Tuesday 11 December 2012

Christmas All Year Round

"What Christmas Means to Me"
   by Mary Baker Eddy
  

To me Christmas involves an open secret, understood by few — or by none — and unutterable except in Christian Science. Christ was not born of the flesh. Christ  is the Truth and Life born of God — born of Spirit and not of matter. Jesus, the Galilean Prophet, was born of the Virgin Mary's spiritual thoughts of Life and its manifestation.

God creates man perfect and eternal in His own image. Hence man is the image, idea, or likeness of perfection— an ideal which cannot fall from its inherent unity with divine Love, from its spotless purity and original perfection.

Observed by material sense, Christmas commemorates the birth of a human, material, mortal babe — a babe born in a manger amidst the flocks and herds of a Jewish village.

This homely origin of the babe Jesus falls far shortof my sense of the eternal Christ, Truth, never born and never dying. I celebrate Christmas with my soul, my spiritual sense, and so commemorate the entrance into  human understanding of the Christ conceived of Spirit,of God and not of a woman — as the birth of Truth, the dawn of divine Love breaking upon the gloom of matter and evil with the glory of infinite being.

Human doctrines or hypotheses or vague human philosophy afford little divine effulgence, deific presence or power. Christmas to me is the reminder of God's great gift, — His spiritual idea, man and the universe, — a gift which so transcends mortal, material, sensual giving that the merriment, mad ambition, rivalry, and ritual of our common Christmas seem a human mockery in mimicry of the real worship in commemoration of Christ's coming.

I love to observe Christmas in quietude, humility,benevolence, charity, letting good will towards man, eloquent silence, prayer, and praise express my conception of Truth's appearing.

The splendor of this nativity of Christ reveals infinite meanings and gives manifold blessings. Material gifts and pastimes tend to obliterate the spiritual idea in consciousness, leaving one alone and without His glory.

 - included her collection of writings other than
Science & Health, called "Prose Works" in the chapter entitled,
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany pg 261

Tuesday 11 September 2012

Drug dependency - a parent's response

Daughter healed of drug use
by Victoria Butler

When I became a student of Christian Science, I was so glad to know about God's constant guidance in everyone's life. A few months after being introduced to Science I took Christian Science class instruction - a short but powerful course on how to pray effectively. The Monday after completing the class, I resigned my position as a private practice psychologist working in the movie industry, as well as my position as CEO of a large nonprofit drug abuse program. I immediately went into the Christian Science practice because I was already receiving calls to help others through prayer.
                      In Christian Science class instruction I learned the importance of praying for the world, and not  just for myself, my family, and the patients who called me. Sometime during those early weeks after class, I heard that there was going to be a television special on cocaine addiction. I didn't think much about it. A few days later there was to be another program on drug addiction. Again, I ignored it. A few days later - yes, another program on drug addiction. This time I "woke up". These back-to-back advertisements alerted me to pray for the world concerning these issues. I did not watch any of thos programs, being very familiar with the subject from my past work experiences, but I spent the next few days praying for the world, specifically regarding drug abuse.
                      I turned to the Christian Science textbook, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy for inspiration. This book is not just any book. Mrs. Eddy was directed by a higher power, God, divine Love, on what to put in its pages. The ideas in Science and Health are one way that God communicates to us. I have found out through healing experiences that this is true. This citations from page 356 made it clear to me that God wouldn't create a desire for destructive drugs, "Does divine Love commit a fraud on humanity by making man inclined to sin, and then punishing him for it?" I also affirmed man's innocence and freedom from  false attractions.
                      One the third day I felt that I had found peace about this world problem. I remembered sitting in my room and feeling I had covered the topic quite thoroughly in my prayers when my 13-year-old daughter came to me crying her eyes out and asking for my help. She confided in me that she had a drug problem. She was very distressed and felt she was in over her head.
                      Normally this would be a very disturbing thing for a parent to hear, but I had just spent three days realizing God's power over drug dependencey and addiction, so I felt calm and confident that this would be healed. I actually didn't ask my daughter what drugs she had been using or for how long. I think because I had been working so spiritually about the issue it didn't feel like, in this case, I needed more details. But of course, I felt my daughter's distress and responded compassionately, free from alarm.
                      I told her I knew this would be healed because we had God's help - a power bigger than us that would guide us in overcoming this. I was able to calm her fears without a lot of talking, and becuase of the prayerful work I had already done, I was able to see my daughter's goodness and innocence. Almost immediately, she calmed down and was completely receptive and cooperative. I could see she was committed to being free, and she told me there were no drugs in the house.
                      That afternoon as I prayed for my daughter, I turned again to Science and Health  for guidance and found this sentence: "Jesus beheld the perfect man, who appeared to him where sinning mortal man appears to mortals" (p.476-477). I knew that realizing this was a key to my daughter gaining her dominion. I needed to truly understand her as perfect, reflecting God's purity, innocence, and sinlessness.
                       A vision came to me of my daughter in a prison cell calling out to me and saying: "Mum, don't believe that the (picture of a drug-dependency) is really me! I am good and pure and I am being held hostage. My only way out is for you to believe that the picture is not the real me. Don't try to change me or fix me; that could take forever, instead know that the troubled person is an 'imposter' posing as me". It actually made sense to me as I thought about what it says in the Bible; it doesn't say "fix the problem and the person and you will be free," it says, "You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free" (John 8:32). So I continued to know the truth about my daughter - that this material picture was not the individual of God's creating.
                      Well, this vision lit a fire for "justice" in me, as it would for anyone - seeing an innocent person unjustly imprisoned. My initial prayers of mild pleading with God turned to vehement protests insisting on my daughter's God-given right to be free. Guess what? My prayers began to work immediately. Her behaviour changed radically. Right after asking for my help and my prayers she was more relaxed and loving, instead of tense and rebellious. In a period of a few days she looked healthier and happier. It was obvious to both of us that the problem wasn't any part of my daughter and never truly had been. She was free of the desire for drugs.
                       I realized that before this turnaround, my daughter had been avoiding me and acting guilt-ridden, but with the healing she willingly chose to spend time with me at home and naturally stopped hanging out with the kids she had done drugs with. However, she needed some new friends. I took her to a teen support group where she met kids who didn't use drugs, and they became her friends. She became involved in organizing a teen center where teens could socialize in a safe, drug-free environment. Everything about my daughter's character changed. Undesirable traits of selfishness, anger, and definace stopped practically overnight. She even dressed and decorated her bedroom differently, in ways that reflected the exuberance and joy of divine Soul. Only two weeks after telling me about the drug problem, my daughter's transformation was so complete that a person who she used to do drugs with didn't even recognize her when they had a conversation at the bus stop. I am grateful for the ease of this healing, especially because before being a student of Christian Science I had worked for years under beliefs about drug dependency being a lifelong problem that was very difficult to resolve.
                    My daughter is now an adult with a 17-year-old of her own, and has lived a healthy drug-free lifestyle ever since, thanks to God's merciful love. I am also particularly grateful to God for preparing me to meet this challenge.

