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Church of Christ, Scientist
Church of Christ, Scientist
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Church of Christ, Scientist
The First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, the church's administrative headquarters
ClassificationChristian new religious movement Restorationist
OrientationNontrinitarianism
ScriptureScience and Health with Key to the Scriptures and Bible
RegionUnited States
FounderMary Baker Eddy
Origin1879; 146 years ago (1879)
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Congregationsapproximately 1750[1] worldwide (1,153 in US as of 2010)
Membersestimates range from around 400,000 to under 100,000.

The Church of Christ, Scientist was founded in 1879 in Boston, Massachusetts, by Mary Baker Eddy, author of Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, and founder of Christian Science. The church was founded "to commemorate the word and works of Christ Jesus" and "reinstate primitive Christianity and its lost element of healing".

In the early decades of the 20th century, Christian Science churches were founded in communities around the world. During the final decades of that century, there was a marked decline in membership, except in Africa, where there has been growth. Headquartered in Boston, the church does not officially report membership, and estimates as to worldwide membership range from under 100,000 to about 400,000.[2] In 2010, there were 1,153 churches in the United States.[3]

History

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The church building, Huntington Ave., Boston, 1900

The church was incorporated by Mary Baker Eddy in 1879, following a claimed personal healing in 1866, which she said resulted from reading the Bible.[4] The Bible and Eddy's textbook on Christian healing, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, are together the church's key doctrinal sources and have been ordained as the church's "dual impersonal pastor".[5]

The First Church of Christ, Scientist publishes the weekly newspaper The Christian Science Monitor in print and online.

Beliefs and practices

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Christian Scientists believe that prayer is effective for healing diseases.[6] The Church has collected over 50,000 testimonies of incidents that it considers healing through Christian Science treatment alone. While most of these testimonies represent ailments neither diagnosed nor treated by medical professionals, the Church requires three other people to vouch for any testimony published in any of its official organs, including the Christian Science Journal, Christian Science Sentinel, and Herald of Christian Science; verifiers say that they witnessed the healing or know the testifier well enough to vouch for them.[7]

A Christian Science practitioner is someone who devotes their full time to prayer for others, but they do not use drugs or make medical diagnoses.[8] Christian Scientists may take an intensive two-week "Primary" class from an authorized Christian Science teacher.[9] Those who wish to become "Journal-listed" (accredited) practitioners, devoting themselves full-time to the practice of healing, must first have Primary class instruction. When they have what the church regards as a record of healing, they may submit their names for publication in the directory of practitioners and teachers in the Christian Science Journal. A practitioner who has been listed for at least three years may apply for "Normal" class instruction, given once every three years.[10][11] Those who receive a certificate are authorized to teach.[12] Both Primary and Normal classes are based on the Bible and the writings of Mary Baker Eddy. The Primary class focuses on the chapter "Recapitulation" in Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. This chapter uses the Socratic method of teaching and contains the "Scientific Statement of Being". The "Normal" class focuses on the platform of Christian Science, contained on pages 330-340 of Science and Health.[13]

Organization

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Reflecting pool with high-rises in the background
Reflecting pool of the headquarters of the Church of Christ, Scientist. The Prudential Tower and 111 Huntington Avenue are in the background.

The First Church of Christ, Scientist is the legal title of The Mother Church and administrative headquarters of the Christian Science Church.[14] The Mary Baker Eddy Library for the Betterment of Humanity is housed in an 11-story structure originally built for The Christian Science Publishing Society.

An international newspaper, The Christian Science Monitor, founded by Eddy in 1908 and winner of seven Pulitzer Prizes, is published by the church through the Christian Science Publishing Society.[15]

Board of directors

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The First Church of Christ, Scientist is the Mother Church and ad­min­is­tra­tive head­quar­ters of the Christian Science Church.

The Christian Science Board of Directors is a five-person executive entity created by Mary Baker Eddy to conduct the business of the Christian Science Church under the terms defined in the by-laws of the Church Manual. Its functions and restrictions are defined by the Manual.

Controversies

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Broadcasting

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Beginning in the mid-1980s, church executives undertook a controversial and ambitious foray into electronic broadcast media. The first significant effort was to create a weekly half-hour syndicated television program, The Christian Science Monitor Reports. "Monitor Reports" was anchored in its first season by newspaper veteran Rob Nelson.[16] He was replaced in the second by the Christian Science Monitor's former Moscow correspondent, David Willis.[17]

In October 1991, Christian Science Monitor anchor John Hart, who is not a Christian Scientist, resigned following professional disputes with the Monitor regarding Christian Science teachings and his journalistic independence.[18]

The hundreds of millions lost on broadcasting brought the church to the brink of bankruptcy. However, with the 1991 publication of The Destiny of The Mother Church by the late Bliss Knapp, the church secured a $90 million bequest from the Knapp trust. The trust dictated that the book be published as "Authorized Literature", with neither modification nor comment. Historically, the church had censured Knapp for deviating at several points from Eddy's teaching, and had refused to publish the work. The church's archivist, fired in anticipation of the book's publication, wrote to branch churches to inform them of the book's history. Many Christian Scientists thought the book violated the church's by-laws, and the editors of the church's religious periodicals and several other church employees resigned in protest. Alternate beneficiaries subsequently sued to contest the church's claim it had complied fully with the will's terms, and the church ultimately received only half of the original sum.[19][20]

