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| CHAPTER IX - CREATION |
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Thy throne is established of old Thou art from
everlasting. - PSALMS. |
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For we know that the whole creation groaneth and
travaileth in pain together until now. And not only they, but ourselves also,
which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within
ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our
body. - PAUL. |
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Inadequate theories of creation
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ETERNAL Truth is changing the universe. As mortals drop off
their mental swaddling-clothes, thought expands into expression. "Let there be
light," is the perpetual demand of Truth and Love, changing chaos into order
and discord into the music of the spheres. The mythical human theories of
creation, anciently classified as the higher criticism, sprang from cultured
scholars in Rome and in Greece, but they afforded no foundation for accurate
views of creation by the divine Mind. |
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Finite views of Deity |
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Mortal man has made a covenant with his eyes to belittle
Deity with human conceptions. In league with material sense, mortals take
limited views of all things. That God is corporeal or material, no man should
affirm. The human form, or physical finiteness, cannot be made the basis of any
true idea of the infinite Godhead. Eye hath not seen Spirit, nor hath ear heard
His voice. |
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No material creation |
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Progress takes off human shackles. The finite must yield to
the infinite. Advancing to a higher plane of action, thought rises from the
material sense to the spiritual, from the scholastic to the inspirational, and
from the mortal to the immortal. All things are created spiritually. Mind, not
matter, is the creator. Love, the divine Principle, is the Father and Mother of
the universe, including man. |
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Tritheism impossible |
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The theory of three persons in one God (that is, a personal
Trinity or Tri-unity) suggests polytheism, rather than the one ever-present I
AM. "Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God is one Lord." |
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No divine corporeality |
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The everlasting I AM is not bounded nor compressed within
the narrow limits of physical humanity, nor can He be understood aright through
mortal concepts. The precise form of God must be of small importance in
comparison with the sublime question, What is infinite Mind or divine Love? Who
is it that demands our obedience? He who, in the language of Scripture, "doeth
according to His will in the army of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the
earth; and none can stay His hand, or say unto Him, What doest Thou?" No form
nor physical combination is adequate to represent infinite Love. A finite and
material sense of God leads to formalism and narrowness; it chills the spirit
of Christianity. |
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Limitless Mind |
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A limitless Mind cannot proceed from physical limitations.
Finiteness cannot present the idea or the vastness of infinity. A mind
originating from a finite or material source must be limited and finite.
Infinite Mind is the creator, and creation is the infinite image or idea
emanating from this Mind. If Mind is within and without all things, then all is
Mind; and this definition is scientific. |
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Matter is not substance |
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If matter, so-called, is substance, then Spirit, matter's
unlikeness, must be shadow; and shadow cannot produce substance. The theory
that Spirit is not the only substance and creator is pantheistic heterodoxy,
which ultimates in sickness, sin, and death; it is the belief in a bodily soul
and a material mind, a soul governed by the body and a mind in matter. This
belief is shallow pantheism. Mind creates His own likeness in ideas, and the
substance of an idea is very far from being the supposed substance of
non-intelligent matter. Hence the Father Mind is not the father of matter. The
material senses and human conceptions would translate spiritual ideas into
material beliefs, and would say that an anthropomorphic God, instead of
infinite Principle, in other words, divine Love, is the father of the rain,
"who hath begotten the drops of dew," who bringeth "forth Mazzaroth in his
season," and guideth "Arcturus with his sons." |
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Inexhaustible divine Love |
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Finite mind manifests all sorts of errors, and thus proves
the material theory of mind in matter to be the antipode of Mind. Who hath
found finite life or love sufficient to meet the demands of human want and woe,
to still the desires, to satisfy the aspirations? Infinite Mind cannot be
limited to a finite form, or Mind would lose its infinite character as
inexhaustible Love, eternal Life, omnipotent Truth. |
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Infinite physique impossible
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It would require an infinite form to contain infinite Mind.
Indeed, the phrase infinite form involves a contradiction of terms.