Victoria Butler still helps people through prayer in Los Angeles, and she is especially grateful for the spirit of Christian fellowship she's experienced in the Christian Science community.

This article is from the Christian Science Sentinel, Sept.10, 2012
www.jsh.com

Tuesday 7 August 2012

Mental Fitness And Olympic Outcomes

MENTAL FITNESS MAKES OR BREAKS OLYMPIANS: BEYOND POSITIVE THINKING

#Olympics2012… Twitter yes, or twitter no, just before entering the race? Well that depends. It’s amazing what thoughts can do, or undo!

The Opening Ceremony entertained and inspired millions to think – think about the past, present and future. The profoundly deaf musician, Dame Evelyn Glennie led a band of 965 ground-shaking drummers. 600 Nurses and patients from the London Great Ormond Street Hospital for children performed their hearts out. The Koas Singing Choir of deaf and hearing children sang in harmonious unison. Flash mob dancers in all shapes and sizes moved in exuberant unity. Mr Bean’s dream of “endurance, persistence and dedication” in Chariots of Fire (you had to see it!) was so Mr Bean. Even the Queen was a sport (yup, you had to see it).

And now it’s all about the amazing athletes – past and present stories, interviews and reports, arousing the good, the bad, and the ugly.

THE GOOD… “Are you mentally fit for it?” – an important question from a coach.
Dawn Fraser, one of Australia’s all-time darlings was interviewed on ABC Radio National, “
The Sporty Ones. Part 1: The Swimmers”, and tells her story beautifully. “In 1962… I felt I was getting older, I’d won gold medals and I thought that I had really achieved a lot of things in swimming… But, there was one little stepping stone I hadn’t.” Her coach asked if she’d thought about breaking her 60.2 second record in the 100m Freestyle race. She hadn’t, and now she was being challenged to “put it in her mind.” Fraser was struggling in the trials and not happy. She told her Mum that she’d had the worst swim in her life. Mum’s advice: “… just go and enjoy it”. (Got to love Mum’s advice!) At the trials Fraser told her coach, “I’m just going to enjoy the race, coach.” She set a new world record as the first woman to break the one minute barrier for the 100m Freestyle at 59.6 seconds. “And that’s the easiest swim I’ve ever done in my life and I still remember the swim.”.

