This week I was alerted to a webinar produced by The Mother
Church for Reading Room librarians and workers. The topic (on christianscience.com)
is “The Bible Lessons and the ‘prosperity of Christian Science.’”
I especially appreciated hearing from a lady in California
who had shared the weekly Christian Science Bible Lesson with a young woman
whose family had found themselves homeless. The young woman took an
interest in what she had been given to read and soon started coming to church.
Her family recently found a home.
There are many references to the Christian Science Bible
Lessons in our periodicals. You might start your research in jsh-online.com by
typing “Lesson sermon” in the search bar. Among the many articles there is one
from The Christian Science Journal of May 1899. It was written by Irving
Tomlinson, who served on the Bible Lesson Committee for many years from its
inception. Here’s an excerpt:
The
Maker of the Christian Science sermons is God, for He "made all that was
made." Humanly speaking, God's agents do His work. As Christ Jesus said,
"My Father worketh hitherto and I work." The subjects for these
sermons, as is quite well known, were furnished by our Leader. These subjects
cover the essentials of Christianity. As has been observed, they follow the
order she was wont to employ in teaching her classes. ...
Irving Tomlinson gives further background in his book Twelve
Years with Mary Baker Eddy (amplified edition) on p. 187. Here
he points out that once Mrs. Eddy was sure of God's direction, she
permitted no delay in carrying it out:
Not only the verbal form
of the subjects of the Christian Science Bible Lessons, but their order in the
Christian Science Quarterly is entirely Mrs. Eddy's arrangement. …
When in the summer of
1898 Mrs. Eddy sent down the topics for the new lessons, she asked that the
lessons be prepared at once. This meant the immediate arrangement of twenty-six
lessons—there being only a week's time in which to plan for the first lesson of
July 3, 1898…
With the entire Bible
from which to select and six hundred pages of Science and Health open to
the Bible Lesson Committee, I found, as a member of this committee, that there
was opportunity for endless variety. …
A more recent contributor to the periodicals (Michael
Mooslin, “Me, we, and them”, Christian Science Sentinel 3 March 2025) wrote:
Mrs. Eddy explained that
we don’t attend church to worship God but to express Him. “We study these
lessons six days,” she continued, “then we go to Church to express God for the
world—to give the world a treatment” (William Curtis Coffman, Memoirs
of a Christian Scientist, 1955, p. 3).
I love that “the Bible and the Christian Science textbook
are our only preachers” (Explanatory Note read prior to the Lesson-Sermon at
each Christian Science church service).
Julie Swannell
Thank you for this information!
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