Chapter 9

thought,—and must proceed from God; hence it must [1]be sinless, and destitute of self-created or derived capacityto sin.Third:Jesus said,“If a man keep my saying, heshall never see death.”This statement of our Master [5]is true, and remains to be demonstrated; for it is theultimatum of Christian Science; but this immortal sayingcan never be tested or proven true upon a false premise,such as the mortal belief that soul is in body, and lifeand intelligence are in matter. That doctrine is not [10]theism, but pantheism. According to human belief thebodies of mortals are mortal, but they contain immortalsouls! hence these bodies must die for these souls toescape and be immortal. The theory that death mustoccur, to set a human soul free from its environments, [15]is rendered void by Jesus' divine declaration, who spakeas never man spake,—and no man can rationally rejecthis authority on this subject and accept it on other topicsless important.Now, exchange the termsoulforsensewhenever this [20]word means the so-called soul in the body, and you willfind the right meaning indicated. The misnamed humansoul is material sense, which sinneth and shall die; forit is an error or false sense of mentality in matter, andmatter has no sense. You will admit that Soul is the [25]Life of man. Now if Soul sinned, it would die; for“thewages of sin is death.”The Scripture saith,“WhenChrist, who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye alsoappear with him in glory.”The Science of Soul, Spirit,involves this appearing, and is essential to the fulfilment [30]of this glorious prophecy of the master Metaphysician,who overcame the last enemy, death.[pg 077]Did the salvation of the eunuch depend merely on his[1]believing that Jesus Christ was the Son of God?It did; but this believing was more than faith in thefact that Jesus was the Messiah. Here the verbbelievetook its original meaning, namely, to befirm,—yea, to [5]understandthose great truths asserted of the Messiah:it meant to discern and consent to that infinite demandmade upon the eunuch in those few words of the apostle.Philip's requirement was, that he should not only ac-knowledge the incarnation,—God made manifest through [10]man,—but even the eternal unity of man and God, asthe divine Principle and spiritual idea; which is the in-dissoluble bond of union, the power and presence, indivine Science, of Life, Truth, and Love, to support theirideal man. This is the Father's great Love that He [15]hath bestowed upon us, and it holds man in endlessLife and one eternal round of harmonious being. Itguides him by Truth that knows no error, and withsupersensual, impartial, and unquenchable Love. Tobelieveis tobe firm. In adopting all this vast idea of [20]Christ Jesus, the eunuch was toknowin whom he be-lieved. Tobelievethus was to enter the spiritual sanctuaryof Truth, and there learn, in divine Science, somewhatof the All-Father-Mother God. It was to understandGod and man: it was sternly to rebuke the mortal [25]belief that man has fallen away from his first estate; thatman, made in God's own likeness, and reflecting Truth,could fall into mortal error; or, that man is the fatherof man. It was to enter unshod the Holy of Holies, wherethe miracle of grace appears, and where the miracles of [30]Jesus had their birth,—healing the sick, casting outevils, and resurrecting the humansenseto the belief[pg 078]that Life, God, is not buried in matter. This is the spirit- [1]ual dawn of the Messiah, and the overture of theangels. This is when God is made manifest in theflesh, and thus it destroys all sense of sin, sickness, anddeath,—when the brightness of His glory encompasseth [5]all being.Can Christian Science Mind-healing be taught to thosewho are absent?The Science of Mind-healing can no more be taughtthus, than can science in any other direction. I know [10]not how to teach either Euclid or the Science of Mindsilently; and never dreamed that either of these partookof the nature of occultism, magic, alchemy, or necro-mancy. These“ways that are vain”are the inventionsof animal magnetism, which would deceive, if possible, [15]the very elect. We will charitably hope, however, thatsome people employ theet ceteraof ignorance and self-conceit unconsciously, in their witless ventilation of falsestatements and claims. Misguiding the public mind andtaking its money in exchange for this abuse, has become [20]too common: we will hope it is the froth of error passingoff; and that Christian Science will some time appear allthe clearer for the purification of the public thought con-cerning it.Has man fallen from a state of perfection?[25]If God is the Principle of man (and He is), man is theidea 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 arealways human vagaries, formulated views antagonistic [30][pg 079]to the divine order and the nature of Deity. All these [1]mortal beliefs will be purged and dissolved in the cru-cible of Truth, and the places once knowing them willknow them no more forever, having been swept cleanby the winds of history. The grand verities of Science [5]will sift the chaff from the wheat, until it is clear to hu-man comprehension that man was, and is, God's perfectlikeness, that reflects all whereby we can know God. InHim we live, move, and have being. Man's origin andexistence being in Him, man is the ultimatum of per- [10]fection, and by no means the medium of imperfection.Immortal man is the eternal idea of Truth, that cannotlapse into a mortal belief or error concerning himselfand his origin: he cannot get out of the focal distance ofinfinity. If God is upright and eternal, man as His like- [15]ness is erect in goodness and perpetual in Life, Truth,and Love. If the great cause is perfect, its effect is per-fect also; and cause and effect in Science are immutableand immortal. A mortal who is sinning, sick, and dying,is not immortal man; and never was, and never can be, [20]God's image and likeness, the true ideal of immortalman's divine Principle. The spiritual man is that per-fect and unfallen likeness, coexistent and coeternal withGod.“As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all bemade alive.”[25]What course should Christian Scientists take in regardto aiding persons brought before the courts for violation ofmedical statutes?Beware of joining any medical league which in anyway obligates you to assist—because they chance to be [30]under arrest—vendors of patent pills, mesmerists,[pg 080]occultists, sellers of impure literature, and authors of [1]spurious works on mental healing. By rendering errorsuch a service, you lose much more than can be gainedby mere unity on the single issue of opposition to unjustmedical laws. [5]A league which obligates its members to give moneyand influence in support and defense of medical char-latans in general, and possibly to aid individual rightsin a wrong direction—which Christian Science eschews—should be avoided. Anybody and everybody, who [10]will fight the medical faculty, can join this league. It isbetter to be friendly with cultured and conscientiousmedical men, who leave Christian Science to rise or fallon its own merit or demerit, than to affiliate with a wrongclass of people. [15]Unconstitutional and unjust coercive legislation andlaws, infringing individual rights, must be“of few days,and full of trouble.”Thevox populi, through the provi-dence of God, promotes and impels all true reform; and,at the best time, will redress wrongs and rectify injus- [20]tice. Tyranny can thrive but feebly under our Govern-ment. God reigns, and will“turn and overturn”untilright is found supreme.In a certain sense, we should commiserate the lot ofregular doctors, who, in successive generations for cen- [25]turies, have planted and sown and reaped in the fieldsof 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 patronizethe new school, at least not until it shall come to understand [30]the medical system of the new.Christian Science Mind-healing rests demonstrably on[pg 081]the broad and sure foundation of Science; and this is [1]not the basis ofmateria medica, as some of the most skil-ful and scholarly physicians openly admit.To prevent all unpleasant and unchristian action—aswe drift, by right of God's dear love, into more spiritual [5]lines of life—let each society of practitioners, the matter-physicians and the metaphysicians, agree to disagree, andthen patiently wait on God to decide, as surely He will,which is the true system of medicine.Do we not see in the commonly accepted teachings of the[10]day, the Christ-idea mingled with