Today there are all sorts of fancy inventions resulting from sports science and psychology; from medicine and diet to equipment. And yet, the relationship between our thoughts and our performance is clear. To today’s Games:

THE BAD… uncovered. Anti-doping agencies are at work once more. And eight badminton athletes were caught blatantly throwing matches in order to improve their positions for the knockout stages.
THE UGLY… Body image issues came up even before the Games began. Aussie swimmer Leisel Jones was criticized as looking unfit (putting it mildly). There was general outrage in the community, for and against. After her excellent race Jones shared how chuffed she was to be at her fourth Olympics, and said, “Smooth sailing doesn’t make for a skilful sailor.” Cathy Freeman, another Aussie icon who ran and won the 400m race in the Olympics 2000, implored the Aussie public to be supportive, not critical of their athletes. When swimmer James “Missile” Magnussen missed his mark for Gold in the men’s 4x100m freestyle relay swim, there was a news poll asking the public whether they believed he’d make it or not in his next race. Scientific or not, was this poll helpful? It depends.

FORWARD THINKING… Handling being under pressure to perform is plainly an individual journey. How can the athletes prevent becoming victims of their own hype? Lose graciously and stay motivated despite defeat? Overcome sickness resulting from the strain? What if the highest quality care is to include spirituality into training? According to ‘The Effect of Spirituality on Health and Healing: A Critical Review of Athletic Trainers, Journal of Athletic Training, 2000’:-

Conclusions/Recommendations: The impact of spirituality on health and healing is a topic that has been virtually ignored in the disciplines of athletic training and sports medicine. Because of their lack of exposure to this topic, most athletic trainers are unaware of the many positive associations that exist between spirituality and health and healing. The available literature base regarding this topic is quite large; its findings need to be explored and integrated into our profession.”

After all is said and done, every competitor has permission to shine, beyond positive thinking. It might be the simplest thing that makes one mentally fit for the moment. Like someone reminding us to “enjoy”. Or realising that there is something far greater than ourselves to depend upon.

from Carey Arber's
www.health4thinkers.com
Carey Arber is a health blogger, researching scientific studies and testimonies on the relationship between consciousness and wellbeing, particularly spirituality and health. She finds her own practice effective, as a Christian Science practitioner, and is seeing how scientists are exploring this new-old subject, and the impact it has on medical outcomes. www.health4thinkers.com  Carey also represents Christian Science to the media and government in ACT & NSW.