Finite man cannot be the image and likeness of the infinite God. A mortal,
corporeal, or finite conception of God cannot embrace the glories of limitless,
incorporeal Life and Love. Hence the unsatisfied human craving for something
better, higher, holier, than is afforded by a material belief in a physical God
and man. The insufficiency of this belief to supply the true idea proves the
falsity of material belief. |
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Infinity's reflection |
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Man is more than a material form with a mind inside, which
must escape from its environments in order to be immortal. Man reflects
infinity, and this reflection is the true idea of God. God expresses in man the
infinite idea forever developing itself, broadening and rising higher and
higher from a boundless basis. Mind manifests all that exists in the infinitude
of Truth. We know no more of man as the true divine image and likeness, than we
know of God. The infinite Principle is reflected by the infinite idea and
spiritual individuality, but the material so-called senses have no cognizance
of either Principle or its idea. The human capacities are enlarged and
perfected in proportion as humanity gains the true conception of man and God.
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Individual permanency |
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Mortals have a very imperfect sense of the spiritual man
and of the infinite range of his thought. To him belongs eternal Life. Never
born and never dying, it were impossible for man, under the government of God
in eternal Science, to fall from his high estate. |
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God's man discerned |
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Through spiritual sense you can discern the heart of
divinity, and thus begin to comprehend in Science the generic term man.
Man is not absorbed in Deity, and man cannot lose his individuality, for he
reflects eternal Life; nor is he an isolated, solitary idea, for he represents
infinite Mind, the sum of all substance. In divine Science, man is the true
image of God. The divine nature was best expressed in Christ Jesus, who threw
upon mortals the truer reflection of God and lifted their lives higher than
their poor thought-models would allow, thoughts which presented man as fallen,
sick, sinning, and dying. The Christlike understanding of scientific being and
divine healing includes a perfect Principle and idea, perfect God and perfect
man, as the basis of thought and demonstration. |
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The divine image not lost |
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If man was once perfect but has now lost his perfection,
then mortals have never beheld in man the reflex image of God. The lost
image is no image. The true likeness cannot be lost in divine reflection.
Understanding this, Jesus said: "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father
which is in heaven is perfect." |
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Immortal models |
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Mortal thought transmits its own images, and forms its
offspring after human illusions. God, Spirit, works spiritually, not
materially. Brain or matter never formed a human concept. Vibration is not
intelligence; hence it is not a creator. Immortal ideas, pure, perfect, and
enduring, are transmitted by the divine Mind through divine Science, which
corrects error with truth and demands spiritual thoughts, divine concepts, to
the end that they may produce harmonious results. Deducing one's conclusions as
to man from imperfection instead of perfection, one can no more arrive at the
true conception or understanding of man, and make himself like it, than the
sculptor can perfect his outlines from an imperfect model, or the painter can
depict the form and face of Jesus, while holding in thought the character of
Judas. |
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Spiritual discovery |
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The conceptions of mortal, erring thought must give way to
the ideal of all that is perfect and eternal. Through many generations human
beliefs will be attaining diviner conceptions, and the immortal and perfect
model of God's creation will finally be seen as the only true conception of
being. Science reveals the possibility of achieving all good, and sets mortals
at work to discover what God has already done; but distrust of one's ability to
gain the goodness desired and to bring out better and higher results, often
hampers the trial of one's wings and ensures failure at the outset. |
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Requisite change of our ideals
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Mortals must change their ideals in order to improve their
models. A sick body is evolved from sick thoughts. Sickness, disease, and death
proceed from fear. Sensualism evolves bad physical and moral conditions.
Selfishness and sensualism are educated in mortal mind by the thoughts ever
recurring to one's self, by conversation about the body, and by the expectation
of perpetual pleasure or pain from it; and this education is at the expense of
spiritual growth. If we array thought in mortal vestures, it must lose its
immortal nature. |
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Thoughts are things |
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If we look to the body for pleasure, we find pain; for
Life, we find death; for Truth, we find error; for Spirit, we find its
opposite, matter. Now reverse this action. Look away from the body into Truth
and Love, the Principle of all happiness, harmony, and immortality. Hold
thought steadfastly to the enduring, the good, and the true, and you will bring
these into your experience proportionably to their occupancy of your thoughts.
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Unreality of pain |
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The effect of mortal mind on health and happiness is seen
in this: If one turns away from the body with such absorbed interest as to
forget it, the body experiences no pain. Under the strong impulse of a desire
to perform his part, a noted actor was accustomed night after night to go upon
the stage and sustain his appointed task, walking about as actively as the
youngest member of the company. This old man was so lame that he hobbled every
day to the theatre, and sat aching in his chair till his cue was spoken, a
signal which made him as oblivious of physical infirmity as if he had inhaled
chloroform, though he was in the full possession of his so-called senses.
