Questions & Answers
When mists obscure the earth, we do not see The glory of the rising sun Nor glimpse the majesty of mountain height, Nor starlit sky when day is done. When fear enshrouds the thought, we cannot know The peace that is our heritage; We cannot vision that which God has done, Nor all His wondrous blessings gauge.
Oh , blessed, blessed joy, when we can trace The pattern of God's purpose in our lives! The healing of some sorrow clears a space, Some rout of sickness farther vision gives, And through each triumph over sin we see Line linking up all purposeful with line, Till, where we deemed heart-breaking chance to be, Our dazzled eyes glimpse part of a design, More grand and lovely than we could have dreamed! Oh, gladly then we work at our small part, Knowing such parts in one great whole are seamed— God's perfect plan of Science and of art!
"In my Father's house are many mansions. "— John 14:2.
Give me a singing heart, O God, And I shall see Beauty in common things— The daily round; the whispering tree; Colors in earth and sky; The sunset's glow; Bird song and butterfly; The flowers that grow On hill and lea. Give me a loving heart that I May healing bring To other hearts bowed down By pain or woe, and bid them sing.
If I can fill my place, calm and serene And go through life with loving, kindly mien; If I can live to show some other soul The way to peace, the universal goal; Then though my days be shorn of worldly gain, I shall not feel that I have lived in vain. If I can make some traveler's burden light And help to make the dark days seem more bright; If I can show by kindly actions meek The way to find those treasures which they seek; If I can show that love, when rightly viewed, Is heaven—I have fed a multitude.
I have lost nothing: For naught can ever be Taken away from good. Down through eternity— Love giveth all to me.
Spring steals upon the world; Nor storm, nor heat, nor lightning shock arrests Her coming; silently, She comes to earth asleep in winter's shade; Joyful, we see a primrose in the glade, A leaf uncurled. Spring steals upon the world.
"The song of Christian Science is, 'Work—work—work—watch and pray. '" —Message to The Mother Church for 1900, by Mary Baker Eddy ( p.
Within the hushed, dense darkness, where you stand, Lonely, afraid, with thought bowed to the grass; Blind to unceasing light throughout the land Until the conjurers of error pass, There is a gentle stir—softer than wings— A healing presence calls your name: Awake, O captive child of Zion! Hark! He sings Of high, immortal blessings you may take. The veil's aside.
May I be grateful today, dear Lord, For all that would speak of good— For health, for home, for the love of friends, For work, and for daily food— Symbols each one of Thy tender care, Thy love surrounding us everywhere. May I be joyful today, dear Lord— Every thought that is sick or sad, Fearful, foreboding, be swiftly replaced With the happy, the free, and the glad.