the teachings of Johnthe Baptist? or, rather, Are not the last eighteen centuriesbut the footsteps of Truth being baptized of John, and com-ing up straightway out of the ceremonial (or ritualistic)waters to receive the benediction of an honored Father, and[15]afterwards to go up into the wilderness, in order to over-come mortal sense, before it shall go forth into all the citiesand towns of Judea, or see many of the people from beyondJordan? Now, if all this be a fair or correct view of thisquestion, why does not John hear this voice, or see the[20]dove,—or has not Truth yet reached the shore?Every individual character, like the individual Johnthe Baptist, at some date must cry in the desert ofearthly joy; and his voice be heard divinely andhumanly. In the desolation of human understanding, [25]divine Love hears and answers the human call for help;and the voice of Truth utters the divine verities of beingwhich deliver mortals out of the depths of ignoranceand vice. Thisisthe Father's benediction. It giveslessons to human life, guides the understanding, peoples [30][pg 082]the mind with spiritual ideas, reconstructs the Judean [1]religion, and reveals God and man as the Principle andidea of all good.Understanding this fact in Christian Science, bringsthe peace symbolized by a dove; and this peace floweth [5]as a river into a shoreless eternity. He who knew theforetelling Truth, beheld the forthcoming Truth, as itcame up out of the baptism of Spirit, to enlighten andredeem mortals. Such Christians as John cognize thesymbols of God, reach the sure foundations of time, stand [10]upon the shore of eternity, and grasp and gather—in allglory—what eye hath not seen.Is there infinite progression with man after the destruc-tion of mortal mind?Man is the offspring and idea of the Supreme Being, [15]whose law is perfect and infinite. In obedience to thislaw, man is forever unfolding the endless beatitudes ofBeing; for he is the image and likeness of infinite Life,Truth, and Love.Infinite progression is concrete being, which finite [20]mortals see and comprehend only as abstract glory. Asmortal mind, or the material sense of life, is put off,the spiritual sense and Science of being is brought tolight.Mortal mind is a myth; the one Mind is immortal. [25]A mythical or mortal sense of existence is consumedas 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,and move, and have our being.”This Mind, then, is not [30]subject to growth, change, or diminution, but is the divine[pg 083]intelligence, or Principle, of all real being; holding [1]man forever in the rhythmic round of unfolding bliss,as a living witness to and perpetual idea of inexhaustiblegood.In your book, Science and Health,3page 181, you[5]say:“Every sin is the author of itself, and everyinvalid the cause of his own sufferings.”On page182 you say:“Sickness is a growth of illusion, spring-ing from a seed of thought,—either your own thoughtor another's.”Will you please explain this seeming[10]contradiction?No person can accept another's belief, except it bewith the consent of his own belief. If the error whichknocks at the door of your own thought originated inanother's mind, you are a free moral agent to reject or [15]to accept this error; hence, you are the arbiter of yourown fate, and sin is the author of sin. In the wordsof our Master, you are“a liar, and the father of it[the lie].”Why did Jesus call himself“the Son of man”?[20]In the life of our Lord, meekness was as conspicuousas might. In John xvii. he declared his sonship withGod:“These words spake Jesus, and lifted up hiseyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come;glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may glorify Thee.”[25]The hour had come for the avowal of this great truth,and for the proof of his eternal Life and sonship. Jesus'[pg 084]wisdom ofttimes was shown by his forbearing to speak, [1]as well as by speaking, the whole truth. Haply he waitedfor 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 [5]hasten or permit it.The disciples and prophets thrust disputed points onminds unprepared for them. This cost them their lives,and the world's temporary esteem; but the prophecieswere fulfilled, and their motives were rewarded by [10]growth and more spiritual understanding, which dawnsby 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 spiritualself, or Christ, was the Son of God; and that the mor- [15]tal mind, not the immortal Mind, suffered. The humanmanifestation of the Son of God was called the Son ofman, or Mary's son.Please explain Paul's meaning in the text,“For to meto live is Christ, and to die is gain.”[20]The Science of Life, overshadowing Paul's sense oflife in matter, so far extinguished the latter as foreverto quench his love for it. The discipline of the flesh isdesigned to turn one, like a weary traveller, to the homeof Love. To lose error thus, is to live in Christ, Truth. [25]A true sense of the falsity of material joys and sorrows,pleasures and pains, takes them away, and teaches Life'slessons aright. The transition from our lower sense ofLife to a new and higher sense thereof, even though it bethrough the door named death, yields a clearer and [30]nearer sense of Life to those who have utilized the present,[pg 085]and are ripe for the harvest-home. To the battle- [1]worn and weary Christian hero, Life eternal bringsblessings.Is a Christian Scientist ever sick, and has he who issick been regenerated?[5]The Christian Scientist learns spiritually all that heknows of Life, and demonstrates what he understands.God is recognized as the divine Principle of his being,and of every thought and act leading to good. His pur-pose must be right, though his power is temporarily lim- [10]ited. Perfection, the goal of existence, is not won in amoment; and regeneration leading thereto is gradual,for it culminates in the fulfilment of this divine rule inScience:“Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Fatherwhich is in heaven is perfect.”[15]The last degree of regeneration rises into the rest ofperpetual, spiritual, individual existence. The firstfeeble fluttering of mortals Christward are infantileand more or less imperfect. The new-born ChristianScientist must mature, and work out his own salvation. [20]Spirit and flesh antagonize. Temptation, that mist ofmortal mind which seems to be matter and the environ-ment of mortals, suggests pleasure and pain in matter;and, so long as this temptation lasts, the warfare is notended and the mortal is not regenerated. The pleas- [25]ures—more than the pains—of sense, retard regenera-tion; for pain compels human consciousness to escapefrom sense into the immortality and harmony of Soul.Disease in error, more than ease in it, tends to destroyerror: the sick often are thereby led to Christ, Truth, [30]and to learn their way out of both sickness and sin.[pg 086]The material and physical are imperfect. The in- [1]dividual and spiritual are perfect; these have no fleshlynature. This final degree of regeneration is saving, andthe Christian will, must, attain it; but it doth not yetappear. Until this be attained, the Christian Scientist [5]must continue to strive with sickness, sin, and death—though in lessening degrees—and manifest growth atevery experience.Is it correct to say of material objects, that they are noth-ing and exist only in imagination?[10]Nothingandsomethingare words which need correctdefinition. They either mean formations of indefiniteand vague human opinions, or scientific classificationsof the unreal and the real. My sense of the beauty ofthe universe is, that beauty typifies holiness, and is some- [15]thing to be desired. Earth is more spiritually beautifulto my gaze now than when it was more earthly to theeyes of Eve. The pleasant sensations of human belief,of form and color, must be spiritualized, until we gain theglorified sense of substance as in the new heaven and [20]earth, the harmony of body and Mind.Even the human conception of beauty, grandeur, andutility is something that defies a sneer. It is more thanimagination. It is next to divine beauty and the gran-deur of Spirit. It lives with our earth-life, and is [25]the subjective state of high thoughts. The atmos-phere of mortal mind constitutes our mortal envi-ronment. What mortals hear, see, feel, taste, smell,constitutes their present earth and heaven: but we mustgrow out of even this pleasing thraldom, and find wings [30]to reach the glory of supersensible Life; then we shall[pg 087]soar above, as the bird in the clear ether of the blue tem- [1]poral sky.

