Independent Christian Science articles

Rays From Christmastide

From the December 1888 issue of the Christian Science Journal by


Long, long ago there was witnessed, at dead of night, a sight in the heavens more wonderful than had ever before been witnessed by human eye. No astronomer, however well versed in his science, has ever hinted at the cause of this strange phenomenon. Though it filled those who saw it with awe and terror, so that “they were sore afraid,” it was not a warning of impending evil, but brought such a promise of peace and joy as never before was whispered in human ears.

The phenomenon referred to was the Star of Bethlehem, which blazed out through the dark night of old, bathing a world of woe in a hallowed light never before seen by mortals. Shining in the East, from whence cometh the light, it led mankind to the manger, where, cradled in humble obscurity, lay our Master,—the Prince of Peace. This guiding Star appeared to be a physical phenomenon; but we must look upon this vision in a higher sense (since matter has been shorn of its reality) and consider this heavenly light in its spiritual significance.

From this height of thought the Star of Bethlehem becomes a glimmer of Truth, rising above materiality, and blazing out through the dark night of sense, burning away the clouds of belief, and leading to the living Christ,—a glimmer of immortal light, traversing the darkness of human belief, rising higher and higher above worldliness, ever beckoning pilgrims to the habitation of the perfect Idea of God.

This glorious pilot of the heavenly realm will guide all to Christ. This Star, which for eighteen-hundred years has been lost to view, has again made its appearance in the heavenly dome.

The Wisemen from the far East were not the only ones who had supernatural warning of the advent of a new dispensation, in the birth of this wonderful child, Jesus. We read in the simple Gospel narrative: “There were in that same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flocks by night; and lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them.”

This wonderful vision, which the shepherds saw, was no mere fancy, no dream, no fable. It did not appear to those who were wrapped in slumber. It was not born of poet’s pen or painter’s pencil. It did not burst upon men when suddenly wakened out of sleep, too bewildered to believe their senses. It came to shepherds who were accustomed to all-night wakefulness, watching their flocks. It came to men who were in a proper condition of mind to receive it,—men whose spiritual vision was ever awake, penetrating the darkness of mortal mind, watching their flocks, the offspring of their thoughts, lest, during the darkness of belief, they should wander from their care. These shepherds stood guard over the messages of love God had given them, awaiting the time when the full light of Truth should forever dispel the mists of materiality, and reveal the full sunburst of an eternal day, in which there could be no night.

To such shepherds appeared this angelic message. It did not come in confusion or discord. It came in the midnight hour, when the world was asleep in material darkness, and none but shepherds were awake. It came in heavenly harmony, and was heard only by those whose minds were receptive to the heavenly chorus. The air was stirred with that wondrous song, as a multitude of the heavenly host swept down from the skies, to bless the earth with “glory to God in the highest, peace on earth and goodwill toward man.” The theme belongs to Heaven. There is a ring in the words that is not of this world.

When Jesus was born there was no place for his mother at the village inn, and she and Joseph were obliged to take up their lodgings in the stable connected with the inn. In a manger in this stable our Master was born.

Is it very different today? Does not personality again crowd Christ out from the consciousness of mankind? Does not the world refuse a place for the birth of Truth? Again comes the question, Where shall he be born? Oh that mortals would open their hearts for the birthplace of Truth. Christ stands at the door of your heart and knocks for admission. Who will open to him and the heavenly host?

The Star of Bethlehem shines today as of old, piercing the darkness of belief, and leading followers to the portals of Heaven. As of old, it shines in the Heavens of perpetual and perfect harmony. As our sun rises in the eastern horizon, where seem to blend the earth and sky, and ascends higher and higher above the material world, it causes the shadows to flee away which had stretched rearward. As the gilded orb of righteousness approaches the zenith, our shadows grow less and less, till we are immersed in a flood of sunshine which casts no shadows.

Can the light of Truth ever wholly disperse the darkness of mortal mind, until we find the perfect day in which is no night? Why do not mortals heed the lesson which the sun teaches, as it daily rises above matter? Are the signs of the times never to be observed? Will not the sun of Soul some day rise to the zenith, never more to descend? Can we not so teach that the sun of Truth shall never again sink below the horizon of human outlook? When our senses are so spiritual that we can discern no darkness, then we shall perpetually behold the light. Did not the sun stand still for Joshua, until he had defeated the enemy? So will God’s light, the light of eternal Truth,—Christ the light of the world,—remain shining in the Christian’s consciousness, until our enemies, sickness, sin, and death are vanquished. This everlasting day must dawn!

