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Looking for information about Christian Science branch churches and Christian Science? We're Second Church, Richmond, Virginia, and we'd love to share with you healings, ideas, remarks, and information supplied by our members. Stop back often, we're a busy site.



Thursday, November 01, 2012

Wednesday Citations for October 31, 2012


Subject:  Weather Report

Hymns: 102, 74, 172

 

Bible

1.      Ps 55:6 Oh, 8

2.      Job 37:14-23 consider

3.      Prov 30:4(to 4th ?)

4.      Is 54:9-11 as I

5.      I Kings 19:1-3 Ahab, 9-12

6.      Ps 62:11

7.      Mark 3:7 Jesus, 9

8.      Mark 4:35-41

9.      Amos 4:13 lo

10.  I Chron 29:11

 

Science & Health

1.      275:6

2.      597:27

3.      83:16

4.      128:4-6

5.      209:10-13,16-24

6.      201:9

7.      77:5-9

8.      144:18-20

9.      490:3

10.  293:13-16,21-31

11.  96:5-11 (to 1st .),15

12.  97:11-13

13.  192:11-19

14.  585:5 (to 1st .),7

15.  337:22-24

16.  484:9-14 In

17.  310:11

18.  124:14-31

19.  273:21

20.  535:29

21.  310:5-6

22.  240:1-6,10-11

 

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Wednesday Citations for October 24, 2012


Subject: Overcoming Discouragement
Hymns: 426, 60, 462

Bible
1. Josh 10:25 Fear (to :)
2. Josh 1:9 for
3. Ps 31:21-22, 24
4. Is 54:1 (to 1st ;), 2-4 (to 2nd ;), 10-11, 13 all, 14-15 (to fall), 17
5. Mark 5:25-34
6. John 13:31 Jesus (to 3rd ,)
7. John 14:1, 2 (to 1st .), 10-18
8. John 15:1, 2, 4-11
9. II Thess 3:1, 3-5 the (to waiting)

Science & Health
1. 380:28-7
2. 423:8-14.18
3. 394:7
4. 167:22
5. 420:10-13, 17-19
6. 390:4-9
7. 276:12
8. 256:1
9. 506:18
10. 426:5-11
11. 454:18-21
12. 96:4
13. 322:26-30
14. 22:14-20
15. 288:10-14
16. 573:29-2
17. 323:6

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Wednesday Citations for October 17, 2012


Subject:  The Unselfish Affections
Hymns: 178, 76, 340

Bible
1. I John 4:7-8
2. Luke 4:14
3. Luke 6:12, 13, 17-18, 20 (to 2nd ,), 30-31, 36
4. Luke 10:25-37
5. Matt 23:1-8, 11-12
6. Matt 24:2 (to 1st ,)
7. Matt 25:31-32 (to :), 34-40
8. II Peter 1:2, 5-7, 10-11
9. I John 4:10-11, 12 If, 20-21

Science & Health
1. 366:30-31
2. 25:31
3. 26:10-14
4. 51:19-32
5. 365:7
6. 57:18-21
7. 58:7
8. 147:29
9. 1:1
10. 9:5, 32 (to .)
11. 11:22-25, 31-32 (to 2nd .)
12. 462:25-30
13. 366:12-19
14. 61:4-11
15. 272:3-8,19
16. 367:3
17. 483:30-32



Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Wednesday Citations for October 10, 2012


Subject: Silencing serpent chatter
Hymns: 5, 73, 36

Bible
1. Deut 4:36 (to :)
2. Deut 18:21 How
3. Gen 3:1-4,6 she took,13-14
4. Neh 1:1(to 1st .),3 they
5. Neh 2:17-18(to ;),18 And,19 (to 1st ?),20
6. Neh 6:1-4,10 (to Shemaiah), 10 and he,11-13,15-16
7. Mark 1:1,9-13,14 Jesus,23-27,34 (to 2nd ,)
8. John 9:41 (to 1st ,)
9. John 10:1-5 He,9-10

Science & Health
1. 332:9-15 Christ
2. 333:9-13,16-23 The
3. 564:24-26,29-1
4. 529:13-29
5. 530:13-25
6. 594:1 (to SERPENT),2-3 (to ;),8
7. 316:7
8. 251:13
9. 252:4-8,15-23,31-7
10. 253:9-21
11. 583:10
12. 64:30


Saturday, August 04, 2012

Rethinking the problem...