The fallout of the broadcasting debacle also sparked a minor revolt among some prominent church members. In late 1993, a group of Christian Scientists filed suit against the Board of Directors, alleging a willful disregard for the Manual of The Mother Church in its financial dealings. The suit was thrown out by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in 1997, but a lingering discontent with the church's financial matters persists to this day.[21] The Destiny Of The Mother Church ceased publication in September 2023.[22]

Membership decline and financial setbacks

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In spite of its early meteoric rise, church membership has declined over the past eight decades, according to the church's former treasurer, J. Edward Odegaard.[23] Though the Church is prohibited by the Manual from publishing membership figures, the number of branch churches in the United States has fallen steadily since World War II. In 2009, for the first time in church history, more new members came from Africa than the United States.[24]

In 2005, The Boston Globe reported that the church was considering consolidating Boston operations into fewer buildings and leasing out space in buildings it owned. Church official Philip G. Davis noted that the administration and Colonnade buildings had not been fully used for many years and that vacancy increased after staff reductions in 2004. The church posted an $8 million financial loss in fiscal 2003, and in 2004 cut 125 jobs, a quarter of the staff, at the Christian Science Monitor. Conversely, Davis noted that "the financial situation right now is excellent" and stated that the church was not facing financial problems.[25]

Use of spiritual healing in place of medical treatment

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The use of prayer, often in place of medical treatment, has been an area of controversy since the founding of the church; and the legality of practicing Christian Science was raised as early as 1887, when some Christian Science practitioners were charged with practicing medicine without a license.[26] Avoidance of medical care is not a doctrinal obligation and is considered a personal choice.[27] However, during the 1980s and 1990s in the United States, a number of Christian Scientist parents whose children died from lack of access to medical treatment were the subject of considerable controversy and were charged with manslaughter or even murder, but the outcomes of the cases were inconsistent.[28][29] The lack of consensus regarding medical care is reflected in the laws of various U.S. states, which have also been inconsistent regarding religious exemptions from medical care.[30]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Church of Christ, Scientist, commonly known as the Christian Science church, is a religious denomination founded by Mary Baker Eddy in 1879 in Lynn, Massachusetts, which teaches that physical ailments and moral failings arise from erroneous material beliefs and can be healed through prayerful alignment with God's spiritual laws, as interpreted via the Bible and Eddy's Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. The church's core tenet posits God as infinite divine Principle, Love, and Spirit, rendering matter—including disease and death—as illusory, with healing achieved not by medical intervention but by demonstrating spiritual reality. Eddy, who claimed to have rediscovered the healing method of Jesus after her own recovery from a severe injury in 1866, established the denomination's Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston in 1892 following an earlier reorganization. Lacking ordained clergy, services feature readings from the Bible and Science and Health by elected readers, emphasizing individual study and reliance on Christian Science practitioners for prayer-based treatment. The church operates branch congregations worldwide and publishes the Pulitzer Prize-winning Christian Science Monitor, noted for objective journalism. Despite its foundational emphasis on eschewing medicine in favor of prayer, the church has faced persistent legal scrutiny over cases where adherents' refusal of medical care, particularly for children, resulted in preventable deaths, with at least 50 parents charged with or since the mid-20th century. Empirical outcomes of prayer-only have drawn for lacking the of conventional treatments, contributing to the denomination's sharp decline from over 270,000 U.S. adherents in 1936 to an estimated fewer than 50,000 worldwide today, alongside the closure of hundreds of branches.

History

Founding and Mary Baker Eddy

Mary Baker Eddy was born Mary Morse Baker on July 16, 1821, in , to a Congregationalist family where she developed an early interest in the amid chronic health issues that limited her formal education. In 1862, suffering from severe illness, she sought treatment from , a mesmerist and healer in , who emphasized mental causes for disease and used suggestion to effect cures; historians note this experience influenced her later ideas on mind and healing, though Eddy maintained her principles derived from biblical study rather than Quimby's methods. Quimby's approach rejected material medicine in favor of mental manipulation, but Eddy's evolving system centered on spiritual reality as described in Scripture, denying matter's substantiality—a distinction she insisted upon to differentiate her discovery from secular . On February 22, 1866, while living in Lynn, Massachusetts, Eddy fell severely on an icy sidewalk, sustaining injuries physicians deemed fatal; bedridden and in agony, she reportedly recovered dramatically within days after turning to accounts of Jesus' healings in the New Testament Gospels, an event she described as her "discovery" of the divine laws underlying spiritual healing, termed Christian Science. This experience, which she attributed to prayer revealing God's omnipotence over illusionary sickness, prompted intensive Bible study and experimentation with teaching others to heal through spiritual means, marking the causal origin of her theology that views disease as erroneous belief countered by alignment with divine Mind. From 1867 onward, Eddy conducted informal classes in Lynn, refining her teachings amid personal and financial hardships, including a brief, contentious marriage to Daniel Patterson in 1853 that ended in separation. Eddy's core text, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, first appeared in 1875 under her then-name Mary Baker Glover, articulating as a demonstrable system where health reflects harmony with , Spirit, and matter as unreal; initial print runs were small, around 1,000 copies, and the book faced criticism for its metaphysical claims but sold steadily among her students. By 1877, after divorcing Patterson and marrying Asa Gilbert Eddy, she formalized instruction through the Christian Scientist Association, which in April 1879, with approximately 12 to 15 members in Lynn, voted to establish the Church of Christ, , to "reinstate primitive and its lost element of ." The church's bylaws emphasized scriptural authority and rejection of material remedies, with Eddy as pastor; its founding on these principles reflected her empirical observations of healings via her method, though skeptics later attributed successes to or , a view Eddy countered by documenting cases independent of human will. The nascent church in Lynn operated modestly, holding services in members' homes and focusing on healing practice over ritual, but internal disputes prompted relocation to by 1882, where growth accelerated; Eddy's leadership, grounded in her claimed revelatory insights rather than institutional precedent, positioned the movement as a restorationist effort against mainstream Christianity's perceived dilution of Jesus' . Sources close to Eddy, such as church records, affirm the founding's success through verified s, while external analyses highlight her organizational acumen in codifying a that attracted adherents disillusioned with 19th-century medicine's limitations, including high mortality from procedures like .

