer for sale at three dollars, teach its readers to heal the sick, — or is one obliged to become a student under your personal instruction? And if one is obliged to study under you, of what benefit is your book? |
SHOW ALL | 15 Will the book Science and Health, that you offer for sale at three dollars, teach its readers to heal the sick, — or is one obliged to become a student under your personal in- 18 struction? And if one is obliged to study under you, of what benefit is your book? Why do we read the Bible, and then go to church to 21 hear it expounded? Only because both are important. Why do we read moral science, and then study it at college? 24 You are benefited by reading Science and Health, but it is greatly to your advantage to be taught its Science by the author of that work, who explains it in detail. |
||
8 | 8 | 35 | What is immortal Mind? |
SHOW ALL | 27 What is immortal Mind? In reply, we refer you to "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,"¹ Vol. I. page 14: "That which 30 ¹See the sixth edition. Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 36 1 is erring, sinful, sick, and dying, termed material or mortal man, is neither God's man nor Mind; but to be 3 understood, we shall classify evil and error as mortal mind, in contradistinction to good and Truth, or the Mind which is immortal." |
||
9 | 9 | 36 | Do animals and beasts have a mind? |
SHOW ALL | 6 Do animals and beasts have a mind? Beasts, as well as men, express Mind as their origin; but they manifest less of Mind. The first and only 9 cause is the eternal Mind, which is God, and there is but one God. The ferocious mind seen in the beast is mortal mind, which is harmful and proceeds not from 12 God; for His beast is the lion that lieth down with the lamb. Appetites, passions, anger, revenge, subtlety, are the animal qualities of sinning mortals; and the 15 beasts that have these propensities express the lower qualities of the so-called animal man; in other words, the nature and quality of mortal mind, — not immortal 18 Mind. |
||
10 | 10 | 36 | What is the distinction between mortal mind and immortal Mind? |
SHOW ALL | What is the distinction between mortal mind and im- mortal Mind? 21 Mortal mind includes all evil, disease, and death; also, all beliefs relative to the so-called material laws, and all material objects, and the law of sin and death. 24 The Scripture says, "The carnal mind [in other words, mortal mind] is enmity against God; for it is not sub- ject to the law of God, neither indeed can be." Mortal 27 mind is an illusion; as much in our waking moments as in the dreams of sleep. The belief that intelligence, Truth, and Love, are in matter and separate from God, 30 is an error; for there is no intelligent evil, and no power Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 37 1 besides God, good. God would not be omnipotent if there were in reality another mind creating or governing 3 man or the universe. Immortal Mind is God; and this Mind is made manifest in all thoughts and desires that draw man- 6 kind toward purity, health, holiness, and the spiritual facts of being. Jesus recognized this relation so clearly that he said, 9 "I and my Father are one." In proportion as we oppose the belief in material sense, in sickness, sin, and death, and recognize ourselves under the control of God, 12 spiritual and immortal Mind, shall we go on to leave the animal for the spiritual, and learn the meaning of those words of Jesus, "Go ye into all the world . . . heal the 15 sick." |
||
11 | 11 | 37 | Can your Science cure intemperance? |
SHOW ALL | Can your Science cure intemperance? Christian Science lays the axe at the root of the tree. 18 Its antidote for all ills is God, the perfect Mind, which corrects mortal thought, whence cometh all evil. God can and does destroy the thought that leads to moral 21 or physical death. Intemperance, impurity, sin of every sort, is destroyed by Truth. The appetite for alcohol yields to Science as directly and surely as do sickness 24 and sin. |
||
12 | 12 | 37 | Does Mrs. Eddy take patients? |
Does Mrs. Eddy take patients? She now does not. Her time is wholly devoted to in- 27 struction, leaving to her students the work of healing; which, at this hour, is in reality the least difficult of the labor that Christian Science demands. |
|||
13 | 13 | 38 | Why do you charge for teaching Christian Science, when all the good we can do must be done freely? |
SHOW ALL | 1 Why do you charge for teaching Christian Science, when all the good we can do must be done freely? 3 When teaching imparts the ability to gain and main- tain health, to heal and elevate man in every line of life, — as this teaching certainly does, — is it un- 6 reasonable to expect in return something to support one's self and a Cause? If so, our whole system of education, secular and religious, is at fault, and the 9 instructors and philanthropists in our land should ex- pect no compensation. "If we have sown unto you spiritual things, is it a great thing if we shall reap your 12 carnal things?" |
||
14 | 14 | 38 | How happened you to establish a college to instruct in metaphysics, when other institutions find little interest in such a dry and abstract subject? |
SHOW ALL | How happened you to establish a college to instruct in metaphysics, when other institutions find little interest in 15 such a dry and abstract subject? Metaphysics, as taught by me at the Massachusetts Metaphysical College, is far from dry and abstract. It 18 is a Science that has the animus of Truth. Its practical application to benefit the race, heal the sick, enlighten and reform the sinner, makes divine metaphysics need- 21 ful, indispensable. Teaching metaphysics at other col- leges means, mainly, elaborating a man-made theory, or some speculative view too vapory and hypothetical 24 for questions of practical import. |
||
15 | 15 | 38 | Is it necessary to study your Science in order to be healed by it and keep well? |
SHOW ALL | Is it necessary to study your Science in order to be healed by it and keep well? 27 It is not necessary to make each patient a student in order to cure his present disease, if this is what you mean. Were it so, the Science would be of less Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 39 1 practical value. Many who apply for help are not prepared to take a course of instruction in Christian 3 Science. To avoid being subject to disease, would require the understanding of how you are healed. In 1885, this 6 knowledge can be obtained in its genuineness at the Massachusetts Metaphysical College. There are abroad at this early date some grossly incorrect and false 9 teachers of what they term Christian Science; of such beware. They have risen up in a day to make this claim; whereas the Founder of genuine Christian Science has 12 been all her years in giving it birth. |
||
16 | 16 | 39 | Can you take care of yourself? |
SHOW ALL | Can you take care of yourself? God giveth to every one this puissance; and I have 15 faith in His promise, "Lo, I am with you alway" — all the way. Unlike the M. D.'s, Christian Scientists are not afraid to take their own medicine, for this 18 medicine is divine Mind; and from this saving, ex- haustless source they intend to fill the human mind with enough of the leaven of Truth to leaven the whole lump. 21 There may be exceptional cases, where one Christian Scientist who has more to meet than others needs support at times; then, it is right to bear "one another's burdens, 24 and so fulfil the law of Christ." |
||
17 | 17 | 39 | In what way is a Christian Scientist an instrument by which God reaches others to heal them, and what most obstructs the way? |
SHOW ALL | In what way is a Christian Scientist an instrument by which God reaches others to heal them, and what most 27 obstructs the way? A Christian, or a Christian Scientist, assumes no more when claiming to work with God in healing the sick, 30 than in converting the sinner. Divine help is as neces- Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 40 1 sary in the one case as in the other. The scientific Prin- ciple of healing demands such cooperation; but this 3 unison and its power would be arrested if one were to mix material methods with the spiritual, — were to min- gle hygienic rules, drugs, and prayers in the same pro- 6 cess, — and thus serve "other gods." Truth is as effectual in destroying sickness as in the destruction of sin. 9 It is often asked, "If Christian Science is the same method of healing that Jesus and the apostles used, why do not its students perform as instantaneous cures 12 as did those in the first century of the Christian era?" In some instances the students of Christian Science equal the ancient prophets as healers. All true healing 15 is governed by, and demonstrated on, the same Princi- ple as theirs; namely, the action of the divine Spirit, through the power of Truth to destroy error, discord 18 of whatever sort. The reason that the same results fol- low not in every case, is that the student does not in every case possess sufficiently the Christ-spirit and its 21 power to cast out the disease. The Founder of Chris- tian Science teaches her students that they must possess the spirit of Truth and Love, must gain the power 24 over sin in themselves, or they cannot be instantaneous healers. In this Christian warfare the student or practitioner 27 has to master those elements of evil too common to other minds. If it is hate that is holding the purpose to kill his patient by mental means, it requires more divine 30 understanding to conquer this sin than to nullify either the disease itself or the ignorance by which one unin- tentionally harms himself or another. An element of Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 41 1 brute-force that only the cruel and evil can send forth, is given vent in the diabolical practice of one who, having 3 learned the power of liberated thought to do good, per- verts it, and uses it to accomplish an evil purpose. This mental malpractice would disgrace Mind-healing, were it 6 not that God overrules it, and causes "the wrath of man" to praise Him. It deprives those who practise it of the power to heal, and destroys their own possibility of 9 progressing. The honest student of Christian Science is purged through Christ, Truth, and thus is ready for victory in 12 the ennobling strife. The good fight must be fought by those who keep the faith and finish their course. Mental purgation must go on: it promotes spiritual growth, 15 scales the mountain of human endeavor, and gains the summit in Science that otherwise could not be reached, — where the struggle with sin is forever done. |
||
18 | 18 | 41 | Can all classes of disease be healed by your method? |
SHOW ALL | 18 Can all classes of disease be healed by your method? We answer, Yes. Mind is the architect that builds its own idea, and produces all harmony that appears. 21 There is no other healer in the case. If mortal mind, through the action of fear, manifests inflammation and a belief of chronic or acute disease, by removing the cause 24 in that so-called mind the effect or disease will disappear and health will be restored; for health, alias harmony, is the normal manifestation of man in Science. The 27 divine Principle which governs the universe, including man, if demonstrated, is sufficient for all emergencies. But the practitioner may not always prove equal to 30 bringing out the result of the Principle that he knows to be true. |
||
19 | 19 | 42 | After the change called death takes place, do we meet those gone before? — or does life continue in thought only as in a dream? |
SHOW ALL | 1 After the change called death takes place, do we meet those gone before? — or does life continue in thought only 3 as in a dream? Man is not annihilated, nor does he lose his identity, by passing through the belief called death. After the 6 momentary belief of dying passes from mortal mind, this mind is still in a conscious state of existence; and the in- dividual has but passed through a moment of extreme 9 mortal fear, to awaken with thoughts, and being, as material as before. Science and Health clearly states that spiritualization of thought is not attained by the death 12 of the body, but by a conscious union with God. When we shall have passed the ordeal called death, or destroyed this last enemy, and shall have come upon the same plane 15 of conscious existence with those gone before, then we shall be able to communicate with and to recognize them. If, before the change whereby we meet the dear de- 18 parted, our life-work proves to have been well done, we shall not have to repeat it; but our joys and means of ad- vancing will be proportionately increased. 21 The difference between a belief of material existence and the spiritual fact of Life is, that the former is a dream and unreal, while the latter is real and eternal. Only 24 as we understand God, and learn that good, not evil, lives and is immortal, that immortality exists only in spiritual perfection, shall we drop our false sense of Life 27 in sin or sense material, and recognize a better state of existence. |
||
20 | 20 | 42 | Treatment, Can I be treated without being present during treatment? |
SHOW ALL | Can I be treated without being present during treatment? 30 Mind is not confined to limits; and nothing but our own false admissions prevent us from demonstrating this Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 43 1 great fact. Christian Science, recognizing the capabili- ties of Mind to act of itself, and independent of matter, 3 enables one to heal cases without even having seen the individual, — or simply after having been made ac- quainted with the mental condition of the patient. |