Wednesday 11 July 2012

A spiritual perspective on guilt

Prayer - not guilt - heals
by Deborah Packer

          One day as Jesus was passing by a man who was blind from his birth, his disciples asked him whether the man was born blind because of his own sin or because of his parents' sin. Jesus answered: "Neither hath tthis man sinned, nor his parents: but that the works of God should be made manifest in him" (John 9:3). Then Jesus healed the man of his blindness.
         What this Bible passage means to me is that we are not punished for past errors. Even in situations where we initially allowed errors of thinking to go unchallenged, we can still correct our thought - and when we do, we can expect to be free of any bad effects. This rule is in fact the third tenet of Christian Science: "We acknowledge God's forgiveness of sin in the destruction of sin and the spiritual understanding that casts out evil as unreal. But the belief in sin is punished so long as the belief lasts" (Mary Baker Eddy, Science & Health,p.497).
         An experience that we had in our family some years ago demonstrates this truth in an immediate, certain and undeniable way. At the time, I was teaching in a primary school some 40 minutes' drive from my home, and my son, who was just a year old, was being cared for by a baby sitter, who lived near my work. One day while I was on a field trip to a park with my students, a toddler rushed up the path toward me with her father in hot pursuit. Her happiness made me smile, but as she came closer I realized she had some serious injuries to her face. It so took me by surprise that for a moment I stared. Her father, noticing my attention, offered an explanation: She had fallen down a flight of stone stairs, landing on her face. He added that she had spent more than a week in hospital, and now, three weeks later, she was almost better.
          I was so busy tending to my students that day that I didn't give the incident with the toddler any more thought, but the image of her face had impressed me and would sometimes come to mind.
         About ten days later after this incident, I was at school giving the morning lessons when I received an urgent message to come to the office. The baby sitter had called to say that my son had had an accident. This time I was more alert, and straightaway I claimed that there are no accidents because God, divine Principle, is always in charge.
         Within five minutes I was a the baby sitter's. As I pulled up in the car, she ran out of the front door carrying my son. He was limp in her arms. A glance told me that he had scraped one side of his face; there was much swelling, and he had a large gash in his head.
         Just for one moment I was tempted to be shocked, but I knew not to give in to alarm or distress. I knew that the image before me was not God's child, His perfect image; therefore, I would not give it credence. The baby sitter was distraught and explained that my son had tripped on the top step in the garden and fallen head-first onto the concrete below, scraping his face on the steps as he fell. Instantly I saw that this was a repetition of the story the young father in the park had told me.
          I scooped up my son in my arms, reassuring the baby sitter that he was all right. While I settled my son into his car seat, I talked gently to him and ensured that he was comfortable and secure. He began to respond, and showed no signs of distress. I headed for home, knowing that he was safe and in God's loving care.
          The 40-minute drive allowed me plenty of quiet praying time. Mrs. Eddy directs us in Science & Health: "Stand porter at the door of thought. Admitting only such conclusions as you wish realized in bodily results, you will control yourself harmoniously" (p.392). I realized that in a number of ways I had not "stood porter" over my thought. On several occasions in the weeks before, I had admitted the possibility of accidents - this situation with the young girl being the most recent. On other occasions, in little ways, I had allowed that chance, good and bad, could play a part in my life On page 234 of Science & Health, Eddy writes: "Sin and disease must be thought before they can be manifested. You must control evil thoughts in the first instance, or they will control you in the second." I knew this also held true for the thought of accidents.
         The drive home was an awakening time for me. It felt as though I was experiencing a huge mental clean-up. At one point I was tempted to feel guilty for not having been more alert in protecting my though, but I dismissed this feeling, I knew that God never sends guilt, that He knows only the perfect man, in whom is no sin or guilt. I also recognized that these thoughts of chance and accident were not my thoughts. I refused to own them.They were evil suggestions for me to accept or reject. I strongly rejected them, and therefore they had no claim me.
           Christian Science teaches that God is Principle and Love. Therefore, I knew that God's care, His love and protection for my son, was a certainty, a law. Any evidence to the contrary was to be denied as false evidence, illusion. I had read this idea many times, but as I drove home that day, I saw it beyond doubt; it became to me an undeniable truth.
           While I was engrossed in my prayer, I could hear my son making happy noises in the back seat, so I knew he was OK. When we pulled up in the driveway at home, I unbuckled him and carried him inside. He was awake and joyful, and he ran out to play with our dog.
          Later that evening, as I was giving my son his bath, I was scrubbing his hair quite vigorously while we talked and laughed. I noticed that it was glued together with red-brown sticky stuff, and I said to him, puzzled, "What have you got in your hair?" Suddenly I remembered the events of the morning. This was the first time I had thought of the fall since I put him in the car. Instinctively now as I washed his hair, I looked to see where this dried blood might have come from, but no cut, no injury remained. I then looked at his face. He had one tiny scab on the side of his nose; the rest of his skin was perfect - not a single mark!
         Needless to say, the baby sitter was more than a little surprised when we arrived the next morning and she saw that my son was so untourched by the incident. The scab on the nose was gone in a day or two.
         Often I think back on this incident to examine what I learned that day. I know that focusing on God was important. In the Bible, Isaiah instructs us: "Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth: for I am God, and there is none else" (45:22). Eddy advises: "We should prevent the images of disease from taking form in thought, and we should efface the outlines of disease already formulated in the minds of mortals" (Science & HealthI,  pp. 174-175). Later in the book, she explains:"To cure a bodily ailment, every broken moral law should be taken into account and the error be rebuked. Fear, which is an element of all disease, must be cast out to readjust the balance for God" (p.392).
           Although I was brought up in Christian Science, I was not a truly diligent Christian Scientist at the time of this incident. I loved its teachings, but I often let the human busyness of life crowd out time for spiritual study. Yet, on this day when I turned to God whole-heartedly, He gave me the thoughts I needed to be master of the situation. This has given me great confidence that past mistakes can have no hold over us once we're ready to correct them and move forward.
         This experience has also given me a clearer understanding of my son's true identity as God's chold, and this understanding has helped me parent more wisely and with less fear. My son has grown up with a clear awareness of his spiritual identity and has had many beautiful healings through his own understanding of God. I continue to be unspeakably grateful for this demonstration of God's power and for His ever-present guidance.
Deborah Packer lives in Canberra, Australia
This article appears in the Christian Science Sentinel June18,2012

Tuesday 19 June 2012

The Olympics from a spiritual perspective

Shining like Stars
by Heather Hayward

from the Christian Science Sentinel June 11, 2012

When a member of my family took part in and actually won a national ballet competition at the tender age of eight, her reaction was simply: "I didn't do it. God did!"  She had glimpsed a wonderful spiritual truth that echoes the words of Christ Jesus, "I can of mine own self do nothing" (John 5:30).