While working on converting some computer files into another format, I pulled up a program I have used often to do this. I expected no problems. Imagine my shock when the program not only didn't work, but it gave me no hint as to the problem.  I played with it for a couple of hours, figured I'd think more clearly in the morning, and went to bed expecting everything to be fine with a new day.

It wasn't. For five hours, I did everything I knew how to make the conversion proceed properly.  I won't go into all the computer tricks I tried, because none of them work.  Finally, (sheesh), I decided to pray about the problem.

My prayer was simple. I knew there was one divine Mind that governs all, and I was part of that "all."  There was no answer too hard, too complicated, too impossible, because God gives us all we need, and that includes every right idea. The work I was doing on the computer was necessary, and nothing could stand in the way of accomplishing my task.  I needed to be still and listen for the angel message.

It came, almost instantly.  The answer was simple and the task proceeded to be completed in about fifteen minutes.  Not only was I thrilled to have the job done, I was even happier that I'd taken my thought in the right path and acknowledged God's control and government in every aspect of my life and work. To say I was grateful is a gross understatement.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Frustration Overcome by Love


Sometimes I find myself getting angry easily at little things and sometimes just feeling nothing but frustration.  Being unemployed can kind of bring out the not so great side of me. I admit, I hate feeling frustrated all the time. I don’t want to be living with this feeling. But at a lecture called Annual Meeting held by The Mother Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston I realize that I have been doing something wrong in the way that I look at things, my thinking has not been all that clear or loving.  For the longest time I have been resenting the fact that while all my other friends have been receiving wonderful jobs (most of them right out of school), I have had no such luck in even nailing an interview, despite the copious amounts of applications I have sent all over.

 At times I have felt that my religion, the one that is supposed to help me overcome difficult situations easily, has been letting me down.  Well today I realized I’ve been going about my problem all wrong.  I have been forgetting the most fundamental part about being a Christian Scientist, and that is being CHRISTIAN.  If I just led my life more by the first commandment, love thy neighbor as thyself, then I can make steps towards the science part, the healing. I need to be a better Christian.  Once I replaced the angry/frustrated feelings with that of nothing but love for everyone, did I start to feel progress.
For those of you who might be in a similar situation as me I assure you that despite the feeling of hopelessness/sadness/frustration/despair, you don’t need to let it consume you.  John, from the Bible, knew what he was talking about when he said “God is Love.” ( 1 John 4:8)  but the whole quote actually is “Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love.”  (English Standard Version)
To me, not only does God love us, but we need to show God we love him, and we can do this by expressing the love he gives us.  After some reevaluation of my attitude, I realized there was absolutely no reason I should let other people’s lives influence mine. I needed to see them in a more loving light and not one of hate.  So I went through and thought of every good quality each of my friends possessed, and why I thought of them as a friend in the first place, and after a while, I was no longer jealous or upset.  I knew then, and I still know now, that Love (another name for God) will meet my needs.



Watermelon Festival is Coming!

This photo from a Watermelon Festival in the past gives a small idea of how you can find us in the street on August 5, from 10 to 6, in front of 3431 West Cary Street. In addition to merchandise, chats, and cold water, we're happy to present Christian singer Alex Cook, who will be performing about 11:30 a.m. under the tent. Stop by to hear some inspirational songs for the soul. (www.alexcookmusic.com)

If you're in need of a break from the heat, the Reading Room will be open and the air conditioning will be on!

Monday, May 21, 2012

Meeting a Need in the Reading Room

A Church Alive segment recently stopped me, mentally, in my tracks.  The speakers said that seekers are lead to the Reading Room when WE are serving.  I know for a fact this is true.

Our RR is tucked back from the street, and as a way to let people know we're there, we put a cart on the sidewalk with literature.  On a day I wouldn't normally been there, I watched from our window as a woman scooped up just about every Sentinel and Journal from the cart, crossed the street, and sat at the outdoor table of the McDonald's across the street. She sipped a drink and read and read.  I prayed she was finding what she needed. After a while, I  noticed she'd left.