In former times, before electric lights, gas, or petroleum had been discovered, it was the fashion to light meeting-houses with candles. These candles were not furnished by the church-officers, but each worshipper brought his candle with him. One of these wicks would emit only a feeble light, but the aggregate of tiny flames illumined the place. So is it with us. The light carried by any single one of us may be flickering and faint; but let our thoughts shine together, each illumined with but a spark of Truth, and the moral region around us will be filled with divine light. Never despise the dimness of the reflection you make. A mere streak of gray dawn presages the open day. “To him that hath shall be given.”

Jesus is the central light of human history. His Truth is “the same yesterday, today, and forever.” He called himself the Way, the Truth, the Life. The Way and the Life, like the Truth, are “the same yesterday today and forever,”—that is, from eternity to eternity.

Human words and metaphors fail us, when we talk of God’s verities. The Way is from everlasting to everlasting, beginning with God and ending in God, for it is the eternal circle. The Truth shines in all ages and for all men. It shone for the angels, when the Morning Stars first sang together in Heaven. It will shine upon the wings of the seraphim “before the great white throne,” the ruling power of God,—the great white throne of the blessed Apocalypse, the revelation, the unfolding, of divine Love. The Life is the all-pervading essence of infinite Being, permeating alike the tiniest grain of reality and the grandest star of thought.

Jesus—or, to speak spiritually, the Christ—is the concentration, the essence, of the combined excellencies of spiritual realities, expressed by three words, Way, Truth, Life. Before his birth in human history, his culminating religion was anticipated by the divine thought, partially expressing itself in the inferior Mosaic system of religion, and in the higher conceptions of the Prophets. Even among the heathen nations were to he found anticipations of a brighter spiritual light to rise in Judea. The Magi, who came to the Holy Land at the Advent, were from a foreign country, where they had seen his Star in the East,—the light of Truth.

Since that day there is scarcely a religionist, the wide world over, who has not received, directly or indirectly, some higher blessedness of thought from the Star which “stood over the place where the young child lay.”

The angel of the Lord came upon the shepherds; that is to say, a message from infinite Love reached human hearts. This message has been sounding ever since. Nay, this message had been sounding from all eternity; only the ears of men were dulled, and it remained for Jesus to remove their deafness, that they might hear the Christmas chorus of peace and goodwill. If our ears are open, let us bless God, and the teachers whom God has sent; but if we hear this Overture of the Angels, this hearing lays upon us the wider duty of joining the everlasting song, and communicating it in our turn,—not only to the deaf ears about us, but to generations yet unborn.

Let us all turn our thoughts Heavenward. Then God will send His angels to us, and they will bear us upward to the dwelling-place of the Most High.

Birds never light on fluttering or moving objects. So is it with Truth. Truth can find no resting-place in vacillating minds.

Let us walk with single-eyed devotedness, reflecting so much of God’s glory, that we may point with the finger of assurance to the true and only Star, which will not only guide us, but lead others to the place where they can discern the living Christ, the risen and immortal Jesus.


Christian Science Bible Lessons

From the October 1889 issue of the Christian Science Journal by


Lesson No. 4. October 27. (Fourth Quarter.)

Sin, Forgiveness, and Peace. Ps. xxxii. 1-71.

Scripture Text: Chapter XXXII.

1 Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered.
2 Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile.
3 When I kept silence, my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long.
4 For day and night thy hand was heavy upon me: my moisture is turned into the drought of summer. Selah.
5 I acknowledged my sin unto thee, and mine iniquity have I not hid. I said, I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord; and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin. Selah.
6 For this shall every one that is godly pray unto thee in a time when thou mayest be found: surely in the floods of great waters they shall not come nigh unto him.
7 Thou art my hiding place; thou shalt preserve me from trouble; thou shall compass me about with songs of deliverance. Selah.
8 I will instruct thee and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go: I will guide thee with mine eye.
9 Be ye not as the horse, or as the mule, which have no understanding: whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle, lest they come near unto thee.
10 Many sorrows shall be to the wicked: but he that trusteth in the Lord, mercy shall compass him about.
11 Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice, ye righteous: and shout for joy, all ye that are upright in heart.

Golden Text: “Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” Rom. v. 1. Outline: Blessedness which follows cessation of sin. Wickedness and righteousness contrasted. Prominent Thought: The joy which follows rectitude. Digest: David’s sin. 2 Sam. xi. 1-27. Confession and forgiveness. 2 Sam. xii. 1-3. Prayer for forgiveness. Psa. li. 1-19. Forgiveness. 1 John i. 1-10. Time: About B. C. 1035. Place: Jerusalem, David’s palace on Mount Zion. David now about 50 years of age. Twentieth year of his reign.

Introduction.

