Because I have received immeasurable good from the testimonies...

Because I have received immeasurable good from the testimonies of others, and because I appreciate our Christian Science literature more than anything else in the world, I offer my tribute of thanksgiving. It may be that some one will gather from it a desire for higher and better living and be led into the realm of the real, where the sins of sense and the fears of false foes are being destroyed, and the everlasting joys of Soul are becoming veritable facts in this present day. In 1893, when all other helpers failed to bring relief, I turned to Christian Science, and found physical health and spiritual enlightenment with a joy and satisfaction I had never known before.

All my life I had been subject to rheumatic troubles. These culminated in a serious attack of sciatica, accompanied by paralysis for some days. The good physician attending me said he could do nothing for me except to deaden the pain with an opiate; but I objected to this and began to think of a higher power than drugs. Though I had ridiculed Christian Science for five years, I insisted at this time upon sending a telegram to a Christian Science practitioner in a near-by city (I was at that time in a boarding-school in the state of New York). In less than two hours from the time the telegram left my bedside, I arose from my bed perfectly free from pain and stiffness; in fact, entirely well, and from that day to this, almost nineteen years, I have had no recurrence of rheumatism in any form. Other diseases, including asthma, hay-fever, indigestion, also a violent temper, left me gradually as I continued to study the Christian Science text-book.

Because of my religious training and experiences at home,—my father having been a preacher, also my brother, and a brother-in-law,—I knew there must be a correct interpretation of the Scriptures. I had sought everywhere, and even went so far as to read lectures on infidelity and atheism; but in vain, for I was left stranded upon the sad shores of wonderment, "having no hope, and without God in the world." I yearned for a solution of this life-problem, for I could not reconcile the injustice of mental, physical, and financial suffering in the world with the justice of an infinite, loving God; and no one ever seemed capable of explaining to me the whys and the wherefores that troubled me.

Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.

March 15, 1913
Contents

We'd love to hear from you!

Easily submit your testimonies, articles, and poems online.

Submit