thought,—and must proceed from God; hence it must [1]be sinless, and destitute of self-created or derived capacityto sin.Third:Jesus said,“If a man keep my saying, heshall never see death.”This statement of our Master [5]is true, and remains to be demonstrated; for it is theultimatum of Christian Science; but this immortal sayingcan never be tested or proven true upon a false premise,such as the mortal belief that soul is in body, and lifeand intelligence are in matter. That doctrine is not [10]theism, but pantheism. According to human belief thebodies of mortals are mortal, but they contain immortalsouls! hence these bodies must die for these souls toescape and be immortal. The theory that death mustoccur, to set a human soul free from its environments, [15]is rendered void by Jesus' divine declaration, who spakeas never man spake,—and no man can rationally rejecthis authority on this subject and accept it on other topicsless important.Now, exchange the termsoulforsensewhenever this [20]word means the so-called soul in the body, and you willfind the right meaning indicated. The misnamed humansoul is material sense, which sinneth and shall die; forit is an error or false sense of mentality in matter, andmatter has no sense. You will admit that Soul is the [25]Life of man. Now if Soul sinned, it would die; for“thewages of sin is death.”The Scripture saith,“WhenChrist, who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye alsoappear with him in glory.”The Science of Soul, Spirit,involves this appearing, and is essential to the fulfilment [30]of this glorious prophecy of the master Metaphysician,who overcame the last enemy, death.[pg 077]Did the salvation of the eunuch depend merely on his[1]believing that Jesus Christ was the Son of God?It did; but this believing was more than faith in thefact that Jesus was the Messiah. Here the verbbelievetook its original meaning, namely, to befirm,—yea, to [5]understandthose great truths asserted of the Messiah:it meant to discern and consent to that infinite demandmade upon the eunuch in those few words of the apostle.Philip's requirement was, that he should not only ac-knowledge the incarnation,—God made manifest through [10]man,—but even the eternal unity of man and God, asthe divine Principle and spiritual idea; which is the in-dissoluble bond of union, the power and presence, indivine Science, of Life, Truth, and Love, to support theirideal man. This is the Father's great Love that He [15]hath bestowed upon us, and it holds man in endlessLife and one eternal round of harmonious being. Itguides him by Truth that knows no error, and withsupersensual, impartial, and unquenchable Love. Tobelieveis tobe firm. In adopting all this vast idea of [20]Christ Jesus, the eunuch was toknowin whom he be-lieved. Tobelievethus was to enter the spiritual sanctuaryof Truth, and there learn, in divine Science, somewhatof the All-Father-Mother God. It was to understandGod and man: it was sternly to rebuke the mortal [25]belief that man has fallen away from his first estate; thatman, made in God's own likeness, and reflecting Truth,could fall into mortal error; or, that man is the fatherof man. It was to enter unshod the Holy of Holies, wherethe miracle of grace appears, and where the miracles of [30]Jesus had their birth,—healing the sick, casting outevils, and resurrecting the humansenseto the belief[pg 078]that Life, God, is not buried in matter. This is the spirit- [1]ual dawn of the Messiah, and the overture of theangels. This is when God is made manifest in theflesh, and thus it destroys all sense of sin, sickness, anddeath,—when the brightness of His glory encompasseth [5]all being.Can Christian Science Mind-healing be taught to thosewho are absent?The Science of Mind-healing can no more be taughtthus, than can science in any other direction. I know [10]not how to teach either Euclid or the Science of Mindsilently; and never dreamed that either of these partookof the nature of occultism, magic, alchemy, or necro-mancy. These“ways that are vain”are the inventionsof animal magnetism, which would deceive, if possible, [15]the very elect. We will charitably hope, however, thatsome people employ theet ceteraof ignorance and self-conceit unconsciously, in their witless ventilation of falsestatements and claims. Misguiding the public mind andtaking its money in exchange for this abuse, has become [20]too common: we will hope it is the froth of error passingoff; and that Christian Science will some time appear allthe clearer for the purification of the public thought con-cerning it.Has man fallen from a state of perfection?[25]If God is the Principle of man (and He is), man is theidea 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 arealways human vagaries, formulated views antagonistic [30][pg 079]to the divine order and the nature of Deity. All these [1]mortal beliefs will be purged and dissolved in the cru-cible of Truth, and the places once knowing them willknow them no more forever, having been swept cleanby the winds of history. The grand verities of Science [5]will sift the chaff from the wheat, until it is clear to hu-man comprehension that man was, and is, God's perfectlikeness, that reflects all whereby we can know God. InHim we live, move, and have being. Man's origin andexistence being in Him, man is the ultimatum of per- [10]fection, and by no means the medium of imperfection.Immortal man is the eternal idea of Truth, that cannotlapse into a mortal belief or error concerning himselfand his origin: he cannot get out of the focal distance ofinfinity. If God is upright and eternal, man as His like- [15]ness is erect in goodness and perpetual in Life, Truth,and Love. If the great cause is perfect, its effect is per-fect also; and cause and effect in Science are immutableand immortal. A mortal who is sinning, sick, and dying,is not immortal man; and never was, and never can be, [20]God's image and likeness, the true ideal of immortalman's divine Principle. The spiritual man is that per-fect and unfallen likeness, coexistent and coeternal withGod.“As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all bemade alive.”[25]What course should Christian Scientists take in regardto aiding persons brought before the courts for violation ofmedical statutes?Beware of joining any medical league which in anyway obligates you to assist—because they chance to be [30]under arrest—vendors of patent pills, mesmerists,[pg 080]occultists, sellers of impure literature, and authors of [1]spurious works on mental healing. By rendering errorsuch a service, you lose much more than can be gainedby mere unity on the single issue of opposition to unjustmedical laws. [5]A league which obligates its members to give moneyand influence in support and defense of medical char-latans in general, and possibly to aid individual rightsin a wrong direction—which Christian Science eschews—should be avoided. Anybody and everybody, who [10]will fight the medical faculty, can join this league. It isbetter to be friendly with cultured and conscientiousmedical men, who leave Christian Science to rise or fallon its own merit or demerit, than to affiliate with a wrongclass of people. [15]Unconstitutional and unjust coercive legislation andlaws, infringing individual rights, must be“of few days,and full of trouble.”Thevox populi, through the provi-dence of God, promotes and impels all true reform; and,at the best time, will redress wrongs and rectify injus- [20]tice. Tyranny can thrive but feebly under our Govern-ment. God reigns, and will“turn and overturn”untilright is found supreme.In a certain sense, we should commiserate the lot ofregular doctors, who, in successive generations for cen- [25]turies, have planted and sown and reaped in the fieldsof 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 patronizethe new school, at least not until it shall come to understand [30]the medical system of the new.Christian Science Mind-healing rests demonstrably on[pg 081]the broad and sure foundation of Science; and this is [1]not the basis ofmateria medica, as some of the most skil-ful and scholarly physicians openly admit.To prevent all unpleasant and unchristian action—aswe drift, by right of God's dear love, into more spiritual [5]lines of life—let each society of practitioners, the matter-physicians and the metaphysicians, agree to disagree, andthen patiently wait on God to decide, as surely He will,which is the true system of medicine.Do we not see in the commonly accepted teachings of the[10]day, the Christ-idea mingled with the teachings of Johnthe Baptist? or, rather, Are not the last eighteen centuriesbut the footsteps of Truth being baptized of John, and com-ing up straightway out of the ceremonial (or ritualistic)waters to receive the benediction of an honored Father, and[15]afterwards to go up into the wilderness, in order to over-come mortal sense, before it shall go forth into all the citiesand towns of Judea, or see many of the people from beyondJordan? Now, if all this be a fair or correct view of thisquestion, why does not John hear this voice, or see the[20]dove,—or has not Truth yet reached the shore?Every individual character, like the individual Johnthe Baptist, at some date must cry in the desert ofearthly joy; and his voice be heard divinely andhumanly. In the desolation of human understanding, [25]divine Love hears and answers the human call for help;and the voice of Truth utters the divine verities of beingwhich deliver mortals out of the depths of ignoranceand vice. Thisisthe Father's benediction. It giveslessons to human life, guides the understanding, peoples [30][pg 082]the mind with spiritual ideas, reconstructs the Judean [1]religion, and reveals God and man as the Principle andidea of all good.Understanding this fact in Christian Science, bringsthe peace symbolized by a dove; and this peace floweth [5]as a river into a shoreless eternity. He who knew theforetelling Truth, beheld the forthcoming Truth, as itcame up out of the baptism of Spirit, to enlighten andredeem mortals. Such Christians as John cognize thesymbols of God, reach the sure foundations of time, stand [10]upon the shore of eternity, and grasp and gather—in allglory—what eye hath not seen.Is there infinite progression with man after the destruc-tion of mortal mind?Man is the offspring and idea of the Supreme Being, [15]whose law is perfect and infinite. In obedience to thislaw, man is forever unfolding the endless beatitudes ofBeing; for he is the image and likeness of infinite Life,Truth, and Love.Infinite progression is concrete being, which finite [20]mortals see and comprehend only as abstract glory. Asmortal mind, or the material sense of life, is put off,the spiritual sense and Science of being is brought tolight.Mortal mind is a myth; the one Mind is immortal. [25]A mythical or mortal sense of existence is consumedas 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,and move, and have our being.”This Mind, then, is not [30]subject to growth, change, or diminution, but is the divine[pg 083]intelligence, or Principle, of all real being; holding [1]man forever in the rhythmic round of unfolding bliss,as a living witness to and perpetual idea of inexhaustiblegood.In your book, Science and Health,3page 181, you[5]say:“Every sin is the author of itself, and everyinvalid the cause of his own sufferings.”On page182 you say:“Sickness is a growth of illusion, spring-ing from a seed of thought,—either your own thoughtor another's.”Will you please explain this seeming[10]contradiction?No person can accept another's belief, except it bewith the consent of his own belief. If the error whichknocks at the door of your own thought originated inanother's mind, you are a free moral agent to reject or [15]to accept this error; hence, you are the arbiter of yourown fate, and sin is the author of sin. In the wordsof our Master, you are“a liar, and the father of it[the lie].”Why did Jesus call himself“the Son of man”?[20]In the life of our Lord, meekness was as conspicuousas might. In John xvii. he declared his sonship withGod:“These words spake Jesus, and lifted up hiseyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come;glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may glorify Thee.”[25]The hour had come for the avowal of this great truth,and for the proof of his eternal Life and sonship. Jesus'[pg 084]wisdom ofttimes was shown by his forbearing to speak, [1]as well as by speaking, the whole truth. Haply he waitedfor 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 [5]hasten or permit it.The disciples and prophets thrust disputed points onminds unprepared for them. This cost them their lives,and the world's temporary esteem; but the prophecieswere fulfilled, and their motives were rewarded by [10]growth and more spiritual understanding, which dawnsby 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 spiritualself, or Christ, was the Son of God; and that the mor- [15]tal mind, not the immortal Mind, suffered. The humanmanifestation of the Son of God was called the Son ofman, or Mary's son.Please explain Paul's meaning in the text,“For to meto live is Christ, and to die is gain.”[20]The Science of Life, overshadowing Paul's sense oflife in matter, so far extinguished the latter as foreverto quench his love for it. The discipline of the flesh isdesigned to turn one, like a weary traveller, to the homeof Love. To lose error thus, is to live in Christ, Truth. [25]A true sense of the falsity of material joys and sorrows,pleasures and pains, takes them away, and teaches Life'slessons aright. The transition from our lower sense ofLife to a new and higher sense thereof, even though it bethrough the door named death, yields a clearer and [30]nearer sense of Life to those who have utilized the present,[pg 085]and are ripe for the harvest-home. To the battle- [1]worn and weary Christian hero, Life eternal bringsblessings.Is a Christian Scientist ever sick, and has he who issick been regenerated?[5]The Christian Scientist learns spiritually all that heknows of Life, and demonstrates what he understands.God is recognized as the divine Principle of his being,and of every thought and act leading to good. His pur-pose must be right, though his power is temporarily lim- [10]ited. Perfection, the goal of existence, is not won in amoment; and regeneration leading thereto is gradual,for it culminates in the fulfilment of this divine rule inScience:“Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Fatherwhich is in heaven is perfect.”[15]The last degree of regeneration rises into the rest ofperpetual, spiritual, individual existence. The firstfeeble fluttering of mortals Christward are infantileand more or less imperfect. The new-born ChristianScientist must mature, and work out his own salvation. [20]Spirit and flesh antagonize. Temptation, that mist ofmortal mind which seems to be matter and the environ-ment of mortals, suggests pleasure and pain in matter;and, so long as this temptation lasts, the warfare is notended and the mortal is not regenerated. The pleas- [25]ures—more than the pains—of sense, retard regenera-tion; for pain compels human consciousness to escapefrom sense into the immortality and harmony of Soul.Disease in error, more than ease in it, tends to destroyerror: the sick often are thereby led to Christ, Truth, [30]and to learn their way out of both sickness and sin.[pg 086]The material and physical are imperfect. The in- [1]dividual and spiritual are perfect; these have no fleshlynature. This final degree of regeneration is saving, andthe Christian will, must, attain it; but it doth not yetappear. Until this be attained, the Christian Scientist [5]must continue to strive with sickness, sin, and death—though in lessening degrees—and manifest growth atevery experience.Is it correct to say of material objects, that they are noth-ing and exist only in imagination?[10]Nothingandsomethingare words which need correctdefinition. They either mean formations of indefiniteand vague human opinions, or scientific classificationsof the unreal and the real. My sense of the beauty ofthe universe is, that beauty typifies holiness, and is some- [15]thing to be desired. Earth is more spiritually beautifulto my gaze now than when it was more earthly to theeyes of Eve. The pleasant sensations of human belief,of form and color, must be spiritualized, until we gain theglorified sense of substance as in the new heaven and [20]earth, the harmony of body and Mind.Even the human conception of beauty, grandeur, andutility is something that defies a sneer. It is more thanimagination. It is next to divine beauty and the gran-deur of Spirit. It lives with our earth-life, and is [25]the subjective state of high thoughts. The atmos-phere of mortal mind constitutes our mortal envi-ronment. What mortals hear, see, feel, taste, smell,constitutes their present earth and heaven: but we mustgrow out of even this pleasing thraldom, and find wings [30]to reach the glory of supersensible Life; then we shall[pg 087]soar above, as the bird in the clear ether of the blue tem- [1]poral sky.

