0.0 – Christian Science – 16 Books by Mary Baker Eddy – Bk 16 – The First Church of Christ Scientist and Miscellany – Chpt 13 – Christmas Mary Baker Eddy Category: Book Beg Line#: 1 Pub Title: The First Church of Christ Scientist and Miscellany Pub Type: Book End Pg#: 263 Author: Eddy, Mary Baker Chapter #: 13 End Line#: 11 Chpt Title: Christmas Beg Pg#: 256 Total Pgs: 8 View/Download: available later View/Dnld Des: ALL BOOKS ALL CHAPTERS Christian Science ~ 16 books by Mary Baker Eddy Topics: Tags: 16 ~ The First Church of Christ Scientist and Miscellany ~ Chpt 13 ~ Christmas Description: Text Content: SHOW ALL Chapter XIII CHRISTMAS 1 EARLY CHIMES, DECEMBER, 1898 Before the Christmas bells shall ring, allow me 3 to improvise some new notes, not specially musi- cal to be sure, but admirably adapted to the key of my feeling and emphatically phrasing strict observance or 6 note well. This year, my beloved Christian Scientists, you must grant me my request that I be permitted total exemption 9 from Christmas gifts. Also I beg to send to you all a deep-drawn, heartfelt breath of thanks for those things of beauty and use forming themselves in your thoughts 12 to send to your Leader. Thus may I close the door of mind on this subject, and open the volume of Life on the pure pages of impersonal presents, pleasures, achieve- 15 ments, and aid. CHRISTMAS, 1900 Again loved Christmas is here, full of divine benedic- 18 tions and crowned with the dearest memories in human history — the earthly advent and nativity of our Lord and Master. At this happy season the veil of time 21 springs aside at the touch of Love. We count our bless- ings and see whence they came and whither they tend. Parents call home their loved ones, the Yule-fires burn, 24 the festive boards are spread, the gifts glow in the dark Christmas Gifts 257 1 green branches of the Christmas-tree. But alas for the broken household band! God give to them more of 3 His dear love that heals the wounded heart. To-day the watchful shepherd shouts his welcome over the new cradle of an old truth. This truth has traversed 6 night, through gloom to glory, from cradle to crown. To the awakened consciousness, the Bethlehem babe has left his swaddling-clothes (material environments) for the 9 form and comeliness of the divine ideal, which has passed from a corporeal to the spiritual sense of Christ and is winning the heart of humanity with ineffable tenderness. 12 The Christ is speaking for himself and for his mother, Christ's heavenly origin and aim. To-day the Christ is, more than ever before, "the way, the truth, and the 15 life," — "which lighteth every man that cometh into the world," healing all sorrow, sickness, and sin. To this auspicious Christmastide, which hallows the close of the 18 nineteenth century, our hearts are kneeling humbly. We own his grace, reviving and healing. At this immortal hour, all human hate, pride, greed, lust should bow and 21 declare Christ's power, and the reign of Truth and Life divine should make man's being pure and blest. CHRISTMAS GIFTS 24 Beloved Students: — For your manifold Christmas memo- rials, too numerous to name, I group you in one benison and send you my Christmas gift, two words enwrapped, 27 — love and thanks. To-day Christian Scientists have their record in the monarch's palace, the Alpine hamlet, the Christian trav- 30 eller's resting-place. Wherever the child looks up in Miscellany 258 1 prayer, or the Book of Life is loved, there the sinner is reformed and the sick are healed. Those are the "signs 3 following." What is it that lifts a system of religion to deserved fame? Nothing is worthy the name of religion save one lowly offering — love. 6 This period, so fraught with opposites, seems illumi- nated for woman's hope with divine light. It bids her bind the tenderest tendril of the heart to all of holiest 9 worth. To the woman at the sepulchre, bowed in strong affection's anguish, one word, "Mary," broke the gloom with Christ's all-conquering love. Then came her resurrec- 12 tion and task of glory, to know and to do God's will, — in the words of St. Paul: "Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith; who for the joy that was set be- 15 fore him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God." The memory of the Bethlehem babe bears to mortals 18 gifts greater than those of Magian kings, — hopes that cannot deceive, that waken prophecy, gleams of glory, coronals of meekness, diadems of love. Nor should they 21 who drink their Master's cup repine over blossoms that mock their hope and friends that forsake. Divinely beautiful are the Christmas memories of him who sounded 24 all depths of love, grief, death, and humanity. To the dear children let me say: Your Christmas gifts are hallowed by our Lord's blessing. A transmitted 27 charm rests on them. May this consciousness of God's dear love for you give you the might of love, and may you move onward and upward, lowly in its majesty. 30 To the children who sent me that beautiful statuette in alabaster — a child with finger on her lip reading a book — I write: Fancy yourselves with me; take a peep into The Significance of Christmas 259 1 my studio; look again at your gift, and you will see the sweetest sculptured face and form conceivable, mounted 3 on its pedestal between my bow windows, and on either side lace and flowers. I have named it my white student. From First Church of Christ, Scientist, in London, 6 Great Britain, I received the following cabled message: — REV. MRS. EDDY, PLEASANT VIEW, Concord, N. H. 9 Loving, grateful Christmas greetings from members London, England, church. December 24, 1901 12 To this church across the sea I return my heart's wire- less love. All our dear churches' Christmas telegrams to me are refreshing and most pleasing Christmas presents, 15 for they require less attention than packages and give me more time to think and work for others. I hope that in 1902 the churches will remember me only thus. Do not 18 forget that an honest, wise zeal, a lowly, triumphant trust, a true heart, and a helping hand constitute man, and nothing less is man or woman. 