Independent Christian Science articles

“Whose Daughter Art Thou?”

From the September 1918 issue of the Christian Science Journal by


Biblical history fails to mention the name of the first daughter born to the human family, or to give her father’s name; and in its early narrative, covering a period of over two thousand years, the word daughter is rarely used, except in genealogical records of “sons and daughters.” This omission no doubt had its origin in error of belief regarding woman’s God-given place in the order of creation; for God has no nameless offspring. As the inspired record indicates, He calls His own by name, sets them in families, fixes the bounds of their habitation, establishes their dwelling place, declares their generation, and places the Father’s name “in their foreheads.”

In the annals of the divine Mind there are no errors and no omissions. As the true spiritual order of creation is understood and accepted as the only authentic account of man, it will be seen that in the ascending scale of created beings woman is mentioned last, although it may be more clearly implied that man and woman coexist in the divine Mind; for in Genesis it is written: “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.” This equality of birthright bestowed by the Father alike on all His children is in accord with the spiritual law of order, harmony, and justice; and man-made theories alone are responsible for the seeming reversal of that law, and the apparent oppression, discord, and suffering it has entailed upon mankind. Readjustment would greatly benefit the race, bring equipoise to all human endeavor, accelerate the coming of the time when war shall cease, and make possible a complete answer to the prayer of the ages, “Thy kingdom come.”

Anticipating though not understanding these expanding race possibilities, a modern biologist has said that “woman stands at the top curve of the human wave from which the superman of the future is to evolve.” The patriarch Abraham nearly four thousand years ago concluded a true line of reasoning when he was considering the choice of a wife for his son Isaac, and could not look with favor upon the “daughters of the Canaanites” among whom he dwelt, but turned his thought to his own kindred in the city of Nahor, in the land of Mesopotamia; for, calling his most trusted servant to him and placing him under oath of faithfulness, he sent him forth to that distant country to bring back a maiden suitable to become the wife of Isaac and mother to the seed of promise.

We are told that this servant with his men and camels, after a long journey from Beersheba across the Syrian desert, came at eventide near to the city of Nahor, and rested outside the city by a well where the women came to draw water. There the servant prayed that the God of his master Abraham would direct his choice, and while the words were still on his lips a damsel “very fair to look upon” went down to the well, filled her pitcher, and came up again. The servant ran to meet her and asked her for a drink. When she had given him this and had drawn water for the camels, the servant, believing that God had answered his prayer, took the jewels he had brought for the chosen one, and said, “Whose daughter art thou?” The maiden, whose name was Rebekah, answered, “I am the daughter of Bethuel the son of Milcah, which she bare unto Nahor.” Then the servant knew that she belonged to the kinsmen of Abraham and went with her to her mother’s house. Here Rebekah was asked whether or not she would go with this servant to become the wife of Isaac, and she answered: “I will go.” Then her mother and brother blessed her, saying: ‘Be thou the mother of thousands of millions, and let thy seed possess the gate of those which hate them.”

This story of Rebekah not only is the first real romance recorded in the Bible, but it is the first time the “daughter” is given specific consideration. There was nothing extraordinary in the servant’s question, “Whose daughter art thou?” but it showed awakened thought,—the dawn of true womanhood appearing above the horizon of race consciousness and revealing in its calm irradiation some faint idea of the “measure of the stature” of the perfect man in due time to appear, not as “superman,” but as normal man and woman, capable in every way of having dominion over the earth which God provided for their dwelling place.

By faith Abraham had seen many things not revealed to other men of his generation: in his youth he had “looked for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God;” in mature life he had discerned, when about to sacrifice his son Isaac, that God is the Father of man whose life is spiritual and not material; in riper years he beheld with clear insight that if man was ever to realize his sonship with the Father, woman must unfold in thought the perfect model of God’s creating until the spiritual idea should be manifested to human consciousness as the only reality of being. This glorious consummation may have seemed afar off even to Abraham’s faith perception, but he believed that right thinking and its continuity through many generations of pure descent would bring to the world the Christ-idea,—the perfect type of generic man, the reflection of infinite Mind. In the history of the daughters of our race, Rebekah holds a most distinguished place. She stands at the “top curve” of her generation,—a woman of character and discernment, as well as “mother of thousands of millions,” the chosen woman through whose lineage “the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us.”

