Christian Science by Mark Twain

commands it; that is sufficient; the obedience rendered is not reluctant,

but prompt and whole-hearted. Admiration for a Napoleon, confidence in

him, pride in him, affection for him, can lift him high and carry him

far; and these are forms of worship, and are strong forces, but they are

worship of a mere human being, after all, and are infinitely feeble, as

compared with those that are generated by that other worship, the worship

of a divine personage. Mrs. Eddy has this efficient worship, this massed

and centralized force, this force which is indifferent to opposition,

untroubled by fear, and goes to battle singing, like Cromwell’s soldiers;

and while she has it she can command and it will obey, and maintain her

on her throne, and extend her empire.

She will have it until she dies; and then we shall see a curious and

interesting further development of her revolutionary work begin.

CHAPTER XIV

The President and Board of Directors wil1 succeed her, and the government

will go on without a hitch. The By-laws will bear that interpretation.

All the Mother-Church’s vast powers are concentrated in that Board. Mrs.

Eddy’s unlimited personal reservations make the Board’s ostensible

supremacy, during her life, a sham, and the Board itself a shadow. But

Mrs. Eddy has not made those reservations for any one but herself–they

are distinctly personal, they bear her name, they are not usable by

another individual. When she dies her reservations die, and the Board’s

shadow-powers become real powers, without the change of any important By-

law, and the Board sits in her place as absolute and irresponsible a

sovereign as she was.

It consists of but five persons, a much more manageable Cardinalate than

the Roman Pope’s. I think it will elect its Pope from its own body, and

that it will fill its own vacancies. An elective Papacy is a safe and

wise system, and a long-liver.

CHAPTER XV

We may take that up now.

It is not a single if, but a several-jointed one; not an oyster, but a

vertebrate.

1. Did Mrs. Eddy borrow from Quimby the Great Idea, or only the little

one, the old-timer, the ordinary mental-healing-healing by “mortal” mind?

2. If she borrowed the Great Idea, did she carry it away in her head, or

in manuscript?

3. Did she hit upon the Great Idea herself? By the Great Idea I mean,

of course, the conviction that the Force involved was still existent, and

could be applied now just as it was applied by Christ’s Disciples and

their converts, and as successfully.

4. Did she philosophize it, systematize it, and write it down in a book?

5. Was it she, and not another, that built a new Religion upon the book

and organized it?

I think No. 5 can be answered with a Yes, and dismissed from the

controversy. And I think that the Great Idea, great as it was, would

have enjoyed but a brief activity, and would then have gone to sleep

again for some more centuries, but for the perpetuating impulse it got

from that organized and tremendous force.

As for Nos. 1, 2, and 4, the hostiles contend that Mrs. Eddy got the

Great Idea from Quimby and carried it off in manuscript. But their

testimony, while of consequence, lacks the most important detail; so far

as my information goes, the Quimby manuscript has not been produced. I

think we cannot discuss No. 1 and No. 2 profitably. Let them go.

For me, No. 3 has a mild interest, and No. 4 a violent one.

As regards No. 3, Mrs. Eddy was brought up, from the cradle, an old-

time, boiler-iron, Westminster-Catechism Christian, and knew her Bible as

well as Captain Kydd knew his, “when he sailed, when he sailed,” and

perhaps as sympathetically. The Great Idea had struck a million Bible-

readers before her as being possible of resurrection and application–it

must have struck as many as that, and been cogitated, indolently,

doubtingly, then dropped and forgotten–and it could have struck her, in

due course. But how it could interest her, how it could appeal to her–

with her make this a thing that is difficult to understand.

For the thing back of it is wholly gracious and beautiful: the power,

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