Cause and Cure

Christian people are frequently compelled to try to explain to themselves, if not to others, the reasons for the saddening delay in the healing of humanity's hurt. The centuries pass without any noticeable lessening of mortal ills; while the phases and aspects of evil are ever shifting, its blight remains. Some of the maladies which afflicted our fathers seem to have disappeared through faith-filled reliance on material remedies or the hygienic improvement of conditions, but for every ailment thus escaped from two new troubles have appeared; while, as the result of the more studied acquaintance with disease and its continuous exploitation in the interest of the trade in nostrums, the subjection of people in general to fear and their consequent dependence upon drugs and doctors, has vastly increased.

These facts are so unquestionable that today the saying of a celebrated physician, to the effect that it would be well if everything pertaining to materia medica were sunken in the sea, is quite as likely to awaken serious consideration as it is to beget a smile. Four thousand years of effort to banish physical disharmony has effected great changes in the catalogue of fashionable discomforts, but that it has decreased the number of diseases to which men are subject, or sensibly emancipated the race from the fear of them, even the most optimistic materialists would not claim.

Christian Science explains this fact in its recognition that men have been wrestling with phenomena when their attention should have been addressed to cause. It teaches that the only wise course to pursue in the effort to get rid of any ill, is to discover and dispose of the circumstance or thing which occasions it. There is nothing queer about this proposition, and yet many are exercised over its intimation that in the effort to heal the sick the medical profession has been indifferent to causation. They point by way of protest to the discovery that the mosquito is responsible for the spread of yellow fever, and to other achievements in the way of the determination and eradication of the sources of disease.

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Editorial
"The tree of life"
March 11, 1916
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