DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 4, 1921. TEN PAGES LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PACE EIGHT 3F ; AN AUTHORIZED LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE, ENTITLED Christian Science: The Leaven of Spirit, liV lli. .IOIIN M. Tl I I. . s. n. Member rlf the lUMIrvl or I,o.-tll-osJiip, of The Mother J Ihiii Ii. The I'iiM lunch of liti-l. Si initlsl, In twe-l.m, !.., Tho woi'l inlay ts iai orient ing a revival of Intel i-1 In tho things of the Spi It. Pi. bile epre.Jton abniin-ls With references to tho spiritual needs of hiMn.'iitity. Materialism, oven in Hi refinements, has foiled to Kft!ly human aspiration. lvet where mrn an- tllHllllii from nallor to Spirit, til- i Minctlvolv confident that, tinder divine i direction, srutluallMtion of lifo v!ll ineot human mo.! today and will .in tli'y the loli;il!K and tile hope tor il hpirlUliil toinoriov. This splriluali Kiition of thought and life is the pecii ltar work ot i hristian Science in hu man const iousnoss. 1 am uro that those' of yon vho liavo ohservet! christian Science enter tho lite of a friend or nctiuamlnncc. und there can be few. if any, have not been witness to such a iiclc. will testify to a deep, a fmi..a-jt" '' in.lesti uctiblc. Now it is true ni.-nlal .liaiige which has com.- ovcrj'hat matter cannot destroy matter, that ln.JhWu.1l: ou will testify, -uoi'e- (The leM ruction of matter can never over, tliat the change Is decidedly fori1"' ''omplish,sl by other than the the better. Wh.-r.as, perchaoce. he .dissolution or its seeming reality was ill, he lias become well; win-rein ,nrom;h the recognition that Spirit is ).e was a bail cifi7.en. he has to-come substance. Matter and the i...... r., ...,. i,. human mind are like a kaleidoscope. ouii-ed supply abundant' for bis needs; ,,..,. ... ... .....e l.te cheer: once dcientlent n,l fear- fill, he has l)econie suffii lent for 111s . . . . . t 1. .. t . ... . . . W hat has happened to that man? He , ureahniR up mid re-aliBiimcnt. I on is b-inK l.aveni: His thoiiKht ami templatine the kaleidoscope history Jience his life, are becoming- fdi-itunl- 'f humanity, its strupgles, its unrest, Ized. He is begiiitiins: to behold the!'s Present state of fermentation, one vision of man miiiammeled t.v matter!" struck with this obvious fact: there uni is coming into his rightful sense!""' "pver been any real progress in of dominion over all. 1 le continues in ' matter. Always there has been the world, thoiiKh no longer of it, yet jehanfre in matter. In incessant action tenderlv responsive to its needs, andj-n'l reaction, building up and tearing Just as he himself is being- leavened mutations are he communicates the ferment to his changes only of form. No essential environment to the betterment of all j K''gris occurs till the leaven of Spir with whom and with w hich he eon.es 'f works in human consciousness that in contact. ! fundamental change from the ma- The purified stte of consciousness 1 tP!il1' 'o thf? spiritual. All permanent i. the ki.iir.iom of heaven on earth lor '. progress is mental, spiritual, not ma- which Jesus uravtd and taught Christians to pray. How much of .h..- kingdom of harmony can one expeii ence here Mid now?' Just the degree of his leavening, just the measure of his spiritualized thought. Before one can go to heaven, heaven must eorne to him on earth. This is the import of Mrs. Eddys grtat discovery. Christian Science was God's response to her uplifted heart, the reward of her unselfed devotion. It came flee ing her from the limitations of a frail Sj.rdy, opening the way to a long de-J.v'-ed life work, and setting her eager feet upon the path of nearly a hair century of lovimr service. To her the st .ritual b nveii came, as through h?r "eif"WWrt has come to count less others: "A divine influence, ever present hi tjiinian consciousness, com ing' now as was promised aforetime, to preach ! lovrance to the captives (of sense.) and recovering of sight to the Mind, to set at liberty them that ..,; .,..! ,e.,. ..,,,i 11..., i,h i.reiuce.) Whenever I roe a life besrm reived, degrade.!, besotted with sense grati fication. 1 try to think of the sweet ness ar.d (leanness and wholosorne , !; of that life when Christian Sci ence, shall have done Its work therein, wl.ei the leaven of Love shall hve ,l..clr-. Iiivt unit b:.le find fear. -.1 ". u.. f r,,.K -v.. .11 ti, eradicated the mass of error, when h i..nc,. f s.,irit shall have chanir- .-,1 tho belief of niwteri.'.l conscious- ness to the spiritual understanding ofi'" received an impetus Chemistry, life in God. when the h aven of Prin- I Physics, the arts, gained the benetit ciple shall have taught lawless hu-.f "grated thought and many useful man sense that obedience to divine inventions came, giving evidence of law i true liberty. !"?. 1"niot, oyer all the earth. iThe disproving of toe atomic theory to CtlltlSTI.W sriFACF. M III'- I be the final statement of nana- n MAV INTlimST.S. cessitated further explanation and so People generally are aware that Christian Science has touched tha lives of individuals and has worked in such persons profound change for the better in mind, in morals, in body, Have you ever considered the changes in genera! thought and life Fince Christian Science began its reforma tory mission? Not only have indi viduals been affected directly but the transforming influence has extended to the universal thought, so that those who have not yet come to know Christian Science have nevertheless conformed to much of its basic teach ing. Surely, though slowly, and oft- tini.