Nearly six centuries after the days of Rebekah, two women went down to Bethlehem in the time of the barley harvest; the elder was Naomi, the younger was her daughter-in-law, Ruth, the Moabitess. Ruth went to glean in the fields of Boaz, a wealthy kinsman of Naomi. One day when Boaz went out to look after the reapers, he saw her there gathering the straws that fell from the sheaves, and asked, “Whose damsel is this?” Being told how Ruth, after the death of her husband, had clung to her mother-in-law and had left Moab to come to Bethlehem when Naomi returned, he spoke kindly to her and told his reapers to protect and favor her. Later he married her, and their son Obed was the grandfather of David, king of Israel. Ruth, like Rebekah, marks the summit of race progress for her time, but with greater strength of character, for she is able to make a clear and positive separation between the false and the true, between the idolatry of the Moabites and the worship of the one God of the Israelites. By so doing she realized a larger womanhood, a more spiritual worship, a higher service. She helped to build up the house of Israel, establish the seed of promise in its own land, make the erection of the temple possible, and safeguard the pure descent of “the root and the offspring of David, and the bright and morning star,” that was to be sent to lift human thought above the earthly and sensual into the liberty of sons and daughters of God.

Through tumultuous centuries the longing for the ascendancy of good in human consciousness became so intensified that it took form in an angel of light sent from God to a virgin of Nazareth whose name was Mary, “espoused to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David.” Perceiving the nature of her spiritual visitant and the great possibilities of being bestowed by Mind, Mary said, “Behold the handmaid of the Lord.” In her exaltation of thought she stood revealed not alone as the lineal daughter of Israel: she was one whose spiritual ancestry, antedating all human generation, was coexistent with the Father-Mother of all who by faith should discern man’s true identity with his Maker. Mary’s conception of Jesus as the Christ-idea revealed to human understanding was spiritual; but, on account of the gross materiality of the age, it is written that “Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her heart.”

Because Jesus saw the perfect man and woman of God’s creating, he was able to heal the sick, save the sinner, break the seeming law of death, and uplift thought and ideals. It is apparent from the study of the gospels that the women of his time were quick to discern the spirituality of his nature and mission. Upon one occasion when he spoke to a woman of Samaria who had come to draw water at Jacob’s well, saying, “Give me to drink,” and meeting a question from her, he told her of the living water and the true worship, she ran to tell her brethren, exclaiming, “Is not this the Christ?” Mary and Martha and other women felt the benediction of the life sacrifice of Jesus and tried to proclaim it; but the restrictions of the Mosaic law, as well as the customs of the times, narrowed the scope of their influence. Even his disciples scarcely understood him when he said to them: “Call no man your father upon the earth: for one is your Father, which is in heaven;” or, again, when he replied to their questionings upon another occasion, “For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother, and sister, and mother,” clearly showing that all true relations are established upon a basis of spiritual equality.

Paul, too, bound the early Christian women about with conventionalities, which though protective perhaps in his day, have been used by selfish minds ever since as authority for circumscribing the sphere of woman, excluding her from equal political, social, and economic rights, and even denying her equal rights with the father in parentage of their child. Only within the memory of present generations have the colleges opened their doors to the daughters as well as to the sons; and it has seemed to require an avalanche of war such as the world has never before known, to prove to the race that the daughters can be quite as quickly trained for skilled or manual work as the sons; that the women all over the world are just as patriotic as the men, sacrificing, laboring, conserving,—not only for the present generation, but for the sons and daughters of the future. The props of a double standard for morals, privileges, and rights for sons and daughters are being shaken from their false foundations, and divine Principle, establishing justice and liberty, is now being recognized in universal thought as the basis of true world democracy, the only hope for lasting peace, happiness, and prosperity.