This Psalm xxxii. is a portrayal of David’s inner life. It is a rehearsal of his own experiences. It should be read in connection with the 51st Psalm. David committed an atrocious crime, details of which can be found in 2 Sam. xi. This Psalm xxxii. gives us a deep insight into David’s bitter sorrow, his sincere repentance, and earnest prayer for forgiveness. “Sorrow for a wrong act is one step in the right direction.” David was not forgiven for his terrible sin against Uriah the Hittite and his wife Bathsheba, until he had suffered mental agonies for his sin. “Whatsoever a man sows that also shall he reap.” The only forgiveness of sin is the cessation of sin, then there is nothing left to forgive. We pay the utmost farthing for each transgression. Deflections from the moral law are no more forgiven than are deflections from the principles of Mathematics. The Psalms of David embody Christian experiences and are extremely edifying. Parleying with temptation makes us willing captives of sin. “If thy eye offend thee pluck it out,” is the Gospel’s injunction.

Expository Notes. — Vs. 1 and 2: “Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven.” (Rom. iv. 6, 8.) Blotted out (covered), forgotten. “Let the dead bury the dead.” Forgetting the things that are behind us, push forward for the goal. Never dwell on the past. “Look up; he is not here; he is risen.” Open denunciation of sin and realization of guilt give a forward impetus. Because Christian Science affirms “there is no reality,” this relieves us from none of our works in sin: whatsoever a man thinketh in his heart so is he. Sin is a reality to those who are in bondage to it, and the transgressor will be punished. God says, “I am all, and there is none beside me.” Forgetfulness of this declaration plunges us in the opposite of this thought and we are punished until we retrace our footsteps. Of the knowledge of good and evil God decrees, “the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die” (to the true sense of Being). Submitting to the testimony of matter brings fruit “after its kind,” and the kind is suffering. “To the pure all things are pure” and God “imparteth not iniquity” to the pure in heart. God blots out our sins; that is, a consciousness of the Divine presence destroys them. The prodigal saw no more of the “husks” and “swine” and the “citizen of the far place” when he was reinstalled in his father’s house. “When we die our thoughts perish.” When we die to the material sense of things, our thought of material sense is obliterated. V. 3: “When I kept silence my bones waxed old,” etc. “Nothing hidden but what shall be revealed.” “He who covereth iniquity shall not prosper.” David’s frame work (bones) of Truth was lost to him during his retrogression. The support of Truth was taken away from him. “Rearing” uneasiness of mind. Mental chemicalization smiting of the conscience. V. 4: “For day and night thy hand,” etc. “Whom He loveth He chasteneth.” Deflection from God punishes us. Whatever makes us retrace our steps is good for us; hence the misunderstood quotation, “Whom He loveth He chasteneth.” “My moisture is turned into the drought of summer.” Dry, sterile, no freshness of thought. Truth faded from sight. A famine of thought. “Selah” a word denoting reflection! Reflect upon what has been said. V. 5: “I acknowledged my sin unto thee,” etc. Recognition of our sins, puts us in a position to master them. V. 6: “For this shall every one that is godly pray unto thee,” etc. “Seek and ye shall find.” “Where one man finds a golden nugget, others feel inclined to dig.” Turning to God always brings peace and forgiveness because our sins are forsaken! “The flood of great waters shall not come nigh unto him.” Turning to God lifts us above the tidal wave of error. Getting into the ark of safety, the “secret place of the most high,” enables us to ride over the floods of sense. Every error must be excluded from thought, thus “pitching the ark within and without.” “Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return unto the Lord, and He will have mercy upon him; and to our God and He will abundantly pardon.” (Isaiah lv. 7.) V. 7: “Thou art my hiding place,” etc. “He who dwelleth in the secret place of the Most High (consciousness of the supremacy of Mind) shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.” (Ps. xci. 1.) Trust in God is absolute protection from the “pestilence that walketh in darkness, and the arrow that flieth by day.” Harmony (“songs of deliverance”) follows the penitent sinner. God, Truth, is the sinner’s refuge. His present help in time of affliction. V. 8: “I will instruct thee,” etc. Reflecting David’s consciousness will instruct us. True penitence directs us heavenward, and reveals “the way which thou shalt go.” “I will guide thee with mine eye.” “If thine eye be single thy whole body shall be full of light.” (Matt. vi. 22.) (Luke xi. 34.) “The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous and His ear is open to their cry.” V. 9: “Be not as the horse or as the mule,” etc. Man must exercise understanding. Evil ways will never be abandoned through compulsion. Penance is not Christian Science. Mankind must rise spiritually above the claims of the senses — not abandon them through will power! Man must be rational, not irrational as are the beasts, are guided by force only. We cannot control with “bit and bridle”; “our weapons are not carnal but mighty to the pulling down of strongholds.” If we are not willing to be “led by the Spirit,” the “bit and bridle” of severe discipline will be used, for “every knee must bow.” If sin did not bring its punishment, we should be without hope in the world, nothing would turn us back to God. “Pain is more salutary than pleasure.” — (S. and H.) Whatever directs our footsteps Godward is a blessing. V. 10: “Many sorrows shall be to the wicked,” etc. Wickedness and righteousness contrasted; both have their reward; righteousness promotes joy; evil engenders misery. Man can never escape the woes of slavery as long as he remains a slave. “Whatsoever a man sows that shall he also reap.” “The wages of sin are death.” Error meets its own reward and the “seed brings forth fruit after its kind.” “He that trusteth in the Lord,” etc. “Because he hath set his love upon me therefore will I deliver him,” etc. (Ps. xci. 14.) “Mercy” and goodness will follow the righteous all the days of his life and he will dwell in the house of the Lord forever. V. 11: “Be glad in the Lord and rejoice,” etc. “Well done, thou good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord” — the reward for righteousness. Harmony is the ultimation of true living. — “The pure in heart see God.”

