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THE NOBLER DOING
The world is well supplied with inactives, and for the most part they are inefficients. They make little if any contribution to betterment of the race; indeed they are add to rather than diminish the human handicap. Such people are accounted for not infrequently by poverty, and, as well, by riches. With many the economic struggle seems to consume every increment of their time and strength, so that there is no opportunity to do anything for others; while, on the other hand, the many cares which wealth entails, and the materiality to which it persistently tempts, often result in the centering of all thought upon the furtherance of sadly selfish aims and indulgences. The lack of educational equipment, and that spirit of dependence which is consented to, and cultivated in well-to-do young people nowadays,—these things all tend to augment the number of those, in well-nigh every community, who could be spared without awakening any thought whatever of public loss.
But, whatever the occasion of human impotence, it is certainly true that as a whole the dominating fact in the matter is a sense of incapacity rather than of indisposition. Inefficiency cannot yield self-satisfaction to any one, and though some may seem to pride themselves on the weakness that gives them distinction, the great body of those who for any reason are given to self-depreciation, who are tempted to rank themselves as "back numbers," "nobodies," etc., would be made very happy by the assurance that it is possible for their lives to mean something to the world's advance. This is especially true of that army of aspiring women who, because of their isolation, their physical weakness, their enforced dependence, or their immersion in a ceaseless round of "shut-in" work, seem to be hopelessly separated from that fair chance to be and to do for which they have longed all their lives, and who, consequently, in the wearying years, have acquired the habit of counting themselves out as relatively useless.
To these and to all Christian Science opens a door of practically limitless opportunity in its redisclosure and demonstration of the fact that to know is to achieve; that all true effectiveness through which the radiations of divine Truth are proved to be superior to the so-called human limitations which have heretofore seemed to spell inevitable defeat. In Christian Science it is seen as never before that the doer of the word is he who so abideth in the understanding of Truth that through him God is able to work His good pleasure in the overcoming of sickness and sin; and all this in keeping with the Master's saying, "This is the work of God, that ye believe." Our thought of effectiveness, of success, is thus given an entirely new setting and perspective.
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
November 26, 1910 issue
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TREATMENT IN CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
CLARENCE W. CHADWICK.
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"THE GREATEST ... IS LOVE."
DAISY BEDFORD.
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THE UNITY OF MAN
RICHARD P. VERRALL.
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GRACE
FRANCES FIGART WILSON.
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THANKSGIVING
ELIZABETH J. VAN ZELLER.
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TOKENS
HELEN ANDREWS NIXON.
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INSTANTANEOUS HEALING
ELIZABETH L. EAST.
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AWAKENING
BELLE A. MUNDY.
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THE SURE FOUNDATION
BERT A. MILLER.
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The term malicious animal magnetism suggests the exercise...
James D. Sherwood
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The statement that Christian Scientists do not believe in...
George S. Powell
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Mrs. Eddy, who discovered Christian Science, and...
C. A. Newman
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The commonly accepted theory of "mind over matter"...
Frank Bell in Butler (Pa.) Citizen.
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I agree with you that "disease is the result of wrong...
Willis D. McKinstry
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As to the question of a denial of the miracles, there may...
Campbell MacCulloch
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In the course of her remarks our critic says: "The...
Eugene R. Cox
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NOTICE
The Christian Science Board of Directors
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THE WORD FULFILLED
Archibald McLellan
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THE NOBLER DOING
John B. Willis
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"SPIRITUAL SONGS."
Annie M. Knott
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AMONG THE CHURCHES
with contributions from Carlyle
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THE LECTURES
with contributions from Clifford P. Smith, Maud H. McGuire, John D. Denison, Fred D. Ewell, Gray Montgomery, Joy E. R. Zint
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As a child I knew I had to be a lawyer when I grew up,...
W. K. Primrose
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I wish to give a testimony to the healing power of...
Leona S. Bean
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I wish to bear witness to the healing and saving power of...
Lemuel O. Griffith
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Previous to taking up the study of Christian Science, I...
Ann Elisabeth Kellar
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It is with hearts filled with gratitude that we wish to...
Herr und Wilhelm Ritter with contributions from Edith Curtis
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I wish to express my gratitude for what Christian Science...
Estella Osborn
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My heart is overflowing with love and gratitude to God,...
Mercy E. Gibson
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I wish to express my gratitude for what Christian Science...
Alice F. Wyatt
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Three years ago I heard about Christian Science and its...
Wilhelmina Jansen
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Christian Science has brought such happiness to me that I...
Nellie Lightfoot
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A little anecdote which has helped me to make clearer to...
Isabelle Tennant
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FROM OUR EXCHANGES
with contributions from William Jennings Bryan, Harold Begbie, William Henry Meredith, C. Silverster Horne