Pulpit and Press (6th Edition) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 77 pages of information about Pulpit and Press (6th Edition).

Pulpit and Press (6th Edition) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 77 pages of information about Pulpit and Press (6th Edition).

MRS. EDDY AS A CHILD.

As a child Mary Baker saw visions and dreamed dreams.  When eight years of age she began, like Jeanne d’Arc, to hear “voices,” and for a year she heard her name called distinctly, and would often run to her mother questioning if she were wanted.  One night the mother related to her the story of Samuel, and bade her, if she heard the voice again to reply as he did:  “Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth.”  The call came, but the little maid was afraid and did not reply.  This caused her tears of remorse and she prayed for forgiveness, and promised to reply if the call came again.  It came, and she answered as her mother had bidden her, and after that it ceased.

These experiences, of which Catholic biographies are full, and which history not unfrequently emphasizes, certainly offer food for meditation.  Theodore Parker related that when he was a lad at work in a field one day on his father’s farm at Lexington, an old man with a snowy beard suddenly appeared at his side, and walked with him as he worked, giving him high counsel and serious thought.  All inquiry in the neighborhood as to whence the stranger came or whither he went was fruitless; no one else had seen him, and Mr. Parker always believed, so a friend has told me, that his visitor was a spiritual form from another world.  It is certainly true that many and many persons, whose life has been destined to more than ordinary achievement, have had experiences of voices or visions in their early youth.

At an early age Miss Baker was married to Colonel Glover, of Charleston, S.C., who lived only a year.  She returned to her father’s home—­in 1844—­and from that time until 1866 no special record is to be made.

In 1866, while living in Lynn, Mass., Mrs. Eddy (then Mrs. Glover) met with a severe accident and her case was pronounced hopeless by the physicians.  There came a Sunday morning when her pastor came to bid her good-by before proceeding to his morning service as there was no probability that she would be alive at its close.  During this time she suddenly became aware of a divine illumination and ministration.  She requested those with her to withdraw, and reluctantly they did so, believing her delirious.  Soon, to their bewilderment and fright, she walked into the adjoining room, “and they thought I had died, and that it was my apparition,” she said.

THE PRINCIPLE OF DIVINE HEALING.

From that hour dated her conviction of the principle of divine healing, and that it is as true to-day as it was in the days when Jesus of Nazareth walked the earth.  “I felt that the divine spirit had wrought a miracle,” she said, in reference to this experience.  “How, I could not tell, but later I found it to be in perfect scientific accord with the divine law.”  From 1866-’69, Mrs. Eddy withdrew from the world to meditate, to pray, to search the Scriptures.

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Pulpit and Press (6th Edition) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.