The youngster's pure expression of divine qualities was evidenced in her performance that day. Loveliness shone from her as she proved her understanding of the principles of discipline, grace, and precision. Her moment of triumph was very special at that point in her experience.

This related in serveral ways to the thousands of athletes who'll be competing in the Summer Olympics. The joy of participation and the honour of representing their countries will be a rich reward for the concentrated preparation, perseverance, and sacrifice each one has made. However, they'll need to be wise about the cult of personality that dominates the media at such times. Great attention goes to the winners, while the rest scarcely get a mention and quickly become no more than "also-rans".

Obviously, in sporting competition we can't all be winners, though in other aspects of life the word winner can be more broadly interpreted. But that's where the phrase "personal best" comes into play. It offers a yardstick for those who may compete brilliantly - certainly at pivotal moments - yet may not reach the rostrum. There's nothing to stop any of us from achieving or improving our "personal best".

 Jesus' parable of the wise and foolish virgins who were to attend a wedding banquet points to the importance of  planning and readiness in tackling events of all kinds (see Matthew 25:1-13). And the ballet, mentioned earlier, provides just one example of the role of concentrated preparation, including fitness training. In school examinations, too, going over the work is key, and brings its own rewards.

I recall a time when I first began to take singing lessons and found myself participating in a local comeptition. I was a complete amateur in an open adult class in which everyone was expected to perform the same song. It was my first public solo performance, and I was very apprehensive. My husband and I prayed together, as we'd done for our three daughters, who'd participated successfully in the dance, drama, and music sections of the same festival. And we were strengthened by the knowledge that prayer in Christian Science "enhances (one's) endurance and mental powers" and gives one "an ability to exceed (one's) ordinary capacity" (Science and Health, p.128).

I felt calm, and was aware of the comforting presence of divine Love. By the time I opened by mouth to sing in front of a large audience in a lofty hall, my fear had melted and, surprisingly, I enjoyed the whole experience. I'd made a massive leap forward in confidence and in understanding more of God's ever-presence and power.

I was grateful that in the adjudication I received a good mark that compared favourably with the marks obtained by more experienced singers.

From then on, my confidence and ability to speak and perform in public developed by leaps and bounds, and I never looked back. I can't help thinking of a hymn by Irving Tomlinson in which he wrote, "As stars in their courses never contend,/ ...So God's loving children in concord remain" (Science and Health Hymnal, No. 236). For me, that confirms that no one can take from any "star" his or her ability to shine and succeed in any challenge, be it a job application, the purchase of a home, or a pbulic performance in any sphere.

In effect, there really is no competition in any endeavour except with our belief in our own ability. Understanding God's unfailing presence and power, we can shine like stars wherever we place on the finishing line. The joy of participation transcends any fierce determination to be first past the post. Our love for the activity of expressing God's goodness is its own reward. Nothing can stop us from doing our best for Him - at all times!

Heather Hayward is a Christian Science prectitioner and teacher. She teaches in London, and divides her time between London and Hampshire, England.

Monday 16 April 2012

Man up to real Manhood

TMC Youth's website, time4thinkers.com recently featured this article as a blog.
BY GORDON MYERS

A shirtless model on a billboard. A bumbling loser in a sitcom. A callous businessman, or the suave guy who gets all the girls. If you ask the media, this what manhood looks like in the 21st century: cool, powerful, and ruthless, or stupid, hapless and helpless.

You might roll your eyes and say, Yeah, but the media stereotypes women, too.  What's the big deal?  Well, the big deal is that stereotypes of any kind limit and undermine. And we're seeing the effects of that: While women's education rates continue to improve, each year we see a disproportionate decrease in the percentage of boys who graduate from high school and attend college. Also, young boys are four times more likely to be prescribed "sit still" medications such as Ritalin and Adderall.  Worst of all, world suicide rates showcase a whopping 80 to 90 percent of all suicides are committed by men.

While I'm not blaming the media for the problems men are facing, these statistics have definitely made me take notice. I don't want to stand by as either gender is forced into a certain box or made to feel unworthy.

So what's a spiritual thinker to do? For me, the starting point with this problem - as with any challenge I face - is God. In Science and Health, Mary Baker Eddy defined God as Father-Mother - that is, as incorporating and expressing both tradtionally masculine and traditionally feminine qualities. In other words, both the male and female are necessary. Both types of qualities are worthy because they originate in God. And in spite of society's contention that men and women are from different planets, the nature of God as Father-Mother unifies the masculine and feminine. Instead of the genders being at war, in God we find complete harmony between "male" qualities and "female" qualities.