-s by devious by-paths, thought ha-s come into agreement with the great spiritual facts revealed in Christian Siktice. Coincidently basic I'iianges have occurred in human af fairs, touching the academy the pul pit, and the- medical forum to higher, . yen to more spiritual issuer. Science, theology am! medicine are so woven Into the warp ami woof of human ex istence that they constitute its motif. Jndeid, involving as they do salvation both here and hereafter. the--e are the indispensable factors in human life to day, they are the basis of the hope of a tomorrow. Now the human mind is finite; its t very sense is. of course, limited. The human mind's concepts , spiritual creation, am J, ..y s reve a- tlan s,,it;!,ce teachcB meu that 0od te of K, icmc, theology and r., -di. -Inc. tion of Truth was ultimate She le-ja Go(J not , be fpare,, not merelv t0 never rise above the limns by whiyh I eared cause and effect to be the di- ; ,,f. w..shi , ,)llt , 0()1 t0 be lovc(1 th- human thought is bounded, for Uvine Mind and its Idea, thus revealing' . . rt(.rsionrl tan ot Itsell rise no lug per t nan ltseu. 1 oiuu dim ..n.w: ot ..u. j.umai.i, That self is material, and heme to I lie I but divinely mental, unenlightened thought, science, theo- .The htm an mind is an accretion of logy, and medicine .-m material. mortal education, and that te illustrat I'iiysical st ieii. e. scholastic theology, 'ed in the case of the new-born infant, nnii material m.iii.ine have operated 1 -Mortal man conies into the world in human consciousness to bei.ttle God .without the consciousness of identity, with finite form and nature, and to (without experience, without Intel!!- bind man with the 1 annuel: of mat ter. Spirit mill v considered and there fore rightly vie.v! si iee.ie, thooloiry and medicine . xpiess inod.s of divine consciousness, activities of the li.vine jMimt. or the infinite Principle. God. To be true, to be hri-diaii. religion must take into account these tiicinely nieiilul modes: human action l.asd on them is most Christian. ii;.e.l spir iitmlls si-iciititic. h.nie 11. a rest ngh. Christ Jesus. s ii'i.i e. I us Iheolog.. his in.i.-lne, were spiritual and tote woi-e true. Christian wuh. Hit the limitations of mat th. ere-.tie Ihe S. leuee tit ru.! J.-sis; Chit: th..log-.-, without ladatic .1 .gma. tiie relisiva vt Cluitst Jesus; Christian healing without materia tm it ir-;t . Vim the medicine of I'lti-lst Ji'MlS. It will .i understood tli.it Christian Science iltxs not ...me to destroy sci ence, theology and me.licino hut rather in li.nrii the human concept of thim. It rhmes to purge out t ho oh! liio-p, hi ihe bsiv. mug, science is t-hnt-n of ph.si.nl f.-ttors. theology is ,., an.'oil of tin mifiuiiirpts of . re. d ;1ih1 .L.ma, and medicine is relit .d of matter and properly re lated to Mind. Thus spirituahation of thought raises tho concepts of sci- roc, theology, anil medicine to a higher Ulss, reveals thorn to la- in truth moles of divine Mill. I. anil re tsioias thorn in himiaa eons, iousnoss 'to thoir righliul place, from 'which jlantcti.U theories have debased them. . Till". I l.W I X 1 M UM i:. Physical s. I, nee from tho first been fettered to tnattor. It does not M-.Mon.( to doal with ultimato ranse. JR. ilher it accepts matter as iis start 'in?; point, leaving to theology the ex planation of origin. Thus natural si i iencc makes of matter nn absurdity, an effect without a cause. Matter jhuwn.c no origin, he conclusion is in evitable. though not admitted by phy- su-s, that matter has no existence fact, l-'roiii such a basis, this who ;'alh''! science, with nltog:etlier ms vjiir. it.-nal incoesisteiicy. declacs matter j wherein the minut. particles of my- run. nrtn p"isss n re kpdti to ru. m run I eolnr. rt p"lsss n re km.ii to l.o ptiintr thro tuniion .inn destruction ot marvel- ous figures, a ceaseless nhgnment, llilell;" - !lnQ 13 niamusteu numaniy in ana is manifested numaniy in jlhe overcoming of matter. Thus man's true advancement has been recorded jn0 " material history, but in spiritual development. The truth about any thing begins to unfold to human con sciousness at the vanishing point of m.itt..r. ho!icf f.hont it ... The atomic theory was the founda- lion 01 pnysies. wnen -iirs. r.uay un covered Christian Science. Briefly, this theory taught that in the pro cess of subdivision of matter, a point must ue reacned at wincn no furtner division could be made. Physics cif..i Ins- sacrifices of blood to an of termed this irreducible particle of fendc.f deity, than in a clergyman I matter the atom and upon it raised us,.(1 to ri,t.w. On Sunday morning the entire structure of natural sci- jm'ter a society event of the night be- enee. meluomg physical man. in- stinctively I felt the untruth of it 1,1 ! college, and later in medical college 1 questioned the atomic theory, and .found myself always reaching back of 'the material toward primary cause. '"'' c"" "c .was at work in human consciousness. To me it never s.