thought,—and must proceed from God; hence it must [1]be sinless, and destitute of self-created or derived capacityto sin.Third:Jesus said,“If a man keep my saying, heshall never see death.”This statement of our Master [5]is true, and remains to be demonstrated; for it is theultimatum of Christian Science; but this immortal sayingcan never be tested or proven true upon a false premise,such as the mortal belief that soul is in body, and lifeand intelligence are in matter. That doctrine is not [10]theism, but pantheism. According to human belief thebodies of mortals are mortal, but they contain immortalsouls! hence these bodies must die for these souls toescape and be immortal. The theory that death mustoccur, to set a human soul free from its environments, [15]is rendered void by Jesus' divine declaration, who spakeas never man spake,—and no man can rationally rejecthis authority on this subject and accept it on other topicsless important.Now, exchange the termsoulforsensewhenever this [20]word means the so-called soul in the body, and you willfind the right meaning indicated. The misnamed humansoul is material sense, which sinneth and shall die; forit is an error or false sense of mentality in matter, andmatter has no sense. You will admit that Soul is the [25]Life of man. Now if Soul sinned, it would die; for“thewages of sin is death.”The Scripture saith,“WhenChrist, who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye alsoappear with him in glory.”The Science of Soul, Spirit,involves this appearing, and is essential to the fulfilment [30]of this glorious prophecy of the master Metaphysician,who overcame the last enemy, death.[pg 077]Did the salvation of the eunuch depend merely on his[1]believing that Jesus Christ was the Son of God?It did; but this believing was more than faith in thefact that Jesus was the Messiah. Here the verbbelievetook its original meaning, namely, to befirm,—yea, to [5]understandthose great truths asserted of the Messiah:it meant to discern and consent to that infinite demandmade upon the eunuch in those few words of the apostle.Philip's requirement was, that he should not only ac-knowledge the incarnation,—God made manifest through [10]man,—but even the eternal unity of man and God, asthe divine Principle and spiritual idea; which is the in-dissoluble bond of union, the power and presence, indivine Science, of Life, Truth, and Love, to support theirideal man. This is the Father's great Love that He [15]hath bestowed upon us, and it holds man in endlessLife and one eternal round of harmonious being. Itguides him by Truth that knows no error, and withsupersensual, impartial, and unquenchable Love. Tobelieveis tobe firm. In adopting all this vast idea of [20]Christ Jesus, the eunuch was toknowin whom he be-lieved. Tobelievethus was to enter the spiritual sanctuaryof Truth, and there learn, in divine Science, somewhatof the All-Father-Mother God. It was to understandGod and man: it was sternly to rebuke the mortal [25]belief that man has fallen away from his first estate; thatman, made in God's own likeness, and reflecting Truth,could fall into mortal error; or, that man is the fatherof man. It was to enter unshod the Holy of Holies, wherethe miracle of grace appears, and where the miracles of [30]Jesus had their birth,—healing the sick, casting outevils, and resurrecting the humansenseto the belief[pg 078]that Life, God, is not buried in matter. This is the spirit- [1]ual dawn of the Messiah, and the overture of theangels. This is when God is made manifest in theflesh, and thus it destroys all sense of sin, sickness, anddeath,—when the brightness of His glory encompasseth [5]all being.Can Christian Science Mind-healing be taught to thosewho are absent?The Science of Mind-healing can no more be taughtthus, than can science in any other direction. I know [10]not how to teach either Euclid or the Science of Mindsilently; and never dreamed that either of these partookof the nature of occultism, magic, alchemy, or necro-mancy. These“ways that are vain”are the inventionsof animal magnetism, which would deceive, if possible, [15]the very elect. We will charitably hope, however, thatsome people employ theet ceteraof ignorance and self-conceit unconsciously, in their witless ventilation of falsestatements and claims. Misguiding the public mind andtaking its money in exchange for this abuse, has become [20]too common: we will hope it is the froth of error passingoff; and that Christian Science will some time appear allthe clearer for the purification of the public thought con-cerning it.Has man fallen from a state of perfection?[25]If God is the Principle of man (and He is), man is theidea 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 arealways human vagaries, formulated views antagonistic [30][pg 079]to the divine order and the nature of Deity. All these [1]mortal beliefs will be purged and dissolved in the cru-cible of Truth, and the places once knowing them willknow them no more forever, having been swept cleanby the winds of history. The grand verities of Science [5]will sift the chaff from the wheat, until it is clear to hu-man comprehension that man was, and is, God's perfectlikeness, that reflects all whereby we can know God. InHim we live, move, and have being. Man's origin andexistence being in Him, man is the ultimatum of per- [10]fection, and by no means the medium of imperfection.Immortal man is the eternal idea of Truth, that cannotlapse into a mortal belief or error concerning himselfand his origin: he cannot get out of the focal distance ofinfinity. If God is upright and eternal, man as His like- [15]ness is erect in goodness and perpetual in Life, Truth,and Love. If the great cause is perfect, its effect is per-fect also; and cause and effect in Science are immutableand immortal. A mortal who is sinning, sick, and dying,is not immortal man; and never was, and never can be, [20]God's image and likeness, the true ideal of immortalman's divine Principle. The spiritual man is that per-fect and unfallen likeness, coexistent and coeternal withGod.“As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all bemade alive.”[25]What course should Christian Scientists take in regardto aiding persons brought before the courts for violation ofmedical statutes?Beware of joining any medical league which in anyway obligates you to assist—because they chance to be [30]under arrest—vendors of patent pills, mesmerists,[pg 080]occultists, sellers of impure literature, and authors of [1]spurious works on mental healing. By rendering errorsuch a service, you lose much more than can be gainedby mere unity on the single issue of opposition to unjustmedical laws. [5]A league which obligates its members to give moneyand influence in support and defense of medical char-latans in general, and possibly to aid individual rightsin a wrong direction—which Christian Science eschews—should be avoided. Anybody and everybody, who [10]will fight the medical faculty, can join this league. It isbetter to be friendly with cultured and conscientiousmedical men, who leave Christian Science to rise or fallon its own merit or demerit, than to affiliate with a wrongclass of people. [15]Unconstitutional and unjust coercive legislation andlaws, infringing individual rights, must be“of few days,and full of trouble.”Thevox populi, through the provi-dence of God, promotes and impels all true reform; and,at the best time, will redress wrongs and rectify injus- [20]tice. Tyranny can thrive but feebly under our Govern-ment. God reigns, and will“turn and overturn”untilright is found supreme.In a certain sense, we should commiserate the lot ofregular doctors, who, in successive generations for cen- [25]turies, have planted and sown and reaped in the fieldsof 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 patronizethe new school, at least not until it shall come to understand [30]the medical system of the new.Christian Science Mind-healing rests demonstrably on[pg 081]the broad and sure foundation of Science; and this is [1]not the basis ofmateria medica, as some of the most skil-ful and scholarly physicians openly admit.To prevent all unpleasant and unchristian action—aswe drift, by right of God's dear love, into more spiritual [5]lines of life—let each society of practitioners, the matter-physicians and the metaphysicians, agree to disagree, andthen patiently wait on God to decide, as surely He will,which is the true system of medicine.Do we not see in the commonly accepted teachings of the[10]day, the Christ-idea mingled with the