<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.</h2>
<h2><span class="smcap">The Foundations of Faith.</span></h2>
<p>Before man can think in the
Certain Way which will
cause his diseases to be
healed, he must believe in
certain truths which are
here stated:—</p>
<p>All things are made from one Living
Substance, which, in its original state,
permeates, penetrates, and fills the interspaces
of the universe. While all
visible things are made from It, yet this
Substance, in its first formless condition
is in and through all the visible forms
that It has made. Its life is in All, and
its intelligence is in All.</p>
<p>This Substance creates by thought,
and its method is by taking the form
of that which it thinks about. The
thought of a form held by this substance
causes it to assume that form; the<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 18]</span>
thought of a motion causes it to institute
that motion. Forms are created by
this substance in moving itself into certain
attitudes or positions. When Original
Substance wishes to create a given
form, it thinks of the motions which
will produce that form. When it wishes
to create a world, it thinks of the motions,
perhaps extending through ages,
which will result in its coming into the
attitude and form of the world; and
these motions are made. When it wishes
to create an oak tree, it thinks of the
sequences of movement, perhaps extending
through ages, which will result in
the form of an oak tree; and these
motions are made. The particular
sequences of motion by which differing
forms should be produced were established
in the beginning; they are changeless.
Certain motions instituted in the
Formless Substance will forever produce
certain forms.</p>
<p>Man's body is formed from the Original
Substance, and is the result of cer<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 19]</span>tain
motions, which first existed as
thoughts of Original Substance. The
motions which produce, renew, and repair
the body of man are called functions,
and these functions are of two
classes: voluntary and involuntary.
The involuntary functions are under
the control of the Principle of Health
in man, and are performed in a perfectly
healthy manner so long as man thinks
in a certain way. The voluntary functions
of life are eating, drinking, breathing,
and sleeping. These, entirely or in
part, are under the direction of man's
conscious mind; and he can perform
them in a perfectly healthy way if he
will. If he does not perform them in
a healthy way, he cannot long be well.
So we see that if man thinks in a certain
way, and eats, drinks, breathes, and
sleeps in a corresponding way, he will
be well.</p>
<p>The involuntary functions of man's life
are under the direct control of the Principle
of Health, and so long as man<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 20]</span>
thinks in a perfectly healthy way, these
functions are perfectly performed; for
the action of the Principle of Health is
largely directed by man's conscious
thought, affecting his sub-conscious
mind.</p>
<p>Man is a thinking center, capable of
originating thought; and as he does not
know everything, he makes mistakes
and thinks error. Not knowing everything,
he believes things to be true which
are not true. Man holds in his thought
the idea of diseased and abnormal functioning
and conditions, and so perverts
the action of the Principle of Health,
causing diseased and abnormal functioning
and conditions within his own
body. In the Original Substance there
are held only the thoughts of perfect
motion; perfect and healthy function;
complete life. God never thinks disease
or imperfection. But for countless ages
men have held thoughts of disease, abnormality,
old age, and death; and the
perverted functioning resulting from<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 21]</span>
these thoughts has become a part of the
inheritance of the race. Our ancestors
have, for many generations, held imperfect
ideas concerning human form and
functioning; and we begin life with
racial sub-conscious impressions of imperfection
and disease.</p>
<p>This is not natural, or a part of the
plan of nature. The purpose of nature
can be nothing else than the perfection
of life. This we see from the very
nature of life itself. It is the nature
of life to continually advance toward
more perfect living; advancement is
the inevitable result of the very act
of living. Increase is always the result
of active living; whatever lives
must live more and more. The seed,
lying in the granary, has life, but
it is not living. Put it into the soil and
it becomes active, and at once begins to
gather to itself from the surrounding
substance, and to build a plant form.