-oiricd logkal that there could be an indivisible portion of matter. Anything that could be divided, I eoimmle.l, could be divided again, and so indefinitely. Before my college cour.se was comph te. the atomic theory began to crumble. The atom was split in two, and not only in two, but was divided many times. : until at last matter as matter disap- i ; reared. Freed from the limitations . ot the atomic theory, thought began e.M-aiio imii inn coitqueM oi mm- ; physicist have been advancing from I one tbeorv to another, until thev have I i concluded that matter is energy, oriv.iao force, or to be down to the very min- lute, mater is ju?t "holes in the ether.' .More than fifty years ago, Mrs. Eddy said something that amounts to very nearly that when she declared matter to be nothing more than a phase of false belief. Physical science, under the influence of the leavening, is slowly, by devious paths, approaching lilts poiiit. wneie -iis. ruuy uegau, namely the identity of matter and the human mind. Mrs. Eddy needed not to be a pedant to conclude that the essence of matter is mortal mind, for hers was a divinely inspired course which passed unerringly over the in tervening steps necessaily taken by human reason and research. The an cient philosophers taught that matter Is but the subjective state of human consciousness, that In the words of .Mrs. Eddy, "Mortal mind sees what it believes as certainly as it believes what it sees. It feels, hears, and sees its own thoughts." (S&H,p&6, 20-31.) P.ut Christian Science alone reveals tho fact that neither matter nor the human mind have existence save as the misstatement of cause and effect, the misunderstanding of God and His igenee. .Nothing in animal life is must worship Him in Spirit and in iboiu so helpless, so completely with-j Truth." The human mind has al jout sense as the human kind. Com- way- tared to a power outside itself 'monly it has not sense enough to eat, in times ol stress, thereby acknowl jjts very cries are but the chemical re-(edging its own insiifiicieney, but its , action fif shock. It is plainly littleigods ha lion merely human con jmore than animated matter. Weak, jecpis yml have taken material form Iholplo-s, unintelligent, it lives wholly jand nature. Yet even idolaters hi v ;depetidc.'it on othurs fur ev. n the. log tio.vn to images conceive them to js.mpk.-t thought processes. The edii- he ret res -"tatives of a power not 10a Walior.al pror.-ss whereby the infant t.-cal. "he fal:;e gods of mortals a'v -rfuqunis a so-called mind of its own ' Pc.i t-ils." I .li. fs about Deity, they are ; begins from birth and goes on by li'-,ihe extei nalh'.ed ideals of the human' and b little. First this little ; Science i bun. lie of mortality b arns to hr.athe. er. xva.then r e;.t. These are not yet, how- ; t v, r, ii.t. ii'g impulses of lit ai 1 .nilil;.! s. but instill. r;i!b-r tho t. Ed Ufa- h' tooimucs until ti.c thlid U-gina ' t.) manifest Intelligence, becoming less unit less dependent on others, and art ai'iiliros at last what is termed' u milal. Hut from first to last liuntan existence, ft hrii unleavened by divine Science, is a mortally ii-ent.,1 process, rising no higher than tho limits of its materially monlal ssll'hood. Christian s a noo has eomo to mako e.hi.ation uivine'.y mental, thus rah ing' mortal soli hood (ihoye itsolf. lo.l a tl 1 IIS' the race wi'tt triio Science, and puiling- to an -ml tho kaleidoscopic rotnnl of ma- teri.il lite. ' Although roc, lit higher attainments in man's t oiaiuest of matter hac lieett far in aihanee of tlio atom, tho atomic thtory. thoiii;h disproved, contiimes to lo the practical working hasia of phy sica! science. Just so, matter, ex posed liy ("hristiau Sciein e, as merely j human belief, continues to bo the 'practical working basis for the pros. lent state of human life. This explains 'why Christian Scientists arc consist 'ent in continuint,' to employ so-called ! matter in its various useful forms. We eat. wear clothes, heat our houses, conduct ourselves much as others do. ' Out the effect of Christian Science at :this period is to break down the sense ""01.111011 . 1. 1. .no. .... euoca.uis ill." .intern ......, . ... . ,Christian Scientist Is therefore putting off daily the old, the inadequate, the 'material, and is putting- on the new. the spiritual; Meanwhile he .lues not increase his dependence, upon matter by making added concessions to ma terial laws. The Christian Scientist's motto is not more and more hut less and less reliance on matter. The way in Christian Science is the way of overcoming material dependence, and ! hwj 'Cwi m"' nn" the ress. I Me " point of matter is fore- , mall !i alwiiys increasinK i,,evit ihK- there j"" " v will come a nay w neu, 111 111c nuitm ot Isaiah, "The earth is clean dissolved, tlsaiah, 24:19.) THE I.KAVKX IV THFOIKiY. "Tiie proper study of mankind," said the poet, "is man," and that is metaphysically true. Hudthe poet been a Christian Scientist, he might have declared further the proper study of man Is God, his Maker. The uroat harrier to human progress has !eett ignorance. Ignorance of God, Ig norance of man. Christ Jesus said o the womt-n at Sychar, "We know what we worship." Thereby he separated all ot'ier religious beliefs from true ; Chrtiar;ty and Indicated both the ,..(., ity Hnd the necessity to know God. To know God is to know man, for 1111 n, the Bible says. Is God's im at,e and i.kenrss. Because of Ignorance, the earliest concepts of oGod Involved fear, taboo. ana penally. ine theology Wi.s God s r.d penalty. The basis of scholastic as a punisher of 'man. v. hatever the concept or ;oa. He was always a terrible Being to be feared anil hence to he. If possible, ao poasetl. This prevailing belief was ,,,,,.. . no greater in the naean Driest 1 ., .,. which m.mv of his consrre: i lion 'had indulged in certa.'n prohibited amusements, this dear old saint level his f.n at his shamefaced, thoueli ; 1 r.repeiitnnt flock, and solemnly ex- j cifiii.ied. "Oh you had better he glad i I'll, not Cod:" How far above his 'en-ed that man was compelkd to live , to he a Christian! Odd as a punisher Into the concept of of His offspring no ; el "incut of