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Immutable identity of man |
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Detach sense from the body, or matter, which is only a form
of human belief, and you may learn the meaning of God, or good, and the nature
of the immutable and immortal. Breaking away from the mutations of time and
sense, you will neither lose the solid objects and ends of life nor your own
identity. Fixing your gaze on the realities supernal, you will rise to the
spiritual consciousness of being, even as the bird which has burst from the egg
and preens its wings for a skyward flight. |
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Forgetfulness of self |
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We should forget our bodies in remembering good and the
human race. Good demands of man every hour, in which to work out the problem of
being. Consecration to good does not lessen man's dependence on God, but
heightens it. Neither does consecration diminish man's obligations to God, but
shows the paramount necessity of meeting them. Christian Science takes naught
from the perfection of God, but it ascribes to Him the entire glory. By putting
"off the old man with his deeds," mortals "put on immortality." We cannot
fathom the nature and quality of God's creation by diving into the shallows of
mortal belief. We must reverse our feeble flutterings our efforts to find life
and truth in matter and rise above the testimony of the material senses, above
the mortal to the immortal idea of God. These clearer, higher views inspire the
God like man to reach the absolute centre and circumference of his being.
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The true sense |
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Job said: "I have heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear:
but now mine eye seeth Thee." Mortals will echo Job's thought, when the
supposed pain and pleasure of matter cease to predominate. They will then drop
the false estimate of life and happiness, of joy and sorrow, and attain the
bliss of loving unselfishly, working patiently, and conquering all that is
unlike God. Starting from a higher standpoint, one rises spontaneously, even as
light emits light without effort; for "where your treasure is, there will your
heart be also." |
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Mind only the cause |
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The foundation of mortal discord is a false sense of man's
origin. To begin rightly is to end rightly. Every concept which seems to begin
with the brain begins falsely. Divine Mind is the only cause or Principle of
existence. Cause does not exist in matter, in mortal mind, or in physical
forms. |
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Human egotism |
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Mortals are egotists. They believe themselves to be
independent workers, personal authors, and even privileged originators of
something which Deity would not or could not create. The creations of mortal
mind are material. Immortal spiritual man alone represents the truth of
creation. |
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Mortal man a mis-creator |
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When mortal man blends his thoughts of existence with the
spiritual and works only as God works, he will no longer grope in the dark and
cling to earth because he has not tasted heaven. Carnal beliefs defraud us.
They make man an involuntary hypocrite, producing evil when he would create
good, forming deformity when he would outline grace and beauty, injuring those
whom he would bless. He becomes a general mis-creator, who believes he is a
semi-god. His "touch turns hope to dust, the dust we all have trod." He might
say in Bible language: "The good that I would, I do not: but the evil which I
would not, that I do." |
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No new creation |
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There can be but one creator, who has created all. Whatever
seems to be a new creation, is but the discovery of some distant idea of Truth;
else it is a new multiplication or self-division of mortal thought, as when
some finite sense peers from its cloister with amazement and attempts to
pattern the infinite. The multiplication of a human and mortal sense of persons
and things is not creation. A sensual thought, like an atom of dust thrown into
the face of spiritual immensity, is dense blindness instead of a scientific
eternal consciousness of creation. |
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Mind's true camera |
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The fading forms of matter, the mortal body and material
earth, are the fleeting concepts of the human mind. They have their day before
the permanent facts and their perfection in Spirit appear. The crude creations
of mortal thought must finally give place to the glorious forms which we
sometimes behold in the camera of divine Mind, when the mental picture is
spiritual and eternal. Mortals must look beyond fading, finite forms, if they
would gain the true sense of things. Where shall the gaze rest but in the
unsearchable realm of Mind? We must look where we would walk, and we must act
as possessing all power from Him in whom we have our being. |
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Self-completeness |
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As mortals gain more correct views of God and man,
multitudinous objects of creation, which before were invisible, will become
visible. When we realize that Life is Spirit, never in nor of matter, this
understanding will expand into self-completeness, finding all in God, good, and
needing no other consciousness. |
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Spiritual proofs of existence
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Spirit and its formations are the only realities of being.