teachings of Johnthe Baptist? or, rather, Are not the last eighteen centuriesbut the footsteps of Truth being baptized of John, and com-ing up straightway out of the ceremonial (or ritualistic)waters to receive the benediction of an honored Father, and[15]afterwards to go up into the wilderness, in order to over-come mortal sense, before it shall go forth into all the citiesand towns of Judea, or see many of the people from beyondJordan? Now, if all this be a fair or correct view of thisquestion, why does not John hear this voice, or see the[20]dove,—or has not Truth yet reached the shore?Every individual character, like the individual Johnthe Baptist, at some date must cry in the desert ofearthly joy; and his voice be heard divinely andhumanly. In the desolation of human understanding, [25]divine Love hears and answers the human call for help;and the voice of Truth utters the divine verities of beingwhich deliver mortals out of the depths of ignoranceand vice. Thisisthe Father's benediction. It giveslessons to human life, guides the understanding, peoples [30][pg 082]the mind with spiritual ideas, reconstructs the Judean [1]religion, and reveals God and man as the Principle andidea of all good.Understanding this fact in Christian Science, bringsthe peace symbolized by a dove; and this peace floweth [5]as a river into a shoreless eternity. He who knew theforetelling Truth, beheld the forthcoming Truth, as itcame up out of the baptism of Spirit, to enlighten andredeem mortals. Such Christians as John cognize thesymbols of God, reach the sure foundations of time, stand [10]upon the shore of eternity, and grasp and gather—in allglory—what eye hath not seen.Is there infinite progression with man after the destruc-tion of mortal mind?Man is the offspring and idea of the Supreme Being, [15]whose law is perfect and infinite. In obedience to thislaw, man is forever unfolding the endless beatitudes ofBeing; for he is the image and likeness of infinite Life,Truth, and Love.Infinite progression is concrete being, which finite [20]mortals see and comprehend only as abstract glory. Asmortal mind, or the material sense of life, is put off,the spiritual sense and Science of being is brought tolight.Mortal mind is a myth; the one Mind is immortal. [25]A mythical or mortal sense of existence is consumedas 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,and move, and have our being.”This Mind, then, is not [30]subject to growth, change, or diminution, but is the divine[pg 083]intelligence, or Principle, of all real being; holding [1]man forever in the rhythmic round of unfolding bliss,as a living witness to and perpetual idea of inexhaustiblegood.In your book, Science and Health,3page 181, you[5]say:“Every sin is the author of itself, and everyinvalid the cause of his own sufferings.”On page182 you say:“Sickness is a growth of illusion, spring-ing from a seed of thought,—either your own thoughtor another's.”Will you please explain this seeming[10]contradiction?No person can accept another's belief, except it bewith the consent of his own belief. If the error whichknocks at the door of your own thought originated inanother's mind, you are a free moral agent to reject or [15]to accept this error; hence, you are the arbiter of yourown fate, and sin is the author of sin. In the wordsof our Master, you are“a liar, and the father of it[the lie].”Why did Jesus call himself“the Son of man”?[20]In the life of our Lord, meekness was as conspicuousas might. In John xvii. he declared his sonship withGod:“These words spake Jesus, and lifted up hiseyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come;glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may glorify Thee.”[25]The hour had come for the avowal of this great truth,and for the proof of his eternal Life and sonship. Jesus'[pg 084]wisdom ofttimes was shown by his forbearing to speak, [1]as well as by speaking, the whole truth. Haply he waitedfor 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 [5]hasten or permit it.The disciples and prophets thrust disputed points onminds unprepared for them. This cost them their lives,and the world's temporary esteem; but the prophecieswere fulfilled, and their motives were rewarded by [10]growth and more spiritual understanding, which dawnsby 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 spiritualself, or Christ, was the Son of God; and that the mor- [15]tal mind, not the immortal Mind, suffered. The humanmanifestation of the Son of God was called the Son ofman, or Mary's son.Please explain Paul's meaning in the text,“For to meto live is Christ, and to die is gain.”[20]The Science of Life, overshadowing Paul's sense oflife in matter, so far extinguished the latter as foreverto quench his love for it. The discipline of the flesh isdesigned to turn one, like a weary traveller, to the homeof Love. To lose error thus, is to live in Christ, Truth. [25]A true sense of the falsity of material joys and sorrows,pleasures and pains, takes them away, and teaches Life'slessons aright. The transition from our lower sense ofLife to a new and higher sense thereof, even though it bethrough the door named death, yields a clearer and [30]nearer sense of Life to those who have utilized the present,[pg 085]and are ripe for the harvest-home. To the battle- [1]worn and weary Christian hero, Life eternal bringsblessings.Is a Christian Scientist ever sick, and has he who issick been regenerated?[5]The Christian Scientist learns spiritually all that heknows of Life, and demonstrates what he understands.God is recognized as the divine Principle of his being,and of every thought and act leading to good. His pur-pose must be right, though his power is temporarily lim- [10]ited. Perfection, the goal of existence, is not won in amoment; and regeneration leading thereto is gradual,for it culminates in the fulfilment of this divine rule inScience:“Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Fatherwhich is in heaven is perfect.”[15]The last degree of regeneration rises into the rest ofperpetual, spiritual, individual existence. The firstfeeble fluttering of mortals Christward are infantileand more or less imperfect. The new-born ChristianScientist must mature, and work out his own salvation. [20]Spirit and flesh antagonize. Temptation, that mist ofmortal mind which seems to be matter and the environ-ment of mortals, suggests pleasure and pain in matter;and, so long as this temptation lasts, the warfare is notended and the mortal is not regenerated. The pleas- [25]ures—more than the pains—of sense, retard regenera-tion; for pain compels human consciousness to escapefrom sense into the immortality and harmony of Soul.Disease in error, more than ease in it, tends to destroyerror: the sick often are thereby led to Christ, Truth, [30]and to learn their way out of both sickness and sin.[pg 086]The material and physical are imperfect. The in- [1]dividual and spiritual are perfect; these have no fleshlynature. This final degree of regeneration is saving, andthe Christian will, must, attain it; but it doth not yetappear. Until this be attained, the Christian Scientist [5]must continue to strive with sickness, sin, and death—though in lessening degrees—and manifest growth atevery experience.Is it correct to say of material objects, that they are noth-ing and exist only in imagination?[10]Nothingandsomethingare words which need correctdefinition. They either mean formations of indefiniteand vague human opinions, or scientific classificationsof the unreal and the real. My sense of the beauty ofthe universe is, that beauty typifies holiness, and is some- [15]thing to be desired. Earth is more spiritually beautifulto my gaze now than when it was more earthly to theeyes of Eve. The pleasant sensations of human belief,of form and color, must be spiritualized, until we gain theglorified sense of substance as in the new heaven and [20]earth, the harmony of body and Mind.Even the human conception of beauty, grandeur, andutility is something that defies a sneer. It is more thanimagination. It is next to divine beauty and the gran-deur of Spirit. It lives with our earth-life, and is [25]the subjective state of high thoughts. The atmos-phere of mortal mind constitutes our mortal envi-ronment. What mortals hear, see, feel, taste, smell,constitutes their present earth and heaven: but we mustgrow out of even this pleasing thraldom, and find wings [30]to reach the glory of supersensible Life; then we shall[pg 087]soar above, as the bird in the clear ether of the blue tem- [1]poral sky.