love could enter, for there iis no .ove in fear. Because of the I proscription of love, some of the bla':k i est crimes In history have been ram. , nutted in the name of Deity. The I practice of religion has always ended toward discipline, toward the citation to Ice, obey and serve find through he exercise of fear of punishment. In u:ie-pie-7i:e 01 itus raise oeoe. ui rie,y, men have had little faith in ioo-1, in health, and well-being as the natural sequence of events under God's care and government, 'jut have shown, -unbounded and everpresent expecta '. rr. of eiil. Why do not people ex- pect naturally the unfoldment of good i-i ineir experience: it is neca ise 01 the human mind's educated belief that ti e supreme power, God, is a wreaker ieance, a visitor of iniquity. ods have ever been Jealous gods, visiting iniquity upon their hap less worshippers. Fear of punishment never mane men gocd. yel the very meaning of the word. God, is good. C'hr:siia!i Science is changing the hu man thought of God from fear to love, and Christian Scientists are coming to expnt at the hands of a loving Father th;, Kjftg of 'love j ine Kins 01 ioe. . e are cumin; 10 expect with conf'dcnce, the destruc tion of sin and sickness, and to realize the consciousness of health. Thus fear J ts disappearing from human lives be cause it Is going out of human con sciousness. In the absence of fear, we can always see good. We are gaining he higher concept that God is divine T.ove, ever responsive to human needs, ever mindful of His own, remembering His children. When I recall the ter ror? of my childhood, my fears of the very .larknrss, my constant expectation of divine displeasure, and of the ter rible administration of His supposed laws of disease, and thea observe the comparative fearlessness and freedom of the children f t today, I thank Cod from m; heart for Christian Science, which has in one generation so tran- fr.,'r,,oil r...,T,.,r. D.li,.,m azia f'l,.ci TIIE TISl'K GOI. S;nee time and mortal man began, men have tried to know God material ly, tr worship Him materially, and to attribute to Him all material phenom ena; ,yet Jesus' words are true: "God is Spirit, and they that worship Him miao hr'-stian Science fe ioh.es, as most I reh,-;ir us u 'iefs iieren, and as reason ' em, firms, that Core must he a pri-1 lien y taw- tor all things that exist, ami liial this fcix-at first Cause is Hit Creator, or God. Then plainly God I not an ohect. .All o'ojwt me iflc-oK not cause. Tlioroforo Unit can not :irop rlv l.o worshippod iis tin object. Tho infinite o-oator could not lu n croat. on, the first Oau.'.o could not bo a lhinj;. llcrco tlod could not .ho a lot in, however, l,irn'. I'"1"' tlio saoie reason thai could not be a person in ar.y llm'tod sen-o of a form or entitle, If popular theolouy concoivo Cod to to person in the s.mse of a foiin or lo. it i'.Pa.ido.:s ihc thoii'jbt .hat Is" omnipresent, for it is impos-ibe to conceive of a form as omni-'ln ,.ii' God S;i,jt present, Nevi rUi'doss t'lod Is infinite presence nnd power equally and in- stan. v ev ywnero. Cod can lh ri t-e oousiticre.l as iiersoti in the sense of infinite l'eison only, the one Heing or t'ause. Cauuso in its Wu.esi sense is I'lineiple. Mrs. lCtl.ly diseernec'. that every ihin-r that really exists has a Cause or riinciple. This I'lincliile .r . lu. es and .controls .he object, this 1'riiu iple elves to its object both fu.ic. tioii nnd identity, it is to be fount! n!- iwa.'s in the jiresenec of its object and is inseparable from it. The wonder of Christian Science is that as one grasps the fact that God i.v divine Principle, o-ie loses Ihe false belief that'll.' is an object, yet gains the sense of lfis nearness. His evorpres. eiv-e. As It becomes clearer that God is a God a! hand, one can reach out an 1 utilize His power. Because He is i'riio iple, God bccon.es nva.iahlo for one's needs, hence the ability of Chris tian Seieutbts to demonstrate Got! lm iM: I'MTY OF GOD AM) M X. Mrs. t-.d.ly's emploiment of the word Principle f 1 r lliity arouse 1 in evitable d'ssent from those wh'e-o thought inelinied only a finite concept of 'Principle as one of a number of material laws and forces, secondary an I derived, yet she la Idly proclaim ed dpi: to be Principle. She reoog nl?e.l Cause without effect to be im possible, and so she ejiicliaied that God withr.ut His creation, man a id ihe universe, would be In possible. There fore a fully descriptive term lor Deity must convey also the thought of God's handiwork. Principle, as it Is used by Mrs. Eddy.' Includes both Causo and effect, both God and man. Very early In the chapter Recapitu lation, in the Christian Sclerce text book. Science and Health with Key to ihe Scriptures, page 46,", Mis. Kri ly has cske.l and answered .1 question which fully etprerses ti.e basis of true science, theology, and medicine. The question reads, "Is there more than one Mind or Principle?" Tr.e answer follows, "There is nor. Principle nnd its idea is one and this one is God, ompipotent, omniscient, omnipresent Being, and His reflection is man nnd the universe." If God is omnlpotentJ if He possesses all power, Ho must be that power itself, otherwise there would he a, source outside Himself fron. which to derive His power. Paul says: "There Is no power but of God." (Horn, 13:1.) If God is omnipresent and He must be everywhere, for Ha Is the infinite One, then He must be the eternal presence. "Where shall I flee from Thy presence," cried the Psalm ist. If God is omniscient, if He knows i'1'1' Ho "An Himself be the infinite .uin.i. job declared: "He is In one V"'" - " m tnus tne one :;eing or principle, who is the only power, the only presence, and the onlv Mil-.!. Mrs. RJdy's exposition of God to i be Principle brings to the student the , recognition of God and man insepar able, and the unity of God and man becomes to him a vivid reality. He realizes why Christ Jesus so boldly as serted: "I and my Father are one," one as Father and Son. one as Cause and effecct, one as Mind "and idea. j Failing to comprehend Mrs. Eddy's use nf the word Principle some critics 'might at this point cry: "Ah, Mrs. r.tuiy is a 1'anUlelst: Lot US see! Pantheism, simply stated. Is the teach ing that God Is quantitatively His crea tion, that God and creation are syn- onyms thnt "God Is everything and everything is God." It is to he admitted that many religions beliefs, , some under the banner nf Christianity, do so deify things, and even.man, for do not some teach that Jesus' the man was God? Does Christian Science properly come within such category? Emphatically, no. Christian Science alone of all the denominations, teach es the oneness, plus the distinctness, of Cod and man. Is it not clear that an idea Is the product of Mind? It is the result of creation, of the function ing of Mind. Now an Idea is not Mind, nor is there quantitatively any part of Mind in an idea. If Mind were quan titatively in its ideas. Mind would de plete Itself by thinking. Qualitatively Mind Is In its idea, and the idea is al ways in Mind. Can you Imagine an idea outside of Mind, a mindless Idea any more than an idealess Mind? Neither Is possible. Then does it not become luminous what Paul meant when he quoted: "For in Him we live and move nnd have our being." thus expressing the unity of God and man? Paul disposed of the shallow charge of Pantheism by adding: "For we are also His offspring," thus stating the distinctness of God and man. Paul knew thnt critics would say, "He is a Pantheist, he teaches that we live and move and Iiave our being In God, tint man in a part of Ood." How con clusively Paul refuted this accusation by the declaration: "For we are also His offspring," and how divinely guid ed was Mrs. Eddy when Rhe made plain the oneness and yet the distinct ness of God and man by the use of Principle and Mind as synonyms of Deily. The pantheistic dogma that Jesus was God is based on nothing stronger than his own declaration: "I and my Father are one." If that be held to prove that Jesus was quantitatively one with God then It would follow that all Christians "are God, for Jesus said of all believers: "And the glory which Thou gavest me I have given them; that they may be one, even ns we are one." The oneness to which Jesus referred was not quantitative but qualitative. Even as the ray of lieht Is one with the sun, yet no part of it, bo in quality man is one with God. as idea Is ono with the Mind I wnicn creates and manifests It, yet nobis it forever within its own heing. ' Man tle-n is mental, not physical. 'That is nnd.. iilain bv a sininln lllus- 'ration. No doubt everyone in this -vidience has loved ones. What Is It 'n these loved ones thnt callR forth this speci,,! regard? Is It physique? Pri- marily no, for physicality Is relative, itmt cmp whose body mltfht bo hnper-, feet, whoso physical beauty might fall far short of tho standard, Is often lovod mure than tin Adonis. JC It Is physicality which constitutes man, It were wiso to select tho physically per fect upon iihiiin to bestow affection, but too often wuch perfection cloaks an unlovable personality, while the in- ivalid or physically dpficlt'nt may have I a nohlo charaotcr. No, plainly, olio i loves sonietliliii,' ahovo and beyond tho j physical, mid that object of love can only tho thought, the Idea of Mind, this Idea one finds heart's desire, fitness, goutiness, all lovable ipiiilities, iiualitles endiirlinr, (lopendalile, uver- liriseiu. Man Is surely idea, ami It Is this Idea, not the mortal body, which Is the Individuality and Identity of man. I MTV KMOSTIl Alil.K When a man begins to learn the profound significance of the divine unity, he begins to throw off the limi tations of Ignorance. Man being In dlssiiluhly linked by Science to His Maker and possessing forever the qualities of the infinite Principle, the iearner sees that his achievement is limited In no proper direction of thought, that indeed nil that the Father has is his. In the degree of his spiritual apprehension of the great fact of the oneness of God ami man. he sees how it was possible for Jesus to prove that unity, or at-one-ment. and so to make the atonement. So, also. In the degree of liis spirituality, he himself begins to prove for him self this at-one-ment, thus working out his own salvation In obedience to the Scriptural command, secure in the1 assurance: "For It Is God that work eth in you." It Is evident that (he de sire to sin or the ability to sin cannot be present with tho realization of man's divine unity with good, for sin ! is a departure from good, and could be present, even In belief, in the sup posed absence, only, of God. But God's omnipresence Is evil's never presence. Thus the learner catches a glimpse of the Infinite possibilities of man at one with God nnd he strives henceforth to he lfke Him, to have the divine likeness. God's everpres- enco is the everpresenoc of Good, and where God Is, there is man also. And so .because God is all Being and has within Himself the qualities of Being, we Christian Scientists are striving to be like Him. Because God Is Spirit, we are working to become spiritual In thought and deed. Pe cause God is Truth, we must be truth ful. Because God is Love, we should he loving, Livable, lovely. Because God Is I'rinelple, wo are endeavoring to be principled in all our ways. Cliristian Scientists are no longer sat isfied with former standards of hon esty, we are learning that a man may be sincere nn.l earnest and yet have little apprehension of Principle. The future of mankind under the govern ment of Principle Is foreshown In the progrei-s of Christian Scientists today. Let mo illustrate how tho leaven of Principle Is working In human lives. Two Christian Scientists boarded a train at the dinner hour and passed at onco from the Pullman to the diner. Their destination reached, they dis- severed that their tickets had not been tvtotin . - , ........ ...... w..ii..'..fn . have torn tip their tickets, saved j them for future use, or perhaps soldi mom, mil nicy na.i come to know God as Principle and man as the expres sion of Principle, and so th.y couldn't rest until they had acted to their high- I est sense of Principle. They decided to send the tickets in to Die general offices of tho railroad, with a letter of explanation. Some weeks later. letter came from the general manager of the road, thanking them for as- sistance in correcting a defective meth od of haniHing tiekeis on that train. CIIHIST .I1-SIS Tin; WAY, is 11 saci .iigeous to claim one s unity with God? Paul lulls us that Christ Jesus, whom all Christians ac cept as the exemplar "being in the likeness of God, thought it not rob bery to be equal with God." (Phil. 1:0.) Jesus made the atonement, he proved his unity with God, and so be came worthy to hear the title Christ. 'The divine manifestation of God." (K. & II., p. 5S3-10.) His vicarious sacrifice was complete self-denial, ut ter renunciation of material self-hood, or life in matter, with its false pleas ures and pain, its sin, disease, discord, and death. Tho way of the cross was the way out of matter, out of personal sense. And on that day of days when Jesus had taken every human foot step along the way and stood trium phant over matter the world, the flesh, and all evil, his was the leaven ed lump wherein no grain of material ity remained, wherein the conscious ness of spiritual selfhood was com plete. Ami so the real Jesuus ascend ed to tho Father, found his true being in Spirit. Thus he worked out a full salvation from sin, disease, and death, and thus Christ Jesus became The Way for all mankind. Contemplating the example of Jesus and considering his command, If any man will come after mo, let him deny himself," te Christian Scientist obediently enters an utter denial of physical selfhood and en deavors to lie the man God made In the Image nnd likeness of Spirit, not of matter. He strives to follow the In junction of his' inspired Leader: "Thou shalt recognize thyself as God's spiritual child only." (Mis. p. 18, line 11.) The working out of the false hu man sense of lifo In mutter is a prob lem fully demonstrated by Jesus, and for which he has laid down for us a theorem genuine as any geometrical proposition. This theorem John stated: "Heloved, now are wo the sons of God," a declaration which he quali fied only .so far as the acknowledge that to human sense it doth not yet appear. Christ Jesus' achievement was final. The truth of the theorem stands revealed In his example. Truth needs only to be practiced. When the geometrician arrives at the proof of his theorem by taking up and estab lishing each step of the right process, he writes upon his finished work the letters "(I. E. D." that which was to he lemoiistrutcd. If we are to follow tho example of the Wnyshower and write our triumphant Q. E. D. on life's proh. lems, we must adhere to tho Principle ind abide by the rules of Divine sicii nee. No mystery attaches to the 'passage from sense to Soul." ,s. H., p. r.0-7.) Aspiring pilgrims have pwaaaU tlioir tent upon (bat path throutshoiit thV centuries. "Step by step, since time beitan, wo see too steady Kain of man." KiKht tlilnlilnK bemits right aotiiiif, unit so step, we shall win our way conclusions. We lire persuaded that ultimately we shall "lay usltlo every weight, anil the sin that, doth so easily heset us'1 and prove the liberty of the sons of (foil. When l'rinciplo shall have wrought Its perfect work In nil- mull consciousness, the idea ot God I spu n uuiii . 1 nese sue recognlMd to will he manifest mnl the new cieiifuro constitute public health! ,.s for so wlll stand revealed, man in (lull's , culled communit able rtjifiism. Mrs. Imago and likeness, bearing His j Kddy required strict ohedlenco to iianto. possessed of Ills qualities, and ; qiiarrniil lue regulations, respecting nut unlimited In any direction of good, only the law of the land, hut public "And it shall come to pass that In the seiitimenl also. NevertheleHH, she knew place where It was said unto them, Ye ; that the only real germ Is the germ of are not my people,, there It shall he 1 p!i ituiil Truth, which w Ifen cultured said iinio them. Ye are tho sons of the in human consciousness, never ceases living God." tllos. 