Exploring in depth what Christian Science is and how it heals.
Articles
I grew up in a close family who participated in a Christian Science Church and Sunday School, so from a very young age I learned of Mary Baker Eddy’s lifework: her discovery of Christian Science, writing a book ( Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures ), and founding a church. As a young girl I was so struck by all that she had accomplished as a 19th-century woman.
It’s hard to describe how grateful I am for Mary Baker Eddy and the Church she founded. Her teachings have defined my life since I came to Christian Science in high school, from a mainstream Protestant background.
You might say my family’s “contact” with the Founder of Christian Science and her teachings occurred at the end of her career. At that time, after several tragic years, my grandfather was healed of alcoholism by a Spanish countess, an American by birth, who had become a Christian Science practitioner.
In the 1920s my grandmother was given a book that was to change her life. She had lost her husband in the Great War, and she had two children to bring up on her own with very little money.
A letter to the Los Angeles Times some years ago in response to a thought-provoking article about church caught my attention. The writer of the letter, who identified herself as a member of a Protestant denomination, lamented that her denomination had gone through what she called a “dumbing-down process.
In evaluating and analyzing world affairs from the daily news, it seems logical to identify the presence of good or evil with a particular person or group of people. Not only are these attributes applied to prominent personalities who receive ample media coverage, but are also present closer to home—with family members, neighbors, fellow employees, etc.
The advice columns that appear in many newspapers provide an interesting window into relationship challenges. Some writers may be seeking an independent assessment of who was right and who was wrong in a particular situation.
From the time I was a young teenager, I played music professionally. For several years I made a living singing, as well as playing the saxophone.
This contributor wrote the following during a lunch break on a Christian Science association day, when she was feeling so “fired up and inspired” that “the words just came pouring out. ” Get out there and heal.
As I have grown in my understanding of spiritual healing, I am learning there is no condemnation, no incurability. There is always a way to progress and move forward.