||
21 | 21 | 43 | Do all who at present claim to be teaching Christian Science, teach it correctly? |
SHOW ALL | 6 Do all who at present claim to be teaching Christian Science, teach it correctly? By no means: Christian Science is not sufficiently un- 9 derstood for that. The student of this Science who under- stands it best, is the one least likely to pour into other minds a trifling sense of it as being adequate to make safe 12 and successful practitioners. The simple sense one gains of this Science through careful, unbiased, contemplative reading of my books, is far more advantageous to the 15 sick and to the learner than is or can be the spurious teaching of those who are spiritually unqualified. The sad fact at this early writing is, that the letter is gained 18 sooner than the spirit of Christian Science: time is re- quired thoroughly to qualify students for the great ordeal of this century. 21 If one student tries to undermine another, such sinister rivalry does a vast amount of injury to the Cause. To fill one's pocket at the expense of his conscience, or to 24 build on the downfall of others, incapacitates one to practise or teach Christian Science. The occasional tem- porary success of such an one is owing, in part, to the im- 27 possibility for those unacquainted with the mighty Truth of Christian Science to recognize, as such, the barefaced errors that are taught — and the damaging effects these 30 leave on the practice of the learner, on the Cause, and on the health of the community. Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 44 1 Honest students speak the truth "according to the pattern showed to thee in the mount," and live it: these 3 are not working for emoluments, and may profitably teach people, who are ready to investigate this subject, the rudiments of Christian Science. |
||
22 | 22 | 44 | Can Christian Science cure acute cases where there is necessity for immediate relief, as in membranous croup? |
6 Can Christian Science cure acute cases where there is necessity for immediate relief, as in membranous croup? The remedial power of Christian Science is positive, 9 and its application direct. It cannot fail to heal in every case of disease, when conducted by one who un- derstands this Science sufficiently to demonstrate its 12 highest possibilities. |
|||
23 | 23 | 44 | If I have the toothache, and nothing stops it until I have the tooth extracted, and then the pain ceases, has the mind, or extracting, or both, caused the pain to cease? |
SHOW ALL | If I have the toothache, and nothing stops it until I have the tooth extracted, and then the pain ceases, has 15 the mind, or extracting, or both, caused the pain to cease? What you thought was pain in the bone or nerve, could 18 only have been a belief of pain in matter; for matter has no sensation. It was a state of mortal thought made manifest in the flesh. You call this body matter, when 21 awake, or when asleep in a dream. That matter can re- port pain, or that mind is in matter, reporting sensa- tions, is but a dream at all times. You believed that if 24 the tooth were extracted, the pain would cease: this de- mand of mortal thought once met, your belief assumed a new form, and said, There is no more pain. When 27 your belief in pain ceases, the pain stops; for matter has no intelligence of its own. By applying this men- tal remedy or antidote directly to your belief, you scien- Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 45 1 tifically prove the fact that Mind is supreme. This is not done by will-power, for that is not Science but mesmerism. 3 The full understanding that God is Mind, and that mat- ter is but a belief, enables you to control pain. Chris- tian Science, by means of its Principle of metaphysical 6 healing, is able to do more than to heal a toothache; although its power to allay fear, prevent inflammation, and destroy the necessity for ether — thereby avoiding 9 the fatal results that frequently follow the use of that drug — render this Science invaluable in the practice of dentistry. |
||
24 | 24 | 45 | Can an atheist or a profane man be cured by metaphysics, or Christian Science? |
SHOW ALL | 12 Can an atheist or a profane man be cured by metaphysics, or Christian Science? The moral status of the man demands the remedy of 15 Truth more in this than in most cases; therefore, under the deific law that supply invariably meets demand, this Science is effectual in treating moral ailments. Sin is 18 not the master of divine Science, but vice versa; and when Science in a single instance decides the conflict, the patient is better both morally and physically. |
||
25 | 25 | 45 | If God made all that was made, and it was good, where did evil originate? |
SHOW ALL | 21 If God made all that was made, and it was good, where did evil originate? It never originated or existed as an entity. It is but a 24 false belief; even the belief that God is not what the Scriptures imply Him to be, All-in-all, but that there is an opposite intelligence or mind termed evil. This 27 error of belief is idolatry, having "other gods before me." In John i. 3 we read, "All things were made by Him; and without Him was not anything made that was made." Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 46 1 The admission of the reality of evil perpetuates the belief or faith in evil. The Scriptures declare, "To whom ye 3 yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are." The leading self-evident proposition of Christian Science is: good being real, evil, good's opposite, is unreal. This 6 truism needs only to be tested scientifically to be found true, and adapted to destroy the appearance of evil to an extent beyond the power of any doctrine previously 9 entertained. |
||
26 | 26 | 46 | Do you teach that you are equal with God? |
SHOW ALL | Do you teach that you are equal with God? A reader of my writings would not present this ques- 12 tion. There are no such indications in the premises or conclusions of Christian Science, and such a misconcep- tion of Truth is not scientific. Man is not equal with 15 his Maker; that which is formed is not cause, but effect, and has no power underived from its creator. It is pos- sible, and it is man's duty, so to throw the weight of his 18 thoughts and acts on the side of Truth, that he be ever found in the scale with his creator; not weighing equally with Him, but comprehending at every point, in 21 divine Science, the full significance of what the apostle meant by the declaration, "The Spirit itself beareth wit- ness with our spirit, that we are the children of God: and 24 if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ." In Science, man represents his divine Prin- ciple, — the Life and Love that are God, — even as the 27 idea of sound, in tones, represents harmony; but thought has not yet wholly attained unto the Science of being, wherein man is perfect even as the Father, his divine 30 Principle, is perfect. |
||
27 | 27 | 47 | How can I believe that there is no such thing as matter, when I weigh over two hundred pounds and carry about this weight daily? |
SHOW ALL | 1 How can I believe that there is no such thing as matter, when I weigh over two hundred pounds and carry about 3 this weight daily? By learning that matter is but manifest mortal mind. You entertain an adipose belief of yourself as substance; 6 whereas, substance means more than matter: it is the glory and permanence of Spirit: it is that which is hoped for but unseen, that which the material senses 9 cannot take in. Have you never been so preoccupied in thought when moving your body, that you did this with- out consciousness of its weight? If never in your waking 12 hours, you have been in your night-dreams; and these tend to elucidate your day-dream, or the mythical nature of matter, and the possibilities of mind when let loose 15 from its own beliefs. In sleep, a sense of the body ac- companies thought with less impediment than when awake, which is the truer sense of being. In Science, 18 body is the servant of Mind, not its master: Mind is supreme. Science reverses the evidence of material sense with the spiritual sense that God, Spirit, is the only 21 substance; and that man, His image and likeness, is spiritual, not material. This great Truth does not de- stroy but substantiates man's identity, — together with 24 his immortality and preexistence, or his spiritual co- existence with his Maker. That which has a beginning must have an ending. |
||
28 | 28 | 47 | What should one conclude as to Professor Carpenter's exhibitions of mesmerism? |
SHOW ALL | 27 What should one conclude as to Professor Carpenter's exhibitions of mesmerism? That largely depends upon what one accepts as either 30 useful or true. I have no knowledge of mesmerism, Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 48 1 practically or theoretically, save as I measure its demon- strations as a false belief, and avoid all that works ill. If 3 mesmerism has the power attributed to it by the gentle- man referred to, it should neither be taught nor practised, but should be conscientiously condemned. One thing 6 is quite apparent; namely, that its so-called power is despotic, and Mr. Carpenter deserves praise for his public exposure of it. If such be its power, I am opposed to it, 9 as to every form of error, — whether of ignorance or fanaticism, prompted by money-making or malice. It is enough for me to know that animal magnetism is neither 12 of God nor Science. It is alleged that at one of his recent lectures in Bos- ton Mr. Carpenter made a man drunk on water, and 15 then informed his audience that he could produce the effect of alcohol, or of any drug, on the human system, through the action of mind alone. This honest declara- 18 tion as to the animus of animal magnetism and the pos- sible purpose to which it can be devoted, has, we trust, been made in season to open the eyes of the people to the 21 hidden nature of some tragic events and sudden deaths at this period. |
||
29 | 29 | 48 | Was ever a person made insane by studying meta-physics? |
SHOW ALL | Was ever a person made insane by studying meta- 24 physics? Such an occurrence would be impossible, for the proper study of Mind-healing would cure the insane. 27 That persons have gone away from the Massachusetts Metaphysical College "made insane by Mrs. Eddy's teachings," like a hundred other stories, is a baseless 30 fabrication offered solely to injure her or her school. The enemy is trying to make capital out of the follow- Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 49 1 ing case. A young lady entered the College class who, I quickly saw, had a tendency to monomania, and re- 3 quested her to withdraw before its close. We are cred- ibly informed that, before entering the College, this young lady had manifested some mental unsoundness, 6 and have no doubt she could have been restored by Christian Science treatment. Her friends employed a homoeopathist, who had the skill and honor to state, as his 9 opinion given to her friends, that "Mrs. Eddy's teach- ings had not produced insanity." This is the only case that could be distorted into the claim of insanity ever 12 having occurred in a class of Mrs. Eddy's; while ac- knowledged and notable cases of insanity have been cured in her class. |
||
30 | 30 | 49 | If all that is mortal is a dream or error, is not our capacity for formulating a dream, real; is it not God-made; and if God-made, can it be wrong, sinful, or an error? |
SHOW ALL | 15 If all that is mortal is a dream or error, is not our capacity for formulating a dream, real; is it not God-made; and if God-made, can it be wrong, sinful, or 18 an error? The spirit of Truth leads into all truth, and enables man to discern between the real and the unreal. Enter- 21 taining the common belief in the opposite of goodness, and that evil is as real as good, opposes the leadings of the divine Spirit that are helping man Godward: it pre- 24 vents a recognition of the nothingness of the dream, or belief, that Mind is in matter, intelligence in non-intel- ligence, sin, and death. This belief presupposes not 27 only a power opposed to God, and that God is not All- in-all, as the Scriptures imply Him to be, but that the capacity to err proceeds from God. 30 That God is Truth, the Scriptures aver; that Truth never created error, or such a capacity, is self-evident; Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 50 1 that God made all that was made, is again Scriptural; therefore your answer is, that error is an illusion of 3 mortals; that God is not its author, and it cannot be real. |
||
31 | 31 | 50 | Does "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" explain the entire method of metaphysical healing, or is there a secret back of what is contained in that book, as some say? |
SHOW ALL | Does "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" 6 explain the entire method of metaphysical healing, or is there a secret back of what is contained in that book, as some say? 9 "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" is a complete textbook of Christian Science; and its metaphysical method of healing is as lucid in presenta- 12 tion as can be possible, under the necessity to express the metaphysical in physical terms. There is absolutely no additional secret outside of its teachings, or that gives 15 one the power to heal; but it is essential that the student gain the spiritual understanding of the contents of this book, in order to heal. |