Lesson Points. — “Cessation of sin is the only forgiveness of sin there is. We pay the utmost farthing for every transgression. Forgiveness of sin without punishment would be license to commit sin.”* “The way of the transgressor is hard.” Nothing but “drought” follows in the path of the ungodly. Turning to God blots out the past. Maintenance of position in Truth is protection against error’s invasions. Pure living and not penance is the sickle which cuts down every plant which the Father has not planted Stubbornness, intractability, will be mastered with severe discipline. The way of the slothful man is an hedge of thorns; but the way of the righteous is made plain. (Prov. xv. 19.) Eternal harmony is the kingdom of heaven, the abode of the faithful.


Bible Lessons

From the December 1888 issue of the Christian Science Journal by


The Temptation of Jesus. MATTHEW iv. 1-11.

Jesus’ baptism was the dividing line between his preparatory days and his public mission. He stood upon the threshold of a great work. He had been baptized in the Jordan by John the Baptist, thus, at the very outset, meeting the world on its own basis of thought, that he might lead mankind gently from the old to the new dispensation, — from the symbol (the water-baptism) to the true baptism, complete submersion in Truth, the heavenly baptism.

Golden Text: For in that he hath suffered, being tempted, he is able to succor them that are tempted. HEBREWS, ii. 18.

Time: About January, of the year 27, according to our reckoning; very soon after Jesus’ baptism.

Place: The Wilderness of Judea, between Jerusalem and Jericho on the west, and between the Jordan and upper part of the Dead Sea on the east. Tradition places it in a place called Mount Quarantania, near the Jordan. This Latin word means a space of forty days, because Jesus is supposed to have fasted forty days in one of the caves of this place; but this name was given to the locality much later in its history.

PARALLEL ACCOUNTS: MARK i. 12, 13; LUKE iv. 1-13.

Introduction. John’s was the water-baptism, or purity. Jesus baptized with the Holy Ghost, Divine Science. John was cousin to Jesus, and also Jesus’ forerunner. Purity is the herald of Truth, and a near relative to the Perfect Idea.

Immediately after Jesus’ baptism he was led into the Wilderness to be tempted. The realization of his awful responsibility dawned upon him. He saw what he must accomplish in his mission. He realized that he alone could emancipate mankind from worldly thraldom. Jesus knew materiality to be the antipodes of spirituality; hence that spirituality was forever hidden from those whose conceptions were material.

As Jesus entertained no material conception, he discerned the higher sense of Life. He knew he must demonstrate the problem of Life. He realized that his followers could rise to no greater height than himself, and that if he made a single mistake in his demonstration, the result would be fatal to them. Jesus foresaw the dreadful consequences of a single deviation from the one true pathway. The veil must be rent in twain, not partially, but from top to bottom.

Jesus determined to prove man’s oneness with God. What a contest was before the mighty Nazarene. Single-handed he must conquer the world. All its pleasures, as well as woes, must be annihilated. Jesus knew it was not against flesh and blood he must battle, but “against principalities and powers,” against the darkness of this world, against “spiritual wickedness in high places,” against those who might profess friendship, but who in times of need would betray with a Judas kiss, against professed followers of God, and against their religious teachers. He knew full well the power of belief.

Satan, material belief, had for thousands of years held despotic sway over mankind, oppressing them with burdensome and cruel tasks. The lash of tyranny was held above mankind, and in fear and trembling they offered homage to error’s demands. Not a victorious opponent appeared to thwart Satan’s advances, until Mary’s pure conception of right and justice was manifested to mankind in the birth of Jesus, who was destined to wield the sword of Spirit, and conquer the Prince of this World. Man was to be freed from earthly thraldom, and reestablished in his rightful domain. A legacy of eternal, harmonious Life was to be given to humanity forevermore.