All that might sound a little "out there" given the things we see in our own offices or communities. But we have to start somewhere. "What is the model before mortal mind?" Mary Baker Eddy asked in Science and Health. "Is it imperfection, joy, sorrow, sin, suffering?...Do you not hear from all mankind of the imperfect model? The world is holding it before your gaze continually. The result is that you are liable to follow those lower patterns, limit your life-work, and adopt into your expereince the angular outline and deformity of matter models" (pg248).

You could think of that passage another way: What you see is what you get. Right now, the "model before mortal mind" is a pretty bleak picture of manhood. And right now, that's definitely what we're seeing play out. Politicians who are unfaithful. Or inept guys who can't even boil a pot of water without help from their female counterparts.

The good news is that changing begins with each of us. It begins with our individual models -  the version of manhood we choose to embrace, and the version we choose to hold to, no matter what the rest of the world is offering up. Here's one version according to Eddy: "The ideal man corresponds to creation, to intelligence, and to Truth" (Science and Health,pg517).

As a guy, I love this definition - and not because I think it means that I have a corner on these qualities! What it tells me is that manhood cannot be obsolete or undervalued, because it's a part of God's character. And this definition of manhood sets a positive standard for masculinity. Intelligence, creativity, productivity, and honesty (or commitment to Truth) are masculine qualities, and as I express those qualities more purely, I'm expressing my masculinity.

Does this mean that only men are smart, creative, and honest, while women are not? Of course not! In the same way, Eddy followed that passage up by saying, "The ideal woman corresponds to Life and to Love". Does that mean that women are livley, energetic, social, caring, nurturing, and loving, but men are not? Again: No! We each incorporate both sets of these qualities in our complete expression. But you  could say that if I'm expressing nurturing qualities, or loving ones, I'm expressing my womanhood. And that's OK! Guys can express womanhood and women can express manhood. That's the beauty of those qualities being united in God.

In Christian Science we learn that men and women are not created as two incomplete halves of a whole, but rather as the full expression of divine goodness and Love, already complete and perfect. Eddy wrote, "The masculine mind reaches a higher tone through certain elements of the feminine, while the feminine mind gains courage and strength through masculine qualities (Science and Health, pg57).

How do we conquer the stereotypes that threaten to divide and demean us? As that passage reminds us, by being undivided ourselves. Each of us has the right to claim and express our manhood and womanhood. And as we let our own light shine brighter, that naturally helps free those around us from anything that would inhibit their complete individuality. That model of unified manhood and womanhood can and must bless men and women alike - and our our world at large.

Goordon Myers is a Web developer in Madison, Wisconsin, USA

Sunday 18 March 2012

Prayers for Syria

I had the privilege of travelling to the beautiful, ancient city of Homs several years ago, loving its Roman waterwheel, still turning, and the gentle way its residents milled in the city centre, greeting friends, engaging in conversations over outdoor cafes - all the ways you would expect to see people enjoy a sunny day.
Now a tragic picture is unfolding. Protests against the authoritarian regime of Bashar al-Assad are being violently suppressed by government forces.  Secret pictures and videos smuggled out in the most difficult of circumstances document this.  Shelling of the city has killed hundreds of Syrians.  At least four journalists have been among the dead.  Only by the end of the week were the wounded allowed to be evacuated.
What can those of us far away from the violence do to help?  We can pray deeply to know that even in such war-torn circumstances, God's law of divine Love is protecting its creation.  The founder of the Monitor, Mary Baker Eddy, wrote in her book "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures", what the action of God - also called Truth, Life and Love -  is doing in spite of what the senses see: "Truth has no consciousness of error.  Love has no sense of hatred.  Life has no partnership with death. Truth, Life and Love are a law of annihilation to everything unlike themselves, because they declare nothing except God" (p 243).
Just as light annihilates darkness effortlessly, by being itself, the truth destroys a lie once it has been exposed.  The lie here is that individuals are motivated by such ambition, brutality, and cruelty that they will go to any length to protect their own position.  The truth is that God is ever in control, and God's sons and daughters can never be out from under the protection of this divine Love.  Why?  Because each one is made in the very image and likeness of God, as the first chapter in Genesis declares: "And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness..." (1:26).
The implications of being the image of divine Love, God, are true for every single one of us.  That means that a regime that looks determined to stay in power is also ultimately subject to this government, as well as those who appear to be the victims of such an imbalance of military strength.
The writer of Hebrews makes an astounding observation that has the feel of an eye-witness who has experienced the truth which he describes: "For the word of God is alive and powerful.  It is sharper than the sharpest two-edged sword, cutting between soul and spirit, between joint and marrow.  It exposes our innermost thoughts and desires.  Nothing in all creation is hidden from God.  Everything is naked and exposed before his eyes, and he is the one to whom we are accountable" (Hebrews 4:12,13 New Living Translation).
Government representatives may try to reason with the Assad regime, but only God, infinite Mind, can provide the kind of searing truth that cuts through all beliefs and goes to the deepest core - to the heart - that deeply knows what is the difference between right and wrong.  Nothing can interfere with the laserlike reach of infinite Mind, God.  Nothing can resist the power of light to illumine the dark corners of thought that need transforming.
God, divine Love, is operating right now in Homs, as it is in other trouble spots in the world, bringing protection and safety to its citizens and making the way clear for its government to resolve whatever needs resolution to return to a life of peace for its citizens.  God is in charge, regardless of what the headlines claim.