||
32 | 32 | 50 | Do you believe in change of heart? |
SHOW ALL | 18 Do you believe in change of heart? We do believe, and understand — which is more — that there must be a change from human affections, de- 21 sires, and aims, to the divine standard, "Be ye therefore perfect;" also, that there must be a change from the be- lief that the heart is matter and sustains life, to the 24 understanding that God is our Life, that we exist in Mind, live thereby, and have being. This change of heart would deliver man from heart-disease, and ad- 27 vance Christianity a hundredfold. The human affections need to be changed from self to benevolence and love for God and man; changed to having but one God and 30 loving Him supremely, and helping our brother man. Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 51 1 This change of heart is essential to Christianity, and will have its effect physically as well as spiritually, 3 healing disease. Burnt offerings and drugs, God does not require. |
||
33 | 33 | 51 | Is a belief of nervousness, accompanied by great mental depression, mesmerism? |
Is a belief of nervousness, accompanied by great mental 6 depression, mesmerism? All mesmerism is of one of three kinds; namely, the ignorant, the fraudulent, or the malicious workings of 9 error or mortal mind. We have not the particulars of the case to which you may refer, and for this reason can- not answer your question professionally. |
|||
34 | 34 | 51 | How can I govern a child metaphysically? Doesn't the use of the rod teach him life in matter? |
SHOW ALL | 12 How can I govern a child metaphysically? Doesn't the use of the rod teach him life in matter? The use of the rod is virtually a declaration to the 15 child's mind that sensation belongs to matter. Motives govern acts, and Mind governs man. If you make clear to the child's thought the right motives for action, and 18 cause him to love them, they will lead him aright: if you educate him to love God, good, and obey the Golden Rule, he will love and obey you without your having to 21 resort to corporeal punishment. "When from the lips of Truth one mighty breath Shall, like a whirlwind, scatter in its breeze 24 The whole dark pile of human mockeries; Then shall the reign of Mind commence on earth, And starting fresh, as from a second birth, 27 Man in the sunshine of the world's new spring, Shall walk transparent like some holy thing." |
||
35 | 35 | 51 | Are both prayer and drugs necessary to heal? |
SHOW ALL | Are both prayer and drugs necessary to heal? 30 The apostle James said, "Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it upon your Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 52 1 lusts." This text may refer to such as seek the material to aid the spiritual, and take drugs to support God's 3 power to heal them. It is difficult to say how much one can do for himself, whose faith is divided be- tween catnip and Christ; but not so difficult to know 6 that if he were to serve one master, he could do vastly more. Whosoever understands the power of Spirit, has no doubt of God's power, — even the might of Truth, — 9 to heal, through divine Science, beyond all human means and methods. |
||
36 | 36 | 52 | What do you think of marriage? |
What do you think of marriage? 12 That it is often convenient, sometimes pleasant, and occasionally a love affair. Marriage is susceptible of many definitions. It sometimes presents the most 15 wretched condition of human existence. To be normal, it must be a union of the affections that tends to lift mortals higher. |
|||
37 | 37 | 52 | If this life is a dream not dispelled, but only changed, by death, — if one gets tired of it, why not commit suicide? |
SHOW ALL | 18 If this life is a dream not dispelled, but only changed, by death, — if one gets tired of it, why not commit suicide? 21 Man's existence is a problem to be wrought in divine Science. What progress would a student of science make, if, when tired of mathematics or failing to dem- 24 onstrate one rule readily, he should attempt to work out a rule farther on and more difficult — and this, because the first rule was not easily demonstrated? In 27 that case he would be obliged to turn back and work out the previous example, before solving the advanced problem. Mortals have the sum of being to work out, 30 and up, to its spiritual standpoint. They must work Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 53 1 out of this dream or false claim of sensation and life in matter, and up to the spiritual realities of existence, 3 before this false claim can be wholly dispelled. Com- mitting suicide to dodge the question is not working it out. The error of supposed life and intelligence in 6 matter, is dissolved only as we master error with Truth. Not through sin or suicide, but by overcoming tempta- tion and sin, shall we escape the weariness and wicked- 9 ness of mortal existence, and gain heaven, the harmony of being. |
||
38 | 38 | 53 | Do you sometimes find it advisable to use medicine to assist in producing a cure, when it is difficult to start the patient's recovery? |
SHOW ALL | Do you sometimes find it advisable to use medicine to 12 assist in producing a cure, when it is difficult to start the patient's recovery? You only weaken your power to heal through Mind, 15 by any compromise with matter; which is virtually ac- knowledging that under difficulties the former is not equal to the latter. He that resorts to physics, seeks what is 18 below instead of above the standard of metaphysics; showing his ignorance of the meaning of the term and of Christian Science. |
||
39 | 39 | 53 | If Christian Science is the same as Jesus taught, why is it not more simple, so that all can readily understand it? |
SHOW ALL | 21 If Christian Science is the same as Jesus taught, why is it not more simple, so that all can readily understand it? The teachings of Jesus were simple; and yet he found 24 it difficult to make the rulers understand, because of their great lack of spirituality. Christian Science is simple, and readily understood by the children; only 27 the thought educated away from it finds it abstract or difficult to perceive. Its seeming abstraction is the mystery of godliness; and godliness is simple to the 30 godly; but to the unspiritual, the ungodly, it is dark Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 54 1 and difficult. The carnal mind cannot discern spiritual things. |
||
40 | 40 | 54 | Has Mrs. Eddy lost her power to heal? |
SHOW ALL | 3 Has Mrs. Eddy lost her power to heal? Has the sun forgotten to shine, and the planets to revolve around it? Who is it that discovered, dem- 6 onstrated, and teaches Christian Science? That one, whoever it be, does understand something of what can- not be lost. Thousands in the field of metaphysical 9 healing, whose lives are worthy testimonials, are her students, and they bear witness to this fact. Instead of losing her power to heal, she is demonstrating the 12 power of Christian Science over all obstacles that envy and malice would fling in her path. The reading of her book, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," 15 is curing hundreds at this very time; and the sick, un- asked, are testifying thereto. |
||
41 | 41 | 54 | Must I study your Science in order to keep well all my life? I was healed of a chronic trouble after one month's treatment by one of your students. |
SHOW ALL | Must I study your Science in order to keep well all my 18 life? I was healed of a chronic trouble after one month's treatment by one of your students. When once you are healed by Science, there is no rea- 21 son why you should be liable to a return of the disease that you were healed of. But not to be subject again to any disease whatsoever, would require an understanding 24 of the Science by which you were healed. |
||
42 | 42 | 54 | Because none of your students have been able to perform as great miracles in healing as Jesus and his disciples did, does it not suggest the possibility that they do not heal on the same basis? |
SHOW ALL | Because none of your students have been able to perform as great miracles in healing as Jesus and his disciples did, 27 does it not suggest the possibility that they do not heal on the same basis? You would not ask the pupil in simple equations to 30 solve a problem involving logarithms; and then, because Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 55 1 he failed to get the right answer, condemn the pupil and the science of numbers. The simplest problem 3 in Christian Science is healing the sick, and the least understanding and demonstration thereof prove all its possibilities. The ability to demonstrate to the extent 6 that Jesus did, will come when the student possesses as much of the divine Spirit as he shared, and utilizes its power to overcome sin. 9 Opposite to good, is the universal claim of evil that seeks the proportions of good. There may be those who, having learned the power of the unspoken thought, 12 use it to harm rather than to heal, and who are using that power against Christian Scientists. This giant sin is the sin against the Holy Ghost spoken of in Matt. 15 xii. 31, 32. |
||
43 | 43 | 55 | Is Christian Science based on the facts of both Spirit and matter? |
SHOW ALL | Is Christian Science based on the facts of both Spirit and matter? 18 Christian Science is based on the facts of Spirit and its forms and representations, but these facts are the direct antipodes of the so-called facts of matter; and 21 the eternal verities of Spirit assert themselves over their opposite, or matter, in the final destruction of all that is unlike Spirit. 24 Man knows that he can have one God only, when he regards God as the only Mind, Life, and substance. If God is Spirit, as the Scriptures declare, and All-in- 27 all, matter is mythology, and its laws are mortal beliefs. If Mind is in matter and beneath a skull bone, it is 30 in something unlike Him; hence it is either a godless and material Mind, or it is God in matter, — which are theo- Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 56 1 ries of agnosticism and pantheism, the very antipodes of Christian Science. |
||
44 | 44 | 56 | What is organic life? |
SHOW ALL | 3 What is organic life? Life is inorganic, infinite Spirit; if Life, or Spirit, were organic, disorganization would destroy Spirit and 6 annihilate man. If Mind is not substance, form, and tangibility, God is substanceless; for the substance of Spirit is divine 9 Mind. Life is God, the only creator, and Life is im- mortal Mind, not matter. Every indication of matter's constituting life is mortal, 12 the direct opposite of immortal Life, and infringes the rights of Spirit. Then, to conclude that Spirit consti- tutes or ever has constituted laws to that effect, is a mor- 15 tal error, a human conception opposed to the divine government. Mind and matter mingling in perpetual warfare is a kingdom divided against itself, that shall be 18 brought to desolation. The final destruction of this false belief in matter will appear at the full revelation of Spirit, — one God, and the brotherhood of man. 21 Organic life is an error of statement that Truth destroys. The Science of Life needs only to be understood; its dem- onstration proves the correctness of my statements, and 24 brings blessings infinite. |
||
45 | 45 | 56 | Why did God command, "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth," if all minds (men) have existed from the beginning, and have had successive stages of existence to the present time? |
SHOW ALL | Why did God command, "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth," if all minds (men) have existed 27 from the beginning, and have had successive stages of existence to the present time? Your question implies that Spirit, which first spirit- 30 ually created the universe, including man, created man Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 57 1 over again materially; and, by the aid of mankind, all was later made which He had made. If the first record 3 is true, what evidence have you — apart from the evi- dence of that which you admit cannot discern spiritual things — of any other creation? The creative "Us" 6 made all, and Mind was the creator. Man originated not from dust, materially, but from Spirit, spiritually. This work had been done; the true creation was finished, 9 and its spiritual Science is alluded to in the first chapter of Genesis. Jesus said of error, "That thou doest, do quickly." 12 By the law of opposites, after the truth of man had been demonstrated, the postulate of error must appear. That this addendum was untrue, is seen when Truth, God, 15 denounced it, and said: "I will greatly multiply thy sorrow." "In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die." The opposite error said, "I am true," and 18 declared, "God doth know . . . that your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods," creators. This was false; and the Lord God never said it. This history of a falsity 21 must be told in the name of Truth, or it would have no seeming. The Science of creation is the universe with man created spiritually. The false sense and error of creation 24 is the sense of man and the universe created materially. |
||
46 | 46 | 57 | Why does the record make man a creation of the sixth and last day, if he was coexistent with God? |