It will so cause increase that a seed head
will be produced containing thirty,<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 22]</span>
sixty, or a hundred seeds, each having
as much life as the first.</p>
<p>Life, by living, increases.</p>
<p>Life cannot live without increasing,
and the fundamental impulse of life is
to live. It is in response to this fundamental
impulse that Original Substance
works, and creates. God must live; and
he cannot live except as he creates and
increases. In multiplying forms, He
is moving on to live more.</p>
<p>The universe is a Great Advancing
Life, and the purpose of nature is the
advancement of life toward perfection;
toward perfect functioning. The purpose
of nature is perfect health.</p>
<p>The purpose of Nature, so far as man
is concerned, is that he should be continuously
advancing into more life, and
progressing toward perfect life; and
that he should live the most complete
life possible in his present sphere of
action.</p>
<p>This must be so, because That which
lives in man is seeking more life.<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 23]</span></p>
<p>Give a little child a pencil and paper,
and he begins to draw crude figures;
That which lives in him is trying to
express Itself in art. Give him a set of
blocks, and he will try to build something;
That which lives in him is seeking
expression in architecture. Seat him
at a piano, and he will try to draw harmony
from the keys; That which lives in
him is trying to express Itself in music.
That which lives in man is always seeking
to live more; and since man lives
most when he is well, the Principle of
Nature in him can seek only health.
The natural state of man is a state of
perfect health; and everything in him,
and in nature, tends toward health.</p>
<p>Sickness can have no place in the
thought of Original Substance, for it is
by its own nature continually impelled
toward the fullest and most perfect life;
therefore, toward health. Man, as he
exists in the thought of the Formless
Substance, has perfect health. Disease,
which is abnormal or perverted func<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 24]</span>tion—motion
imperfectly made, or made
in the direction of imperfect life—has
no place in the thought of the Thinking
Stuff.</p>
<p>The Supreme Mind never thinks of
disease. Disease was not created or
ordained by God, or sent forth from
him. It is wholly a product of separate
consciousness; of the individual thought
of man. God, the Formless Substance,
does not see disease, think disease, know
disease, or recognize disease. Disease
is recognized only by the thought of
man; God thinks nothing but health.</p>
<p>From all the foregoing, we see that
health is <i>a fact</i> or TRUTH in the original
substance from which we are all
formed; and that disease is imperfect
functioning, resulting from the imperfect
thoughts of men, past and present.
If man's thoughts of himself had always
been those of perfect health, man could
not possibly now be otherwise than perfectly
healthy.</p>
<p>Man in perfect health is the thought<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 25]</span>
of Original Substance, and man in imperfect
health is the result of his own
failure to think perfect health, and to
perform the voluntary functions of life
in a healthy way. We will here arrange
in a syllabus the basic truths of the
Science of Being Well:—</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><i>There is a Thinking Substance from
which all things are made, and which, in
its original state, permeates, penetrates,
and fills the interspaces of the universe.
It is the life of All.</i></p>
<p><i>The thought of a form in this Substance
causes the form; the thought of
a motion produces the motion. In relation
to man, the thoughts of this Substance
are always of perfect functioning
and perfect health.</i></p>
<p><i>Man is a thinking center, capable of
original thought; and his thought has
power over his own functioning. By
thinking imperfect thoughts he has
caused imperfect and perverted functioning;
and by performing the voluntary
functions of life in a perverted
manner, he has assisted in causing
disease.</i></p>
</div>
<p><span class='pagenum'>[Pg 26]</span></p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><i>If man will think only thoughts of
perfect health, he can cause within himself
the functioning of perfect health;
all the Power of Life will be exerted to
assist him. But this healthy functioning
will not continue unless man performs
the external, or voluntary, functions
of living in a healthy manner.</i></p>
<p><i>Man's first step must be to learn how
to think perfect health; and his second
step to learn how to eat, drink, breathe,
and sleep in a perfectly healthy way.
If man takes these two steps, he will
certainly become well, and remain so.</i></p>
</div>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class='pagenum'>[Pg 27]</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />