Miscellaneous Writings, 1883-1896 Part 43

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line of mental healing, and you will find that a good rule works one way, and a false rule the opposite way.

Let us suppose that there is a sick person whom an- other would heal mentally. The healer begins by mental [5]

argument. He mentally says, "You are well, and you know it;" and he supports this silent mental force by audible explanation, attestation, and precedent. His mental and oral arguments aim to refute the sick man's thoughts, words, and actions, in certain directions, and [10]

turn them into channels of Truth. He persists in this course until the patient's mind yields, and the harmonious thought has the full control over this mind on the point at issue. The end is attained, and the patient says and feels, "I am well, and I know it." [15]

This mental pract.i.tioner has changed his patient's consciousness from sickness to health. The patient's mental state is now the diametrical opposite of what it was when the mental pract.i.tioner undertook to transform it, and he is improved morally and physically. [20]

That this mental method has power and bears fruit, is patent both to the conscientious Christian Scientist and the observer. Both should understand with equal clear- ness, that if this mental process and power be reversed, and people believe that a man is sick and knows it, and [25]

speak of him as being sick, put it into the minds of others that he is sick, publish it in the newspapers that he is failing, and persist in this action of mind over mind, it follows that he will believe that he is sick,-and Jesus said it would be according to the woman's belief; but if [30]

with the certainty of Science he knows that an error of belief has not the power of Truth, and cannot, does

[Page 221.]

not, produce the slightest effect, it has no power over [1]

him. Thus a mental malpract.i.tioner may lose his power to harm by a false mental argument; for it gives one opportunity to handle the error, and when mastering it one gains in the rules of metaphysics, and [5]

thereby learns more of its divine Principle. Error pro- duces physical sufferings, and these sufferings show the fundamental Principle of Christian Science; namely, that error and sickness are one, and Truth is their remedy. [10]

The evil-doer can do little at removing the effect of sin on himself, unless he believes that sin has produced the effect and knows he is a sinner: or, knowing that he is a sinner, if he denies it, the good effect is lost. Either of these states of mind will stultify the power to heal men- [15]

tally. This accounts for many helpless mental practi- tioners and mysterious diseases.

Again: If error is the cause of disease, Truth being the cure, denial of this fact in one instance and acknowledgment of it in another saps one's under- [20]

standing of the Science of Mind-healing, Such denial dethrones demonstration, baffles the student of Mind- healing, and divorces his work from Science. Such de- nial also contradicts the doctrine that we must mentally struggle against both evil and disease, and is like saying [25]

that five times ten are fifty while ten times five are not fifty; as if the multiplication of the same two numbers would not yield the same product whichever might serve as the multiplicand.

Who would tell another of a crime that he himself is [30]

committing, or call public attention to that crime? The belief in evil and in the process of evil, holds the issues

[Page 222.]

of death to the evil-doer. It takes away a man's proper [1]

sense of good, and gives him a false sense of both evil and good. It inflames envy, pa.s.sion, evil-speaking, and strife. It reverses Christian Science in all things. It causes the victim to believe that he is advancing while [5]

injuring himself and others. This state of false conscious- ness in many cases causes the victim great physical suffering; and conviction of his wrong state of feeling reforms him, and so heals him: or, failing of conviction and re- form, he becomes morally paralyzed-in other words, [10]

a moral idiot.

In this state of misled consciousness, one is ready to listen complacently to audible falsehoods that once he would have resisted and loathed; and this, because the false seems true. The malicious mental argument and [15]

its action on the mind of the perpetrator, is fatal, morally and physically. From the effects of mental malpractice the subject scarcely awakes in time, and must suffer its full penalty after death. This sin against divine Science is cancelled only through human agony: the measure it [20]

has meted must be remeasured to it.

The crimes committed under this new _regime_ of mind- power, when brought to light, will make stout hearts quail.

Its mystery protects it now, for it is not yet known. Error is more abstract than Truth. Even the healing Principle, [25]

whose power seems inexplicable, is not so obscure; for this is the power of G.o.d, and good should seem more natural than evil.

I shall not forget the cost of investigating, for this age, the methods and power of error. While the ways, means, [30]

and potency of Truth had flowed into my consciousness as easily as dawns the morning light and shadows flee,

[Page 223.]

the metaphysical mystery of error-its hidden paths, [1]

purpose, and fruits-at first defied me. I was say- ing all the time, "Come not thou into the secret"- but at length took up the research according to G.o.d's command. [5]

Streams which purify, necessarily have pure fountains; while impure streams flow from corrupt sources. Here, divine light, logic, and revelation coincide.

Science proves, beyond cavil, that the tree is known by its fruit; that mind reaches its own ideal, and cannot [10]

be separated from it. I respect that moral sense which is sufficiently strong to discern what it believes, and to say, if it must, "I discredit Mind with having the power to heal." This individual disbelieves in Mind-healing, and is consistent. But, alas! for the mistake of believing in [15]

mental healing, claiming full faith in the divine Principle, and saying, "I am a Christian Scientist," while doing unto others what we would resist to the hilt if done unto ourselves.

May divine Love so permeate the affections of all those [20]

who have named the name of Christ in its fullest sense, that no counteracting influence can hinder their growth or taint their examples.

Taking Offense

There is immense wisdom in the old proverb, "He [25]

that is slow to anger is better than the mighty." Hannah More said, "If I wished to punish my enemy, I should make him hate somebody."

To punish ourselves for others' faults, is superlative folly. The mental arrow shot from another's bow is [30]

[Page 224.]

practically harmless, unless our own thought barbs it. [1]

It is our pride that makes another's criticism rankle, our self-will that makes another's deed offensive, our egotism that feels hurt by another's self-a.s.sertion. Well may we feel wounded by our own faults; but we can hardly afford [5]

to be miserable for the faults of others.

A courtier told Constantine that a mob had broken the head of his statue with stones. The emperor lifted his hands to his head, saying: "It is very surprising, but I don't feel hurt in the least." [10]

We should remember that the world is wide; that there are a thousand million different human wills, opinions, ambitions, tastes, and loves; that each person has a differ- ent history, const.i.tution, culture, character, from all the rest; that human life is the work, the play, the ceaseless [15]

action and reaction upon each other of these different atoms. Then, we should go forth into life with the smallest expectations, but with the largest patience; with a keen relish for and appreciation of everything beautiful, great, and good, but with a temper so genial that the friction [20]

of the world shall not wear upon our sensibilities; with an equanimity so settled that no pa.s.sing breath nor accidental disturbance shall agitate or ruffle it; with a charity broad enough to cover the whole world's evil, and sweet enough to neutralize what is bitter in it,-de- [25]

termined not to be offended when no wrong is meant, nor even when it is, unless the offense be against G.o.d.

Nothing short of our own errors should offend us. He who can wilfully attempt to injure another, is an object of pity rather than of resentment; while it is a question [30]

in my mind, whether there is enough of a flatterer, a fool, or a liar, _to_ offend a whole-souled woman.

[Page 225.]

Hints To The Clergy

At the residence of Mr. Rawson, of Arlington, Ma.s.sa- chusetts, a happy concourse of friends had gathered to celebrate the eighty-second birthday of his mother-a friend of mine, and a Christian Scientist. [5]

Among the guests, were an orthodox clergyman, his wife and child.

In the course of the evening, conversation drifted to the seventh modern wonder, Christian Science; where- upon the mother, Mrs. Rawson, who had drunk at its [10]

Miscellaneous Writings, 1883-1896 Part 43

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Miscellaneous Writings, 1883-1896 Part 43 summary

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