SHOW ALL | Why does the record make man a creation of the sixth and last day, if he was coexistent with God? 27 In its genesis, the Science of creation is stated in mathe- matical order, beginning with the lowest form and ascend- ing the scale of being up to man. But all that really is, 30 always was and forever is; for it existed in and of the Mind that is God, wherein man is foremost. |
||
47 | 47 | 58 | If one has died of consumption, and he has no remembrance of that disease or dream, does that disease have any more power over him? |
SHOW ALL | 1 If one has died of consumption, and he has no remem- brance of that disease or dream, does that disease have any 3 more power over him? Waking from a dream, one learns its unreality; then it has no power over one. Waking from the dream of 6 death, proves to him who thought he died that it was a dream, and that he did not die; then he learns that con- sumption did not kill him. When the belief in the power 9 of disease is destroyed, disease cannot return. |
||
48 | 48 | 58 | How does Mrs. Eddy know that she has read and studied correctly, if one must deny the evidences of the senses? 12 She had to use her eyes to read. |
SHOW ALL | How does Mrs. Eddy know that she has read and studied correctly, if one must deny the evidences of the senses? 12 She had to use her eyes to read. Jesus said, "Having eyes, see ye not?" I read the in- spired page through a higher than mortal sense. As 15 matter, the eye cannot see; and as mortal mind, it is a belief that sees. I may read the Scriptures through a belief of eyesight; but I must spiritually understand 18 them to interpret their Science. |
||
49 | 49 | 58 | Does the theology of Christian Science aid its healing? |
SHOW ALL | Does the theology of Christian Science aid its heal- ing? 21 Without its theology there is no mental science, no order that proceeds from God. All Science is divine, not human, in origin and demonstration. If God does 24 not govern the action of man, it is inharmonious: if He does govern it, the action is Science. Take away the theology of mental healing and you take away its science, 27 leaving it a human "mind-cure," nothing more nor less, — even one human mind governing another; by which, if you agree that God is Mind, you admit that there is Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 59 1 more than one government and God. Having no true sense of the healing theology of Mind, you can neither 3 understand nor demonstrate its Science, and will prac- tise your belief of it in the name of Truth. This is the mortal "mind-cure" that produces the effect of mes- 6 merism. It is using the power of human will, instead of the divine power understood, as in Christian Science; and without this Science there had better be no "mind- 9 cure," — in which the last state of patients is worse than the first. |
||
50 | 50 | 59 | Is it wrong to pray for the recovery of the sick? |
SHOW ALL | Is it wrong to pray for the recovery of the sick? 12 Not if we pray Scripturally, with the understanding that God has given all things to those who love Him; but pleading with infinite Love to love us, or to restore 15 health and harmony, and then to admit that it has been lost under His government, is the prayer of doubt and mortal belief that is unavailing in divine Science. |
||
51 | 51 | 59 | Is not all argument mind over mind? |
SHOW ALL | 18 Is not all argument mind over mind? The Scriptures refer to God as saying, "Come now, and let us reason together." There is but one right Mind, and 21 that one should and does govern man. Any copartnership with that Mind is impossible; and the only benefit in speaking often one to another, arises from the success that 24 one individual has with another in leading his thoughts away from the human mind or body, and guiding them with Truth. That individual is the best healer who as- 27 serts himself the least, and thus becomes a transparency for the divine Mind, who is the only physician; the divine Mind is the scientific healer. |
||
52 | 52 | 60 | How can you believe there is no sin, and that God does not recognize any, when He sent His Son to save from sin, and the Bible is addressed to sinners? How can you believe there is no sickness, when Jesus came healing the sick? |
SHOW ALL | 1 How can you believe there is no sin, and that God does not recognize any, when He sent His Son to save from 3 sin, and the Bible is addressed to sinners? How can you believe there is no sickness, when Jesus came healing the sick? 6 To regard sin, disease, and death with less deference, and only as the woeful unrealities of being, is the only way to destroy them; Christian Science is proving this by 9 healing cases of disease and sin after all other means have failed. The Nazarene Prophet could make the unreality of both apparent in a moment. |
||
53 | 53 | 60 | Does it not limit the power of Mind to deny the possibility of communion with departed friends — dead only in belief? |
SHOW ALL | 12 Does it not limit the power of Mind to deny the possi- bility of communion with departed friends — dead only in belief? 15 Does it limit the power of Mind to say that addition is not subtraction in mathematics? The Science of Mind reveals the impossibility of two individual sleepers, in 18 different phases of thought, communicating, even if touch- ing each other corporeally; or for one who sleeps to communicate with another who is awake. Mind's possi- 21 bilities are not lessened by being confined and conformed to the Science of being. |
||
54 | 54 | 60 | If mortal mind and body are myths, what is the connection between them and real identity, and why are there as many identities as mortal bodies? |
SHOW ALL | If mortal mind and body are myths, what is the con- 24 nection between them and real identity, and why are there as many identities as mortal bodies? Evil in the beginning claimed the power, wisdom, and 27 utility of good; and every creation or idea of Spirit has its counterfeit in some matter belief. Every material be- lief hints the existence of spiritual reality; and if mortals 30 are instructed in spiritual things, it will be seen that ma- Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 61 1 terial belief, in all its manifestations, reversed, will be found the type and representative of verities priceless, 3 eternal, and just at hand. The education of the future will be instruction, in spir- itual Science, against the material symbolic counterfeit 6 sciences. All the knowledge and vain strivings of mortal mind, that lead to death, — even when aping the wisdom and magnitude of immortal Mind, — will be swallowed 9 up by the reality and omnipotence of Truth over error, and of Life over death. |
||
55 | 55 | 61 | "Dear Mrs. Eddy: — In the October Journal I read the following: 'But the real man, who was created in the image of God, does not commit sin.' What then does sin? What commits theft? Or who does murder? For instance, the man is held responsible for the crime; for I went once to a place where a man was said to be 'hanged for murder' — and certainly I saw him, or his effigy, dangling at the end of a rope. This 'man' was held responsible for the 'sin.'" |
SHOW ALL | "Dear Mrs. Eddy: — In the October Journal I read 12 the following: 'But the real man, who was created in the image of God, does not commit sin.' What then does sin? What commits theft? Or who does murder? For instance, 15 the man is held responsible for the crime; for I went once to a place where a man was said to be 'hanged for mur- der' — and certainly I saw him, or his effigy, dangling 18 at the end of a rope. This 'man' was held responsible for the 'sin.'" What sins? 21 According to the Word, man is the image and likeness of God. Does God's essential likeness sin, or dangle at the end of a rope? If not, what does? A culprit, a sinner, 24 — anything but a man! Then, what is a sinner? A mortal; but man is immortal. Again: mortals are the embodiments (or bodies, if 27 you please) of error, not of Truth; of sickness, sin, and death. Naming these His embodiment, can neither make them so nor overthrow the logic that man is God's like- 30 ness. Mortals seem very material; man in the likeness Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 62 1 of Spirit is spiritual. Holding the right idea of man in my mind, I can improve my own, and other people's individ- 3 uality, health, and morals; whereas, the opposite image of man, a sinner, kept constantly in mind, can no more improve health or morals, than holding in thought the 6 form of a boa-constrictor can aid an artist in painting a landscape. Man is seen only in the true likeness of his Maker. 9 Believing a lie veils the truth from our vision; even as in mathematics, in summing up positive and negative quantities, the negative quantity offsets an equal positive 12 quantity, making the aggregate positive, or true quantity, by that much, less available. |
||
56 | 56 | 62 | Why do Christian Scientists hold that their theology is essential to heal the sick, when the mind-cure claims to heal without it? |
SHOW ALL | Why do Christian Scientists hold that their theology is 15 essential to heal the sick, when the mind-cure claims to heal without it? The theology of Christian Science is Truth; opposed 18 to which is the error of sickness, sin, and death, that Truth destroys. A "mind-cure" is a matter-cure. An adherent to this 21 method honestly acknowledges this fact in her work entitled "Mind-cure on a Material Basis." In that work the author grapples with Christian Science, attempts 24 to solve its divine Principle by the rule of human mind, fails, and ends in a parody on this Science which is amus- ing to astute readers, — especially when she tells them 27 that she is practising this Science. The theology of Christian Science is based on the action of the divine Mind over the human mind and body; 30 whereas, "mind-cure" rests on the notion that the human mind can cure its own disease, or that which it causes, Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 63 1 and the sickness of matter, — which is infidel in the one case, and anomalous in the other. It was said of old by 3 Truth-traducers, that Jesus healed through Beelzebub; but the claim that one erring mind cures another one was at first gotten up to hinder his benign influence and to hide 6 his divine power. Our Master understood that Life, Truth, Love are the triune Principle of all pure theology; also, that this divine 9 trinity is one infinite remedy for the opposite triad, sick- ness, sin, and death. |
||
57 | 57 | 63 | If there is no sin, why did Jesus come to save sinners? |
SHOW ALL | If there is no sin, why did Jesus come to save sinners? 12 If there is no reality in sickness, why does a Chris- tian Scientist go to the bedside and address himself to the healing of disease, on the basis of its unreality? 15 Jesus came to seek and to save such as believe in the reality of the unreal; to save them from this false belief; that they might lay hold of eternal Life, the great reality 18 that concerns man, and understand the final fact, — that God is omnipotent and omnipresent; yea, "that the Lord He is God; there is none else beside Him," as the Scrip- 21 tures declare. |
||
58 | 58 | 63 | If Christ was God, why did Jesus cry out, "My God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" |
SHOW ALL | If Christ was God, why did Jesus cry out, "My God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" 24 Even as the struggling heart, reaching toward a higher goal, appeals to its hope and faith, Why failest thou me? Jesus as the son of man was human: Christ as 27 the Son of God was divine. This divinity was reaching humanity through the crucifixion of the human, — that momentous demonstration of God, in which Spirit proved 30 its supremacy over matter. Jesus assumed for mortals the Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 64 1 weakness of flesh, that Spirit might be found "All-in-all." Hence, the human cry which voiced that struggle; 3 thence, the way he made for mortals' escape. Our Master bore the cross to show his power over death; then relinquished his earth-task of teaching and dem- 6 onstrating the nothingness of sickness, sin, and death, and rose to his native estate, man's indestructible eternal life in God. |
||
59 | 59 | 64 | What can prospective students of the College take for preliminary studies? Do you regard the study of literature and languages as objectionable? |
SHOW ALL | 9 What can prospective students of the College take for preliminary studies? Do you regard the study of litera- ture and languages as objectionable? 12 Persons contemplating a course at the Massachusetts Metaphysical College, can prepare for it through no books except the Bible, and "Science and Health with 15 Key to the Scriptures." Man-made theories are nar- row, else extravagant, and are always materialistic. The ethics which guide thought spiritually must bene- 18 fit every one; for the only philosophy and religion that afford instruction are those which deal with facts and resist speculative opinions and fables. 21 Works on science are profitable; for science is not human. It is spiritual, and not material. Literature and languages, to a limited extent, are aids to a student 24 of the Bible and of Christian Science. |
||
60 | 60 | 64 | Is it possible to know why we are put into this condition of mortality? |