In the history of the past it is clearly seen that through ignorance, superstition, convention, and the abuse of power by man, woman has been held in bondage to man-made laws. Only through the general diffusion of knowledge are women learning to think, act, speak, for themselves, and to insist upon a recognition of the fact that God made the earth for His daughters as well as for His sons. The acceptance of this basic truth has been greatly accelerated since the discovery of Christian Science by Mary Baker Eddy, in the year 1866, and the spiritual interpretation of the Scriptures which it has revealed, bringing into clearer light woman’s place in the plan of God’s creation and showing to mankind that balance of character as well as balance of world power cannot be permanently established until the feminine qualities of mind and heart are given equal weight in the scale of being with the masculine qualities.

Throughout all her writings Mrs. Eddy has tried to make it clear that the equalization of the sexes was an important part of Jesus’ healing mission, and she has set forth a precedent in the Manual of The Mother Church, Article II, Section 1, in a by-law which says: “The Readers for The Mother Church shall be a man and a woman, one to read the Bible, and one to read Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures.” In the explanatory note in The Christian Science Quarterly to be read at the Sunday services, she also says, “The Bible and the Christian Science textbook are our only preachers.” Truth and its interpretation reveal man and woman made in God’s image and likeness as spiritual ideas, demonstrating unity and completeness throughout the universe; and the question, “Whose daughter art thou?” is answered for this and for every age in the prayer our Master taught his disciples, and which covers every human relationship,—”Our Father which art in heaven.”

From his isolated prison on the isle of Patmos, John perceived this real daughter of glorified womanhood as the interpreter of Truth to all mankind, for in Revelation he writes: “And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars.” When Abraham’s servant said to Rebekah, “Whose daughter art thou?” he chose for her “a golden earring of half a shekel weight, and two bracelets for her hands,” typical of woman’s bondage throughout the ages to man-made laws of human relationships. Boaz, the wealthy landowner of Bethlehem, purchased Ruth to be his wife, and “plucked off his shoe” to confirm the bargain, revealing man’s chattel rights and woman’s servitude to material conditions under the Mosaic law.

The Christian world has pictured a halo of light about the head of the mother of Jesus, setting her apart from the material and sensual, and lifting thought to a higher concept of motherhood; the insignia, however, of Mrs. Eddy’s marvelous mission in the world of to-day is stamped upon the books she has left. It is the seal of Christian Science,—a double circle between the lines of which are the words of Jesus: “Heal the sick. Raise the dead. Cleanse the lepers. Cast out demons.” In the center of the circle are placed a cross and a crown, symbolizing to this and to every age the eternality of the truth of being, and showing that those who would be followers of Christ must do the works which he did if they would wear his crown of rejoicing.

Mrs. Eddy’s writings are unfolding the emancipating power of Truth and helping humanity to see the daughter of infinite Love as she appeared to the Revelator’s clarified vision,—clothed with the brightness of all-enveloping spiritual understanding, kindling anew in human thought the fires of living hope and faith, rising to the zenith of power to vanquish oppression and establish for all the sons and daughters of earth their equal rights to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” This “daughter” is not a person, but an eternal idea—the grace of God— dearly seen in the mirror of divine Science as a demonstrable fact in daily life, comforting, healing, transforming, awakening thought until it grasps the limitless possibilities of being, not in some future state, but here in this present hour of material desolation.

With unmistakable emphasis the world is asking: Whose daughter art thou, O woman of to-day, “heir of all the ages”? Seest thou this spiritual idea of womanhood, crowned with the stars of service and self-sacrifice? Gleanest thou, like Ruth, in the barley fields of willing conservation, that the hungry may be fed? Standest thou at the well of living waters as the daughter of Samaria stood at Jacob’s well, ready to give drink to the foot weary travelers along life’s highway? Remember, Jesus said: “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me,” and on page 570 of Science and Health Mrs. Eddy has written: “Millions of unprejudiced minds— simple seekers for Truth, weary wanderers, athirst in the desert—are waiting and watching for rest and drink. Give them a cup of cold water in Christ’s name, and never fear the consequences.”

