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Sunday, 1 March 2026

A letter about accomplishment

I never fail to be touched by accounts of the life of Mary Baker Eddy. 

The Foreword to Twelve Years with Mary Baker Eddy concludes with an excerpt from a letter by Mrs. Eddy to the author, Reverend Irving C. Tomlinson.

She wrote: "The little that I have accomplished has all be done through love, --self-forgetful, patient, unfaltering tenderness."

The letter now appears in Miscellany, page 247 under the heading "To a First Reader".

Julie Swannell   

Saturday, 28 February 2026

Needs met

This is probably the last word for this blog about The Sermon on the Mount. A brief word!

I read through Matthew chapters 6 and 7.

I was left with the impression that I was being told how to pray and how to accomplish tasks and receive rewards: things, fruits, benefits, have needs met. And the way to get rewards and create harmony and peace is to KNOW that we are already in the Kingdom of Heaven and include all good, and only good.

Is not Jesus’ gift of the Lord’s Prayer the promise that our needs are being met? He said “...your Father knoweth what things ye have need of, before ye ask him” (Matt. 6:8).

Joyce Voysey

Ed. I came across an article called SpiritualReward by Ruth Wesler in the Christian Science Sentinel April 10, 1937. Here's an excerpt:

Through the good we know and do our names are written in heaven… The consciousness of having done right is a wondrous reward for being about the Father's business... Spiritual rewards are free to all, yet they must be earned. Mrs. Eddy, who so dearly earned and richly received her spiritual reward, has written, on page 342 of Miscellaneous Writings: "Seek Truth, and pursue it. It should cost you something: you are willing to pay for error and receive nothing in return; but if you pay the price of Truth, you shall receive all."


Friday, 27 February 2026

Build on the rock

February has been our month to review the Sermon on the Mount, viz. Matthew chapters 5 - 7.

Well here we are at the end of February (also marking the official end of summer here in Australia) and we haven't even talked about chapters 6 and 7! 

I've just read them in my copy of the Living Bible

Jesus' teachings are direct, practical, wise, and reassuring. They are our gold standard. Maybe we are still amazed at this sermon, as were the original listeners. It is recorded that he spoke with "great authority, and not as their Jewish leaders" (Matt. 7: 28 TLB).

Here's a passage that stopped me in my tracks this evening. Matt. 7: 24-25 - "All those who listen to my instructions and follow them are wise, like a man who builds his house on solid rock. Though the rain comes in torrents, and the floods rise and the storm winds beat against his house, it won't collapse, for it is built on rock."

Now, we know that Jesus gave Simon the new name of Peter after he impetuously speaks up and identifies Jesus as "the Christ, the Messiah, the Son of the living God" (Matt. 16: 16 TLB).  He says: "You are Peter, a stone; and upon this rock I will build my church..." (Matt. 16: 18 TLB). 

In her textbook of Christian Science, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, Mary Baker Eddy tells us that "rock" stands for "Spiritual foundation; Truth" (SH 583)*. This hints at how we might build our lives on solid ground and thus avoid being blown off course when winds blow.

Readers will want to pull out their Concordances or open up the indispensable online Concord to study references to this mighty sermon in Mrs. Eddy's writings. Here are just a few to get us started: 


The first lessons of the children should be the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20: 3–17), the Lord’s Prayer (Matt. 6: 9–13), and its Spiritual Interpretation by Mary Baker Eddy, Sermon on the Mount (Matt. 5: 3–12).
(Man. 62:24–4 The)

Every man and woman should be to-day a law to himself, herself, — a law of loyalty to Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount.
(Mis. 12:12–14)

No purer and more exalted teachings ever fell upon human ears than those contained in what is commonly known as the Sermon on the Mount, — though this name has been given it by compilers and translators of the Bible, and not by the Master himself or by the Scripture authors.
(Ret. 91:5–10)

Genuine Christian Scientists will no more deviate morally from that divine digest of Science called the Sermon on the Mount, than they will manipulate invalids, prescribe drugs, or deny God.
(Rud. 3:14–17)

To my sense the Sermon on the Mount, read each Sunday without comment and obeyed throughout the week, would be enough for Christian practice.
('01 11:16–19)

Julie Swannell

*The whole definition reads: ROCK. Spiritual foundation; Truth. Coldness and stubbornness. (SH 583)



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