In order to deliver men from their foolish beliefs, a pathway must be made through their material conceptions. Mortal man could not make this opening, because he believed in the reality of the material potentate to whom he offered obeisance. Consequently it was necessary that Jesus should be tempted in all points as we are, in order to annihilate these false claims, and prove to man that they were but illusions, to which man was rightfully superior. Jesus determined to prove the nothingness of materiality and its multifarious claims.

The appetites of the flesh, the lust of the eye, the pleasures of the senses, were as vivid to Jesus as they are to us, — yea, a thousand times more so. Discords which pass unnoticed by many of us, would be agonizing to a musician, whose ear is attuned to harmony. Just so with Jesus. He knew that harmony was reality; hence discord, to him, was intensified by his spiritual acuteness. The claims of worldliness assailed Jesus, as they do us. He was tempted in all points like ourselves. He had proportionately no more Truth wherewith to meet error, than each of us possesses. The more refined our spiritual attainments, the keener will be the darts which assail us. If Jesus was a spiritual Hercules, the shadows which lay across his pathway were also gigantic. He was tempted like ourselves, at every point, yet he was without sin.

Jesus stood in the posture of thought in which each earnest and honest Christian Scientist stands today. God the Father is always higher and grander than our highest and grandest conception of Him. Job was right when he said, concerning divine manifestations, “These are but parts of Thy ways.”

Truly God, to our apprehension, is always the next step higher than our present consciousness. This fact Jesus understood; hence his declaration in after life, “No man cometh unto the Father but by me.” He knew Principle must be interpreted through its Idea.

Jesus must be tempted in every point like ourselves, in order to nullify and prove the nothingness of each claim. Hunger, pain, suffering, physical and mental, must be known and met. From the belief of birth to the belief of death, every method, every mode of materialism, must be counteracted by the production of their opposites. If the opposite, the positive, is not perceived, the negative will seem correct, and will assert itself as true.

Alone Jesus was compelled to meet the Prince of this World. Satan appeared to him in the garb of an angel, — as an angel of light. Satan tempted Jesus with beauty, attraction, splendor, with secular power and a gilded throne. Satan pointed to the rainbow, but ignored the storm.

The Saviour grappled with every claim of materiality; and, with a power above worldliness, he destroyed sickness, sin, and death. He dealt summarily with every adverse thought, destroying its power before it could fix itself upon him.

The Tempter whom Jesus met was mortal mind. Its snares are evil suggestions, contaminating thoughts. Mortal thoughts, if indulged, erase good intentions from the tablets of our consciousness. Mortal mind places stumbling-blocks in the Christian’s way. The scope of mortal mind extends from the most degrading influences, to the highest conception derived from belief, — from the stones under foot to the pinnacle of the Temple. Mortal mind is the influence opposed to God. Because God is eternal, error claims the same quality.

After Jesus’ spiritual baptism he saw, at a glance, the three great delusions to which mankind had always yielded: Appetite, Vanity, Ambition. These were the three which earliest presented themselves.

1. Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the Wilderness to be tempted of the Devil.

2. And when he had fasted forty days and forty nights, he was afterward a’ hungered.

3. And when the Tempter came to him, he said, If thou be the Son of God, command that these stones be made bread.

4. But he answered and said, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.

Note the cunning of the Tempter! Mark the subtlety with which Satan seeks to undermine the very foundation of the Kingdom of Heaven. Adam, the material man, fell before the allurements of evil. Jesus, the spiritual Idea, stood firm as a rock, his face always turned Zionward. Jesus could not be duped by Satan. Adam and Eve were tempted through Appetite. “Eat of this fruit!” said the Serpent. They shared the apple of discord, and moral poison entered human veins. Materialism falls; Spirit survives.

Into the wilderness of doubt and fear Jesus is hurried, to meet the claims of the world. Here he fasts forty days and forty nights, — an equal amount of day and night, of light and darkness. The Spirit of Truth leads mankind upwards. Because God is omnipresent, error claims omnipresence. As mankind advances, led by the Spirit of infinite goodness, error becomes intensified and more subtle. Thus we are tempted by higher degrees of error. Error, overcome at one point, advances us to a still higher degree. Thus the Spirit ever leads us higher and higher, unfolding and overcoming the higher attenuations of evil, until the rising of the sun of infinite glory, which casts no shadows. Thus man strives against darkness, that he may enjoy eternal light.

The forty days and forty nights symbolize the subtlety of evil. Temptations only come when it is almost impossible to tell whether they are born of good or evil, of light or darkness. To the blind, the light and darkness are the same. So is it with the subtleties of evil. Temptations come in the most subtle and seductive form, always meeting one on his own elevation or depression of thought.