This is woman’s day of wondrous opportunity; how is it being used by thee? Thirsting for the hidden springs of demonstrable truth, the whole world is crying out in the words of the psalmist: “As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God.” From trenches, hospitals, prisons, and workshops, from desolated kingdoms and ruined homes, that cry is heard, and it must be heeded. Who shall save mankind from its own self-destruction? Upon the watch towers of eternal Principle, the Rock of the ages, stand the daughters as well as the sons as keepers and interpreters of Truth. They have come up from drawing water at the deep wells of spiritual intuition, bearing their pitchers of healing comfort, and crying with Isaiah, “Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters!” Upon their foreheads, too, is written the “Father’s name,” and as woman knows her peerless, immortal birthright and stands for it, the world will recognize her rightful place in God’s kingdom, find that peace for which it has been blindly struggling all down the centuries, and learn its way back to the open gates of Paradise.


The Morning Star

From the Christian Science Journal, January 1918 by


From those primeval dawns of which it is written, “The morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy,” to that “Lord’s day” on the isle of Patmos when St. John was bidden to say to the angel of the church in Thyatira, respecting the one that overcometh, “I will give him the morning star,” this distinguished herald of approaching day has ever symbolized some new revelation of Truth to a waking world. Those who have proclaimed it and reflected its glory, have for that reason been variously designated as sages, prophets, magi, wisemen. So far above the comprehension of the masses was the status of these seers of old, that it may be said of them that they gave character to the times in which they lived.

Such a one was Enoch, of whom it is written that for over three hundred years he “walked with God” upon the earth, and “was not; for God took him.” On page 214 of Science and Health Mrs. Eddy says of him, “If Enoch’s perception had been confined to the evidence before his material senses, he could never have ‘walked with God,’ nor been guided into the demonstration of life eternal.” We know not what was Enoch’s particular mission, but he will ever be to the world a shining example of man’s great spiritual possibilities.

In a grossly idolatrous age Melchizedec, king of the sacred city of Salem,—typifying peace and righteousness,—appeared as a star of the first magnitude. He became the forerunner of a high order of priesthood, to which are ordained only those who have so liberated themselves from the fetters of human pedigree that they are able to demonstrate their likeness to the Son of God, of whom we read in Hebrews, that he was “made, not after the law of a carnal commandment, but after the power of an endless life.” The “morning star” of faith in God was Abraham, numbering his seed as the stars in the heavens, and perceiving through faith, when he was about to sacrifice his son Isaac, that life is spiritual and eternal.

Out of Egypt rose the day-star of that code of moral and civil law which, was to be the arbiter of justice in every land of progress; and it ascended until its glory encompassed Mt. Sinai, where Moses talked with God. Very lovingly does our Leader veil the light of this perfect law of God, that we, like the children of Israel, may approach near enough to see how it may be humanly applied. On page 200 of Science and Health she says: “The law of Sinai lifted thought into the song of David. Moses advanced a nation to the worship of God in Spirit instead of matter, and illustrated the grand human capacities of being bestowed by immortal Mind.”

Sacred alike to the Turk and the Russian of to-day, the “Cave of Elijah” is guarded from the machine guns of modern warfare. It is believed that there the prophet Elijah, thirty centuries ago, heard the “still small voice” of God and was not afraid, because man’s true identity was revealed to him. This gave him power to speak with authority to the errors of his day, and to rise above all the limitations of material sense, insomuch that, he was borne upward in a chariot of fire. His mantle fell upon Elisha, the only one of the sons of the prophets spiritual enough to follow him in his ascending pathway to the realization of man’s immortality.

