"He that seeketh findeth"

One of the very encouraging signs of the times among Christian Scientists is that in the testimonies given in the churches and through the Sentinel and Journal, there occurs again and again some reference to the great good that has come to the persons giving these testimonies, through the study of the Bible and Science and Health. These experiences prove that God is an ever-present help in trouble, and that He is accessible to all who seek Him in sincerity and in truth; that He is not a far-off and vague personality, whose favor must be sought through a vicarious priesthood, but the loving Father-Mother, who has said, "And it shall come to pass, that before they call, I will answer; and while they are yet speaking, I will hear."

On page 494 of Science and Health Mrs. Eddy has written: "Divine Love always has met and always will meet every human need," and this is an inspiration to Christian Scientists not only to turn to God for guidance in all their affairs, but also to expect that He will hear their prayer and guide them into that understanding of Himself which is life eternal. How they may thus turn to God is made clear in Science and Health, and the way to this knowledge is open to all, without fear or favor, who are willing to devote the necessary time and effort to its acquirement. It is a subtle temptation which urges Christian Scientists to get together and listen to the arguments and dissertations of those who set up to have opinions about this book and about their own ability to interpret it to others. This attitude of thought, however, is but another form of the belief that Science and Health is not clear and simple enough in its teachings to be readily understood by any one who takes the trouble really to study it. Such beliefs find a sharp rebuke in the Foreword to "The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany" in the statements "(1) that Science and Health does not need to be interpreted to those who are earnestly seeking Truth; (2) that it is not possible to state truth absolutely in a simpler or more pleasing form."

One of the things which Mrs. Eddy has sought to impress firmly upon her followers is that Christian Science is an exact Science; that its Yea means yea and its Nay means nay, and that it can be used only in the demonstration of divine Principle. What this divine Principle is,—this is the essential thing that every Christian Scientist needs to know, and this he can learn only through the study of Science and Health. Whatever any one else knows of Christian Science has been acquired primarily from its Discoverer and Founder. Then why not seek the desired information from the authorized exposition of its teaching.

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Editorial
True Freedom
March 21, 1914
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