Early Expansion and Institutionalization

![The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Massachusetts][float-right] Following its establishment on April 19, 1879, in Boston, Massachusetts, the Church of Christ, Scientist experienced initial growth through Mary Baker Eddy's classes on spiritual healing and her publication of Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. Early adherents formed informal groups, leading to the organization of the first branch societies in the early 1880s, such as those in and other U.S. cities by the mid-1890s. To support expansion and maintain doctrinal unity, Eddy launched The Christian Science Journal on April 14, 1883, initially titled Journal of Christian Science, which served to list authorized practitioners, report healings, and directory emerging churches. This periodical facilitated communication among scattered members and helped standardize practices amid rapid dissemination of teachings. In 1898, Eddy established The Christian Science Sentinel as a weekly publication to "hold guard over Truth, Life, and Love," providing timely articles on healings and defenses against , further institutionalizing the movement's . Institutionalization advanced with the 1892 reorganization, designating The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in as the "Mother Church" to oversee branches nationwide. Construction of its first edifice began in 1893 and completed in 1894, symbolizing permanence and attracting members. published the Church Manual in 1895, codifying bylaws, governance structure, and worship protocols, including the use of the and Science and Health as the church's pastor, to prevent deviations and ensure fidelity to her teachings. By the early , these measures supported over 200 branch churches and thousands of adherents, reflecting organized expansion rooted in centralized authority.

Post-Eddy Developments and 20th-Century Challenges

Following Mary Baker Eddy's death on December 3, 1910, governance of The First Church of Christ, Scientist, transitioned to its five-member in , as stipulated in her Church Manual, which prohibited any personal successor and emphasized adherence to her written instructions without alteration. The board centralized authority, managing institutional operations and interpreting the Manual amid early disputes over leadership interpretations, including a 1919-1921 internal conflict known among adherents as "The Field's" challenges to board decisions on church property and publications. By the 1930s, global membership peaked at approximately 270,000, with over 2,100 U.S. congregations by 1945, reflecting continued expansion through branch churches and periodicals like , founded in 1908. Mid-century, the church faced mounting external pressures from advancing medical , including antibiotics discovered in 1928 and widespread campaigns post-1940s, which empirically demonstrated causal in prevention and treatment, contrasting Christian Science's reliance on alone. Membership began a sustained decline, dropping to about 150,000 by 1992, accompanied by church closures; U.S. congregations fell from nearly 1,900 in 1971 to 911 by 2009. This trend correlated with broader U.S. but was exacerbated by the church's doctrinal rejection of material causation in illness, as empirical data showed -based healing lacking reproducible outcomes comparable to medical interventions. Legal challenges intensified scrutiny of practices, particularly cases involving from untreated conditions curable by medicine, leading to at least 50 prosecutions of parents for or by the late . Courts increasingly rejected religious exemptions for medical neglect, as in legislative battles and rulings affirming parental duty to provide effective care, prioritizing child welfare over spiritual autonomy claims. Internally, a 1982 by members contested the Mother Church's hierarchical control over branches, alleging overreach beyond Eddy's Manual, though the board prevailed, reinforcing centralized governance amid declining adherence. These developments highlighted tensions between the church's metaphysical premises and observable causal realities of biology and .

Core Teachings

Theological Foundations

The theological foundations of the Church of Christ, Scientist rest on the premise that is the infinite, omnipotent divine Mind—synonymous with Principle, Life, Truth, Love, Soul, and Spirit—and the sole creator of a purely spiritual , as articulated by founder in her 1875 text Science and Health with Key to the . This work interprets the as the foundational scripture, positing that genuine is a demonstrable of divine laws, wherein spiritual understanding yields and regeneration, countering material beliefs in , sickness, and as illusions originating from a false mortal mind rather than 's perfect creation. Eddy defined as impersonal , the "I AM" of Exodus 3:14, excluding anthropomorphic or tri-personal conceptions of deity that she viewed as suggestive of ; instead, the comprises symbolic elements— as Father-Mother (divine ), Christ as the spiritual idea of sonship (divine ), and divine as the Holy (law of and truth). is regarded not as incarnate in a literal sense but as the human way-shower who fully manifested the eternal Christ-idea, demonstrating mastery over material conditions through alignment with divine Mind, thereby revealing the unreality of matter and the of spiritual man made in 's . Central to this is the assertion that lacks substance, being a sensory of mortal belief disconnected from God's spiritual ; , , and are thus not inherent or divinely ordained but erroneous projections to be nullified through prayerful affirmation of God's allness and man's inherent perfection as spiritual reflection. Salvation follows from awakening to this , emulating ' works by applying immutable divine laws, which described as the promised in :26, leading to eternal life beyond physical demise. This framework rejects as vicarious substitution, emphasizing instead personal demonstration of truth to overcome evil, with the Bible's miracles—such as ' healings—serving as precedents for contemporary .