Busy with a housekeeping task, I was surprised when a couple of hours later, she came through the door.  "I had to come in, even though I was on my way home," she explained. "This is my day off, and I am so upset I felt I had to open your door."

I asked her to sit across from me, and the story poured out.  She was head housekeeper at a chain hotel near a popular mall and the week before, she'd discovered a dead woman in one of the hotel's rooms. It appeared to be a suicide.  Not only was the image stuck in a loop in her head, she was concerned about the whys and what would make this dear person take her life, and furthermore, whether the police had investigated the circumstances sufficiently to make sure it wasn't a suspicious passing.

Taking a deep breath, I realized why she'd come in that day. This dear lady had no idea I'd been a criminal lawyer in years past. I'd even taken a state forensics class for the non-forensics specialist.

First, I had to help her see that life is deathless, no matter what the human picture. We discussed how this woman, seemingly gone, was still working out her salvation and going about her Father's business. The human picture didn't keep her from Life, because she expressed Life as a reflection of her Father-Mother, God.

My friend was calming down. The tears stopped. But she worried still that, maybe, there'd been foul play, and that the police didn't seem interested in that possibility.  I assured her that there was nothing hidden that would not be revealed, and that proper steps were being taken, later, to make sure that humanly, justice would be served.

Then a sad story poured forth about her marriage, her life, and her job. One by one, the spiritual answers came and Bible quotes, which she knew, comforted her.  I knew, for a surety, that I wasn't coming up with these responses, because I didn't even have to think, the words poured out without hesitation.

She left with a copy of Science and Health and more periodicals with articles on some of the topics we'd covered.  I wasn't to hear from her, or see her, for a year.

A year to the day, and I was in the Reading Room.  My friend came in, smiling, asking if I remembered her. Of course I did, and I asked how she was.  She said life was better, and that she'd been reading Science and Health whenever her husband wasn't around, since he didn't approve.  Yet she persisted and was genuinely grateful for the small changes for the better that had resulted.  A sincere seeker of Truth, on all levels, she wanted to thank me in person.

Little did she know, I wasn't regularly serving in the Reading Room on the two days she'd found me. God lead her and me to meet, and God clearly was lead counsel in this case.

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Words of the solo from Sunday, May 6

Friends,

Because of the overwhelming response to the beautiful words of the solo we heard last Sunday, we are posting the words to that piece of music -- Enjoy the inspiration!


Words of the Solo on May 6, 2012
“A HEAVEN ON EARTH”
By Sally DeFord

When we kneel in prayer with humble hearts, to invite His spirit in,
When we live each day by the light of faith, and put our trust in Him,
When our souls delight in truth and right and things of eternal worth,
Then the Savior will come and abide in our home and make it a heaven on earth.
When our hearts are turned to loved ones here, and to those who’ve gone before,
When we freely share one another’s joy,
and mourn with those who mourn,
When we offer Him our willing hands and serve Him with all our strength,
Then the Savior will come and abide in our home, and make it a heaven on earth.
When we offer up our grateful praise for each perfect gift of God,
When we find our safety in His commands and make His word our law,
When we set aside our worldly cares to seek after heaven first,
Then the Savior will come and abide in our home, and make it a heaven on earth……
and make it a heaven on earth.


Thursday, August 25, 2011

Or even if you do live near a local branch church . . .

Thanks for the recent post highlighting the availability of the weekly web broadcasts of the Wednesday testimony meetings from The Mother Church in Boston.  Here's a link you can use to access those broadcasts:  http://christianscience.com/church/Wednesday-meeting-broadcast/

Also, even if you do live near a church and attend a local testimony meeting, you may still want to listen in to The Mother Church broadcast on Wednesdays as well as attend the local meeting.  I often do this.  What a gift!

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

If you don't live near a church...

You might like to listen to the Wednesday services from The Mother Church in Boston, which are broadcast over the Internet at 2 p.m. (ET) This is a 'full' service, complete with hymns and testimonies sent over the Internet. The service is rebroadcast from 4 p.m. Wednesday to 3 p.m. (ET) Thursday.

