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Miscellaneous Writings Part 72

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Go gaze on the eagle, his eye on the sun, Fast gathering strength for a flight well begun, As rising he rests in a liberty higher Than genius inflated with worldly desire.

No tear dims his eye, nor his pinions lose power [30]

To gaze on the lark in her emerald bower- Whenever he soareth to fas.h.i.+on his nest, No vision more bright than the dream in his breast.

[Page 355.]

The Way

The present stage of progress in Christian Science pre- [2]

sents two opposite aspects,-a full-orbed promise, and a gaunt want. The need, however, is not of the letter, but the spirit. [5]

Less teaching and good healing is to-day the acme of "well done;" a healing that is not guesswork,-chronic recovery ebbing and flowing,-but instantaneous cure.

This absolute demonstration of Science must be revived.

To consummate this _desideratum_, mortal mind must pa.s.s [10]

through three stages of growth.

First, self-knowledge. The physician must know him- self and understand the mental state of his patient. Error found out is two-thirds destroyed, and the last third pierces itself, for the remainder only stimulates and gives [15]

scope to higher demonstration. To strike out right and left against the mist, never clears the vision; but to lift your head above it, is a sovereign panacea. Mental dark- ness is senseless error, neither intelligence nor power, and its victim is responsible for its supposit.i.tious presence. [20]

"Cast the beam out of thine own eye." Learn what in thine own mentality is unlike "the anointed," and cast it out; then thou wilt discern the error in thy patient's mind that makes his body sick, and remove it, and rest like the dove from the deluge. [25]

"Physician, heal thyself." Let no clouds of sin gather and fall in mist and showers from thine own mental atmosphere. Hold thy gaze to the light, and the iris of faith, more beautiful than the rainbow seen from my window at the close of a balmy autumnal day, will span [30]

thy heavens of thought.

[Page 356.]

A radiant sunset, beautiful as blessings when they take [1]

their flight, dilates and kindles into rest. Thus will a life corrected illumine its own atmosphere with spiritual glow and understanding.

The pent-up elements of mortal mind need no terrible [5]

detonation to free them. Envy, rivalry, hate need no temporary indulgence that they be destroyed through suffering; they should be stifled from lack of air and freedom.

My students, with cultured intellects, chastened affec- [10]

tions, and costly hopes, give promise of grand careers.

But they must remember that the seedtime is pa.s.sed, the harvest hour has come; and songs should ascend from the mount of revelation, sweeter than the sound of vintage bells. [15]

The seed of Christian Science, which when sown was "the least of all seeds," has sprung up, borne fruit, and the birds of the air, the uplifted desires of the human heart, have lodged in its branches. Now let my faithful students carry the fruit of this tree into the rock-ribbed [20]

nests of the raven's callow brood.

The second stage of mental development is humility.

This virtue triumphs over the flesh; it is the genius of Christian Science. One can never go up, until one has gone down in his own esteem. Humility is lens and [25]

prism to the understanding of Mind-healing; it must be had to understand our textbook; it is indispensable to personal growth, and points out the chart of its divine Principle and rule of practice.

Cherish humility, "watch," and "pray without ceasing," [30]

or you will miss the way of Truth and Love. Humility is no busybody: it has no moments for trafficking

[Page 357.]

in other people's business, no place for envy, no time for [1]

idle words, vain amus.e.m.e.nts, and all the _et cetera_ of the ways and means of personal sense.

Let Christian Scientists minister to the sick; the school- room is the _dernier ressort_. Let them seek the lost sheep [5]

who, having strayed from the true fold, have lost their great Shepherd and yearn to find living pastures and rest beside still waters. These long for the Christlike- ness that is above the present status of religion and be- yond the walks of common life, quite on the verge of [10]

heaven. Without the cross and healing, Christianity has no central emblem, no history.

The seeds of Truth fall by the wayside, on artless listeners. They fall on stony ground and shallow soil.

The fowls of the air pick them up. Much of what has [15]

been sown has withered away, but what remaineth has fallen into the good and honest hearts and is bearing fruit.

The third stage of mental growth is manifested in _love_, the greatest of all stages and states of being; love that [20]

is irrespective of self, rank, or following. For some time it has been clear to my thought that those students of Christian Science whose Christian characters and lives recommend them, should receive full fellows.h.i.+p from us, no matter who has taught them. If they have been taught [25]

wrongly, they are not morally responsible for this, and need special help. They are as lambs that have sought the true fold and the great Shepherd, and strayed inno- cently; hence we should be ready and glad to help them and point the way. [30]

Divine Love is the substance of Christian Science, the basis of its demonstration, yea, its foundation and super-

[Page 358.]

structure. Love impels good works. Love is greatly [1]

needed, and must be had to mark the way in divine Science.

The student who heals by teaching and teaches by healing, will graduate under divine honors, which are [5]

the only appropriate seals for Christian Science. State honors perish, and their gain is loss to the Christian Scientist. They include for him at present naught but tardy justice, hounded footsteps, false laurels. G.o.d alone is his help, his s.h.i.+eld and great reward. He that [10]

seeketh aught besides G.o.d, loseth in Life, Truth, and Love. All men shall be satisfied when they "awake in His likeness," and they never should be until then. Hu- man pride is human weakness. Self-knowledge, humility, and love are divine strength. Christ's vestures are put [15]

on only when mortals are "washed in the blood of the Lamb;" we must walk in the way which Jesus marked out, if we would reach the heaven-crowned summit of Christian Science.

Be it understood that I do not require Christian Sci- [20]

entists to stop teaching, to dissolve their organizations, or to desist from organizing churches and a.s.sociations.

The Ma.s.sachusetts Metaphysical College, the first and only College for teaching Christian Science Mind- healing, after accomplis.h.i.+ng the greatest work of the [25]

ages, and at the pinnacle of prosperity, is closed. Let Scientists who have grown to self-sacrifice do their present work, awaiting, with staff in hand, G.o.d's commands.

When students have fulfilled all the good ends of [30]

organization, and are convinced that by leaving the material forms thereof a higher spiritual unity is won,

[Page 359.]

then is the time to follow the example of the _Alma Mater_. [1]

Material organization is requisite in the beginning; but when it has done its work, the purely Christly method of teaching and preaching must be adopted. On the same principle, you continue the mental argument in the prac- [5]

tice of Christian healing until you can cure without it instantaneously, and through Spirit alone.

St. Paul says: "When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things. For [10]

now we see through a gla.s.s, darkly; but then face to face." Growth is restricted by forcing humanity out of the proper channels for development, or by holding it in fetters.

For Jesus to walk the water was scientific, insomuch [15]

as he was able to do this; but it is neither wisdom nor Science for poor humanity to step upon the Atlantic until we can walk on the water.

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