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Wednesday, 29 January 2025

Peel's dual perspective

Earlier in the month I got somewhat bogged down over a passage on page 49 of Robert Peel's Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Trial where he writes about “her ‘absolute’ metaphysics and her ‘relative’ psychology".*

I searched for the derivation etc. of psychology, took in Mrs. Eddy’s definitions of the term, and noted the definitions of ontology and theodicy.

The fog of it all was cleared through this sentence from the current Bible Lesson in the Christian Science Quarterly:

If God, the All-in-all, be the creator of the spiritual universe, including man, then everything entitled to a classification as truth, or Science, must be comprised in a knowledge or understanding of God, for there can be nothing beyond illimitable divinity.” (Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy, p. 127:4).

Further clarification came from an article titled “True Psychology” by Nathan Talbot, a one-time editor of the Christian Science periodicals. See Christian Science Sentinel 31st May, 1975.

Through it all, I discovered that the numbering system for the end-notes in the 1st edition of Peel’s book differs from the numbering system adopted for the footnotes which appear in this new, 2nd edition. I feel sure this is explained somewhere but I couldn’t find it in this book. Perhaps it appears in the previous book Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery.**

Speaking of author Robert Peel in the Foreword to the 2nd edition, Thomas Johnsen says,

A devoted Christian Scientist, he brought to his work the insights of this dual perspective, concerned not only with representing the theology of Christian Science correctly but also committed to addressing fully the skeptical questions raised by thoughtful outsiders. (Trial, p. xi-xii)

Now back to my current reading of the text. On p. 64 Peel had a gem for me about Mrs. Eddy’s use of the terms “mortal mind” and “divine Mind”. Commenting on the publication of the 2nd (“Ark”) edition of Science and Health in 1878, Peel writes:

For the first time she clearly and repeatedly defined God as Mind, as well as Soul, Spirit, Life, Truth, Love, and Principle. As a correlative step she began to substitute the term “mortal mind” for “personal sense,” though not abandoning the latter phrase altogether. Previously she had tended to use “mind” in a neutral sense which permitted it to be identified either with spiritual reality or with material appearances. Now she drew a clear distinction between “divine Mind” and “mortal mind,” not merely as two modes of thinking (a true and a false) but as two antithetical starting points (an infinite intelligence and a self-destructive ignorance).   [My underlining.]

Joyce Voysey

*Ed. Here is the whole paragraph –

               It has sometimes been said that Mrs. Eddy ruled Satan out of her metaphysics only to let him back through the doctrine of “aggressive mental suggestion” or “malicious animal magnetism.” It would be more exact to draw a distinction between her “absolute” metaphysics and her “relative” psychology". In the realm of absolute Truth, evil was absolutely powerless; in the human situation it had only as much power as belief gave it, in somewhat the same way that a mathematical error had power to produce wrong results only so long as it remained undetected and uncorrected.

**Ed. This might be helpful: The Publisher’s Note (pp. vii – ix) explains that the “first edition’s placement of these notes in a back section rendered them invisible to some readers and difficult to locate for those wishing to engage with their rich content. … The substantive material contained in the notes has been left in place… Additions deemed useful for the current edition are enclosed in brackets; these consist chiefly of new citations not found in the original.”

Her tread was as light as air.

It's 1878. In February of that year, Thomas Edison had been granted the copyright of his invention, the phonograph. 

In November, the "smartly dressed" (p. 84, 2nd edition Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Trial by Robert Peel) Mary Baker Eddy lectured at the Baptist Tabernacle in Boston, even though unprecedented difficulties assailed her. Robert Peel records that while "unhappy court cases dragged on", she "spoke with ... buoyant conviction" which attracted many newcomers. One later observer remarked that "Though she walked over thorns, her tread was as light as air" (ibid).

In her pamphlet No and Yes, she would write (p. 27: 23-26): 

"Who can say what the absolute personality of God or man is? Who living hath seen God or a perfect man? In presence of such thoughts take off thy shoes and tread lightly, for this is holy ground."

Julie Swannell


Thursday, 16 January 2025

Times of crisis

Mrs. Eddy was no stranger to struggles and difficulties. Robert Peel's Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Trial makes that plain. 

With her discovery of Christian Science and the publication of the first edition of her book Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, students were coming to learn from her. But some of those students presented her with contradictions:  loyalty and disaffection, conspiracy and reconciliation, praise and scorn. (It is interesting that "they laughed [Jesus] to scorn" for his declaration that the dead-12-year-old girl was "not dead, but sleepeth". See Luke 8: 52-53.)

Through the turmoil, Peel gives us some insight into Mrs. Eddy's means of staying on course when confronted with evil intent. He explains (p. 46) that she had "redefined" evil as "error, demanding correction". Her beloved Bible would give her the means of correcting the error: 

Again and again in times of crisis she would note down in her Bible a particular verse through which she felt God had spoken to her and given her direction, noting also the date on which she had turned to it.

I love this. Her Bible was her "chart of life", as she was to note in Science and Health on page 24: 

Acquaintance with the original texts, and willingness to give up human beliefs (established by hierarchies, and instigated sometimes by the worst passions of men), open the way for Christian Science to be understood, and make the Bible the chart of life, where the buoys and healing currents of Truth are pointed out.

I ask myself if I turn to my Bible with such confidence? Am I acknowledging and noting in it the day-by-day the answers coming to me from its pages?

Peel reminds us that "discipline, energy, and persistence" were and are required - see p. 47. He warns that "...the struggles [of 1878] ...harried and  and almost destroyed Christian Science" (p. 50). 

Julie Swannell




Tuesday, 7 January 2025

holding hands

Robert Peel recounts a lovely story about Mrs. Eddy -- then Mrs. Glover -- when she was living at 8 Broad Street in Lynn, Massachusetts.

 https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/Lynn,_Essex_County,_Massachusetts_Genealogy

A Mr. Orville Clough noticed her coming out of the house holding the hand of a small child and remarked on the "beautiful sign" on her home. It was the Cross and Crown emblem that she had adopted as a symbol of Christian Science and can be found on the cover of her work Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures

Mrs. Glover remarked that: "We all have the Cross but each one must become as this little child before he can have the Crown." (See Mary Baker Eddy: the Years of Trial by Robert Peel, 2nd edition, footnote 43, p. 20.)




Julie Swannell


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