This article appeared in the January 02, 2019 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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A Christian Science Perspective

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Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

How do we start anew?

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As the new year kicks off, here’s a spiritual take on the concept of renewal that brings truly meaningful change into our lives.

Today's Christian Science Perspective audio edition

“I’m Jamie and I’m going to Wales. It’s time for Jamie 2.0.”

Knowing that adding “2.0” to a familiar product or service indicates a significant improvement on the original, I smiled when reading this statement on social media. Not knowing Jamie personally, I had no idea why “Jamie 1.0” needed an upgrade. But the humility to recognize a need for change and the willingness to reinvent himself struck me as a noble undertaking.

Self-motivated change can seem appealing when things aren’t going as we would wish. But in my experience, I’ve found there’s a problem with the premise that we need to reinvent ourselves. It suggests we’re poorly designed in the first place.

On the other hand, I’ve found the opposite starting point to be the more powerful change agent in my life, which has had many positive twists and turns. I begin from the understanding that we’re so much more than we appear. Grasping this has led to unsought career opportunities, a decade living overseas, and learning new skills.

These adjustments haven’t felt like a reset, but a spiritual unfoldment of good, of regeneration. In “Miscellaneous Writings 1883-1896,” Mary Baker Eddy, the discoverer of Christian Science, describes regeneration as “the appearing of divine law to human understanding” (p. 73).

Letting go of a material sense of our lives for a spiritual understanding of what we are – divinely designed by a perfect creator – has a beneficial impact on every aspect of our experience, including healing our minds and bodies. But the ultimate goal of this regeneration isn’t just improved human experience but yielding to the life that expresses God’s perfection.

This isn’t done in a day! But at each stage of progress, there’s a freedom, grace, and power to seeking change through a deeper and clearer awareness of what we are in the light of what God creates – “very good,” as the Bible puts it (Genesis 1:31).

This is the spiritual reality of our being. As sons and daughters of a perfect God, there’s nothing in us that truly needs to be reinvented. But as the yearly tradition of making New Year’s resolutions reminds us, there can be plenty of room for improvement in our human character and behavior.

None of us is yet consistently aware of our true selves as God’s creation. But God is constantly urging that true view upon us through Christ, the true idea of God that Jesus most clearly evidenced by healing others. Our need is to open our hearts to the spiritual identity and individuality we each have.

Such spiritual cleansing is open to all. Jesus showed how understanding God’s true nature restores bodily health, no matter how solid the problem appears. For instance, a woman so twisted and bent over that she couldn’t even look up was instantaneously cured by Jesus’ understanding of eternal, spiritual perfection.

A modest but precious healing of a fellow church member echoes that experience of physical regeneration through spiritual means. Years after a skiing accident had left her thumb disfigured and inflexible, she became aware of how she’d allowed herself to accept that permanent injuries to the hand were an inescapable outcome of falling on an artificial ski slope surface.

As she progressed in her practice of Christian Science, though, she saw this as an inaccurate assumption in light of her being included in God’s “very good” creation. From then on, whenever she looked at or used her hand, she prayed to better understand her spiritual perfection. In a short while the deformity that had been there for decades disappeared, and her thumb has been normal ever since.

“Reinvention” isn’t in itself a negative concept. Many musicians, artists, and business entrepreneurs have breathed fresh life into their careers by presenting a new persona to the public. But to the degree seeking reinvention means visualizing and pursuing self-centered goals, it distracts from the deeper, God-guided renewal that takes us so much further than just bettering our day-to-day experience. As “Miscellaneous Writings” points out, “The last degree of regeneration rises into the rest of perpetual, spiritual, individual existence” (p. 85).

This pure, spiritual consciousness comes to light, step by step, as we humbly allow ourselves to be cleansed by spiritual renewal of whatever doesn’t belong to our being as God’s child, and let all that does belong come to ever clearer light.

Adapted from an editorial published in the January 2019 issue of The Christian Science Journal.


This article appeared in the January 02, 2019 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 01/02 edition
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