Our local Wednesday Testimony services are held at 7:30 p.m. Everyone is welcomed.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

New Hymn -- new inspiration

Last night we sang a new hymn at our Wednesday evening meeting.  It was from the Hymnal Supplement, Hymn #462.  This hymn contains the thought that there is a prayer that I can always pray -- no matter what the circumstances, "Simply praising Him."  What a wonderful and simple thought to treasure as we go through our daily routines, or as we face troubling times.  The simple choice is ours.  Each moment of our busy day we can choose to   "Praise the Creator.  Let all within me sing!" 

I am looking forward to a bright, happy, praise-filled day!

Friday, August 05, 2011

Watermelon Festival 2011

Please join us on Sunday, the 7th of August, for the Watermelon Festival! We'll be open and in the street in front of our Reading Room at 3431 W.Cary, from 10 to 6 p.m.  Bargains, goodies, and lots of fun will be a-plenty!

Wednesday, August 03, 2011

New Beginnings

I'm so grateful that each morning is a new beginning with our Father-Mother
God. (Sometimes I need new beginnings in the middle of the day too!)


That I can resolve to hold my thinking, my actions and my words to a higher standard right this minute keeps me alert.

Here's my review of each day:

Did my words about, or to someone, bless or lift them? 

Did my thoughts tend to heal the current news of our government and world conditions?

Are my actions motivated by love for my fellow man?

Does my love for my fellow man motivate me to do more than I am doing?

Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science states in her seminal textbook, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,  "If you believe in and practise wrong knowingly, you can at once change your course  and do right."

"What we most need is the prayer of fervent desire for growth in grace, expressed in patience, meekness, love, and good deeds." 

"Desire is prayer..."

So my daily prayer is from Psalms 143:8

"Cause me to hear thy loving-kindness in the morning; for in thee do I trust: cause me to know the way wherein I should walk; for I lift up my soul unto thee."

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

A Different Take on Things

There is a passage in the Bible (Phil. 4:7) that states, "And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus."

I was surprised recently when I heard someone reference this line with the interpretation that "passeth" meant "surpasses" or "is beyond" understanding.  This view reduces the "peace of God" to an unknowable mystery with only a hope that the last part of that statement will be true.  From the very first time I read this passage I thought that "passeth" was an old fashioned way of saying "passes."  To me this is a statement of divine activity.  

Understanding flows from (passes/paseth) from God to man.  The children of God, you and me, created in His image after His likeness as stated in Genesis, reflect every element of that source.  I find this to be a comforting statement, bringing with it "the peace of God."

The Prayerful Mechanic was my post and is an example of a need being met by the recognition that understanding isn't an internal chemical or electrical mental process.  Rather, it is an expression of God completely
demonstratable all the time, especially when we need it most.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Looking for God?

                 
People all over the planet are looking for God these days.  And rightly so, since problems and conditions are frequently bigger than we can handle ourselves. Loneliness, starvation, war, political unrest, maybe a nagging physical problem, to name a few.   Even though we may look for Him (or Her) out there somewhere, ultimately true spirituality can be found within each of us. Jesus said, “The kingdom of God is within you.” We already possess the consciousness that recognizes and experiences the Supreme Being and the power that settles our problems and harmonizes all things. We just need to tap into that divine consciousness more deeply.


Once we start looking within our minds and hearts for solutions, what will we find? There may be some mental or moral debris we want to get rid of that needs to be cleared out. The one true God Christ told us about is just what is needed to clean house.  Here’s where I find Christian Science so helpful. It articulates the very nature and power of Deity better than any other source I know, and how to apply that nature and power to overcome debilitating thoughts and tendencies.


For instance, Science and Health, written by Mary Baker Eddy, and translated into many languages, gathers specific synonyms and qualities of God used in the Bible. They in turn enable us to strengthen and focus our prayers far more than we may have thought possible. Some of those synonyms are Life, Mind, Truth, Love, Principle (law), Spirit, Soul. And qualities like love, ever presence, infinite freedom,  all-providing. When you consider that these are already within your grasp, your own consciousness, think of the potential for reformation and healing right at hand! Each one gives us an avenue to explore and utilize with divine power.  


