Archive for the ‘Thought’ Category

Rightness with God   Leave a comment

(Bible KJV – Isaiah 32: 17)

To Have a Sound Mind   1 comment

(The Bible KJV – II Timothy 1: 7)

Love Not the World   Leave a comment

Hate No One   2 comments

Hate no one; for hatred is a plague-spot that spreads its virus and kills at last. If indulged, it masters us; brings suffering upon suffering to its possessor, through‐out time and beyond the grave. If you have been badly wronged, forgive and forget: God will recompense this wrong, and punish, more severely than you could, him who has striven to injure you. Never return evil for evil; and, above all, do not fancy that you have been wronged when you have not been.

(Miscellaneous Writings – Love Your Enemies p12 by Mary Baker Eddy)

Finding Peace   1 comment

Spiritual living and blessedness are the only evidences, by which we can recognize true existence and feel the unspeakable peace which comes from an all-absorbing spiritual love.

(Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy p264)

Our Purpose – Spiritual   Leave a comment

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.

(Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy p506)

Thinking Spiritually   Leave a comment

And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.

(The Bible KJV – Romans 12: 2)

The Songbird Sings Before the Dawn   Leave a comment

Recently I started reading a book by Christian Science practitioner Myrtle Smith.  The book is titled “The Songbird Sings Before the Dawn” and has three parts to it.  The first part is about Gratitude, the second is concerned with Angels and the third part is called The Practice.

Within the Gratitude section she makes mention of how much we can be grateful for; how much we can be thankful for.  Some of the simple things – our privacy, our education, our thoughtful neighbours and friends, the simple act of being able to set the table for a meal.

She also relates a story of a meeting with another practitioner who had asked a person he was working with to make a list each day of the things they could be grateful for and to send it to him each day.  The next day he received a letter with a 16 page gratitude list.

I have taken that suggestion and have started to write each day some of the things for which I am grateful.  My daily list doesn’t run to 16 pages, but in doing so it is making me more considered and grateful for what I have.  While I might not have been ungrateful for what I have I do recognise I have been remiss in not acknowledging and giving thanks for the good in my life.

Myrtle Smith also makes mention of Peter Henniker-Heaton, a man who had been discharged from the army when his legs became paralysed.  His healing took ten years.  When he was finally out on his own walking on crutches he met a man on a bus and the conversation turned to being grateful.  The apparently somewhat grumpy man said to Peter Henniker-Heaton he (Henniker-Heaton) must be grateful to be here, to which Henniker-Heaton responded “No, I am here because I was grateful.”

I am not losing anything in my life by taking time to show a bit more gratitude.  I am not losing anything in my life by being a bit more thoughtful and considered and giving thanks.

In the preface of Science and Health With Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy she states “To those leaning on the sustaining infinite, to-day is big with blessings.” (Page vii line 1).

It is in this spirit of ‘Leaning on the sustaining infinite’ and acknowledging the origin of all the blessings that I am giving more than passing or mere lip service to, and gratitude for, all that is in my life.

***

The lecture by Myrtle Smith titled: The Power of Thanksgiving – The Songbird Sings Before the Dawn can be listened to here.

Spiritual Progress   2 comments

Every step towards goodness is a departure from materiality, and is a tendency towards God, Spirit.

(Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy p213)

Ageless Beauty   Leave a comment

2023 has now slid into 2024.  Before long we will be planning for 2025. Sometimes it seems that the years slip by more and more quickly and as every year goes by, we add another unit to our age.  For each stage in life there seem to be expectations for health, behaviour and appearance.  Don’t we talk about the terrible twos or stroppy teenagers?  How often do you hear people of advanced years say, when talking about their health: ‘What can you expect at my age?’ 

I was looking at an old black and white photo of my mum the other day. I guess she would have been in her early twenties, so the photo was taken over seventy years ago.  As a young woman my mum was very lovely. She had a special grace about her that made you want to look longer.

I began to think, if she was around today looking like that you would still have to say she was beautiful, but she wouldn’t fit today’s standards of beauty. Her skin was whiter, her body fleshier, her hair contrived into curls and she wore a pretty frock. Standards of beauty change.  This set me to thinking about what beauty really is. In each era fashion seems to give us strict dictates as to what the ideal look is – how tanned our skin should be, how lean our body, even the shape of our eyebrows.  Not many of us fit that ideal model. So does this mean that we are not beautiful? If we do fit those standards, are we only beautiful for a short while? Does age diminish true beauty?  Our society is currently quite preoccupied with youthfulness but true youthfulness is not defined by our age but by the youthful qualities we express.

My mother knew the impact that thought has on experience.  To the end she was a strong, healthy, active woman.  The qualities people saw in her – intelligence, calmness and strength in the face of trouble, joy at the little things, devotion to family and friends, innocence, resilience, energy – these qualities shone out of her right to the last. They were the qualities that people mentioned when they commented on how lovely my mother was.

Mary Baker Eddy, one of the first women to investigate thoroughly the connection between consciousness and experience, writes in her book, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures (p208): You embrace your body in your thought, and you should delineate upon it thoughts of health, not of sickness.  Perhaps if we put as much thought and effort into developing beautiful qualities of Mind as we do our outward appearance our beauty and health would be less ephemeral and blossom with the passing years.