Putting on record insights into the practice of Christian Science.
Editorials
In Science and Health Mrs. Eddy asks the question, "Can matter drive Life, Spirit, hence, and so defeat omnipotence?" Science and Health, p.
There's a scientific basis from which we can "put off the old man with his deeds," Col. 3:9; as Paul says we must.
We are all accustomed to living by different kinds of time. Daylight saving time or standard time.
Christian Science feeds the hunger of the human heart through presenting to the world the healing message of the Christ, God's ideal. Through the tender ministrations of the Christ, Truth, ever active in human consciousness, individuals and nations are awakening to their need of that which is spiritually good and permanent.
The claim that we know something, within a purely human reference frame, often leads to dogmatism. Much trouble in the world comes from the confrontation of those who believe—in connection with some particular theory or ideology—that they "know.
The early Christian community grew rapidly. The twelve apostles and other adherents of the faith were so filled with inspiration that they attracted great numbers of men and women to join them in worshiping God according to the teaching of Christ Jesus.
The healing practice of Christian Science includes as an important element a recognition that man unfailingly expresses intelligence. This recognition is a potent factor in restoring physical normality and in resolving many types of individual problems, as well as other problems, with a wider impact.
We gain an utterly different sense of being and an entirely fresh basis for living as we begin to understand through metaphysical Science that there is only one originator—divine Principle. One of the fundamental falsities that would make our lives labored is the belief that we ourselves are the source of intelligence and substance.
Through the revelation of Christian Science, the possibility of our gaining a higher sense of man is always open to us. Science's depiction of man is quite different from the mundane—he is seen as spiritual, incorporeal, the infinite idea of timeless Life.
When we read in the history books of the people whose lives illumine the past, we may well be filled not only with gratitude for their contribution to human progress but with awe as we recognize the courage and steadfastness many of them expressed. Through the years, reformers, inventors, educators, philanthropists, leaders in government and religion, have not only caught the vision of some advanced concept of truth and life that others did not have before, but they have cherished and promoted it with single-minded fidelity, so that society could know of it and thereby benefit.