With the words, “If thou be the Son of God, command that these stones be made bread,” Satan introduces himself to our Master. This is one of the most subtle of the enemy’s claims, one of the most artful demands within the province of mortal mind, — a temptation to cater to the wants of physical sense, by turning stones into bread. Satan sought to make Jesus turn to material things for support, tempting him to misuse his spiritual power, in order to supply his physical wants.

Jesus had begun his crusade, against the Prince of the Darkness of this World, with a fixed determination to subjugate all his unreal claims. Every plant which the Father had not planted was to be uprooted. The strongholds of Satan were to be razed. Like Samson of old, Jesus determined to pull down the pillars of Satan’s temple, and crush the imps of darkness, even if his life paid the forfeit. At the very outset Satan confronted Jesus with the demands of physical belief.

Jesus hungered. The claims of materiality voiced themselves, and said: “This body must be taken care of; its wants, must be attended to; it is the image and likeness of God, given to mankind to care for and sustain.” The terrible pangs of hunger, which lay hold of Jesus, evoked the temptation to work what the world calls a miracle, in order to get bread. His hungering and thirsting after righteousness intensified the opposite. How easily he could have succumbed to these demands. The stones beneath his feet, as if to still further tantalize him, resembled in form the loaves of those days.

Would Jesus stoop to this perversion of his powers? or would he spurn the overtures of Satan, leave the stony thoughts still beneath his feet, and turn wholly to God his Father? No sooner had the temptation come than Jesus met it. He did not dwell on it an instant. He knew that by so doing temptation would gain the advantage over him. Heeding temptation intensifies its power, and renders it more difficult to overcome. Without hesitation Jesus met this Satanic overture. He made no terms with Satan. In the Master’s thought there were no ifs or buts. Instantly he met the challenge with the Word of God, of Truth: “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.”

The temptation was overcome. The stones still lay at his feet, unchanged, cold, lifeless. That this temptation was a terrible ordeal, no one can doubt. What must have been Jesus’ thoughts?

He knew he possessed Truth. He knew men were groping in darkness, without one ray of light to illumine their consciousness. He was alone in the Wilderness. There was no one to advise him, no one to encourage. Hungering and thirsting after righteousness, so intense were the opposite pangs of physical appetite, that his very Life seemed almost lost. The mission upon which he had but so recently entered seemed likely to end in failure. Surely he must survive and not starve, if he would fulfill this mission. This was a temptation indeed!

Each temptation, as it presents itself to us, always seems to be the hardest we can encounter. How natural it is to cater to the wants of our physical bodies. It seems like a duty, and as if failure to comply with this duty would incur divine displeasure. This is a subtle belief indeed.

Jesus would not use God’s power for selfish motives, for the satisfaction of the senses, for self-gratification. The stones beneath his feet were unconscious, inert, lifeless; and Jesus knew that they could not sustain Life. He desired to establish the fact that Life is spiritual, not material, — that man lives because God lives, and not by material methods. This point he fully demonstrated, and would not yield to Appetite.

Baffled in this first temptation, Satan attacks our Master with another still more subtle, if such a thing be possible. Vanity is now the Circe cup offered to Jesus; for it concerns not merely physique and dress, and mortals are often vain of intellect and virtue.

5 Then the Devil taketh him up into the Holy City, and setteth him on a pinnacle of the Temple.

6 And saith unto him, If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down: for it is written, He shall give His angels charge concerning thee; and in their hands they shall bear thee up, lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone.

7 Jesus said unto him, It is written again, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God.

Jesus had become convinced of the unreality of materiality. He knew God was all-powerful. He knew mankind must worship God in Spirit and in Truth. Jesus, God, Truth, could not be found in forms or ceremonies. He alone knew this fact. He knew the condition of the minds of the people. How would they receive the new Truth? Could they apprehend it? Would they accept it?

Jesus’ high spiritual thought was the pinnacle of the Temple. Far below him the world worshipped. Below were priests and people, passing to and fro in worldly ceremonial worship. The fire was blazing on the altar, the altar of sacrifice. How well Jesus knew that sacrifice must be of the heart, and not an outward physical manifestation. These worldly ceremonies were far beneath him. He knew that it was necessary to rise to spiritual dominion, before exercising control over materiality. Only spiritual consciousness of dominion can make the material world man’s footstool. We do not rid ourselves of matter’s claims by simple abandonment, but by ascertaining their spiritual opposites.