SHOW ALL | Is it possible to know why we are put into this condition of mortality? 27 It is quite as possible to know wherefore man is thus conditioned, as to be certain that he is in a state of mortality. The only evidence of the existence of a mor- 30 tal man, or of a material state and universe, is gathered Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 65 1 from the five personal senses. This delusive evidence, Science has dethroned by repeated proofs of its falsity. 3 We have no more proof of human discord, — sin, sickness, disease, or death, — than we have that the earth's surface is flat, and her motions imaginary. If 6 man's ipse dixit as to the stellar system is correct, this is because Science is true, and the evidence of the senses is false. Then why not submit to the affirmations of 9 Science concerning the greater subject of human weal and woe? Every question between Truth and error, Science must and will decide. Left to the decision of 12 Science, your query concerns a negative which the posi- tive Truth destroys; for God's universe and man are immortal. We must not consider the false side of exist- 15 ence in order to gain the true solution of Life and its great realities. |
||
61 | 61 | 65 | Have you changed your instructions as to the right way of treating disease? |
SHOW ALL | Have you changed your instructions as to the right way 18 of treating disease? I have not; and this important fact must be, and al- ready is, apprehended by those who understand my in- 21 structions on this question. Christian Science demands both law and gospel, in order to demonstrate healing, and I have taught them both in its demonstration, and 24 with signs following. They are a unit in restoring the equipoise of mind and body, and balancing man's ac- count with his Maker. The sequence proves that strict 27 adherence to one is inadequate to compensate for the absence of the other, since both constitute the divine law of healing. 30 The Jewish religion demands that "whoso sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed." But this Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 66 1 law is not infallible in wisdom; and obedience thereto may be found faulty, since false testimony or mistaken 3 evidence may cause the innocent to suffer for the guilty. Hence the gospel that fulfils the law in righteousness, the genius whereof is displayed in the surprising wisdom 6 of these words of the New Testament: "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap." No possible injustice lurks in this mandate, and no human mis- 9 judgment can pervert it; for the offender alone suffers, and always according to divine decree. This sacred, solid precept is verified in all directions in Mind- 12 healing, and is supported in the Scripture by parallel proof. The law and gospel of Truth and Love teach, through 15 divine Science, that sin is identical with suffering, and that suffering is the lighter affliction. To reach the sum- mit of Science, whence to discern God's perfect ways 18 and means, the material sense must be controlled by the higher spiritual sense, and Truth be enthroned, while "we look not at the things which are seen, but at 21 the things which are not seen." Cynical critics misjudge my meaning as to the sci- entific treatment of the sick. Disease that is superin- 24 duced by sin is not healed like the more physical ailment. The beginner in sin-healing must know this, or he never can reach the Science of Mind-healing, and 27 so "overcome evil with good." Error in premise is met with error in practice; yea, it is "the blind leading the blind." Ignorance of the cause of disease can neither 30 remove that cause nor its effect. I endeavor to accommodate my instructions to the present capability of the learner, and to support the Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 67 1 liberated thought until its altitude reaches beyond the mere alphabet of Mind-healing. Above physical wants, 3 lie the higher claims of the law and gospel of healing. First is the law, which saith: — "Thou shalt not commit adultery;" in other words, 6 thou shalt not adulterate Life, Truth, or Love, — men- tally, morally, or physically. "Thou shalt not steal;" that is, thou shalt not rob man of money, which is but 9 trash, compared with his rights of mind and character. "Thou shalt not kill;" that is, thou shalt not strike at the eternal sense of Life with a malicious aim, but shalt 12 know that by doing thus thine own sense of Life shall be forfeited. "Thou shalt not bear false witness;" that is, thou shalt not utter a lie, either mentally or audibly, nor 15 cause it to be thought. Obedience to these command- ments is indispensable to health, happiness, and length of days. 18 The gospel of healing demonstrates the law of Love. Justice uncovers sin of every sort; and mercy demands that if you see the danger menacing others, you shall, 21 Deo volente, inform them thereof. Only thus is the right practice of Mind-healing achieved, and the wrong prac- tice discerned, disarmed, and destroyed. |
||
62 | 62 | 67 | Do you believe in translation? |
SHOW ALL | 24 Do you believe in translation? If your question refers to language, whereby one ex- presses the sense of words in one language by equiva- 27 lent words in another, I do. If you refer to the removal of a person to heaven, without his subjection to death, I modify my affirmative answer. I believe in this 30 removal being possible after all the footsteps requisite have been taken up to the very throne, up to the Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 68 1 spiritual sense and fact of divine substance, intelligence, Life, and Love. This translation is not the work of mo- 3 ments; it requires both time and eternity. It means more than mere disappearance to the human sense; it must include also man's changed appearance and diviner form 6 visible to those beholding him here. |
||
63 | 63 | 68 | The Rev. —— said in a sermon: A true Christian would protest against metaphysical healing being called Christian Science. He also maintained that pain and disease are not illusions but realities; and that it is not Christian to believe they are illusions. Is this so? |
SHOW ALL | The Rev. —— said in a sermon: A true Christian would protest against metaphysical healing being called 9 Christian Science. He also maintained that pain and disease are not illusions but realities; and that it is not Christian to believe they are illusions. Is this so? 12 It is unchristian to believe that pain and sickness are anything but illusions. My proof of this is, that the penalty for believing in their reality is the very pain and 15 disease. Jesus cast out a devil, and the dumb spake; hence it is right to know that the works of Satan are the illusion and error which Truth casts out. 18 Does the gentleman above mentioned know the meaning of divine metaphysics, or of metaphysical theology? 21 According to Webster, metaphysics is defined thus: "The science of the conceptions and relations which are necessary to thought and knowledge; science of the 24 mind." Worcester defines it as "the philosophy of mind, as distinguished from that of matter; a science of which the object is to explain the principles and causes of 27 all things existing." Brande calls metaphysics "the science which regards the ultimate grounds of being, as distinguished from its phenomenal modifications." "A 30 speculative science, which soars beyond the bounds of experience," is a further definition. Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 69 1 Divine metaphysics is that which treats of the exist- ence of God, His essence, relations, and attributes. A 3 sneer at metaphysics is a scoff at Deity; at His goodness, mercy, and might. Christian Science is the unfolding of true metaphysics; 6 that is, of Mind, or God, and His attributes. Science rests on Principle and demonstration. The Principle of Chris- tian Science is divine. Its rule is, that man shall utilize 9 the divine power. In Genesis i. 26, we read: "Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have 12 dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air." I was once called to visit a sick man to whom the 15 regular physicians had given three doses of Croton oil, and then had left him to die. Upon my arrival I found him barely alive, and in terrible agony. In one 18 hour he was well, and the next day he attended to his business. I removed the stoppage, healed him of en- teritis, and neutralized the bad effects of the poison- 21 ous oil. His physicians had failed even to move his bowels, — though the wonder was, with the means used in their effort to accomplish this result, that 24 they had not quite killed him. According to their diagnosis, the exciting cause of the inflammation and stoppage was — eating smoked herring. The man is 27 living yet; and I will send his address to any one who may wish to apply to him for information about his case. 30 Now comes the question: Had that sick man dominion over the fish in his stomach? His want of control over "the fish of the sea" must Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 70 1 have been an illusion, or else the Scriptures misstate man's power. That the Bible is true I believe, not 3 only, but I demonstrated its truth when I exercised my power over the fish, cast out the sick man's illu- sion, and healed him. Thus it was shown that the 6 healing action of Mind upon the body has its only ex- planation in divine metaphysics. As a man "thinketh in his heart, so is he." When the mortal thought, or be- 9 lief, was removed, the man was well. |
||
64 | 64 | 70 | What did Jesus mean when he said to the dying thief, "To-day shalt thou be with me in paradise"? |
SHOW ALL | What did Jesus mean when he said to the dying thief, "To-day shalt thou be with me in paradise"? 12 Paradisaical rest from physical agony would come to the criminal, if the dream of dying should startle him from the dream of suffering. The paradise of Spirit 15 would come to Jesus, in a spiritual sense of Life and power. Christ Jesus lived and reappeared. He was too good to die; for goodness is immortal. The thief was 18 not equal to the demands of the hour; but sin was de- stroying itself, and had already begun to die, — as the poor thief's prayer for help indicated. The dy- 21 ing malefactor and our Lord were inevitably sepa- rated through Mind. The thief's body, as matter, must dissolve into its native nothingness; whereas the 24 body of the holy Spirit of Jesus was eternal. That day the thief would be with Jesus only in a finite and material sense of relief; while our Lord would 27 soon be rising to the supremacy of Spirit, working out, even in the silent tomb, those wonderful demon- strations of divine power, in which none could equal his 30 glory. |
||
65 | 65 | 71 | Is it right for me to treat others, when I am not entirely well myself? |
SHOW ALL | 1 Is it right for me to treat others, when I am not entirely well myself? 3 The late John B. Gough is said to have suffered from an appetite for alcoholic drink until his death; yet he saved many a drunkard from this fatal appetite. Paul 6 had a thorn in the flesh: one writer thinks that he was troubled with rheumatism, and another that he had sore eyes; but this is certain, that he healed others who were 9 sick. It is unquestionably right to do right; and heal- ing the sick is a very right thing to do. |
||
66 | 66 | 71 | Does Christian Science set aside the law of transmission, prenatal desires, and good or bad influences on the unborn child? |
SHOW ALL | Does Christian Science set aside the law of transmission, 12 prenatal desires, and good or bad influences on the unborn child? Science never averts law, but supports it. All actual 15 causation must interpret omnipotence, the all-knowing Mind. Law brings out Truth, not error; unfolds divine Principle, — but neither human hypothesis nor matter. 18 Errors are based on a mortal or material formation; they are suppositional modes, not the factors of divine presence and power. 21 Whatever is humanly conceived is a departure from divine law; hence its mythical origin and certain end. According to the Scriptures, — St. Paul declares astutely, 24 "For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things," — man is incapable of originating: nothing can be formed apart from God, good, the all-knowing Mind. 27 What seems to be of human origin is the counterfeit of the divine, — even human concepts, mortal shadows flitting across the dial of time. 30 Whatever is real is right and eternal; hence the im- mutable and just law of Science, that God is good only, Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 72 1 and can transmit to man and the universe nothing evil, or unlike Himself. For the innocent babe to be born a 3 lifelong sufferer because of his parents' mistakes or sins, were sore injustice. Science sets aside man as a creator, and unfolds the eternal harmonies of the only living and 6 true origin, God. According to the beliefs of the flesh, both good and bad traits of the parents are transmitted to their help- 9 less offspring, and God is supposed to impart to man this fatal power. It is cause for rejoicing that this belief is as false as it is remorseless. The immutable Word 12 saith, through the prophet Ezekiel, "What mean ye, that ye use this proverb concerning the land of Israel, saying, The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children's 15 teeth are set on edge? As I live, saith the Lord God, ye shall not have occasion any more to use this proverb in Israel." |
||