Key Concepts from Science and Health

Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures articulates the metaphysical framework of , presenting divine Science as the system underlying biblical healings and spiritual regeneration. Authored by and first published in 1875, the book interprets Scripture to reveal God as infinite —expressed as Mind, Spirit, Soul, , Life, Truth, and Love— the sole creator and sustainer of a purely spiritual devoid of . This divine operates through immutable spiritual laws, enabling demonstrable of and as proofs of truth. A foundational assertion is the unreality of matter, deemed a "mortal error" or illusion projected by a false material consciousness, in contrast to the eternal reality of Spirit. The book's "Scientific Statement of Being" encapsulates this: "There is no life, truth, intelligence, nor substance in matter. All is infinite Mind and its infinite manifestation, for God is All-in-all." Matter's supposed phenomena, including sickness and death, lack divine origin and thus no inherent power, yielding to the recognition of spiritual harmony. Man, as God's image and likeness, exists only as perfect spiritual idea, reflecting divine attributes without capacity for discord when viewed aright. Healing emerges not as miraculous intervention but as the natural outcome of correcting erroneous mortal thought to align with divine , mirroring ' works as rule rather than exception. Prayer functions as affirmative communion with , destroying belief in materiality by affirming omnipotent good, with results verifiable through practice. emphasizes obedience to this over human will, distinguishing it from mental suggestion or hypnotism. The text summarizes these principles in six tenets on pages 496–497, affirming the as guide to eternal ; one supreme , as divine idea, the Holy Ghost as divine , and man as God's spiritual image; divine forgiveness via sin's unreality; atonement as union with evidenced by ; and demonstrating matter's nothingness and eternal ; and commitment to embody mercy and justice. These tenets integrate theology with practical application, positioning as provable .

Practices

Worship Services and Community Activities

Sunday worship services in branches of the Church of Christ, Scientist, are held weekly, typically at 10 or 11 a.m. local time, and consist of readings from the Bible and Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy, hymns, and prayer, without sermons delivered by clergy. The Lesson-Sermon, the core of the service, alternates passages from the Bible and Science and Health on subjects such as "God the Preserver of Man" or "Probation After Death," prepared quarterly by an editorial committee at The Mother Church in Boston. Services are conducted by two elected readers—a First Reader for biblical selections and a Second Reader for Science and Health—in accordance with the Church Manual by Mary Baker Eddy. Concurrent Sunday schools operate for pupils up to age 20, focusing on biblical lessons interpreted through Christian Science teachings. Wednesday testimony meetings follow a similar structure of hymns and readings but devote the latter portion to voluntary sharing of experiences of healing and spiritual insights derived from study and prayer. These meetings, often held at 7:30 or 8 p.m. local time in branch churches, encourage attendees to recount verifiable healings without physical aid, emphasizing prayer's efficacy. At The Mother Church, the service broadcasts live online at 2 p.m. ET, with audio replays available shortly after. Community activities include public lectures delivered by members of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship, addressing topics like spiritual healing and practical application of biblical principles to contemporary issues. These free talks, offered in-person and online worldwide, aim to explain without proselytizing and are open to all audiences. Many branches maintain public Reading Rooms stocked with the , Science and Health, and other authorized , available for study during posted hours, typically staffed by volunteers. Communion services, symbolic of rather than elements, occur biannually in January and July, incorporating the reading of the church's Tenets.

Spiritual Healing Methods

Christian Science spiritual healing relies on prayer to address the root cause of illness as a mistaken in matter's reality, affirming instead the spiritual perfection of God's creation as described in Mary Baker Eddy's Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures (first published ). Practitioners and adherents view healing as a scientific demonstration of biblical truths, modeled after ' healings, where discord yields to the recognition of divine Mind as the only true power, rendering material symptoms illusory errors in human thought. This method rejects mechanistic or material interventions, positing that genuine cure occurs through mental alignment with God's unchanging goodness, without rituals, incantations, or physical contact such as . The process typically begins when an individual, facing physical, emotional, or relational discord, turns to independently or seeks support from a designated . A practitioner—trained through class instruction authorized by The and listed in official directories—engages in , often remotely, to challenge the patient's fear-based perceptions and affirm spiritual facts like "man is spiritual and perfect, reflecting God's image." This "absent treatment" emphasizes that distance is no barrier, as operates via universal spiritual rather than personal proximity or willpower. Patients are encouraged to study Eddy's writings, particularly chapters on and in Science and Health, and to persist in applying these ideas until manifests, sometimes instantaneously but often progressively as thought reforms. Eddy herself claimed discovery of this method following her 1866 recovery from severe injuries sustained in a fall, which she attributed to insights from biblical accounts of ' healings rather than medical care or mesmerism she had previously explored. Subsequent healings by and early students formed the basis for institutionalizing the practice, with practitioners required to demonstrate consistent results in their own lives before assisting others. While the church publishes verified testimonies of healings—including cases with medical documentation, such as a 1969-1988 reviewing X-rays and biopsies confirming resolutions of conditions like cancer—outcomes rely on self-reported experiences vetted for alignment with core teachings, lacking large-scale randomized controlled trials due to the movement's emphasis on individualized spiritual demonstration over empirical aggregation. A 1999 study of Christian Scientists found self-reported lower illness rates compared to the general population ( 0.66), though critics note potential in adherents predisposed to positive health perceptions.

