Easter Services

The editor of The Christian Science Journal said that

at three o'clock, the hour for the church service proper,

the pastor, Rev. Mary Baker G. Eddy, accompanied

by Rev. D. A. Easton, who was announced to preach [25]

the sermon, came on the platform. The pastor introduced

Mr. Easton as follows:—

Friends:—The homesick traveller in foreign lands

greets with joy a familiar face. I am constantly home-

sick for heaven. In my long journeyings I have met [30]

one who comes from the place of my own sojourning [1]

for many years,—the Congregational Church. He is

a graduate of Bowdoin College and of Andover The-

ological School. He has left his old church, as I did,

from a yearning of the heart; because he was not sat- [5]

isfied with a manlike God, but wanted to become a God-

like man. He found that the new wine could not be

put into old bottles without bursting them, and he came

to us.

Mr. Easton then delivered an interesting discourse [10]

from the text, “If ye then be risen with Christ, seek

those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the

right hand of God” (Col. iii. 1), which he prefaced by

saying:—

“I think it was about a year ago that I strayed into [15]

this hall, a stranger, and wondered what sort of people

you were, and of what you were worshippers. If any

one had said to me that to-day I should stand before

you to preach a sermon on Christian Science, I should

have replied, “Much learning”—or something else— [20]

“hath made thee mad.” If I had not found Christian

Science a new gospel, I should not be standing before you:

if I had not found it truth, I could not have stood up

again to preach, here or elsewhere.”

At the conclusion of the sermon, the pastor again came [25]

forward, and added the following:—

My friends, I wished to be excused from speaking

to-day, but will yield to circumstances. In the flesh, we

are as a partition wall between the old and the new;

between the old religion in which we have been educated, [30]

and the new, living, impersonal Christ-thought that has

been given to the world to-day.

The old churches are saying, “He is not here;” and, [1]

“Who shall roll away the stone?”

The stone has been rolled away by human suffer-

ing. The first rightful desire in the hour of loss, when

believing we have lost sight of Truth, is to know where [5]

He is laid. This appeal resolves itself into these

questions:—

Is our consciousness in matter or in God? Have we

any other consciousness than that of good? If we have,

He is saying to us to-day, “Adam, where art thou?” We [10]

are wrong if our consciousness is in sin, sickness, and

death. This is the old consciousness.

In the new religion the teaching is, “He is not here;

Truth is not in matter; he is risen; Truth has become

more to us,—more true, more spiritual.” [15]

Can we say this to-day? Have we left the conscious-

ness of sickness and sin for that of health and

holiness?

What is it that seems a stone between us and the

resurrection morning? [20]

It is the belief of mind in matter. We can only come

into the spiritual resurrection by quitting the old con-

sciousness of Soul in sense.

These flowers are floral apostles. God does all this

through His followers; and He made every flower in [25]

Mind before it sprang from the earth: yet we look into

matter and the earth to give us these smiles of God!

We must lay aside material consciousness, and then

we can perceive Truth, and say with Mary, “Rabboni!”

—Master! [30]

In 1866, when God revealed to me this risen Christ,

this Life that knows no death, that saith, “Because he

lives, I live,” I awoke from the dream of Spirit in the [1]

flesh so far as to take the side of Spirit, and strive to cease

my warfare.

When, through this consciousness, I was delivered from

the dark shadow and portal of death, my friends were [5]

frightened at beholding me restored to health.

A dear old lady asked me, “How is it that you are

restored to us? Has Christ come again on earth?”

“Christ never left,” I replied; “Christ is Truth, and

Truth is always here,—the impersonal Saviour.” [10]

Then another person, more material, met me, and I

said, in the words of my Master, “Touch me not.” I

shuddered at her material approach; then my heart went

out to God, and I found the open door from this sepulchre

of matter. [15]

I love the Easter service: it speaks to me of Life, and

not of death.

Let us do our work; then we shall have part in his

resurrection.