thought,—and must proceed from God; hence it must [1]be sinless, and destitute of self-created or derived capacityto sin.

thought,—and must proceed from God; hence it must [1]

be sinless, and destitute of self-created or derived capacity

to sin.

Third:Jesus said,“If a man keep my saying, heshall never see death.”This statement of our Master [5]is true, and remains to be demonstrated; for it is theultimatum of Christian Science; but this immortal sayingcan never be tested or proven true upon a false premise,such as the mortal belief that soul is in body, and lifeand intelligence are in matter. That doctrine is not [10]theism, but pantheism. According to human belief thebodies of mortals are mortal, but they contain immortalsouls! hence these bodies must die for these souls toescape and be immortal. The theory that death mustoccur, to set a human soul free from its environments, [15]is rendered void by Jesus' divine declaration, who spakeas never man spake,—and no man can rationally rejecthis authority on this subject and accept it on other topicsless important.

Third:Jesus said,“If a man keep my saying, he

shall never see death.”This statement of our Master [5]

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,

such as the mortal belief that soul is in body, and life

and intelligence are in matter. That doctrine is not [10]

theism, but pantheism. According to human belief the

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

occur, to set a human soul free from its environments, [15]

is rendered void by Jesus' divine declaration, who spake

as never man spake,—and no man can rationally reject

his authority on this subject and accept it on other topics

less important.

Now, exchange the termsoulforsensewhenever this [20]word means the so-called soul in the body, and you willfind the right meaning indicated. The misnamed humansoul is material sense, which sinneth and shall die; forit is an error or false sense of mentality in matter, andmatter has no sense. You will admit that Soul is the [25]Life of man. Now if Soul sinned, it would die; for“thewages of sin is death.”The Scripture saith,“WhenChrist, who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye alsoappear with him in glory.”The Science of Soul, Spirit,involves this appearing, and is essential to the fulfilment [30]of this glorious prophecy of the master Metaphysician,who overcame the last enemy, death.

Now, exchange the termsoulforsensewhenever this [20]

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

it is an error or false sense of mentality in matter, and

matter has no sense. You will admit that Soul is the [25]

Life of man. Now if Soul sinned, it would die; for“the

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,

involves this appearing, and is essential to the fulfilment [30]

of this glorious prophecy of the master Metaphysician,

who overcame the last enemy, death.

Did the salvation of the eunuch depend merely on his[1]believing that Jesus Christ was the Son of God?

Did the salvation of the eunuch depend merely on his[1]

believing that Jesus Christ was the Son of God?

It did; but this believing was more than faith in thefact that Jesus was the Messiah. Here the verbbelievetook its original meaning, namely, to befirm,—yea, to [5]understandthose great truths asserted of the Messiah:it meant to discern and consent to that infinite demandmade upon the eunuch in those few words of the apostle.Philip's requirement was, that he should not only ac-knowledge the incarnation,—God made manifest through [10]man,—but even the eternal unity of man and God, asthe divine Principle and spiritual idea; which is the in-dissoluble bond of union, the power and presence, indivine Science, of Life, Truth, and Love, to support theirideal man. This is the Father's great Love that He [15]hath bestowed upon us, and it holds man in endlessLife and one eternal round of harmonious being. Itguides him by Truth that knows no error, and withsupersensual, impartial, and unquenchable Love. Tobelieveis tobe firm. In adopting all this vast idea of [20]Christ Jesus, the eunuch was toknowin whom he be-lieved. Tobelievethus was to enter the spiritual sanctuaryof Truth, and there learn, in divine Science, somewhatof the All-Father-Mother God. It was to understandGod and man: it was sternly to rebuke the mortal [25]belief that man has fallen away from his first estate; thatman, made in God's own likeness, and reflecting Truth,could fall into mortal error; or, that man is the fatherof man. It was to enter unshod the Holy of Holies, wherethe miracle of grace appears, and where the miracles of [30]Jesus had their birth,—healing the sick, casting outevils, and resurrecting the humansenseto the belief

It did; but this believing was more than faith in the

fact that Jesus was the Messiah. Here the verbbelieve

took its original meaning, namely, to befirm,—yea, to [5]

understandthose 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.

Philip's requirement was, that he should not only ac-

knowledge the incarnation,—God made manifest through [10]

man,—but even the eternal unity of man and God, as

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

ideal man. This is the Father's great Love that He [15]

hath bestowed upon us, and it holds man in endless

Life and one eternal round of harmonious being. It

guides him by Truth that knows no error, and with

supersensual, impartial, and unquenchable Love. To

believeis tobe firm. In adopting all this vast idea of [20]

Christ Jesus, the eunuch was toknowin whom he be-

lieved. Tobelievethus was to enter the spiritual sanctuary

of Truth, and there learn, in divine Science, somewhat

of the All-Father-Mother God. It was to understand

God and man: it was sternly to rebuke the mortal [25]

belief that man has fallen away from his first estate; that

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

the miracle of grace appears, and where the miracles of [30]

Jesus had their birth,—healing the sick, casting out

evils, and resurrecting the humansenseto the belief

that Life, God, is not buried in matter. This is the spirit- [1]ual dawn of the Messiah, and the overture of theangels. This is when God is made manifest in theflesh, and thus it destroys all sense of sin, sickness, anddeath,—when the brightness of His glory encompasseth [5]all being.

that Life, God, is not buried in matter. This is the spirit- [1]

ual dawn of the Messiah, and the overture of the

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 [5]

all being.

Can Christian Science Mind-healing be taught to thosewho are absent?

Can Christian Science Mind-healing be taught to those

who are absent?

The Science of Mind-healing can no more be taughtthus, than can science in any other direction. I know [10]not how to teach either Euclid or the Science of Mindsilently; and never dreamed that either of these partookof the nature of occultism, magic, alchemy, or necro-mancy. These“ways that are vain”are the inventionsof animal magnetism, which would deceive, if possible, [15]the very elect. We will charitably hope, however, thatsome people employ theet ceteraof ignorance and self-conceit unconsciously, in their witless ventilation of falsestatements and claims. Misguiding the public mind andtaking its money in exchange for this abuse, has become [20]too common: we will hope it is the froth of error passingoff; and that Christian Science will some time appear allthe clearer for the purification of the public thought con-cerning it.

The Science of Mind-healing can no more be taught

thus, than can science in any other direction. I know [10]

not how to teach either Euclid or the Science of Mind

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

of animal magnetism, which would deceive, if possible, [15]

the very elect. We will charitably hope, however, that

some people employ theet ceteraof ignorance and self-

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 [20]

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-

cerning it.

Has man fallen from a state of perfection?[25]

Has man fallen from a state of perfection?[25]

If God is the Principle of man (and He is), man is theidea 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 arealways human vagaries, formulated views antagonistic [30]

If God is the Principle of man (and He is), man is the

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

always human vagaries, formulated views antagonistic [30]

to the divine order and the nature of Deity. All these [1]mortal beliefs will be purged and dissolved in the cru-cible of Truth, and the places once knowing them willknow them no more forever, having been swept cleanby the winds of history. The grand verities of Science [5]will sift the chaff from the wheat, until it is clear to hu-man comprehension that man was, and is, God's perfectlikeness, that reflects all whereby we can know God. InHim we live, move, and have being. Man's origin andexistence being in Him, man is the ultimatum of per- [10]fection, and by no means the medium of imperfection.Immortal man is the eternal idea of Truth, that cannotlapse into a mortal belief or error concerning himselfand his origin: he cannot get out of the focal distance ofinfinity. If God is upright and eternal, man as His like- [15]ness is erect in goodness and perpetual in Life, Truth,and Love. If the great cause is perfect, its effect is per-fect also; and cause and effect in Science are immutableand immortal. A mortal who is sinning, sick, and dying,is not immortal man; and never was, and never can be, [20]God's image and likeness, the true ideal of immortalman's divine Principle. The spiritual man is that per-fect and unfallen likeness, coexistent and coeternal withGod.“As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all bemade alive.”[25]

to the divine order and the nature of Deity. All these [1]

mortal beliefs will be purged and dissolved in the cru-

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 [5]

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

Him we live, move, and have being. Man's origin and

existence being in Him, man is the ultimatum of per- [10]

fection, and by no means the medium of imperfection.