21 [New York World] THE SIGNIFICANCE OF CHRISTMAS Certain occasions, considered either collectively or 24 individually and observed properly, tend to give the activity of man infinite scope; but mere merry-making or needless gift-giving is not that in which human capac- 27 ities find the most appropriate and proper exercise. Christmas respects the Christ too much to submerge itself in merely temporary means and ends. It represents 30 the eternal informing Soul recognized only in harmony, Miscellany 260 1 in the beauty and bounty of Life everlasting, — in the truth that is Life, the Life that heals and saves man- 3 kind. An eternal Christmas would make matter an alien save as phenomenon, and matter would reverentially withdraw itself before Mind. The despotism of material 6 sense or the flesh would flee before such reality, to make room for substance, and the shadow of frivolity and the inaccuracy of material sense would disappear. 9 In Christian Science, Christmas stands for the real, the absolute and eternal, — for the things of Spirit, not of mat- ter. Science is divine; it hath no partnership with human 12 means and ends, no half-way stations. Nothing condi- tional or material belongs to it. Human reason and phi- losophy may pursue paths devious, the line of liquids, the 15 lure of gold, the doubtful sense that falls short of sub- stance, the things hoped for and the evidence unseen. The basis of Christmas is the rock, Christ Jesus; its 18 fruits are inspiration and spiritual understanding of joy and rejoicing, — not because of tradition, usage, or cor- poreal pleasures, but because of fundamental and de- 21 monstrable truth, because of the heaven within us. The basis of Christmas is love loving its enemies, returning good for evil, love that "suffereth long, and is kind." The 24 true spirit of Christmas elevates medicine to Mind; it casts out evils, heals the sick, raises the dormant facul- ties, appeals to all conditions, and supplies every need of 27 man. It leaves hygiene, medicine, ethics, and religion to God and His Christ, to that which is the Way, in word and in deed, — the Way, the Truth, and the Life. 30 There is but one Jesus Christ on record. Christ is incorporeal. Neither the you nor the I in the flesh can be or is Christ. The Significance of Christmas 261 1 CHRISTMAS FOR THE CHILDREN Methinks the loving parents and guardians of youth 3 ofttimes query: How shall we cheer the children's Christ- mas and profit them withal? The wisdom of their elders, who seek wisdom of God, seems to have amply provided 6 for this, according to the custom of the age and to the full supply of juvenile joy. Let it continue thus with one exception: the children should not be taught to believe 9 that Santa Claus has aught to do with this pastime. A deceit or falsehood is never wise. Too much cannot be done towards guarding and guiding well the germinating 12 and inclining thought of childhood. To mould aright the first impressions of innocence, aids in perpetu- ating purity and in unfolding the immortal model, man 15 in His image and likeness. St. Paul wrote, "When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, . . . but when I became a man, I put away 18 childish things." PLEASANT VIEW, CONCORD, N. H., December 28, 1905 21 [The Ladies' Home Journal] WHAT CHRISTMAS MEANS TO ME To me Christmas involves an open secret, understood 24 by few — or by none — and unutterable except in Chris- tian Science. Christ was not born of the flesh. Christ is the Truth and Life born of God — born of Spirit and 27 not of matter. Jesus, the Galilean Prophet, was born of the Virgin Mary's spiritual thoughts of Life and its manifestation. Miscellany 262 1 God creates man perfect and eternal in His own image. Hence man is the image, idea, or likeness of perfection 3 — an ideal which cannot fall from its inherent unity with divine Love, from its spotless purity and original perfection. 6 Observed by material sense, Christmas commemorates the birth of a human, material, mortal babe — a babe born in a manger amidst the flocks and herds of a Jewish 9 village. This homely origin of the babe Jesus falls far short of my sense of the eternal Christ, Truth, never born and 12 never dying. I celebrate Christmas with my soul, my spiritual sense, and so commemorate the entrance into human understanding of the Christ conceived of Spirit, 15 of God and not of a woman — as the birth of Truth, the dawn of divine Love breaking upon the gloom of matter and evil with the glory of infinite being. 18 Human doctrines or hypotheses or vague human phi- losophy afford little divine effulgence, deific presence or power. Christmas to me is the reminder of God's great 21 gift, — His spiritual idea, man and the universe, — a gift which so transcends mortal, material, sensual giv- ing that the merriment, mad ambition, rivalry, and 24 ritual of our common Christmas seem a human mock- ery in mimicry of the real worship in commemoration of Christ's coming. 27 I love to observe Christmas in quietude, humility, benevolence, charity, letting good will towards man, elo- quent silence, prayer, and praise express my conception 30 of Truth's appearing. The splendor of this nativity of Christ reveals infinite meanings and gives manifold blessings. Material gifts Mrs. Eddy’s Christmas Message 263 1 and pastimes tend to obliterate the spiritual idea in con- sciousness, leaving one alone and without His glory. 3 MRS. EDDY'S CHRISTMAS MESSAGE MY HOUSEHOLD Beloved: — A word to the wise is sufficient. Mother 6 wishes you all a happy Christmas, a feast of Soul and a famine of sense. Lovingly thine, 9 MARY BAKER EDDY BOX G, BROOKLINE, MASS., December 25, 1909SHOW ALL