Organization and Governance

The Mother Church in Boston

The First Church of Christ, Scientist, universally referred to as The Mother Church, functions as the administrative and spiritual headquarters of the , situated at 250 Massachusetts Avenue in Boston, Massachusetts. Established by on January 18, 1892, through the merger of local societies into a unified international entity, it embodies the denominational center as outlined in Eddy's Church Manual. The original edifice, a modest Romanesque brick structure, was constructed rapidly from late 1894 following the purchase of a small lot for $10,763, with dedication services held on January 6, 1895, accommodating initial growth from fewer than 300 members. This building seated about 500 and symbolized economical stewardship, completed at a cost reflecting volunteer labor and donated materials amid financial constraints. Rapid expansion necessitated the Extension, initiated in 1902 under architect Solon S. Beman and completed in 1906 with a distinctive dome rising 224 feet, blending Byzantine, , and neoclassical styles; it opened to visitors on June 10, 1906, boosting total capacity to over 3,000. Six services were required on opening to handle attendance demands. Governance of The Mother Church resides with the Christian Science Board of Directors, a self-perpetuating five-member body appointed per the Church Manual, tasked with appointing officers such as Readers and , managing properties, publications, and ensuring doctrinal fidelity across affiliated . While branch churches maintain democratic operations without interference from individuals or other entities, they affiliate with The Mother Church and submit to its by-laws for uniformity in practice and teaching. The complex expanded further with the 1972 Colonnade Building, designed by , and a , forming the Christian Science Plaza amid ongoing preservation as a Boston Landmark.

Branch Churches and Local Operations

Branch churches of the Church of Christ, Scientist, are autonomous local congregations formed by groups meeting the membership thresholds specified in Mary Baker Eddy's Church Manual, Article XXIII. A Christian Science requires at least six members, including four members of The Mother Church in , while a branch church demands 16 members, with four from The Mother Church and at least one Journal-listed practitioner. Societies must hold at least two services per month in a public location, whereas branch churches are required to conduct weekly services, Wednesday testimony meetings, maintain a , host an annual public lecture, and operate a Reading Room. Governance of branch churches emphasizes local self-government and democracy, as mandated in Church Manual Article XXIII, Section 10, which states that each branch shall be "distinctly democratic in its government" with no interference from individuals or other churches. Local bylaws are developed to address specific needs, such as membership procedures and operational rules, but must align with the Manual's provisions and tenets of , ensuring no conflict with the Mother Church's framework. This structure promotes independence while upholding core principles of healing and spiritual regeneration. Officers, including first and second readers—who conduct services by reading from the and Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures—a , , , and other roles, are elected annually by the membership through majority vote, reflecting the democratic . Readers must be members of The Mother Church, and elections occur in accordance with local bylaws and . The board handles administrative duties, including financial oversight and property management. Local operations center on regular and community outreach. Sunday services follow a uniform order prescribed in the Manual, featuring correlated readings from the and Science and Health based on weekly lessons from The Christian Science Quarterly. Wednesday meetings include singing, silent , and sharing of testimonies of healing and spiritual progress. Sunday schools instruct youth under 20 in principles, excluding children over 20 to focus on foundational teachings. Many branch churches maintain public Christian Science Reading Rooms, which serve as quiet spaces for study, prayer, and access to literature including the , Science and Health, and periodicals, often open daily or during service times to support individual spiritual inquiry and healing. Branches also organize public lectures on , manage their own properties and finances, and discipline members locally, fostering self-sustaining operations aligned with the church's emphasis on practical demonstration of its teachings.