Once a year the High priest entered the Holy of Holies, behind the veil. Jesus knew that veil must be rent in twain. He knew this was his mission. Far above this earthly worship, on the pinnacle of the Temple, stood our Master. His Father must be worshipped in Spirit and in Truth. His God was changeless. Israel’s Jehovah was believed to smile or frown on His people, as their actions influenced Him to love or hate. This mockery Jesus must destroy, and he knew it. It was from Jesus’ high spiritual consciousness that Satan desired to cast him down, the pinnacle of his thought. Jesus’ thoughts were higher than earth-born theories. They transcended the Temple ceremonies, and Satan wished to hurl him down from this consciousness, to a level with the world. This pinnacle was doubtless the Royal Porch, looking down into the Valley of Kidron, — which, by the way, signifies turbid, black. “Cast thyself down,” said Satan, “He shall give His angels charge concerning thee.” Cast thyself down, is the cry of error today.

Christian Science is too high. “The religion of our fathers was good enough for them; it is good enough for us! Come down to a level with the world! Come down to the worship of the world!” Such is the cry of error in our midst. Is Christian Science too high? Can anything be too high for man, made in the image and likeness of God? Can man conceive of any uplifting influence which does not come from God? Surely God’s “thoughts are higher than our thoughts, and His ways than our ways.” Can man exceed the consciousness of the Infinite, and invent an imaginary sphere of existence? All good comes from God; and any conception of a higher state of being than is now attained, no matter how vague and Utopian it may at first seem, must emanate from God.

Is the distorted form which Christianity assumed to our ancestors good enough for you, for me? Is the old printing-press, used in the days of Franklin, good enough for the present hour? Are the primitive modes of transit adequate for modern demands? If so, why were the old abandoned? Do not become fossilized, stereotyped! Upward and Onward, is the law of Him whose ways and thoughts are above ours. Is a religion which affiliates with sickness, sin, and death good enough for today? Did not Jesus destroy these evils? The animating principle of spinning-wheel and printing-press is indeed unchanged, because it was an outgrowth of nature’s unvarying law; but the form awaited more wonderful developments. So the animating principle of Christianity is always divine: but alas, it has been distorted by human misconceptions!

How many thousand times we have heard it said, “My good old mother lived and died by her religion, and I shall not forsake it.” We want a religion today that we can live by, and not die by. This would be religion in its highest, noblest sense. True religion points with unerring exactness to Life eternal. “Whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die,” was the teaching of the greatest religious expounder who ever lived. True religion has no goal but eternal Life.

“Cast yourself down,” were the penetrating, persistent, persuasive words of the Tempter. Satan knew, if Jesus yielded one iota, the next downward step would be much easier. Satan knew that if Jesus, to gratify his selfish vanity by a public display of miraculous power, should cast himself from the pinnacle, hoping to be supernaturally upheld in mid-air by invisible hands, our Master would be disappointed in the result; because selfish and vain thoughts would incapacitate him for such a manifestation of control over the material law of gravitation, and the angels of the divine presence would not charge themselves with the physical safety of a leader who had forfeited his claim to Messiahship, by yielding to unworthy motives, whose unworthy springs are in self-aggrandizement.

All men are on the pinnacle today, their highest consciousness of good. It is from this point that Satan (error) seeks to cast them down. The temptations which reach one would be no temptation to another.

Again Jesus thwarted Satan, — and with the same weapon as before, the Word of God. It is written, “Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God.”

8 Again, the Devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and sheweth him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them;

9 And saith unto him, All these things will I give thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me.

10 Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee hence, Satan; for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve.

Baffled in his attempted capture of Jesus through Vanity, Satan now appeals to Ambition. He offers Jesus the rulership of the world. How well Satan knew, if Jesus succeeded in demonstrating the Messianic understanding, that the demonic hold on mankind would be forever severed! Therefore one thing more he will offer Jesus, — all Satan has left. He unrolls before Jesus a panorama of the world. “All this will I give thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me.” All the kingdoms of the world would belong to Jesus, if he would acknowledge material potentiality. The panorama unrolled. As Jesus gazed upon the wide prospect, countries and empires and crowns, passed before him in a moment of time. In them he saw the possibilities of a lie. He saw himself as the regal head of the world. This was what many of the Jews longed for; consequently Jesus was brought, in his thought, face to face with the spirit of the age. It was the sovereignty of the world, which the Tempter offered Jesus, if he would do him homage.

What a temptation was here? Who can comprehend the immensity of this temptation? This was Satan’s last chance, his forlorn hope. All his subtlety and adroitness were focalized. It was a terrible ordeal.

Jesus was born with a hereditary belief of material kingship, as the direct descendant of a line of kings. “King David’s son,” he was commonly called. Again, the Jews more than once strove to make him a king, even by force. In these facts we may see the subtlety of this temptation. Besides the wiles of Satan, he was confronted by belief in the rights of hereditary descent, and the patriotic ambition of the popular mind.