Matter disappears under the microscope of Spirit. Sin is unsustained by Truth,
and sickness and death were overcome by Jesus, who proved them to be forms of
error. Spiritual living and blessedness are the only evidences, by which we can
recognize true existence and feel the unspeakable peace which comes from an
all-absorbing spiritual love. When we learn the way in Christian Science and
recognize man's spiritual being, we shall behold and understand God's creation,
all the glories of earth and heaven and man. |
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Godward gravitation |
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The universe of Spirit is peopled with spiritual beings,
and its government is divine Science. Man is the offspring, not of the lowest,
but of the highest qualities of Mind. Man understands spiritual existence in
proportion as his treasures of Truth and Love are enlarged. Mortals must
gravitate Godward, their affections and aims grow spiritual, they must near the
broader interpretations of being, and gain some proper sense of the infinite,
in order that sin and mortality may be put off. This scientific sense of being,
forsaking matter for Spirit, by no means suggests man's absorption into Deity
and the loss of his identity, but confers upon man enlarged individuality, a
wider sphere of thought and action, a more expansive love, a higher and more
permanent peace. |
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Mortal birth and death |
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The senses represent birth as untimely and death as
irresistible, as if man were a weed growing apace or a flower withered by the
sun and nipped by untimely frosts; but this is true only of a mortal, not of a
man in God's image and likeness. The truth of being is perennial, and the error
is unreal and obsolete. |
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Blessings from pain |
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Who that has felt the loss of human peace has not gained
stronger desires for spiritual joy? The aspiration after heavenly good comes
even before we discover what belongs to wisdom and Love. The loss of earthly
hopes and pleasures brightens the ascending path of many a heart. The pains of
sense quickly inform us that the pleasures of sense are mortal and that joy is
spiritual. |
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Decapitation of error |
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The pains of sense are salutary, if they wrench away false
pleasurable beliefs and transplant the affections from sense to Soul, where the
creations of God are good, "rejoicing the heart." Such is the sword of Science,
with which Truth decapitates error, materiality giving place to man's higher
individuality and destiny. |
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Uses of adversity |
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Would existence without personal friends be to you a blank?
Then the time will come when you will be solitary, left without sympathy; but
this seeming vacuum is already filled with divine Love. When this hour of
development comes, even if you cling to a sense of personal joys, spiritual
Love will force you to accept what best promotes your growth. Friends will
betray and enemies will slander, until the lesson is sufficient to exalt you;
for "man's extremity is God's opportunity." The author has experienced the
foregoing prophecy and its blessings. Thus He teaches mortals to lay down their
fleshliness and gain spirituality. This is done through self-abnegation.
Universal Love is the divine way in Christian Science. The sinner makes his own
hell by doing evil, and the saint his own heaven by doing right. The opposite
persecutions of material sense, aiding evil with evil, would deceive the very
elect. |
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Beatific presence |
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Mortals must follow Jesus' sayings and his demonstrations,
which dominate the flesh. Perfect and infinite Mind enthroned is heaven. The
evil beliefs which originate in mortals are hell. Man is the idea of Spirit; he
reflects the beatific presence, illuming the universe with light. Man is
deathless, spiritual. He is above sin or frailty. He does not cross the
barriers of time into the vast forever of Life, but he coexists with God and
the universe. |
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The infinitude of God |
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Every object in material thought will be destroyed, but the
spiritual idea, whose substance is in Mind, is eternal. The offspring of God
start not from matter or ephemeral dust. They are in and of Spirit, divine
Mind, and so forever continue. God is one. The allness of Deity is His oneness.
Generically man is one, and specifically man means all men. It is generally
conceded that God is Father, eternal, self-created, infinite. If this is so,
the forever Father must have had children prior to Adam. The great I AM made
all "that was made." Hence man and the spiritual universe coexist with God.
Christian Scientists understand that, in a religious sense, they have the same
authority for the appellative mother, as for that of brother and sister. Jesus
said: "For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is in heaven, the
same is my brother, and sister, and mother." |
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Waymarks to eternal Truth |
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When examined in the light of divine Science, mortals
present more than is detected upon the surface, since inverted thoughts and
erroneous beliefs must be counterfeits of Truth. Thought is borrowed from a
higher source than matter, and by reversal, errors serve as waymarks to the one
Mind, in which all error disappears in celestial Truth. The robes of Spirit are
"white and glistering," like the raiment of Christ. Even in this world,
therefore, "let thy garments be always white." "Blessed is the man that
endureth [overcometh] temptation: for when he is tried, [proved faithful], he
shall receive the crown of life, which the Lord hath promised to them that love
him." (James i. 12.) |
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