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

infinity. If God is upright and eternal, man as His like- [15]

ness is erect in goodness and perpetual in Life, Truth,

and Love. If the great cause is perfect, its effect is per-

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, [20]

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

God.“As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be

made alive.”[25]

What course should Christian Scientists take in regardto aiding persons brought before the courts for violation ofmedical statutes?

What course should Christian Scientists take in regard

to aiding persons brought before the courts for violation of

medical statutes?

Beware of joining any medical league which in anyway obligates you to assist—because they chance to be [30]under arrest—vendors of patent pills, mesmerists,

Beware of joining any medical league which in any

way obligates you to assist—because they chance to be [30]

under arrest—vendors of patent pills, mesmerists,

occultists, sellers of impure literature, and authors of [1]spurious works on mental healing. By rendering errorsuch a service, you lose much more than can be gainedby mere unity on the single issue of opposition to unjustmedical laws. [5]

occultists, sellers of impure literature, and authors of [1]

spurious works on mental healing. By rendering error

such a service, you lose much more than can be gained

by mere unity on the single issue of opposition to unjust

medical laws. [5]

A league which obligates its members to give moneyand influence in support and defense of medical char-latans in general, and possibly to aid individual rightsin a wrong direction—which Christian Science eschews—should be avoided. Anybody and everybody, who [10]will fight the medical faculty, can join this league. It isbetter to be friendly with cultured and conscientiousmedical men, who leave Christian Science to rise or fallon its own merit or demerit, than to affiliate with a wrongclass of people. [15]

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

in a wrong direction—which Christian Science eschews

—should be avoided. Anybody and everybody, who [10]

will fight the medical faculty, can join this league. It is

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

class of people. [15]

Unconstitutional and unjust coercive legislation andlaws, infringing individual rights, must be“of few days,and full of trouble.”Thevox populi, through the provi-dence of God, promotes and impels all true reform; and,at the best time, will redress wrongs and rectify injus- [20]tice. Tyranny can thrive but feebly under our Govern-ment. God reigns, and will“turn and overturn”untilright is found supreme.

Unconstitutional and unjust coercive legislation and

laws, infringing individual rights, must be“of few days,

and full of trouble.”Thevox populi, through the provi-

dence of God, promotes and impels all true reform; and,

at the best time, will redress wrongs and rectify injus- [20]

tice. Tyranny can thrive but feebly under our Govern-

ment. God reigns, and will“turn and overturn”until

right is found supreme.

In a certain sense, we should commiserate the lot ofregular doctors, who, in successive generations for cen- [25]turies, have planted and sown and reaped in the fieldsof 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 patronizethe new school, at least not until it shall come to understand [30]the medical system of the new.

In a certain sense, we should commiserate the lot of

regular doctors, who, in successive generations for cen- [25]

turies, have planted and sown and reaped in the fields

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

the new school, at least not until it shall come to understand [30]

the medical system of the new.

Christian Science Mind-healing rests demonstrably on

Christian Science Mind-healing rests demonstrably on

the broad and sure foundation of Science; and this is [1]not the basis ofmateria medica, as some of the most skil-ful and scholarly physicians openly admit.

the broad and sure foundation of Science; and this is [1]

not the basis ofmateria medica, as some of the most skil-

ful and scholarly physicians openly admit.

To prevent all unpleasant and unchristian action—aswe drift, by right of God's dear love, into more spiritual [5]lines of life—let each society of practitioners, the matter-physicians and the metaphysicians, agree to disagree, andthen patiently wait on God to decide, as surely He will,which is the true system of medicine.

To prevent all unpleasant and unchristian action—as

we drift, by right of God's dear love, into more spiritual [5]

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,

which is the true system of medicine.

Do we not see in the commonly accepted teachings of the[10]day, the Christ-idea mingled with the teachings of Johnthe Baptist? or, rather, Are not the last eighteen centuriesbut the footsteps of Truth being baptized of John, and com-ing up straightway out of the ceremonial (or ritualistic)waters to receive the benediction of an honored Father, and[15]afterwards to go up into the wilderness, in order to over-come mortal sense, before it shall go forth into all the citiesand towns of Judea, or see many of the people from beyondJordan? Now, if all this be a fair or correct view of thisquestion, why does not John hear this voice, or see the[20]dove,—or has not Truth yet reached the shore?

Do we not see in the commonly accepted teachings of the[10]

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 com-

ing up straightway out of the ceremonial (or ritualistic)

waters to receive the benediction of an honored Father, and[15]

afterwards to go up into the wilderness, in order to over-

come 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[20]

dove,—or has not Truth yet reached the shore?

Every individual character, like the individual Johnthe Baptist, at some date must cry in the desert ofearthly joy; and his voice be heard divinely andhumanly. In the desolation of human understanding, [25]divine Love hears and answers the human call for help;and the voice of Truth utters the divine verities of beingwhich deliver mortals out of the depths of ignoranceand vice. Thisisthe Father's benediction. It giveslessons to human life, guides the understanding, peoples [30]

Every individual character, like the individual John

the Baptist, at some date must cry in the desert of

earthly joy; and his voice be heard divinely and

humanly. In the desolation of human understanding, [25]

divine Love hears and answers the human call for help;

and the voice of Truth utters the divine verities of being

which deliver mortals out of the depths of ignorance

and vice. Thisisthe Father's benediction. It gives

lessons to human life, guides the understanding, peoples [30]

the mind with spiritual ideas, reconstructs the Judean [1]religion, and reveals God and man as the Principle andidea of all good.

the mind with spiritual ideas, reconstructs the Judean [1]

religion, and reveals God and man as the Principle and

idea of all good.

Understanding this fact in Christian Science, bringsthe peace symbolized by a dove; and this peace floweth [5]as a river into a shoreless eternity. He who knew theforetelling Truth, beheld the forthcoming Truth, as itcame up out of the baptism of Spirit, to enlighten andredeem mortals. Such Christians as John cognize thesymbols of God, reach the sure foundations of time, stand [10]upon the shore of eternity, and grasp and gather—in allglory—what eye hath not seen.

Understanding this fact in Christian Science, brings

the peace symbolized by a dove; and this peace floweth [5]

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

redeem mortals. Such Christians as John cognize the

symbols of God, reach the sure foundations of time, stand [10]

upon the shore of eternity, and grasp and gather—in all

glory—what eye hath not seen.

Is there infinite progression with man after the destruc-tion of mortal mind?

Is there infinite progression with man after the destruc-

tion of mortal mind?

Man is the offspring and idea of the Supreme Being, [15]whose law is perfect and infinite. In obedience to thislaw, man is forever unfolding the endless beatitudes ofBeing; for he is the image and likeness of infinite Life,Truth, and Love.

Man is the offspring and idea of the Supreme Being, [15]

whose law is perfect and infinite. In obedience to this

law, man is forever unfolding the endless beatitudes of

Being; for he is the image and likeness of infinite Life,

Truth, and Love.

Infinite progression is concrete being, which finite [20]mortals see and comprehend only as abstract glory. Asmortal mind, or the material sense of life, is put off,the spiritual sense and Science of being is brought tolight.

Infinite progression is concrete being, which finite [20]

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

light.

Mortal mind is a myth; the one Mind is immortal. [25]A mythical or mortal sense of existence is consumedas 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,and move, and have our being.”This Mind, then, is not [30]subject to growth, change, or diminution, but is the divine

Mortal mind is a myth; the one Mind is immortal. [25]

A mythical or mortal sense of existence is consumed

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,

and move, and have our being.”This Mind, then, is not [30]

subject to growth, change, or diminution, but is the divine

intelligence, or Principle, of all real being; holding [1]man forever in the rhythmic round of unfolding bliss,as a living witness to and perpetual idea of inexhaustiblegood.

intelligence, or Principle, of all real being; holding [1]

man forever in the rhythmic round of unfolding bliss,

as a living witness to and perpetual idea of inexhaustible

good.