In the spiritual universe, however, there is but one “morning star,” the reflection of the Christ-idea, and the glory of this star, with all other bright and shining ones, is radiated out into the immensity of God’s creation, unfolding Life and Love to the waking thought. It is this of which it is written: “That was the true Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world.” It rested over Bethlehem. John, referring to it again in the chapter just mentioned, calls it the “Word,” and says: “The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.”

When the light of Christ, Truth, shone upon the pathway of Saul of Tarsus, it was so glorious that for a time it took from him the sense of physical sight and the desire for food. His whole nature, as well as his name, was changed, and Paul became the “chosen vessel” to carry the gospel to the Gentiles and to preach before kings and philosophers. Thus did the western world begin to see the glory of the “morning star.” The revelator saw its light shining through all the cycles measured off in time and space, till heaven and earth had passed away. His messages to the seven churches typified the ascendancy of this light of Truth even in pagan thought, as well as its growth in the individual consciousness, and showed also the gifts of God that follow the overcoming of error.

The church of Thyatira, to which was promised the “morning star,” was the fourth of these seven churches in line of progress. It marked a spiritual as well as a cosmological dividing line, and represented that terrific struggle in human consciousness which comes after the light of Truth has laid bare the utter falsity of material sense and all its phantoms of night and darkness. John in his vision saw that at this period in world development the day of grace and the time for repentance would merge into a mighty purification and separation, ushered in by the reappearance of the “morning star,” the Christ-idea, sent to prepare the world for that promised day when the Sun of righteousness would “arise with healing in his wings.” It was to be the grand testing time of the entire human race, the moral battle ground of all the ages. It is our world of to-day.

Already the “morning star” has appeared above the rugged horizon of our time, and our earth is entering upon a new era of light and progress. To quote Browning, “The day’s at the morn,”—the morn of a tempestuous but wonderful day. We who in some measure have discerned the spiritual import of the coming of Christ, Truth, to this age, may like the church in Thyatira take heed to the voice of the Son of God, “who hath his eyes like unto a flame of fire, and his feet are like fine brass.” Then may we hear: “I know thy works, and charity, and service, and faith … Notwithstanding I have a few things against thee, because thou sufferest that woman Jezebel, which calleth herself a prophetess, to teach and to seduce my servants.”

Now Jezebel was a prophetess of Baal, the great male divinity of the ancient idolatrous nations round Palestine. Ahab, king of Israel, married her, and through her subtle influence over him Israel again fell into idolatry. Elijah, the prophet of Jehovah, denounced her and foretold her own and Ahab’s self-destruction. John saw in her the personification of wickedness at its climactic period,— the consummation of every evil device, combining idolatry, hypnotism, sensuality, dishonesty, greed, mental and physical assassination, blasphemy. There was not one atrocious claim of error which did not find a place in the maelstrom of moral degeneracy that this wife of Ahab, king of Israel, represented.

This complex manifestation of idolatry and wickedness not only propagated itself in Israel in the time of Elijah, but thought to destroy the Christ-idea, the light of the world, by putting to death Jesus of Nazareth, who reflected that light in all its purity. It sought to pervert the teachings of the apostles. It caused the early church in the third century of our era to ally itself with the belief of worldly place and power, and with cunning sophistry has ever since mesmerized it into believing that evil is as real and as powerful as God, good; that matter and Spirit commingle; that death opens the door to eternal life.

These and other falsities were uncovered when the “morning star” began to rise upon our world of to-day. Its bright light at once disturbed the equilibrium of mortal mind, and set Jezebel’s kingdom on fire with resentment, hatred, malice, war, pestilence, bringing about the time of great tribulation of which it is written in Revelation: “And I will kill her children with death; and all the churches shall know that I am he which searcheth the reins and hearts: and I will give unto every one of you according to your works.”