Roles of Practitioners and Teachers

Christian Science practitioners are lay members of the Church of Christ, Scientist, who devote their full time to providing spiritual healing through prayer, assisting individuals with challenges such as illness, financial difficulties, or ethical dilemmas. They apply principles from the and Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by to support clients in recognizing God's spiritual laws over material conditions, emphasizing transformation of consciousness rather than human suggestion or positive thinking. Practitioners maintain , offer ongoing support via phone, , or in-person sessions, and may charge reasonable fees consistent with biblical , such as "the laborer is worthy of his hire" from Luke 10:7. To qualify as a listed practitioner, individuals must submit verified accounts of healings demonstrating adherence to ' example and reliance on divine power, undergo evaluation by The First Church of Christ, Scientist (The Mother Church), and advertise in The Christian Science Journal. Listing in the Journal serves as a public endorsement of their dedication, enabling seekers to locate them through the church's directory, though unlisted practitioners may also offer services informally. This role underscores the church's emphasis on practical demonstration of its teachings, with practitioners functioning independently without formal or medical training. Christian Science teachers, authorized by the Christian Science , conduct Primary class instruction—a structured 12-lesson course spanning two weeks—focusing on equipping students for self- and healing others through spiritual understanding. The curriculum draws primarily from the "Recapitulation" chapter of Science and Health, integrating references and Eddy's writings to elucidate ' method of healing as a model of aligning thought with divine . Teachers charge a standard fee of $100, though students may contribute more voluntarily, and post-class, they form associations with pupils for annual meetings to foster ongoing spiritual progress and accountability. Authorization requires prior experience as a practitioner or demonstrated healing ability, with the Board selecting candidates who exemplify the church's standards; teachers must adhere to guidelines in the Church Manual, including limits on class frequency (no more than once every three years per teacher). This instruction represents an advanced, individualized extension of teachings, aimed at deepening personal application of principles without substituting for individual study or practitioner assistance. Both roles—practitioners and teachers—reinforce the church's non-clerical , where and instruction emerge from members' direct engagement with its foundational texts.

Publications and Outreach

The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor was established by Mary Baker Eddy, founder of the Church of Christ, Scientist, with its first issue published on November 25, 1908, as a response to the sensationalism prevalent in contemporary newspapers known as yellow journalism. Eddy articulated its guiding principle in the inaugural editorial, stating its object was "to injure no man, but to bless all mankind" by substituting for "entertainment, the useful and true." Initially launched as a daily newspaper targeting a national audience, it emphasized factual reporting, in-depth analysis, and a focus on constructive solutions rather than conflict or scandal. Ownership resides with The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in , which provides financial support through church funds alongside subscription revenue, insulating it from commercial advertising pressures or corporate influences. Despite this affiliation, the publication maintains in its news coverage, with the church appointing the but deferring daily journalistic decisions to professional staff; only opinion pieces under "The Monitor’s View" undergo pre-publication review by church representatives to align with its non-proselytizing stance. News articles deliberately avoid promoting doctrine or religious advocacy, instead prioritizing objective, context-rich reporting that enables readers to draw their own conclusions, a practice rooted in Eddy's intent for the Monitor to foster public discourse without doctrinal imposition. The Monitor's journalistic approach has consistently favored international affairs, human interest stories, and solution-oriented narratives over or partisan bias, earning it a reputation for thoughtful, unprejudiced coverage. In , it transitioned from daily print editions to a weekly magazine format supplemented by robust online daily content, including newsletters and , reflecting adaptations to trends while sustaining its core mission. This shift occurred amid broader industry declines in , though specific subscriber figures for recent years remain undisclosed publicly; historically, peak daily circulation exceeded 220,000 in the 1970s before contracting with the move to nonprofit, digital-first operations. The publication has received seven Pulitzer Prizes, recognizing excellence in areas such as international reporting (1950 for Edmund Stevens' uncensored series; 1967 for John Hughes on ; 1996 for David Rohde on Bosnia), national reporting (1968 for Howard James on court crises; 1969 for Robert Cahn on national parks), commentary (1978 for Richard Strout's political analysis), and editorial cartooning (2002 for Clay Bennett). As of 2025, it operates as a nonprofit international organization with a global reporting staff, delivering content via website, podcasts, and the weekly print edition, while upholding its founder's emphasis on informing through truth and humanity rather than influencing outcomes.

Religious Journals and Periodicals

The Christian Science Publishing Society, established by , produces three primary religious periodicals: The Christian Science Journal, Christian Science Sentinel, and The Herald of Christian Science. These magazines focus on expositions of theology, verified accounts of spiritual healing, and practical applications of Eddy's teachings from Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. They serve as official channels for disseminating doctrinal insights and practitioner directories, distinct from the news-oriented Christian Science Monitor. The Christian Science Journal, launched in April 1883, functions as the flagship monthly publication and official organ of the Church of Christ, Scientist. Eddy initiated it to document the principles of , counter misconceptions, and list authorized practitioners and teachers worldwide. Content includes in-depth articles on biblical interpretation through a metaphysical lens, interviews with church members, and testimonies of healings attributed to , with submissions required to meet verification standards set by the church. Christian Science Sentinel, a weekly founded in 1898, emphasizes timely defenses of amid contemporary challenges. Eddy described its role as "to hold guard over Truth, Life, and Love," featuring short articles, editorials, and reader-submitted healings that illustrate the religion's efficacy in addressing physical, moral, and relational issues through spiritual means. It prioritizes accessible, application-oriented pieces over abstract theory. The Herald of Christian Science, established in 1903, targets non-English-speaking audiences with editions in 14 languages, including German, French, Spanish, and Japanese. Eddy intended it to proclaim the "universal activity and availability" of Christian Science globally, with content mirroring the Journal and Sentinel but adapted culturally, including localized testimonies and lectures. It operates as a sister publication to extend the church's metaphysical outreach beyond English-dominant regions.

