Getting Through A Crisis

February 5, 1998

A thorough perusal of the author's publications heals sickness. If patients sometimes seem worse while reading this book, the change may either arise from the alarm of the physician, or it may mark the crisis of the disease. Perseverance in the perusal of the book has generally completely healed such cases.

Science and Health, by Mary Baker Eddy

If a crisis is an on-going situation, much study and prayer will be necessary; but bearing this process as chemicalization (see Science and Health, pg. 401:16-20), or as a new concept coming to the surface, replacing an old one, is helpful.

An acute crisis can often be quickly met and dispelled by "reversal".  Whatever the belief may be, seek the spiritual for it incidentally other's will directly its problem.  Participants had found the following quotations from Science and Health helpful:

  • 263: 20-26
  • 353: 1-6
  • 573: 3-12

Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, by Mary Baker Eddy

If a crisis occurs in your treatment, you must treat the patient less for the disease and more for the mental disturbance or fermentation, and subdue the symptoms by removing the belief that this chemicalization produces pain or disease. Insist vehemently on the great fact which covers the whole ground, that God, Spirit, is all, and that there is none beside Him. There is no disease. When the supposed suffering is gone from mortal mind, there can be no pain; and when the fear is destroyed, the inflammation will subside. Calm the excitement sometimes induced by chemicalization, which is the alterative effect produced by Truth upon error, and sometimes explain the symptoms and their cause to the patient.

If the reader of this book observes a great stir throughout his whole system, and certain moral and physical symptoms seem aggravated, these indications are favorable. Continue to read, and the book will become the physician, allaying the tremor which Truth often brings to error when destroying it.

There can be but one creator, who has created all. Whatever seems to be a new creation, is but the discovery of some distant idea of Truth; else it is a new multiplication or self-division of mortal thought, as when some finite sense peers from its cloister with amazement and attempts to pattern the infinite.

The Christianly scientific real is the sensuous unreal. Sin, disease, whatever seems real to material sense, is unreal in divine Science. The physical senses and Science have ever been antagonistic, and they will so continue, till the testimony of the physical senses yields entirely to Christian Science.

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