Under God’s law – CSMonitor.com

Date:


We were having exceptionally high winds that day. As I was leaving my house, I noticed that a neighbor’s garbage bin had been blown into the middle of the alley. I went to remove it, but as I did, the wind flipped the bin cover up. It hit me in the head and knocked me down along with the bin. Immediately, a neighbor was there helping me up and righting the bin. I had a painful lump on my head as well as other painful areas and some bleeding. I called a Christian Science practitioner to pray with me for healing.

After our conversation, I remembered a phrase from “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy: “Not guilty.” It’s included in an allegory that illustrates how the laws of God heal the sick (see pp. 430-442). In the story, after helping a sick friend, a man then becomes ill himself. He is on trial for his life, and his defense at the trial is that our true identity is subject only to the laws of God.

Under God’s rule of law, doing what is just and right can result only in good. God’s law is supreme and therefore is a protection from any supposed laws that would impose disease or injury. The final verdict at the trial is that the man – who represents the true, spiritual identity of each of us – is innocent of breaking physical laws “because there are no such laws” and is set free.



Source link

Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related