I have now finished the whole book (Mary Baker Eddy by Gillian Gill), including all the end stuff. I have noted a few things which I may be able to comment on. I’ll start from the back.
Peel
The very last paragraph of the Notes refers
to Robert Peel. Gill writes:
It is hard to overestimate the debt I owe Robert Peel in my own
research and understanding of Mrs. Eddy. This is especially true of the first
two volumes, which cover Mrs. Eddy’s life up to 1892. The third volume,
although the longest of the three, and the one dealing with the movement
correspondence and official documentation which I myself had least access to,
is also the least satisfying, the most guarded. I found myself consulting
Peel Authority in vain for information I knew the author must
have had, and it seemed to me that Peel was increasingly being obliged to toe
some invisible party line.
p. 700
This is so interesting
because Authority is the one most valuable, the most
spiritual, in my opinion, to the student of Christian Science. My copy is
falling to pieces.
[Ed. I am reminded of the
statement in Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by
Mary Baker Eddy, p. 343: 6: "Is not finite mind ignorant of God's
method?"]
Note to parents
In light of the current
pandemic situation there is an interesting note which tells of Mrs. Eddy’s son
George refusing to have his son Andrew vaccinated. I gather he thought this was
the Christian Science way, but Mrs. Eddy wrote to the parents, “But if it were
my child, I should let them vaccinate him and then with Christian Science I
would prevent its harming the health of my child” p. 684.23.
Gill's
perspective
Re care of children. The
author (Gillian Gill) gives her perspective:
... the Christian Scientists I have met in the course of my
research seem to have their children given routine injections, follow careful
and sensible preventative health-care strategies, take their children to
traditional doctors in critical situations, and resort only in extreme
emergencies to surgical procedures and medications such as painkillers and
antibiotics. This seems to me a stoic but not unenlightened policy which many
traditional physicians would endorse.
p. 678.12
Calvin
Frye diary note
Calvin Frye recorded in his
diary in October 1893:
Mrs.
Eddy’s charge to Mrs Monroe and myself.
The first thing in the morning call on God to deliver you from
temptation and help you to be awake. Then do your chores, not as a dreary
hashish eater but with a clear sense of what to do and just how to do it.
Then sit down and first
get yourself into a consciousness of your power with God and then take up the
outside watch. Sit until this is clear if 2 hours.
p. 693.18
Demonstration
and understanding
As I read Gillian Gill’s
biography of Mary Baker Eddy, I was reminded that Mrs. Eddy says that Christian
Science is not understood until demonstrated. “We must recollect that Truth is
demonstrable when understood, and that good is not understood until
demonstrated” (Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary
Baker Eddy, p. 323:14–16). So, Gill does not speak at length about the Science;
after all the biography is of Mrs. Eddy as a person, and what science can be
understood by one who doesn’t study and demonstrate it?
Capitalisation
One of the first things I
noticed about the text of the book was the way “The Mother Church” was
capitalised. In a majority of cases, “the” is lower-case, but there are some
instances where it is capitalised, as Mrs. Eddy directed it should be*. I
wonder if this is typist’s error or a deliberate intention of the author.
*Manual of The Mother Church, Mary Baker Eddy, p. 70:21-- Titles. Sect. 2. “The First
Church of Christ, Scientist,” is the legal title of The Mother Church. Branch
churches of The Mother Church may take the title of First Church of Christ,
Scientist; Second Church of Christ, Scientist; and so on, where more than one
church is established in the same place; but the article “The” must not be used
before titles of branch churches, nor written on applications for membership in
naming such churches.
Building
The Mother Church
I
found the author’s synopsis of the building of the Original Mother Church to be
even more exciting that Joseph Armstrong’s in his book Building of The
Mother Church.
Mrs.
Eddy
I find
it gratifying that she doesn’t just use “Eddy” in referring to her subject. She
always has “Mrs. Eddy.”
Joyce Voysey
No comments:
Post a Comment