67 | 67 | 72 | Are material things real when they are harmonious, and do they disappear only to the natural sense? Does this Scripture, "Your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things," imply that Spirit takes note of matter? |
SHOW ALL | 18 Are material things real when they are harmonious, and do they disappear only to the natural sense? Does this Scripture, "Your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have 21 need of all these things," imply that Spirit takes note of matter? The Science of Mind, as well as the material uni- 24 verse, shows that nothing which is material is in perpetual harmony. Matter is manifest mortal mind, and it exists only to material sense. Real sensation 27 is not material; it is, and must be, mental: and Mind is not mortal, it is immortal. Being is God, infinite Spirit; therefore it cannot cognize aught material, or 30 outside of infinity. The Scriptural passage quoted affords no evidence of Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 73 1 the reality of matter, or that God is conscious of it. The so-called material body is said to suffer, but this 3 supposition is proven erroneous when Mind casts out the suffering. The Scripture saith, "Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth;" and again, "He doth not 6 afflict willingly." Interpreted materially, these pas- sages conflict; they mingle the testimony of immor- tal Science with mortal sense; but once discern their 9 spiritual meaning, and it separates the false sense from the true, and establishes the reality of what is spiritual, and the unreality of materiality. 12 Law is never material: it is always mental and moral, and a commandment to the wise. The foolish disobey moral law, and are punished. Human wisdom therefore 15 can get no farther than to say, He knoweth that we have need of experience. Belief fulfils the conditions of a be- lief, and these conditions destroy the belief. Hence the 18 verdict of experience: We have need of these things; we have need to know that the so-called pleasures and pains of matter — yea, that all subjective states of false sensa- 21 tion — are unreal. |
||
68 | 68 | 73 | "And Jesus said unto them, Verily I say unto you, That ye which have followed me, in the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit in the throne of his glory, ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel." (Matt. xix. 28.) What is meant by regeneration? |
SHOW ALL | "And Jesus said unto them, Verily I say unto you, That ye which have followed me, in the regeneration when 24 the Son of man shall sit in the throne of his glory, ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel." (Matt. xix. 28.) What is meant 27 by regeneration? It is the appearing of divine law to human under- standing; the spiritualization that comes from spiritual 30 sense in contradistinction to the testimony of the so- called material senses. The phenomena of Spirit in Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 74 1 Christian Science, and the divine correspondence of noumenon and phenomenon understood, are here signi- 3 fied. This new-born sense subdues not only the false sense of generation, but the human will, and the un- natural enmity of mortal man toward God. It quickly 6 imparts a new apprehension of the true basis of being, and the spiritual foundation for the affections which en- throne the Son of man in the glory of his Father; and 9 judges, through the stern mandate of Science, all human systems of etiology and teleology. |
||
69 | 69 | 74 | If God does not recognize matter, how did Jesus, who was "the way, the truth, and the life," cognize it? |
SHOW ALL | If God does not recognize matter, how did Jesus, who was 12 "the way, the truth, and the life," cognize it? Christ Jesus' sense of matter was the opposite of that which mortals entertain: his nativity was a spiritual and 15 immortal sense of the ideal world. His earthly mission was to translate substance into its original meaning, Mind. He walked upon the waves; he turned the water 18 into wine; he healed the sick and the sinner; he raised the dead, and rolled away the stone from the door of his own tomb. His demonstration of Spirit virtually van- 21 quished matter and its supposed laws. Walking the wave, he proved the fallacy of the theory that matter is substance; healing through Mind, he removed any sup- 24 position that matter is intelligent, or can recognize or express pain and pleasure. His triumph over the grave was an everlasting victory for Life; it demonstrated the 27 lifelessness of matter, and the power and permanence of Spirit. He met and conquered the resistance of the world. 30 If you will admit, with me, that matter is neither substance, intelligence, nor Life, you may have all that Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 75 1 is left of it; and you will have touched the hem of the garment of Jesus' idea of matter. Christ was "the way;" 3 since Life and Truth were the way that gave us, through a human person, a spiritual revelation of man's possible earthly development. |
||
70 | 70 | 75 | Why do you insist that there is but one Soul, and that Soul is not in the body? |
SHOW ALL | 6 Why do you insist that there is but one Soul, and that Soul is not in the body? First: I urge this fundamental fact and grand verity 9 of Christian Science, because it includes a rule that must be understood, or it is impossible to demonstrate the Sci- ence. Soul is a synonym of Spirit, and God is Spirit. 12 There is but one God, and the infinite is not within the finite; hence Soul is one, and is God; and God is not in matter or the mortal body. 15 Second: Because Soul is a term for Deity, and this term should seldom be employed except where the word God can be used and make complete sense. The word 18 Soul may sometimes be used metaphorically; but if this term is warped to signify human quality, a substitution of sense for soul clears the meaning, and assists one to 21 understand Christian Science. Mary's exclamation, "My soul doth magnify the Lord," is rendered in Sci- ence, "My spiritual sense doth magnify the Lord;" 24 for the name of Deity used in that place does not bring out the meaning of the passage. It was evidently an illuminated sense through which she discovered the 27 spiritual origin of man. "The soul that sinneth, it shall die," means, that mortal man (alias material sense) that sinneth, shall die; and the commonly accepted view is 30 that soul is deathless. Soul is the divine Mind, — for Soul cannot be formed or brought forth by human Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 76 1 thought, — and must proceed from God; hence it must be sinless, and destitute of self-created or derived capacity 3 to sin. Third: Jesus said, "If a man keep my saying, he shall never see death." This statement of our Master 6 is true, and remains to be demonstrated; for it is the ultimatum of Christian Science; but this immortal saying can never be tested or proven true upon a false premise, 9 such as the mortal belief that soul is in body, and life and intelligence are in matter. That doctrine is not theism, but pantheism. According to human belief the 12 bodies of mortals are mortal, but they contain immortal souls! hence these bodies must die for these souls to escape and be immortal. The theory that death must 15 occur, to set a human soul free from its environments, is rendered void by Jesus' divine declaration, who spake as never man spake, — and no man can rationally reject 18 his authority on this subject and accept it on other topics less important. Now, exchange the term soul for sense whenever this 21 word means the so-called soul in the body, and you will find the right meaning indicated. The misnamed human soul is material sense, which sinneth and shall die; for 24 it is an error or false sense of mentality in matter, and matter has no sense. You will admit that Soul is the Life of man. Now if Soul sinned, it would die; for "the 27 wages of sin is death." The Scripture saith, "When Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with him in glory." The Science of Soul, Spirit, 30 involves this appearing, and is essential to the fulfilment of this glorious prophecy of the master Metaphysician, who overcame the last enemy, death. |
||
71 | 71 | 77 | Did the salvation of the eunuch depend merely on his believing that Jesus Christ was the Son of God? |
SHOW ALL | 1 Did the salvation of the eunuch depend merely on his believing that Jesus Christ was the Son of God? 3 It did; but this believing was more than faith in the fact that Jesus was the Messiah. Here the verb believe took its original meaning, namely, to be firm, — yea, to 6 understand those great truths asserted of the Messiah: it meant to discern and consent to that infinite demand made upon the eunuch in those few words of the apostle. 9 Philip's requirement was, that he should not only ac- knowledge the incarnation, — God made manifest through man, — but even the eternal unity of man and God, as 12 the divine Principle and spiritual idea; which is the in- dissoluble bond of union, the power and presence, in divine Science, of Life, Truth, and Love, to support their 15 ideal man. This is the Father's great Love that He hath bestowed upon us, and it holds man in endless Life and one eternal round of harmonious being. It 18 guides him by Truth that knows no error, and with supersensual, impartial, and unquenchable Love. To believe is to be firm. In adopting all this vast idea of 21 Christ Jesus, the eunuch was to know in whom he be- lieved. To believe thus was to enter the spiritual sanctuary of Truth, and there learn, in divine Science, somewhat 24 of the All-Father-Mother God. It was to understand God and man: it was sternly to rebuke the mortal belief that man has fallen away from his first estate; that 27 man, made in God's own likeness, and reflecting Truth, could fall into mortal error; or, that man is the father of man. It was to enter unshod the Holy of Holies, where 30 the miracle of grace appears, and where the miracles of Jesus had their birth, — healing the sick, casting out evils, and resurrecting the human sense to the belief Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 78 1 that Life, God, is not buried in matter. This is the spirit- ual dawn of the Messiah, and the overture of the 3 angels. This is when God is made manifest in the flesh, and thus it destroys all sense of sin, sickness, and death, — when the brightness of His glory encompasseth 6 all being. |
||
72 | 72 | 78 | Can Christian Science Mind-healing be taught to those who are absent? |
SHOW ALL | Can Christian Science Mind-healing be taught to those who are absent? 9 The Science of Mind-healing can no more be taught thus, than can science in any other direction. I know not how to teach either Euclid or the Science of Mind 12 silently; and never dreamed that either of these partook of the nature of occultism, magic, alchemy, or necro- mancy. These "ways that are vain" are the inventions 15 of animal magnetism, which would deceive, if possible, the very elect. We will charitably hope, however, that some people employ the et cetera of ignorance and self- 18 conceit unconsciously, in their witless ventilation of false statements and claims. Misguiding the public mind and taking its money in exchange for this abuse, has become 21 too common: we will hope it is the froth of error passing off; and that Christian Science will some time appear all the clearer for the purification of the public thought con- 24 cerning it. |
||
73 | 73 | 78 | Has man fallen from a state of perfection? |
SHOW ALL | Has man fallen from a state of perfection? If God is the Principle of man (and He is), man is the 27 idea of God; and this idea cannot fail to express the ex- act nature of its Principle, — any more than goodness, to present the quality of good. Human hypotheses are 30 always human vagaries, formulated views antagonistic Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 79 1 to the divine order and the nature of Deity. All these mortal beliefs will be purged and dissolved in the cru- 3 cible of Truth, and the places once knowing them will know them no more forever, having been swept clean by the winds of history. The grand verities of Science 6 will sift the chaff from the wheat, until it is clear to hu- man comprehension that man was, and is, God's perfect likeness, that reflects all whereby we can know God. In 9 Him we live, move, and have being. Man's origin and existence being in Him, man is the ultimatum of per- fection, and by no means the medium of imperfection. 12 Immortal man is the eternal idea of Truth, that cannot lapse into a mortal belief or error concerning himself and his origin: he cannot get out of the focal distance of 15 infinity. If God is upright and eternal, man as His like- ness is erect in goodness and perpetual in Life, Truth, and Love. If the great cause is perfect, its effect is per- 18 fect also; and cause and effect in Science are immutable and immortal. A mortal who is sinning, sick, and dying, is not immortal man; and never was, and never can be, 21 God's image and likeness, the true ideal of immortal man's divine Principle. The spiritual man is that per- fect and unfallen likeness, coexistent and coeternal with 24 God. "As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive." |
||
74 | 74 | 79 | What course should Christian Scientists take in regard to aiding persons brought before the courts for violation of medical statutes? |