In your book, Science and Health,3page 181, you[5]say:“Every sin is the author of itself, and everyinvalid the cause of his own sufferings.”On page182 you say:“Sickness is a growth of illusion, spring-ing from a seed of thought,—either your own thoughtor another's.”Will you please explain this seeming[10]contradiction?

In your book, Science and Health,3page 181, you[5]

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-

ing from a seed of thought,—either your own thought

or another's.”Will you please explain this seeming[10]

contradiction?

No person can accept another's belief, except it bewith the consent of his own belief. If the error whichknocks at the door of your own thought originated inanother's mind, you are a free moral agent to reject or [15]to accept this error; hence, you are the arbiter of yourown fate, and sin is the author of sin. In the wordsof our Master, you are“a liar, and the father of it[the lie].”

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

another's mind, you are a free moral agent to reject or [15]

to accept this error; hence, you are the arbiter of your

own fate, and sin is the author of sin. In the words

of our Master, you are“a liar, and the father of it

[the lie].”

Why did Jesus call himself“the Son of man”?[20]

Why did Jesus call himself“the Son of man”?[20]

In the life of our Lord, meekness was as conspicuousas might. In John xvii. he declared his sonship withGod:“These words spake Jesus, and lifted up hiseyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come;glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may glorify Thee.”[25]The hour had come for the avowal of this great truth,and for the proof of his eternal Life and sonship. Jesus'

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

eyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come;

glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may glorify Thee.”[25]

The hour had come for the avowal of this great truth,

and for the proof of his eternal Life and sonship. Jesus'

wisdom ofttimes was shown by his forbearing to speak, [1]as well as by speaking, the whole truth. Haply he waitedfor 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 [5]hasten or permit it.

wisdom ofttimes was shown by his forbearing to speak, [1]

as well as by speaking, the whole truth. Haply he waited

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 [5]

hasten or permit it.

The disciples and prophets thrust disputed points onminds unprepared for them. This cost them their lives,and the world's temporary esteem; but the prophecieswere fulfilled, and their motives were rewarded by [10]growth and more spiritual understanding, which dawnsby 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 spiritualself, or Christ, was the Son of God; and that the mor- [15]tal mind, not the immortal Mind, suffered. The humanmanifestation of the Son of God was called the Son ofman, or Mary's son.

The disciples and prophets thrust disputed points on

minds unprepared for them. This cost them their lives,

and the world's temporary esteem; but the prophecies

were fulfilled, and their motives were rewarded by [10]

growth and more spiritual understanding, which dawns

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

self, or Christ, was the Son of God; and that the mor- [15]

tal mind, not the immortal Mind, suffered. The human

manifestation of the Son of God was called the Son of

man, or Mary's son.

Please explain Paul's meaning in the text,“For to meto live is Christ, and to die is gain.”[20]

Please explain Paul's meaning in the text,“For to me

to live is Christ, and to die is gain.”[20]

The Science of Life, overshadowing Paul's sense oflife in matter, so far extinguished the latter as foreverto quench his love for it. The discipline of the flesh isdesigned to turn one, like a weary traveller, to the homeof Love. To lose error thus, is to live in Christ, Truth. [25]A true sense of the falsity of material joys and sorrows,pleasures and pains, takes them away, and teaches Life'slessons aright. The transition from our lower sense ofLife to a new and higher sense thereof, even though it bethrough the door named death, yields a clearer and [30]nearer sense of Life to those who have utilized the present,

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

designed to turn one, like a weary traveller, to the home

of Love. To lose error thus, is to live in Christ, Truth. [25]

A true sense of the falsity of material joys and sorrows,

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

through the door named death, yields a clearer and [30]

nearer sense of Life to those who have utilized the present,

and are ripe for the harvest-home. To the battle- [1]worn and weary Christian hero, Life eternal bringsblessings.

and are ripe for the harvest-home. To the battle- [1]

worn and weary Christian hero, Life eternal brings

blessings.

Is a Christian Scientist ever sick, and has he who issick been regenerated?[5]

Is a Christian Scientist ever sick, and has he who is

sick been regenerated?[5]

The Christian Scientist learns spiritually all that heknows of Life, and demonstrates what he understands.God is recognized as the divine Principle of his being,and of every thought and act leading to good. His pur-pose must be right, though his power is temporarily lim- [10]ited. Perfection, the goal of existence, is not won in amoment; and regeneration leading thereto is gradual,for it culminates in the fulfilment of this divine rule inScience:“Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Fatherwhich is in heaven is perfect.”[15]

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,

and of every thought and act leading to good. His pur-

pose must be right, though his power is temporarily lim- [10]

ited. Perfection, the goal of existence, is not won in a

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

which is in heaven is perfect.”[15]

The last degree of regeneration rises into the rest ofperpetual, spiritual, individual existence. The firstfeeble fluttering of mortals Christward are infantileand more or less imperfect. The new-born ChristianScientist must mature, and work out his own salvation. [20]Spirit and flesh antagonize. Temptation, that mist ofmortal mind which seems to be matter and the environ-ment of mortals, suggests pleasure and pain in matter;and, so long as this temptation lasts, the warfare is notended and the mortal is not regenerated. The pleas- [25]ures—more than the pains—of sense, retard regenera-tion; for pain compels human consciousness to escapefrom sense into the immortality and harmony of Soul.Disease in error, more than ease in it, tends to destroyerror: the sick often are thereby led to Christ, Truth, [30]and to learn their way out of both sickness and sin.

The last degree of regeneration rises into the rest of

perpetual, spiritual, individual existence. The first

feeble fluttering of mortals Christward are infantile

and more or less imperfect. The new-born Christian

Scientist must mature, and work out his own salvation. [20]

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;

and, so long as this temptation lasts, the warfare is not

ended and the mortal is not regenerated. The pleas- [25]

ures—more than the pains—of sense, retard regenera-

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

error: the sick often are thereby led to Christ, Truth, [30]

and to learn their way out of both sickness and sin.

The material and physical are imperfect. The in- [1]dividual and spiritual are perfect; these have no fleshlynature. This final degree of regeneration is saving, andthe Christian will, must, attain it; but it doth not yetappear. Until this be attained, the Christian Scientist [5]must continue to strive with sickness, sin, and death—though in lessening degrees—and manifest growth atevery experience.

The material and physical are imperfect. The in- [1]

dividual and spiritual are perfect; these have no fleshly

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 [5]

must continue to strive with sickness, sin, and death—

though in lessening degrees—and manifest growth at

every experience.

Is it correct to say of material objects, that they are noth-ing and exist only in imagination?[10]

Is it correct to say of material objects, that they are noth-

ing and exist only in imagination?[10]

Nothingandsomethingare words which need correctdefinition. They either mean formations of indefiniteand vague human opinions, or scientific classificationsof the unreal and the real. My sense of the beauty ofthe universe is, that beauty typifies holiness, and is some- [15]thing to be desired. Earth is more spiritually beautifulto my gaze now than when it was more earthly to theeyes of Eve. The pleasant sensations of human belief,of form and color, must be spiritualized, until we gain theglorified sense of substance as in the new heaven and [20]earth, the harmony of body and Mind.

Nothingandsomethingare words which need correct

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

the universe is, that beauty typifies holiness, and is some- [15]

thing to be desired. Earth is more spiritually beautiful

to my gaze now than when it was more earthly to the

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 [20]

earth, the harmony of body and Mind.

Even the human conception of beauty, grandeur, andutility is something that defies a sneer. It is more thanimagination. It is next to divine beauty and the gran-deur of Spirit. It lives with our earth-life, and is [25]the subjective state of high thoughts. The atmos-phere of mortal mind constitutes our mortal envi-ronment. What mortals hear, see, feel, taste, smell,constitutes their present earth and heaven: but we mustgrow out of even this pleasing thraldom, and find wings [30]to reach the glory of supersensible Life; then we shall

Even the human conception of beauty, grandeur, and

utility is something that defies a sneer. It is more than

imagination. It is next to divine beauty and the gran-

deur of Spirit. It lives with our earth-life, and is [25]

the subjective state of high thoughts. The atmos-

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

grow out of even this pleasing thraldom, and find wings [30]

to reach the glory of supersensible Life; then we shall

soar above, as the bird in the clear ether of the blue tem- [1]poral sky.

soar above, as the bird in the clear ether of the blue tem- [1]

poral sky.


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