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| 1 | Science that all inharmony of mortal mind or body is illu- |
| | sion, possessing neither reality nor identity though seeming |
| 3 | to be real and identical. |
| | [[[The Science of Mind disposes of all evil. Truth, God, |
| | is not the father of error. Sin, sickness, and death are |
| 6 | to be classified as effects of error. Christ | Christ the ideal Truth |
| | came to destroy the belief of sin. The God- |
| | principle is omnipresent and omnipotent. God is every- |
| 9 | where, and nothing apart from Him is present or has |
| | power. Christ is the ideal Truth, that comes to heal |
| | sickness and sin through Christian Science, and attributes |
| 12 | all power to God. Jesus is the name of the man who, |
| | more than all other men, has presented Christ, the true |
| | idea of God, healing the sick and the sinning and destroy- |
| 15 | ing the power of death. Jesus is the human man, and |
| | Christ is the divine idea; hence the duality of Jesus the |
| | Christ.]]] |
| 18 | In an age of ecclesiastical despotism, Jesus introduced |
| | the teaching and practice of Christianity, affording the |
| | proof of Christianity's truth and love; but to | Jesus not God |
| 21 | reach his example and to test its unerring Sci- |
| | ence according to his rule, healing sickness, sin, and |
| | death, a better understanding of God as divine Prin- |
| 24 | ciple, Love, rather than personality or the man Jesus, is |
| | required. |
| | Jesus established what he said by demonstration, |
| 27 | thus making his acts of higher importance than his |
| | words. He proved what he taught. This | Jesus not understood |
| | is the Science of Christianity. Jesus proved |
| 30 | the Principle, which heals the sick and casts out error, |
| | to be divine. Few, however, except his students un- |
| | derstood in the least his teachings and their glorious |
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