The link, spirituality.com, may lead you to discover the good within yourself you know is there but haven’t found yet.    ///

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Fall from a Bike

It's been a while since I've been on my ancient (I think it almost qualifies as an antique!) bicycle, but when my daughter challenged me to take it for a spin, I couldn't resist. But I hadn't gone ten feet when my feet slipped off the pedals and I crashed onto the driveway. One of the handlebars hooked me in the rib cage, and I heard an odd noise, followed by extreme pain when I tried to move.

I really didn't have time that day, or in the next week, to be immobile. I immediately rose with the help of my family, and decided I had to know that this event had never occurred in God's kingdom if I was to gain my dominion over the situation. Taking a stand wasn't easy, as the pain seemed, and that is all it could do, "seem," intense. I kept on with my chores, knowing I was a spiritual idea, but the pain wasn't getting better. I asked, at one point when I needed immediate help, for my husband's metaphysical support. I knew he'd been working all along, and he said to me "a spiritual idea can have no impact with a material object." The proverbial light bulb went off. I'd been knowing I was God's spiritual child, but I'd never specifically denied the impact issue.

I continued with this truth for the next week or so, every time it seemed I couldn't sleep comfortably or do something that needed doing. About ten days later, I felt truly free as I lifted some heavy boxes and slept on the seemingly affected side without pain. To say I was grateful for this evidence of God's care is an understatement. I was also grateful for my husband's metaphysical clarity about the situation, and how my need was quickly and completely met.  

Friday, July 15, 2011

Thought Awakened

Forty five years ago, my youngest brother was diagnosed with Down’s Syndrome. Labeled for life with restrictions attached! I, too, seemed to have been mesmerized by this mortal belief throughout the years. Occasionally, I would specifically work to see him as God’s spiritual idea forever being unfolded. However, a passage from this week’s lesson, entitled Life, found in the Christian Science Quarterly, has brought unexpected clarity to my thinking. I’d like to share this passage with you. It can be found on page 243, line 32 of Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy.

“Inasmuch as God is good and the fount of all being, He does not produce moral or physical deformity; therefore such deformity is not real, but is illusion, the mirage of error. Divine Science reveals these grand facts. On their basis Jesus demonstrated Life, never fearing nor obeying error in any form.”


Although I have read this passage before, I have now been re-awakened to stand porter and guard my thoughts against erroneous thinking!

Thursday, July 07, 2011

Clearer Vision

I am a Christian Scientist who wears glasses.  You may think this is a contradiction.  Why hasn't that been healed?  Fair question.  Why does one situation persist while another, also dealing with my eyes, as is the case with this posting, is healed quickly and completely?  Another fair question.

First, I don't believe there is any condition which the presence of omnipotent Mind cannot bring into perfect harmony, the realm of the real.  Mrs. Eddy asks in Science and Health "What cannot God do?"(135:20)  Jesus made repeated encouraging statements about his followers' ability to replicate his healing power.  Most notably, for me, is, "I say unto you, He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also." (John 14: 12)  There are also several instances where he healed blindness.

Speaking for myself only, I think the difference lies in dedication and focus.  A problem of seeming urgency gets my full attention while something less dramatic tends to be tolerated or accommodated.  Rather than focus on what I have yet to demonstrate, I choose to express my genuine gratitude for the healings that I have experienced.

Last summer, during a routine eye exam, my optometrist became very concerned that the internal pressure in one eye was much lower than it should be and wanted me to be examined by a specialist.  I put it off for several weeks, all the time praying specifically about my vision, knowing that it was a spiritual quality and not a material condition.  When he asked me about the results and I hadn't even made an appointment, I knew I needed to do this in order to calm his concerns.

No mention of decreased pressure was made at the initial examination.  However, another situation presented itself.  Both eyes had a number of open sores on the irises.  After warning me of the potential for total blindness, the examining physician wrote several prescriptions for antibiotics and eye drops.  It surprised her, and not in a good way, when I said that I would address the situation differently.  I did not say "prayerfully" and I should have.

Her response was, "Well, you can't just wish this away."  I had no intention of trying to do that.  She insisted on a follow-up exam within a week.