1:li'.1 . Its growth till the whole lump of mor- NIGXS OK Till-; TIMFS j lal thought Is splilt uallzed and man's Do you doubt that Christian Science I true self-hooil appear. This germ IN is the' leaven at work in the human highly Infectious and contagious, yd concept of theology'.' liecently 1 read It produces, not disease, hut health, in the official organ of an orthodox tie- j n..i discord, but harmony, not death, nomination an editorial entitled: "Th God We Worship." The theme was ex pressed In (lies,, words: "The last so-, lutlon Is that evil Is all nil Illusion, that it only exists because we think it does." Tell it not In Oath, publish It not In tho streets of Ascaloii! Here we have orthodoxy upon the platform of Chris- lian Science. How much of the out 1 theology is left In the leavened thought j of this writer, when he further declar es: "The conviction that God Is love is worth while; that evil Is an illusion Is magnificlently worth while." Again we hear the voice of the well-known presi dent of a theological college. "The time has come for a creeless Christianity." What means the more recent attempt of a great church to revive the work of healing the slok by splritnnl menus'.' It is true there has not yet come to this denomination the vision of the Christ method ?f healing, liut It Is plain that tho lcavoii of Christian Science is t work therein. What signifies tho growing move ment In religious organizations lo con solidate, to sink creedal differences In tho common good? Men are caring less for doctrine and more for deeds! Material forms and observances are becoming more and more secondary to spiritual understanding witnessed in rhxns following. Do you realize that progressive thought. in tho churches today is accepting, by little and by lit tie, those Ideals which a lone woman, a liulf century ago, proclaimed to an unheeding world? Then theology listened only to scoff nnd to presectite. Today, though not yet recognizing the fact, it has begun to follow, however haltingly, tho trail she blazed. Can you doubt that the day will come when the last of scholasticism shall have risappeared from the leavened lump of theology Then the Christian Science tef tbook may bo read from orthodox pulpits, even as now It is not uncom monly eagerly read In pastors' studies. Then Christian sermons will heal the sick. Then will end forever tho divi sion Into denominations nnd tho Church triumphant will nppenr, in the elimination of material theories and dependencies. In Hint day of spiritual predominance the churches will nn lorstan.l what Mrs. Kddy meant when I she wrote: "I love the orthodox cm,ron: ""' 'Y. ' .. ;. ,, ioo i nriMiau Mitiii.:. ...s. ji. u. i .1 -2 T . TIIF. I.l'.AVl'V IN MFDiriNi: Nowhere in the kulealoscopic char aeter of ihe human mind to be observ ed more strikingly than in tha history of material medicine. In my senior year in medical college, I was required lo devote mui'h study to "The princi ples and I'rietioe of Medicine." A bet- term for the subject would have ! beeu. "Tip" Principles and Practice of j Medicine for 1 !om." Material medicine j has always hen In a state of flux, he. ! cause it has never of itself risen, in theory or practice, above matter. Even when the matter physician discourses learnedly on mind and deals with psycho-analysis, psycho-neurosis, pyscho therapy, and psycho-twhat not, he deals none the less with matter, for to the materialist, mind means little else than hrain-matter. While tho materlalisr has not yet learned that matter anil mortal mind are one, nevertheless the healing art is drawing nearer the truth as revealed In Christian Science. Pro gressive physicians, in practice, are steadily reducing their legion of reme dies. Many doctors admit that there is no' specific medicine. Many boast that they limit their practice to four or five drugs. I have even known phy slclans who declared that a physic nnd a pain-reliever comprised their entire materia medlcn. It Is oVident that If one can reduce the pharmacopoeia In practice to one or two remedies, he can take the next step and eliminate the drug entirely from medical prac tice. It may be argued that God placed drugs here and endowed them with healing power. .When did Spirit. God delegate to matter divine power? Ma terial medicine did not qualify for Christian henllng in Jesus' day. He ignored it and turned instead to pure ly spiritual means. Could Jesus In his wisdom consistently have chosen an unscientific, and hence untrue, method with which to prove his wonderous power to heal? Moreover, Jesus was not alone In his Christian practice. Tho Bible Is full of the teaching and Practice (if spiritual healing, but you will search its pages in vain for an au thentic case of healing by material means. EVen so today material medi cine falls to qualify. It Is not tho Christ method of healing. Nothing spiritual can come out of a wholly ma terial system, and material medicine is such. Indeed, not ono spiritual quality does It embody In its theory or require In its practice. The very study of material medicine leads ono away from the spiritual. Who has ever found soul or spirit In the dissecting room, on the operating table, or under tho microscope? 1 nm aware that many noble men nnd women, true Christians, nro In the medical profes sion. To them all honor and respect! For It Is obvious that these ore such, not because of, hut In splto of their professional .training. If you were to ask any medical en thusiast to name the greatest scienti fic achievement of the age, doubtless ho would say: "Preventive medicine." Now with that Christian Science agrees, hut points out thnt, since any thing, to be medicine, must first be regarded ns sueh, medicino is mental, not material. Therefore Jiroventive medicine begine with Mind. Mrs. Eddy was tho first in this age to proclaim ( and to demonstrate that health U a slate of Mind, not a stale of"; matter; that to produce, 1111, 1 maintain a well body, it Is nccestiu-y first to hnvo ft step by , sound mind, she taught Hint all slck to right I ness Is based in