What would be the result of yielding to Satan’s demands? The Jews would then generally accept and follow Jesus as the Messiah. There would be no suffering, no cross, no humiliation, no reproach, — only glory and secular power. This was truly Satan’s last throw. This princely offer was paramount, and excelled the two preceding bribes. This boon included colossal wealth, luxury indescribable, pomp and power which monarchs might envy. The world would lie at his feet. This tender was Satan’s all, his masterpiece; but had Jesus yielded to the Arch Tempter, man would have lost his birthright; and so would Jesus, for he would have forfeited his spiritual reign for temporal sovereignty.

What did Satan offer Jesus in exchange for his heavenly kingdom? Nothing, absolutely nothing. Hundreds of years before, Solomon had declared this world, with all its concomitants, to be vanity. Did not Jesus know the supremacy of the spiritual over the material? At last Satan has betrayed himself. If he had so arrayed himself in borrowed plumage as to defy detection in the other two temptations, he could do so no longer. Jesus discovered whence his temptation came. “Get thee hence, Satan,” he said; and this proves that the Devil was known.

The “exceedingly high mountain” is wealth. Wealth gives to mankind the kingdoms of the world. Money is the god of this world. How well Satan knew this! What more could he offer Jesus. The claim of personal interest had been met. The claims of Appetite and Vanity had been already destroyed. There were no claims left but those of wealth and power. At last Satan was recognized. The robe of light fell off. He was unmasked. No longer did Satan seem an angel of light to Jesus, but the Prince of Darkness. Jesus had tried the spirits, to see whether they were good or evil, and he had ascertained them to be evil. True to his constant intent, he was “about his Father’s business.” Satan had tried in vain to make Jesus adopt the policy and methods of this world; but supreme allegiance to God had frustrated Satan’s schemes. With the Word of God, Jesus vanquished his adversary. His words silenced the intriguing foe. Battled and confounded, Satan withdrew for a season. He had found his superior. After hundreds, yea thousands of years of uninterrupted dominion, his power was defeated, his kingdom forever overthrown. At last a man had arisen, made in the divine image, clothed with the seamless garment of Truth. This divine man met the enemy on his own domain, and routed him.

11. Then the Devil leaveth him: and, behold, angels came and ministered unto him.

Satan withdrew, and behold angels came and ministered unto Jesus. Glorious conclusion of a well-fought battle! Satan absent, angels present! These angels were spiritual messages from Father to Son. Angels came to Jesus, to prove that he did not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God. He who would not ask the angels to uphold him in tempting God, basked in their brightness. He who refused the kingdoms of the world had won the Kingdom of Heaven. The fight had been not with carnal weapons, but spiritual, mighty to the “pulling down of strongholds.”

The weapon Jesus used is ours also, the Word of God. Jesus can help us, because he was tempted as we are. We can help others, because Jesus is helping us. Satan is a coward, and only comes when we falter and lose courage. He gains the victory who looks only to God. “Satan lies most when he promises most.” Let us watch and pray, that we enter not into temptation! Satan’s temptations have a wide range, even from the stones beneath our feet to the highest pinnacle of the Temple, — from the lowest mortal conception to the highest. Satan does not come as Satan, but robed in sheep’s clothing, — noiselessly and with subtle whisperings, quoting God’s Word, that he may the more deceive. Beware of false Christian Scientists, who say, with smooth tongues, “He shall give His angels charge over thee.” “The Devil can quote Scripture for his purpose.” He comes as an angel of light! “Oh what a goodly outside falsehood hath.” Silently comes the enemy, who would cast you from the pinnacle of your thought into the valley below. The next thought higher than your present estimate of Truth, is your highest conception of God, and this thought tempts no one; because it is the thought immediately beneath your present conception of goodness which tempts you most. Guard zealously the pinnacle of your thought.

Carefully watch yourself, for you are your own greatest enemy. Nobody stands so much in your own light as yourself. When you have conquered self, you have conquered the world. As you rise into spiritual dominion, the opposite will present itself to you. An increased desire for worldly sovereignty will test you at every step. If the whole world was laid at Jesus’ feet, it will be proportionately proffered to you. Can you resist such a temptation? Wealth will sometimes confront you. The brightest crown within the gift of evil will be suspended above your head, ready to encircle your brow at your assent. Will you accept the kingdoms of the world, and reject the Kingdom of Heaven? Jesus labored only for mankind, and to do the will of the Father. Let us do the same. The instant we think of self, we become disqualified to aid others. Let us meet the temptations of the world as did our Master, with the understanding of Truth, and ever watch and pray that we enter not into temptation.



Love is the liberator.