The Christian Science Monitor
'Prayers for Homs'
by Madelon Maupin / February 29, 2012

Wednesday 15 February 2012

Finding Solutions to Our Daily Shortages

With shortages seeming to be everywhere - in our own personal finances and employment, as well as our national, even global resources, it's easy to feel overwhelmed and afraid.  But there are practical solutions that many people are using to meet their immediate needs - spiritual solutions.  Read an article that shows how a family accessed these unlimited sources, that can't be taken from us no many what the economic environment.

Supply and demand - perfectly synchronized
by Janet  Clements

Unexpected expenditures for the month - and for the foreseeable future - were putting pressure on the house budget. As I calculated my income and my outgoings, I frantically realized that I could no longer be a stay-at-home mum. I needed a job yesterday! Before the children came along, I worked full-time as a graphic designer, but put my career on hold to raise my family.

I had to find an employer who could use my skills and coordinate with the hours that my two small children were at school. My needs were specific and I didn't know where to find that perfect fit. My initial reaction - to panic and start a frantic job search - was tempered with the idea to quiet my thought through prayer.

Right away I was filled with gratitude. I recalled a time when my husband and I had only $25 left in our bank account. He had been laid off from work and we were expecting our first child. He'd been looking for a new position for weeks and hadn't found anything. We had just enough money for some groceries.

With other bills to pay and the extra expense of  new baby on the horizon, the situation looked bleak.  As we prayed, we both saw that my husband had a wonderful supply of skills and good work ethics. All these qualities had their source in God, good. Not only does God impart good to man (meaning both men and women) but through His law, He also unfolds opportunities to express that goodness constructively.

Mary Baker Eddy wrote about thin in Science and Health: "Spirit, God, gathers unformed thoughts into their proper channels, and unfolds these thoughts, even as He opens the petals of a holy purpose in order that the purpose may appear."

Knowing that man is never separated from opportunities to express God, my husband was guided to go to his university's outplacement office, where he saw a posting for a job that fitted his experience and abilities. Within days he was working at his new job.

As I remembered this experience, I asked myself, "Isn't that same law of supply and demand in operation for me now? If the need is now, the supply is now; such is the nature of divine Love."

I saw that all the skills and qualities that I express are really evidence of divine supply. This supply is the open handed, spontaneous abundance of God's love graciously pouring forth goodness. Love's bounty is as continual as a flowing river. It is the nature of divine Love to provide everything needed for our well-being, and this includes useful productivity.

I understood that demand isn't depletion, but rather proof that all the infinite goodness that divine Love is pouring forth has a purpose and is appreciated and utilized. so all the qualities that God gives me to express are needed and useful.

Because supply and demand are both of God, Principle, they have to be in perfect balance. There can't be a supply without a demand or a demand without a supply.

The Bible says it so well: "For I mean not that other men be eased, and ye burdened: But by an equality, that is at this time your abundance may be a supply for their want, that their abundance also may be a supply for your want: that there my be equality."

How beautifullly supply and demand are perfectly synchronized by God's law! As I prayed further, I saw that finding the right job didn't need to be circuitous. There was no need for wasted motions of running here and there looking for work.

Armed with joyous gratitude that I would be appropriated directed, and that both supply and demand are of God and in perfect balance in my life, I felt ready to go forward in the job search.

I made only one call, to a published company. They said they weren't really looking for anyone with my skills, but would be happy to look at my portfolio of work just the saem, if I wanted to go in the next day.

This was the one company I was guided to call - and they weren't hiring. I was tempted to doubt the direction been given as the result of prayer, but instead said, "Yes, I'll be there tomorrow". I had enough trust in God to follow through.

When I arrived the next day, there had been a company-wide meeting just a few hours before, in which a major restructuring was announced. Looking at my portfolio and seeing that I had experience in many areas, they said I was the perfect fit for a position that had just been created. In fact they needed my skills right away.