thoiinln-cuntamlnu- tlon, that people who think cleanly and correctly live (hat way an. I are propor tionately Immune from disease. She taught true sanitation nH, cleanli ness of mi ml anil body, true hYKlvlin to He inoralit) .1 1 ue Physiology to bo hut life. Hut you say, how can one question, the genu theory of disease when ona may readily see the actual gerin under the microscope'.' The germ theory Is not prnuihle by the microscope any more surely than a mirage of the des- t would be established as a reality because seen through a telescope, .Neither magnifying nor lulnlmlzlnH error can make it true. As to the germ theory of disease, there has arisen the usiinl failure of Ihe doctors to agree. A famous mili tary surgeon recently is reported to have said that the more bacteria ona breathed, the less liable one would be come to disease, because of tha 1m nimiity established through the system becoming accustomed to foul condi tions. In other words, to become Im mune from disease, get on familiar j terms with disease germs. Fnmlllurlty with bacteria. It hi-iih breeds not only contempt hut Immunity. Never theless, such Immunity is not mater ial, after all, hut menial. That would seem to lie borne out of the fact that physicians rarely take the discuses with which they are thrown. (They almost never take their own medicine.) Again, a class of Investigators, num bering representatives of the Public I Health Hervlce, and many scientists j from our great universities enter a complete denial of the perm theory, substituting therefore tho worm theory. These scientists aver that so ciilled germ diseases are In reality worm diseases nnd already the lengthy list of vogotablo liacterla Is paralleled bv a replaced set of animal forms. There would seem to bo small choice between being consumed by germs or eaten by worms, but this Innovation In medical theories presents another realignment of the medical kaleidos cope. The facts are that Just as the atomlo theory gave place to changing thought, embodied In the theory that matter Is electricity or holes In tho ether, and thus prefigured further nnd more nearly final theories, so has the germ theory of disease Ix guu to disintegrate under tho restiveness of the material scientist's thirst for ultimate knowl edge. A short timo ago, It was consid ered folly to challenge the germ the- " Today, we have actually arrived at Its breaking up. There aro larco and growing numbers of tho medi cal fat uity who boldly disclaim that bacteria have anything more Ulan pos. sihly a helpful role to play in disease, liy these authorities disease germs are regarded as merelv scavengers, which are usually present for a wholly be nign purpose. Writing recently in Tho Medical Record, one of the most prom inent surgeons In America announced: "With regard to the germ and the the. on- of its action In disease, and tho transmission of disease (except as sec- 1 miliary Invaders) all the fails of my experience ale 111 opposition to tho present teaching. The ancient belief that -the stole man was possessed with a demon which must be driven out has Its modern parallel in the Jiellef that the starting point of disease Is In tho Introduction of a foreign agent Into the body. The germ Is the modern demon. You have but to suhstltuta the Idea of the germ for the Idea of the demon nnd the-medical practice of today Is but a kind of exorcism." Ho continues: "As Lloyd George has said, 'The whole world must be re made,' and In the reconstruction, medi cal and surgical practice must he re formed." His conclusions, from ex haustive experiments, are that diseases are caused by poisons prtiduced by ne. crosls and decay of cellular tlsseus. "I have found," he says, "that man'a greatest enemy Is his own decaying tissue." r Nolo that in this newest theory of disease, a man Is made ill, not from without, but from within. Another re arrangement of the kaleidoscope! for hero, as always, material medicine consistently looks lo mutter as tha cause of its own diseases, and to re move the offending tissues lays hnnds rudely upon the helpless body. Jesus said: "A man's foes shall ha they of his own household," and Mrs Eddy has shown that a man's house- ' hold In his mentality. Metaphysically viewed, this new mediclnl theory re veals that mortal man Is made 111 hy his own false beliefs. Mrs. Eddy said that fifty years ago. The proper, the scientific way, to get rid of dlsense la not to excise the effect, but rather to correct the cause. Christian Science heals and preventB disease, Just as It abolishes ull other inharmonles, through the destruction of false be liefs by the nppllcation to them of spiritual truth. The abandonment of the germ the ory will mark tho end of the fear of contagion nnd preventive medicine and public health will be established to hn cleanliness of thought and action, the only way to health and holiness. Tha hour will come for all, even ns It Is now come with many, when the divine Mind will supplant matter In the treat ment of the sick. Kvpti now, the henl. Ing art Is Impregnated with the leaven of Spirit. Christian Science is Plus. ' tratlng-the inevitable reunion of relig ion nnd medicino which must come to ' pass as both advance into more spiri tual latitudes. There will enmo a day when the unity of health nnd holiness will appear. Then religion t the sick, bed will no longer ho helpless; then the pastor nnklng his rounds will no longer delegate half his office to tho medical practitioner. Then Christ will be seen to bP not only "Hi,, head of the Church," as pan declares, but also, .(ConUtuoJ en rage 10.), V