APPEARANCE VS. REALITY

A man who was unaccustomed to thinking beyond the limitations of sense testimony, stood looking at a celebrated statue. At length said to a friend, "I see nothing remarkable in this piece of work. All the sculptor did was to take a large piece of marble and chip off what he did not want. This statue is what was left." If he could have seen beyond the marble, he too might have been a sculptor.

The wondrous work of our beloved Leader in restoring the true concept of man, "every whit whole," from a condition of false living and thinking, and in holding thought to the spiritual reality that lies behind every material manifestation, marks her as a real sculptor among the world's thinkers who throughout all history have sought to express to dull comprehension the ideal and the true. What the painting is to art; what the poem is to poetry; what the note is to music; what the statue is to sculpture, so are the "fruits" thus far produced by the study and practice of Christian Science to the great truth of being, toward which the author of Science and Health is directing the thought of the race. The things we see and hear in our daily contact with materialism are not things at all. They are thinkings.

On page 86 of Science and Health, Mrs. Eddy says, "Mortal mind sees what it believes as certainly as it believes what it sees." A recent experience brought me face to face with the depth of meaning which this statement contains, and thinking it might be of service to others, I here relate it. The hall in which we hold our services has a balcony extending around the auditorium about ten feet above the floor. Beneath this balcony extends also a commodious wall seat. Until the sun reaches high noon each day, a part of this seat is in the shadow. One Sunday some months ago, I was experiencing a sense of both physical and mental suffering when I came to the Reader's desk. It was an inclement, cloudy morning, and the shadow fell heavily under the balcony when the services began. I saw sitting in the shadow a man whom I recognized as a visitor from another congregation, and who is known to be somewhat critical and precise in matters of pronunciation, expression, and literary style; in short, he belongs to that class of people whose value to others is not always appreciated, for he makes the careless careful, the indifferent watchful, and the thoughtless thoughtful. He seemed to be in his place that morning ready to hear the Lesson-Sermon, which evidently I had not fully comprehended, for I wished that he had come at some other time.

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SALVATION HATH GOD ORDAINED
May 21, 1910
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