This was a beautiful proof that there is a divine, omniscient Mind overseeing, uniting, and synchronizing every aspect of being into one concordant whole that blesses all. 

The spiritual facts that guided me to that position are just as relevant for you and your loved ones. For now and always, the power and force of divine Love synchronizes supply and demand in such an all-encompassing way that each of us - you, me, everyone - is productive, fully supplied, and infinitely blessed.

from
 http://www.spirituality.com/
or contact Christian Science Reading Room Wollongong
csrr.wgong@1earth.net

Friday 13 January 2012

Bullying - finding practical, spiritual solutions

Not only children experience bullying, but many adults have also found themselve facing this distressing situation. Are there practical solutions that don't involve resorting to reciprocated aggression and violence?  Absolutely, many people have found spirituality and prayer powerful weapons to arrest and solve this evil situation.

Lois Carlson, a teacher and practitioner of Christian Science in Chicago, Illinois, was the guest on this Sentinel chat called, "A spiritual defense against bullying." Lois has been in the full-time healing ministry of Christian Science since 1975, and has been a Christian Science teacher since 1991. 

FROM TAIWAN:  Kids are calling me something I really don't like, and sometimes I'm frozen with anger and left feeling deeply humiliated.  How do I pray about this?

LOIS:  You've helped us to idenify what bullying is - it's when somebody does or says something to you that makes you feel like you can't be yourself, and being afraid almost makes you feel like you're paralyzed.  The great thing I can assure you of is that right in the middle of the fire is a voice inside you, telling you that you are loved and you are safe, and that you are worth being known.

When somebody calls us something, or exaggerates some part of our body, or says things that are just so contrary to our spiritual nature as children of God, the good thing is that it doesn't change our spiritual nature.  We're still just as lovely to God, just as good and useful.  It is important that you pray about it before this happens again-if it happens again, since I would love to think that it could be stopped in its tracks right now.  When you pray about it, either before or after, ask God to help you hear His voice, because when God created you, He didn't just let you go like you were some balloon floating off into the atmosphere.  God holds on to you, and nobody can change who you are by saying something ugly about you.

NO LOCATION:  As a young girl I was bullied relentlessly at shcool.  Now, many years later I have a happy active life.  However, at times I still feel bullied-especially by other women.  I have a young daughter and wish to protect both of us from these attacks that seem to be so prevalent and even acceptable among women.

LOIS:  Your good life gives us assurance that the effects of bullying can be neutralized.  This bad, manipulative behaviour is really the exact counterfeit of a true sense of womanhood, which comes from God's great mothering.  Think of qualities like patience and intuition, of steadfast love, of nurturing care.  These are a very sharp conterfact to the aggression and belittling that we associate with bullying.

Painful periods in our lives will yield to the reality of God and His kingdom, which upholds and enforces creation in a way that we can understand.  Our Father-Mother God, the creator of the universe, never leaves us alone, never leaves us subject to the limitations and hatred of the carnal mind.

FROM GERMAN:  There are situations in which there seems to be a legitimate form of bullying.  For example, many superiors think they have the right to treat other employees disrespetfully.

LOIS:  That aggressive nature is not natural to man.  Man's purity, his goodness, his ability to love, can't be canceled.  And when I say "man", I'm referring to both men and women.  Just as we want the victim of bullying to know that something else is going on for himself, to protect him from attack, so we want the attacker to know that there's something better going on, so they don't have to act out the attack.

It's agony to be mean - it's agony to act in a way that's foreign to your own spiritual nature.  It's just like any other form of sensuality - it feels so entrapping because it makes you feel finite, when you've actually been designed to be this infinite expression.

FROM CHICAGO:  I've been picked on, insulted, and made fun of all my life.  How do I get my self-esteem back?

LOIS:  You have a right to revive your life according to the good that has happened.  A friend of mine who's a beekeeper old me that one worker bee only produces one-twelfth of a teaspoon of honey.  The tendency is to belittle what we do, and the good news is that you don't get your thoughts about yourself from other people - you get your thoughts from the majesty of God's love for you.

It's a very powerful prayer to ask God to teach you to know yourself the way He knows you, because He doesn't see you in terms of the cruelty.  He sees you in terms of your authority over the cruelty.  The tiny bits of good in your life are actually aligned to the divine Principle of all good, and that's what enables you to make your contribution to society, even if it's very modest.  It's just like, every raindrop counts, every ray of light counts, every bee contributes to the jar of honey!

To listen to the entire chat, go to cssentinel.com/chats/bullyingdefense.

This is an important topic that needs healing both for the individuals suffering from its effects and for society as a whole. We'd love to hear about your ideas on peaceful, healing solutions to bullying.