Archive for the ‘Thought’ Category

Love: The Best Response of All   2 comments

In times of conflict and division these words from Love: the Best Response of All by Barsom Kashish published in the Christian Science Sentinel (May 19, 1986 issue) are a guide for our prayers and actions.

From the life of our Master, Christ Jesus, and from all Christian experience, we know that truly effective love has its source and gathers its power from divine Love—the Love that knows no opposite because it is the Love that is God. Living this Love in the face of obvious injustice isn’t easy. It requires wisdom, discernment, and even spiritual “toughness” at times. But the willingness to persist in loving brings into human experience a transforming factor that simply can’t be assimilated in the world’s terms.

The article quotes Mary Baker Eddy as saying: Each day I pray: God bless my enemies; make them Thy friends; give them to know the joy and the peace of love. (Miscellany 220: 21)

Fulful ye my joy, that ye be likeminded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind. Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves. (The Bible – Philippians 2: 2,3)

Unselfishness   1 comment

Unselfishness, purity, and affection are constant prayers.

(Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy p15:26)

The Importance of Our Thoughts   2 comments

Hold thought steadfastly to the enduring, the good, and the true, and you will bring these into your experience proportionably to their occupancy of your thoughts.

(Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy p261:4)

Your Influence for Good   Leave a comment

People calling themselves influencers seem to proliferate on social media nowadays.  A quick Google search revealed that they are often people who have come to prominence because of their particular skills.  Some were wildlife ‘warriors’, some were sports people, some musicians, and some seemed to be famous just for being famous.  There were many!

This started me thinking about what it means to be an influencer.  Are we not all influencers in some respect?  When my son was in primary school, each year he was seated next to classmates who found listening to instructions and staying on task difficult.  The idea was that my son, who was a steady and capable worker, would be a good influence on his desk-mate.   I asked him if he minded this.  He said that if he could help someone else achieve more or be more successful, then he was happy to do this.

When I thought more about this, I realised that all of us are exerting an influence in some form.  I ask myself:  Am I, like my son, accepting that the way I handle life can be an influence for good?  

In our day-to-day lives dealing with routine tasks at work, in the family or the community our actions are not neutral.  We are always contributing to the mental atmosphere for better or for worse.  The way we handle situations that seem not to go smoothly can have a big impact on those around us.  Our response when we think someone has acted thoughtlessly, or has inconvenienced us, influences the mental atmosphere.  If we meet each of these situations with grace, compassion, forgiveness, generosity then we have been an influencer for good.

Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of Christian Science writes:  Your influence for good depends upon the weight you throw into the right scale.  The good you do and embody gives you the only power obtainable.  (p192 Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures).  This is an hourly – even a moment by moment – demand on each of us.  This is how we too can be real influencers for good.

Contributed by a member of the Canberra Christian Science community. 

Love One Another   2 comments

Put on therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering;

Forbearing one another, and forgiving one another, if any man have a quarrel against any: even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye.

And above all these things put on charity, which is the bond of perfectness.

(The Bible KJV – I Colossians 3: 12-14)

True Motives   1 comment

(Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy p326:20-21)

Are You Buying It   Leave a comment

An article by Jenny Sawyer published in the January 27, 2020 issue of the Christian Science Sentinel.

The girl on my Instagram story was eating a special brand of crackers, and I was intrigued—not so much by the crackers, but by her toned physique and apparently charmed existence. On my next trip to the grocery store, I got a box of these crackers for myself. And when I ripped open the package to try them, I had to admit they were good … but they didn’t give me the girl’s “perfect” life.

Because really, on some level, that’s why I’d bought the crackers: I wanted to believe that following in that girl’s footsteps might get me just a little more of what she had—and what I didn’t. Of course, I knew rationally that eating the same food as some girl on social media wasn’t going to give me the life I was imagining. Yet  … Click here to continue reading, or to listen to, this article.

I Found Joy Again   Leave a comment

A few years ago, I heard something disturbing on the radio here in Singapore, where I live. Someone shared a scary experience they had been through, and the details frightened me. I didn’t know what to think. I was feeling overwhelmed by thoughts about what I’d heard, and my happiness started to fade. These feelings even affected my schoolwork. I decided to pray because I knew prayer could help me.

I started thinking about where my happiness comes from. (Click here to continue reading or to listen to this testimony.)

Finding Peace   1 comment

More Thoughts on Prayer   Leave a comment

Whether you call it prayer or not, probably all of us at some time withdraw to that quiet place within to look for answers to life’s challenges.  For me this is prayer.

When you go to that quiet place do you find answers?  I’ve been thinking a lot about why sometimes I do get answers, and other times not.  What I have noticed is that when I am willing to be humble and to put personal wishes and desires aside, I am more receptive to new ideas.  This makes sense to me.

What I have also noticed is that when I lift my thought above the problem to a higher, larger, more spiritual perspective then solutions are found.

I have an analogy that helps me to lift my thought in times of trouble.  It goes like this. 

A man is canoeing on the ocean not far from the beach.  It is a beautiful day and he ventures out further.  Without warning a dense fog rolls in and he can hardly see to the end of his canoe.  Soon he loses his orientation to the beach.  He becomes fearful and wonders, is he heading to the beach and safety, or to the rocks or even to the open ocean?  He can’t tell.  He sits still and prays.  Quickly the thought comes to him to stand up.  It’s too dangerous to stand up in this little canoe he reasons, so he prays again.  Again he gets the message to stand up.  Three times he asks and three times he has this strong feeling that he should stand up.  Eventually he obeys.  As he stands up he realises that it is only a low-lying band of fog that is not much above his head when he is sitting down.  Now standing up he is in the full sunshine; the beach is clearly in view.  He sits down, spins the canoe around and heads safely to the beach.  The fear is gone because he has a clear direction.

For me the fog represents the details of the human situation that is challenging me.  The sunshine represents the spiritual ideas that are always available to give us a sense of direction.  Nowadays I ask myself:  Are you examining the fog? Am I going over the details of the situation that seems troubling? 

Answers are not to be found by lamenting the fog.  Answers come when we are aware of the good that already exists and celebrate this.  This encourages the state of mind that is receptive.  Sometimes there are solutions that we never expected.

This article was contributed by a member of the Christian Science community in Canberra.