As the morning star in the heavens seems to divide night from day, so the light of Christian Science, the truth of being, as discovered by Mary Baker Eddy, is clarifying individual consciousness as well as world politics. As in Ahab’s time Elijah called all the people together unto Mt. Carmel and said unto them: “How long halt ye between two opinions? if the Lord be God, follow him: but if Baal, then follow him,” so to-day Truth is calling to the people of all the world assembled at this testing time, “Choose you this day whom ye will serve.”

The Spirit further says to this church in Thyatira, “He that over-cometh, and keepeth my works unto the end, to him will I give power over the nations.” This is to be not a man-made power, nor a treaty-made power; rather is it to be a power made, “not after the law of a carnal commandment, but after the power of an endless life.” To him is also given the “morning star,” the power to manifest the Christ-idea, to walk with and talk to God; to speak with authority to every form of error. Its name in our age is Christian Science, defined by its Discoverer, Mrs. Eddy, on page 1 of “Rudimental Divine Science,” as “the law of God, the law of good, interpreting and demonstrating the divine Principle and rule of universal harmony.” It shines for all who will lift up their eyes and walk in its light. It brings the day when all shall know the truth. In the dawn of the twentieth century the “sons of God” are again shouting for joy, because human consciousness discerns a new heaven and a new earth, “wherein dwelleth righteousness.”


Making Right Decisions

by


“Your decisions will master you, whichever direction they take.” (S&H) The truth of this statement is proved in daily life. As the poet James Russell Lowell has written:

Oft to every man and nation
Comes the moment to decide,
In the strife of Truth with falsehood,
For the good or evil side.

How do we decide what is right? The Apostle James gives a helpful answer to this question where he says, “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.”

As we earnestly turn to God as the source of wisdom and right judgment, we will find doubt and fear subsiding, and peace and quietness replacing mental agitation. Spiritual ideas begin to fill thought, and we see the first step to take in the direction of making a right decision. Other steps appear as we progress. As thought is conformed to the law of God, right decisions will unfold. “The point for each one to decide is, whether it is mortal mind or immortal Mind that is causative.” (S&H)

No circumstance is too great or too small to ask God’s guidance in making the right decision.

In Christian Science we learn that man, made in the image and likeness of God, reflects infinite divine intelligence. However, if one has made a bad mistake, or the step he has taken has not been right, but has allowed evil to disrupt his health, happiness, or success, he needs more earnestly to ask wisdom of God, who “upbraideth not.” When one has taken a step which seemed best to him at the time, he should realize that it has given him a clearer view of the situation he would not otherwise have had. He shouldn’t condemn himself for the mistake, but see the lesson learned as part of the working out of the problem. As he understands the absolute power of divine Wisdom to guide him, he will joyfully leave the results to God.

When, through willfulness and disregard for the rights of others, one has committed a nasty offense, the regaining of a sense of uprightness and brotherly love may appear long and hard. This can be seen in the life of Jacob who deceitfully stole his brother Esau’s birthright, and had to flee from his home to a strange land, where he dwelt for many years. When he was sufficiently repentant, God guided him on his way home, promising him protection and peace. Jacob returned with his family to his own land, and after a mighty struggle with self, was reconciled to his brother, Esau.

The fact that our decisions master us, is apparent in every walk of life. Our decisions influence our health, peace of mind, and success, and form the basis of our activities. Once we have sought divine wisdom, and have applied to the problem the intelligence, reason, and right judgment, which are a part of the spiritual heritage of every child of God, we should stand firm with what has been revealed to us, knowing that good alone is operative, immortal Mind alone is causative, and the outcome can bring only good to us and any others involved.

In the “strife of Truth with falsehood,” only the divine Mind can guide men and nations in the mighty decisions now confronting them. Applying our knowledge of God with an understanding of His ability to heal and save, concerning any dispute among the nations, brings the healing influence of the Christ-spirit to the situation, and leads to a higher humanity, a humanity that will be able to make decisions according to God’s perfect plan.



Love is the liberator.