Membership and Demographics

Historical Growth and Peak

The Church of Christ, Scientist was formally organized on April 19, 1879, in , by and a small group of followers, marking the beginning of structured growth for the movement. Initial expansion was driven by Eddy's teachings in Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures (first published 1875) and reports of spiritual healings, attracting adherents primarily in . By the early 1890s, growth accelerated phenomenally, with unorganized membership surpassing organized branches, as noted in contemporary census observations. Into the early 20th century, the church proliferated across the and internationally, establishing numerous branch churches and societies. U.S. membership reached approximately 86,000 by 1906, reflecting widespread appeal amid cultural interest in mind-over-matter healing practices. By 1925, nearly 150 churches and societies operated in alone, alongside 22 in , underscoring transatlantic expansion supported by Eddy's organizational directives and publications. Membership peaked , with estimates of around 270,000 adherents worldwide, the majority , based on the last comprehensive church census in 1936. This zenith coincided with extensive church building programs, including the 1906 extension of The First Church of Christ, Scientist (The Mother Church) , symbolizing institutional maturity. Factors contributing to this peak included the movement's emphasis on prayer-based healing during an era of medical limitations and its differentiation from mainstream , though exact figures remain estimates since the church ceased regular reporting thereafter. Membership in the Church of Christ, Scientist, has continued a multi-decade decline into 2025, with no official figures released by the church, which ceased public reporting in the late . Independent estimates as of 2023 placed active worldwide membership below 50,000, a sharp contraction from historical peaks exceeding 200,000 in the mid-. Even church-affiliated publications acknowledge that numbers remained stable near peak levels until the early 21st century, after which they began declining steadily, reflecting broader challenges in retaining adherents amid competing secular and medical paradigms. The number of branch churches and societies has also dwindled, with 1,253 organizations reported worldwide as of March 2023—comprising 855 churches (down 4 from prior reporting) and 398 societies (up 2)—marking a net loss of 2 from the previous update and continuing a pattern of closures observed for decades. This erosion includes numerous building sales and dissolutions, particularly in urban areas, as congregations shrink below viable thresholds for maintenance. By 2025, analyses describe the trajectory as precipitous, with no evident reversal, underscoring structural vulnerabilities in an aging demographic and limited recruitment. Attendance at services has similarly trended downward, as noted in church periodicals discussing observations of sparsely filled pews and external perceptions of stagnation. While some branches experiment with online lectures and hybrid formats to broaden reach, empirical indicators—such as reduced listings in directories and anecdotal reports from former members—point to persistent contraction rather than revitalization. This decline aligns with wider patterns in alternative religious movements, where empirical scrutiny of core tenets like exclusive reliance on has eroded appeal in an era of advanced healthcare and .

Efficacy and Empirical Assessment of Healing Claims

Anecdotal Testimonies and Church-Reported Outcomes

The Church of Christ, Scientist publishes voluntary anecdotal testimonies of healings attributed to prayer-based treatment in its periodicals, including The Christian Science Journal and The Christian Science Sentinel, with examples appearing for over 125 years. Since 1900, approximately 53,900 such testimonies have been published in these two outlets alone, focusing on physical, mental, and relational improvements realized through application of Christian Science principles as outlined in Mary Baker Eddy's Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. These accounts are submitted by adherents and selected for publication after review, emphasizing cases where individuals report discarding medical intervention in favor of spiritual treatment. Testimonies undergo a verification process requiring the submitter's signature and endorsement by three members of The Mother Church who can vouch for the testifier's integrity or attest to having witnessed the healing, though this does not involve or post-healing diagnostics. The Church maintains that such peer validation ensures reliability within its community, with some testimonies referencing pre-healing medical diagnoses or records to establish the severity of conditions, such as documented cases of fractures, infections, or tumors. Common reported outcomes include rapid resolution of injuries and ailments; for instance, accounts describe third-degree burns healing without scarring within days after , leaving only temporary pink discoloration. Other examples encompass healings of broken bones without setting, severe internal pain from diagnosed conditions like , and chronic skin disorders such as non-healing sores attributed to cancer, where symptoms reportedly vanished following study of scriptural texts and . Historical testimonies from the early similarly claim cures for , ovarian issues, and contagious diseases like chicken pox through absent treatment or self-application of teachings. A 1989 Church-commissioned analysis of 7,154 testimonies published between 1969 and 1988 found that over 80% involved physical disorders, with frequent categories including injuries (e.g., fractures and sprains), infections, digestive issues, and neoplasms, often corroborated by references to prior medical evidence but without systematic tracking of unsuccessful cases or denominational-wide outcomes. Church publications present these as evidence of consistent efficacy when principles are fully applied, though they represent self-reported successes from practitioners rather than controlled or aggregate data on all adherents' experiences.