SHOW ALL | What course should Christian Scientists take in regard 27 to aiding persons brought before the courts for violation of medical statutes? Beware of joining any medical league which in any 30 way obligates you to assist — because they chance to be under arrest — vendors of patent pills, mesmerists, Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 80 1 occultists, sellers of impure literature, and authors of spurious works on mental healing. By rendering error 3 such a service, you lose much more than can be gained by mere unity on the single issue of opposition to unjust medical laws. 6 A league which obligates its members to give money and influence in support and defense of medical char- latans in general, and possibly to aid individual rights 9 in a wrong direction — which Christian Science eschews — should be avoided. Anybody and everybody, who will fight the medical faculty, can join this league. It is 12 better to be friendly with cultured and conscientious medical men, who leave Christian Science to rise or fall on its own merit or demerit, than to affiliate with a wrong 15 class of people. Unconstitutional and unjust coercive legislation and laws, infringing individual rights, must be "of few days, 18 and full of trouble." The vox populi, through the provi- dence of God, promotes and impels all true reform; and, at the best time, will redress wrongs and rectify injus- 21 tice. Tyranny can thrive but feebly under our Govern- ment. God reigns, and will "turn and overturn" until right is found supreme. 24 In a certain sense, we should commiserate the lot of regular doctors, who, in successive generations for cen- turies, have planted and sown and reaped in the fields 27 of what they deem pathology, hygiene, and therapeutics, but are now elbowed by a new school of practitioners, outdoing the healing of the old. The old will not patronize 30 the new school, at least not until it shall come to under- stand the medical system of the new. Christian Science Mind-healing rests demonstrably on Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 81 1 the broad and sure foundation of Science; and this is not the basis of materia medica, as some of the most skil- 3 ful and scholarly physicians openly admit. To prevent all unpleasant and unchristian action — as we drift, by right of God's dear love, into more spiritual 6 lines of life — let each society of practitioners, the matter- physicians and the metaphysicians, agree to disagree, and then patiently wait on God to decide, as surely He will, 9 which is the true system of medicine. |
||
75 | 75 | 81 | Do we not see in the commonly accepted teachings of the day, the Christ-idea mingled with the teachings of John the Baptist? or, rather, Are not the last eighteen centuries but the footsteps of Truth being baptized of John, and coming up straightway out of the ceremonial (or ritualistic) waters to receive the benediction of an honored Father, and afterwards to go up into the wilderness, in order to overcome mortal sense, before it shall go forth into all the cities and towns of Judea, or see many of the people from beyond Jordan? Now, if all this be a fair or correct view of this question, why does not John hear this voice, or see the dove, — or has not Truth yet reached the shore? |
SHOW ALL | Do we not see in the commonly accepted teachings of the day, the Christ-idea mingled with the teachings of John 12 the Baptist? or, rather, Are not the last eighteen centuries but the footsteps of Truth being baptized of John, and com- ing up straightway out of the ceremonial (or ritualistic) 15 waters to receive the benediction of an honored Father, and afterwards to go up into the wilderness, in order to over- come mortal sense, before it shall go forth into all the cities 18 and towns of Judea, or see many of the people from beyond Jordan? Now, if all this be a fair or correct view of this question, why does not John hear this voice, or see the 21 dove, — or has not Truth yet reached the shore? Every individual character, like the individual John the Baptist, at some date must cry in the desert of 24 earthly joy; and his voice be heard divinely and humanly. In the desolation of human understanding, divine Love hears and answers the human call for help; 27 and the voice of Truth utters the divine verities of being which deliver mortals out of the depths of ignorance and vice. This is the Father's benediction. It gives 30 lessons to human life, guides the understanding, peoples Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 82 1 the mind with spiritual ideas, reconstructs the Judean religion, and reveals God and man as the Principle and 3 idea of all good. Understanding this fact in Christian Science, brings the peace symbolized by a dove; and this peace floweth 6 as a river into a shoreless eternity. He who knew the foretelling Truth, beheld the forthcoming Truth, as it came up out of the baptism of Spirit, to enlighten and 9 redeem mortals. Such Christians as John cognize the symbols of God, reach the sure foundations of time, stand upon the shore of eternity, and grasp and gather — in all 12 glory — what eye hath not seen. |
||
76 | 76 | 82 | Is there infinite progression with man after the destruction of mortal mind? |
SHOW ALL | Is there infinite progression with man after the destruc- tion of mortal mind? 15 Man is the offspring and idea of the Supreme Being, whose law is perfect and infinite. In obedience to this law, man is forever unfolding the endless beatitudes of 18 Being; for he is the image and likeness of infinite Life, Truth, and Love. Infinite progression is concrete being, which finite 21 mortals see and comprehend only as abstract glory. As mortal mind, or the material sense of life, is put off, the spiritual sense and Science of being is brought to 24 light. Mortal mind is a myth; the one Mind is immortal. A mythical or mortal sense of existence is consumed 27 as a moth, in the treacherous glare of its own flame — the errors which devour it. Immortal Mind is God, immortal good; in whom the Scripture saith "we live, 30 and move, and have our being." This Mind, then, is not subject to growth, change, or diminution, but is the divine ? Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 83 1 intelligence, or Principle, of all real being; holding man forever in the rhythmic round of unfolding bliss, 3 as a living witness to and perpetual idea of inexhaustible good. |
||
77 | 77 | 83 | In your book, Science and Health,¹ page 181, you say: "Every sin is the author of itself, and every invalid the cause of his own sufferings." On page 182 you say: "Sickness is a growth of illusion, springing from a seed of thought, — either your own thought or another's." Will you please explain this seeming contradiction? |
SHOW ALL | In your book, Science and Health,¹ page 181, you 6 say: "Every sin is the author of itself, and every invalid the cause of his own sufferings." On page 182 you say: "Sickness is a growth of illusion, spring- 9 ing from a seed of thought, — either your own thought or another's." Will you please explain this seeming contradiction? 12 No person can accept another's belief, except it be with the consent of his own belief. If the error which knocks at the door of your own thought originated in 15 another's mind, you are a free moral agent to reject or to accept this error; hence, you are the arbiter of your own fate, and sin is the author of sin. In the words 18 of our Master, you are "a liar, and the father of it [the lie]." |
||
78 | 78 | 83 | Why did Jesus call himself "the Son of man"? |
SHOW ALL | Why did Jesus call himself "the Son of man"? 21 In the life of our Lord, meekness was as conspicuous as might. In John xvii. he declared his sonship with God: "These words spake Jesus, and lifted up his 24 eyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come; glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may glorify Thee." The hour had come for the avowal of this great truth, 27 and for the proof of his eternal Life and sonship. Jesus' ¹Quoted from the sixteenth edition. Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 84 1 wisdom ofttimes was shown by his forbearing to speak, as well as by speaking, the whole truth. Haply he waited 3 for a preparation of the human heart to receive start- ling announcements. This wisdom, which character- ized his sayings, did not prophesy his death, and thereby 6 hasten or permit it. The disciples and prophets thrust disputed points on minds unprepared for them. This cost them their lives, 9 and the world's temporary esteem; but the prophecies were fulfilled, and their motives were rewarded by growth and more spiritual understanding, which dawns 12 by degrees on mortals. The spiritual Christ was infal- lible; Jesus, as material manhood, was not Christ. The "man of sorrows" knew that the man of joys, his spiritual 15 self, or Christ, was the Son of God; and that the mor- tal mind, not the immortal Mind, suffered. The human manifestation of the Son of God was called the Son of 18 man, or Mary's son. |
||
79 | 79 | 84 | Please explain Paul's meaning in the text, "For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain." |
SHOW ALL | Please explain Paul's meaning in the text, "For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain." 21 The Science of Life, overshadowing Paul's sense of life in matter, so far extinguished the latter as forever to quench his love for it. The discipline of the flesh is 24 designed to turn one, like a weary traveller, to the home of Love. To lose error thus, is to live in Christ, Truth. A true sense of the falsity of material joys and sorrows, 27 pleasures and pains, takes them away, and teaches Life's lessons aright. The transition from our lower sense of Life to a new and higher sense thereof, even though it be 30 through the door named death, yields a clearer and nearer sense of Life to those who have utilized the present, Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 85 1 and are ripe for the harvest-home. To the battle- worn and weary Christian hero, Life eternal brings 3 blessings. |
||
80 | 80 | 85 | Is a Christian Scientist ever sick, and has he who is sick been regenerated? |
SHOW ALL | Is a Christian Scientist ever sick, and has he who is sick been regenerated? 6 The Christian Scientist learns spiritually all that he knows of Life, and demonstrates what he understands. God is recognized as the divine Principle of his being, 9 and of every thought and act leading to good. His pur- pose must be right, though his power is temporarily lim- ited. Perfection, the goal of existence, is not won in a 12 moment; and regeneration leading thereto is gradual, for it culminates in the fulfilment of this divine rule in Science: "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father 15 which is in heaven is perfect." The last degree of regeneration rises into the rest of perpetual, spiritual, individual existence. The first 18 feeble flutterings of mortals Christward are infantile and more or less imperfect. The new-born Christian Scientist must mature, and work out his own salvation. 21 Spirit and flesh antagonize. Temptation, that mist of mortal mind which seems to be matter and the environ- ment of mortals, suggests pleasure and pain in matter; 24 and, so long as this temptation lasts, the warfare is not ended and the mortal is not regenerated. The pleas- ures — more than the pains — of sense, retard regenera- 27 tion; for pain compels human consciousness to escape from sense into the immortality and harmony of Soul. Disease in error, more than ease in it, tends to destroy 30 error: the sick often are thereby led to Christ, Truth, and to learn their way out of both sickness and sin. Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 86 1 The material and physical are imperfect. The in- dividual and spiritual are perfect; these have no fleshly 3 nature. This final degree of regeneration is saving, and the Christian will, must, attain it; but it doth not yet appear. Until this be attained, the Christian Scientist 6 must continue to strive with sickness, sin, and death — though in lessening degrees — and manifest growth at every experience. |
||
81 | 81 | 86 | Is it correct to say of material objects, that they are nothing and exist only in imagination? |
SHOW ALL | 9 Is it correct to say of material objects, that they are noth- ing and exist only in imagination? Nothing and something are words which need correct 12 definition. They either mean formations of indefinite and vague human opinions, or scientific classifications of the unreal and the real. My sense of the beauty of 15 the universe is, that beauty typifies holiness, and is some- thing to be desired. Earth is more spiritually beautiful to my gaze now than when it was more earthly to the 18 eyes of Eve. The pleasant sensations of human belief, of form and color, must be spiritualized, until we gain the glorified sense of substance as in the new heaven and 21 earth, the harmony of body and Mind. Even the human conception of beauty, grandeur, and utility is something that defies a sneer. It is more than 24 imagination. It is next to divine beauty and the gran- deur of Spirit. It lives with our earth-life, and is the subjective state of high thoughts. The atmos- 27 phere of mortal mind constitutes our mortal envi- ronment. What mortals hear, see, feel, taste, smell, constitutes their present earth and heaven: but we must 30 grow out of even this pleasing thraldom, and find wings to reach the glory of supersensible Life; then we shall Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 87 1 soar above, as the bird in the clear ether of the blue tem- poral sky. 3 To take all earth's beauty into one gulp of vacuity and label beauty nothing, is ignorantly to caricature God's creation, which is unjust to human sense and 6 to the divine realism. In our immature sense of spirit- ual things, let us say of the beauties of the sensuous universe: "I love your promise; and shall know, some 9 time, the spiritual reality and substance of form, light, and color, of what I now through you discern dimly; and knowing this, I shall be satisfied. Matter is a frail con- 12 ception of mortal mind; and mortal mind is a poorer representative of the beauty, grandeur, and glory of the immortal Mind." |