At that exam there had been sufficient progress that she no longer pressed for the drops and ointment.  Instead, she noted healing was taking place when she said, "Whatever you're doing -- keep doing it."  Another exam was scheduled.

At this third exam she declared all the sores had healed.  There was a big BUT.  The "but" was that the healing process had left scars where each sore had been.  She told me that I was very lucky that the sores had not been over the pupils because the obstruction resulting form the scars would have left permanent blind spots.

God doesn't lead us part way.  Omnipotence doesn't provide partial victories.  There was still work to do.  There was no compromising with this error.  I continued my prayers, seeing myself as God sees me, perfect.

A  subsequent exam with my regular optometrist revealed that neither problem existed or left any evidence of ever having existed.  Pressure was normal.   There were no scars.

I'm a Christian Scientist who still wears glasses, but with a clearer sense of vision.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Takin' it to the Streets!

                                           Watermelon Festival!!


Picture a townhouse-style Reading Room tucked between two buildings that carry facades to the sidewalk. Painted a lively yellow with a bright blue awning, adorned with a perky flower bed awash with color, the Reading Room has perched in its niche on Cary Street for years. Doing okay. Hanging in there.

Now imagine a street festival that attracts approximately a 140-150,000 people meandering the closed streets on a hot August day, right in front of the Reading Room. For one Sunday a year, the Carytown Watermelon Festival converts Cary Street in Richmond,Virginia, into a big party. A street party. Music, food vendors, families with strollers and dogs on leashes. What does the Reading Room do?

First, we open our doors for a few hours on that Sunday afternoon. Nothing happens. Our light is definitely not shining. The Reading Room tries a few years of putting out a table with Reading Room stock in front, manned by a couple of volunteers. No one is too excited about the effort. They offer free cups of water to the hot and thirsty. Almost no one stops by to chat or survey the Reading Room wares. Just too hard a job, some felt. Too difficult to share Christian Science is such a hurly-burly atmosphere.

Does the church give up and go back to closing up for the festival?

No way. The church has learned its lesson. Hiding a light under a bushel is a bummer. The next year, a generous budget is set. The church rents two spaces in the middle of the street, sets up tents and chairs, sponsors a Christian Science lecture for the middle of the festival day, and orders extras of everything. A couple hundred copies of Science and Health in bright blue paperback. A couple hundred blue Bibles. People who never heard of Christian Science sit in the lawn chairs under the tent and hear a great lecture. Several stay and ask questions of the speaker, Sarah Hyatt. Passers-by hear a phrase, stop dead in their tracks and listen from the street. The Reading Room is involved and part of the festival.

Yet somehow that pesky bushel gets popped over the Reading Room’s candle once more. Several lean years follow, but the church is praying its way to the street once more.

Another group gathers to try a tent in the street. This time, many candles will be lit. Pretty green T-shirts with “God Heals, ask me how” printed on the back, and the Cross and Crown symbol on the front shoulder in vivid pink are worn by church members. Monitors are rolled and tied with pink and green ribbons attached to equally festive helium balloons emblazoned with “Christian Science Reading Room, 3431 West Cary Street,” and handed out to passers-by. Hundreds of free Sentinels are accepted by the curious. Festival-goers stop in the tent and chat, maybe to escape the August heat, but also out of curiosity. They ask if the tent belongs to Scientology (which has a new building a block down the street). What fun to explain we’re not. Tent workers get tons of chances to talk about Christian Science and share healings they’ve experienced in their own lives.

The next year, the church orders even more Monitors, more Sentinels for giveaways. And they’re accepted by the passers-by. With each year, and increased orders for periodicals, the volunteers find they’re able to hand out all of them. Each gift to a festival-goer opens a door to a conversation, a chance to talk about God and Christian Science, and spiritual healing.

People head inside to the Reading Room proper, where volunteers answer more questions. The Reading Room stock inside grows depleted. The day is alight with candles without bushels.

More visitors, simple seekers of Truth, visit after the Festival than ever before. The Reading Room has taken it to the streets, and the streets have found the Reading Room. How very grateful the church is for this tangible evidence of the efficacy of prayer.