||
82 | 82 | 87 | Please inform us, through your Journal, if you sent Mrs. —— to —— . She said that you sent her there to look after the students; and also, that no one there was working in Science, — which is certainly a mistake. |
SHOW ALL | 15 Please inform us, through your Journal, if you sent Mrs. —— to —— . She said that you sent her there to look after the students; and also, that no one there was working 18 in Science, — which is certainly a mistake. I never commission any one to teach students of mine. After class teaching, he does best in the investigation of 21 Christian Science who is most reliant on himself and God. My students are taught the divine Principle and rules of the Science of Mind-healing. What they need 24 thereafter is to study thoroughly the Scriptures and "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures." To watch and pray, to be honest, earnest, loving, and truth- 27 ful, is indispensable to the demonstration of the truth they have been taught. If they are haunted by obsequious helpers, who, un- 30 called for, imagine they can help anybody and steady God's altar — this interference prolongs the struggle Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 88 1 and tends to blight the fruits of my students. A faith- ful student may even sometimes feel the need of 3 physical help, and occasionally receive it from others; but the less this is required, the better it is for that student. |
||
83 | 83 | 88 | Please give us, through your Journal, the name of the author of that genuine critique in the September number, "What Quibus Thinks." |
SHOW ALL | 6 Please give us, through your Journal, the name of the author of that genuine critique in the September number, "What Quibus Thinks." 9 I am pleased to inform this inquirer, that the author of the article in question is a Boston gentleman whose thought is appreciated by many liberals. Patience, ob- 12 servation, intellectual culture, reading, writing, exten- sive travel, and twenty years in the pulpit, have equipped him as a critic who knows whereof he speaks. His allu- 15 sion to Christian Science in the following paragraph, glows in the shadow of darkling criticism like a mid- night sun. Its manly honesty follows like a benediction 18 after prayer, and closes the task of talking to deaf ears and dull debaters. "We have always insisted that this Science is natural, 21 spiritually natural; that Jesus was the highest type of real nature; that Christian healing is supernatural, or extra-natural, only to those who do not enter into its 24 sublimity or understand its modes — as imported ice was miraculous to the equatorial African, who had never seen water freeze." |
||
84 | 84 | 88 | Is it right for a Scientist to treat with a doctor? |
SHOW ALL | 27 Is it right for a Scientist to treat with a doctor? This depends upon what kind of a doctor it is. Mind- healing, and healing with drugs, are opposite modes of 30 medicine. As a rule, drop one of these doctors when you Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 89 1 employ the other. The Scripture saith, "No man can serve two masters;" and, "Every kingdom divided 3 against itself is brought to desolation." |
||
85 | 85 | 89 | If Scientists are called upon to care for a member of the family, or a friend in sickness, who is employing a regular physician, would it be right to treat this patient at all; and ought the patient to follow the doctor's directions? |
SHOW ALL | If Scientists are called upon to care for a member of the family, or a friend in sickness, who is employing a 6 regular physician, would it be right to treat this patient at all; and ought the patient to follow the doctor's directions? 9 When patients are under material medical treatment, it is advisable in most cases that Scientists do not treat them, or interfere with materia medica. If the patient 12 is in peril, and you save him or alleviate his sufferings, although the medical attendant and friends have no faith in your method, it is humane, and not unchristian, 15 to do him all the good you can; but your good will gen- erally "be evil spoken of." The hazard of casting "pearls before swine" caused our Master to refuse help to some 18 who sought his aid; and he left this precaution for others. |
||
86 | 86 | 89 | If mortal man is unreal, how can he be saved, and why does he need to be saved? I ask for information, not for controversy, for I am a seeker after Truth. |
SHOW ALL | If mortal man is unreal, how can he be saved, and why 21 does he need to be saved? I ask for information, not for controversy, for I am a seeker after Truth. You will find the proper answer to this question in 24 my published works. Man is immortal. Mortal man is a false concept that is not spared or prolonged by being saved from itself, from whatever is false. This salva- 27 tion means: saved from error, or error overcome. Im- mortal man, in God's likeness, is safe in divine Science. Mortal man is saved on this divine Principle, if he will 30 only avail himself of the efficacy of Truth, and recog- Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 90 1 nize his Saviour. He must know that God is omnipo- tent; hence, that sin is impotent. He must know that 3 the power of sin is the pleasure in sin. Take away this pleasure, and you remove all reality from its power. Jesus demonstrated sin and death to be powerless. This 6 practical Truth saves from sin, and will save all who understand it. |
||
87 | 87 | 90 | Is it wrong for a wife to have a husband treated for sin, when she knows he is sinning, or for drinking and smoking? |
SHOW ALL | Is it wrong for a wife to have a husband treated for 9 sin, when she knows he is sinning, or for drinking and smoking? It is always right to act rightly; but sometimes, under 12 circumstances exceptional, it is inexpedient to attack evil. This rule is forever golden: "As ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them." Do you 15 desire to be freed from sin? Then help others to be free; but in your measures, obey the Scriptures, "Be ye wise as serpents." Break the yoke of bondage in every wise 18 way. First, be sure that your means for doing good are equal to your motives; then judge them by their fruits. |
||
88 | 88 | 90 | If not ordained, shall the pastor of the Church of Christ, Scientist, administer the communion, — and shall members of a church not organized receive the communion? |
SHOW ALL | 21 If not ordained, shall the pastor of the Church of Christ, Scientist, administer the communion, — and shall members of a church not organized receive the 24 communion? Our great Master administered to his disciples the Passover, or last supper, without this prerogative being 27 conferred by a visible organization and ordained priest- hood. His spiritually prepared breakfast, after his resurrection, and after his disciples had left their nets 30 to follow him, is the spiritual communion which Chris- Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 91 1 tian Scientists celebrate in commemoration of the Christ. This ordinance is significant as a type of the true worship, 3 and it should be observed at present in our churches. It is not indispensable to organize materially Christ's church. It is not absolutely necessary to ordain pas- 6 tors and to dedicate churches; but if this be done, let it be in concession to the period, and not as a per- petual or indispensable ceremonial of the church. If 9 our church is organized, it is to meet the demand, "Suffer it to be so now." The real Christian compact is love for one another. This bond is wholly spiritual 12 and inviolate. It is imperative, at all times and under every cir- cumstance, to perpetuate no ceremonials except as 15 types of these mental conditions, — remembrance and love; a real affection for Jesus' character and example. Be it remembered, that all types employed in the ser- 18 vice of Christian Science should represent the most spir- itual forms of thought and worship that can be made visible. |
||
89 | 89 | 91 | Should not the teacher of Christian Science have our textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," in his schoolroom and teach from it? |
SHOW ALL | 21 Should not the teacher of Christian Science have our textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," in his schoolroom and teach from it? 24 I never dreamed, until informed thereof, that a loyal student did not take his textbook with him into the class- room, ask questions from it, answer them according to 27 it, and, as occasion required, read from the book as au- thority for what he taught. I supposed that students had followed my example, and that of other teachers, 30 sufficiently to do this, and also to require their pupils to study the lessons before recitations. Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 92 1 To omit these important points is anomalous, con- sidering the necessity for understanding Science, and 3 the present liability of deviating from Christian Science. Centuries will intervene before the statement of the inex- haustible topics of that book become sufficiently under- 6 stood to be absolutely demonstrated. The teacher of Christian Science needs continually to study this textbook. His work is to replenish thought, and to spiritualize human 9 life, from this open fount of Truth and Love. He who sees most clearly and enlightens other minds most readily, keeps his own lamp trimmed and burning. 12 He will take the textbook of Christian Science into his class, repeat the questions in the chapter on Recapitula- tion, and his students will answer them from the same 15 source. Throughout his entire explanations, the teacher should strictly adhere to the questions and answers con- tained in that chapter of "Science and Health with Key 18 to the Scriptures." It is important to point out the lesson to the class, and to require the students thor- oughly to study it before the recitations; for this spirit- 21 ualizes their thoughts. When closing his class, the teacher should require each member to own a copy of the above-named book and to continue the study of this 24 textbook. The opinions of men cannot be substituted for God's revelation. It must not be forgotten that in times past, 27 arrogant ignorance and pride, in attempting to steady the ark of Truth, have dimmed the power and glory of the Scriptures, to which this Christian Science textbook 30 is the Key. That teacher does most for his students who most divests himself of pride and self, spiritualizes his own Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 93 1 thought, and by reason thereof is able to empty his stu- dents' minds, that they may be filled with Truth. 3 Beloved students, so teach that posterity shall call you blessed, and the heart of history shall be made glad! |
||
90 | 90 | 93 | Can fear or sin bring back old beliefs of disease that have been healed by Christian Science? |
SHOW ALL | 6 Can fear or sin bring back old beliefs of disease that have been healed by Christian Science? The Scriptures plainly declare the allness and oneness 9 of God to be the premises of Truth, and that God is good: in Him dwelleth no evil. Christian Science au- thorizes the logical conclusion drawn from the Scriptures, 12 that there is in reality none besides the eternal, infinite God, good. Evil is temporal: it is the illusion of time and mortality. 15 This being true, sin has no power; and fear, its coeval, is without divine authority. Science sanctions only what is supported by the unerring Principle of being. Sin can 18 do nothing: all cause and effect are in God. Fear is a belief of sensation in matter: this belief is neither main- tained by Science nor supported by facts, and exists only 21 as fable. Your answer is, that neither fear nor sin can bring on disease or bring back disease, since there is in reality no disease. 24 Bear in mind, however, that human consciousness does not test sin and the fact of its nothingness, by believing that sin is pardoned without repentance and reforma- 27 tion. Sin punishes itself, because it cannot go unpun- ished either here or hereafter. Nothing is more fatal than to indulge a sinning sense or consciousness for even one 30 moment. Knowing this, obey Christ's Sermon on the Mount, even if you suffer for it in the first instance, — Miscellaneous Writings --- Questions and Answers page 94 1 are misjudged and maligned; in the second, you will reign with him. 3 I never knew a person who knowingly indulged evil, to be grateful; to understand me, or himself. He must first see himself and the hallucination of sin; then he 6 must repent, and love good in order to understand God. The sinner and the sin are the twain that are one flesh, — but which God hath not joined together. |