Scientific Studies and Medical Critiques

Scientific studies have consistently failed to demonstrate the of prayer-based healing beyond effects or rates observed in untreated populations. A of intercessory , including randomized controlled trials, found no reliable that distant or personal improves medical outcomes for conditions such as cardiovascular events or postoperative recovery, with some studies indicating null effects and others suggesting potential harm from anxiety in aware participants. These findings apply to modalities like , which rely on metaphysical without empirical controls for variables such as natural recovery or regression to the mean. testimonies, while voluminous, consist primarily of uncontrolled anecdotes lacking verification against medical diagnoses or comparison groups, rendering them unsuitable for scientific assessment of causal . Empirical data on longevity among adherents reveal elevated mortality risks associated with forgoing conventional medical care. A 1989 cohort study of over 5,000 Christian Scientists compared to 30,000 non-adherents found that female Christian Scientists exhibited shorter lifespans, with higher death rates attributable to treatable conditions like cancer and infections where medical intervention typically improves survival. Similarly, a comparative analysis of college alumni showed Christian Science graduates had death rates of 40 per 1,000 for men and 27 per 1,000 for women, exceeding those of health-conscious peers who utilized medicine, such as Seventh-day Adventists (22 and lower per 1,000, respectively). These disparities align with causal mechanisms in biomedical science, where untreated pathologies progress due to biological processes like unchecked cellular proliferation or bacterial proliferation, unmitigated by prayer alone. Medical critiques emphasize that Christian Science's denial of disease as a material reality contradicts established , leading to preventable morbidity and mortality. Physicians have argued that reliance on for curable ailments, such as bacterial infections or malignancies, ignores -based interventions with proven benefits, as documented in cases where delayed treatment resulted in fatal outcomes. Professional bodies, including the , have historically opposed exemptions allowing to substitute for standard care in minors, citing higher fatality rates in such groups compared to medically treated populations. While proponents claim equivalence or superiority to allopathic methods, no peer-reviewed trials have substantiated this against randomized medical controls, highlighting a reliance on subjective reports over falsifiable .

Controversies and Criticisms

Reliance on Prayer Over Medical Intervention

The of the Church of Christ, Scientist, posits that arises from a mistaken in as real, rather than recognizing spiritual perfection as the sole reality; healing occurs through that corrects this mental error, as articulated by founder in her 1875 book Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. Adherents typically engage Christian Science practitioners, who provide treatment exclusively via affirmative , affirming God's goodness and denying the reality of illness, rather than prescribing drugs or procedures. While the church maintains that members are not doctrinally prohibited from seeking care—stating that such decisions rest with individuals—core teachings frame as a materialistic approach that perpetuates the illusion of sickness, often leading practitioners and adherents to view reliance on doctors as inconsistent with full commitment to spiritual healing. This preference for prayer has drawn criticism for resulting in preventable deaths, particularly when serious, treatable conditions go unaddressed. Documented cases include at least 50 instances since the mid-20th century where Christian Scientist parents faced criminal charges—such as or child endangerment—after children died from conditions readily curable by standard medical intervention, like bacterial infections or unmanaged without insulin. For example, in 1986, 12-year-old Ashley King died in from a after her parents opted for alone, leading to convictions for ; similar outcomes occurred in cases in 1988 and 1989, where convictions for felony followed deaths from untreated infections and . Critics, including medical ethicists, argue that this approach empirically fails against causal mechanisms of —such as bacterial proliferation or metabolic imbalances—which require targeted physiological interventions, not psychological reframing, as evidenced by autopsy-confirmed pathologies in these fatalities. Legal repercussions have intensified scrutiny, prompting reforms in U.S. states that once granted religious exemptions from laws. By the early 1990s, convictions in multiple jurisdictions eroded such exemptions, with over 30 states repealing or narrowing them by to prioritize child welfare over parental claims; Oregon's 2008 of parents in the -healing of 16-month-old Ava Worthington from exemplified this shift, resulting in convictions despite church defenses invoking religious freedom. Among adults, anecdotal reports document analogous outcomes, such as a 2019 Guardian account of a father's protracted from untreated , where pain and decline progressed unchecked under prayer-only care, highlighting risks for consenting individuals lacking medical recourse. Proponents counter that successful healings occur without material aid, but empirical assessments, including reports from failed cases, indicate no verifiable causal link between and physiological reversal in acute illnesses, underscoring the controversy's grounding in observable morbidity and mortality data. Numerous children of Christian Science parents have died from treatable medical conditions after families opted for prayer-based treatment exclusively, leading to criminal charges against parents for , , or . A 1998 analysis in documented 172 U.S. child fatalities from religion-motivated medical neglect between 1975 and 1995, with 140 involving readily curable illnesses that had over 90% survival rates with prompt intervention; Christian Science cases contributed significantly to this tally, including at least 28 deaths nationwide. At least 50 Christian Science parents faced murder or charges in such incidents, where conditions like bacterial , , and bowel obstructions proved fatal without medical care. Prominent cases illustrate the pattern. In 1984, Laurie and William Walker of Sacramento, California, lost their 4-year-old daughter Shauntay to untreated bacterial meningitis after 17 days of symptoms; the parents were convicted of manslaughter, with the court invoking the 1944 U.S. Supreme Court precedent in Prince v. Massachusetts that parents cannot impose martyrdom on children through religious practices. Similarly, in 1986, David and Ginger Twitchell's 2-year-old son Robyn died in Boston from a duodenal hematoma and bowel obstruction; the parents were convicted of involuntary manslaughter in 1990 and sentenced to probation, but the Massachusetts Supreme Court overturned the verdict in 1993, citing insufficient statutory clarity on when spiritual treatment fails to meet parental duties. In Florida that year, Christian Scientists Joel and Linda Hermanson were convicted of felony child abuse and third-degree murder in their son's death from infection complications, but the state supreme court reversed the ruling in 1992 on due process grounds, noting inconsistent state laws permitting prayer as treatment. Legal outcomes have varied due to religious exemptions in child neglect statutes across approximately 30 states as of the early 2000s, which shielded parents from misdemeanor charges for prayer-based care but often failed against felony manslaughter claims. Prosecutors secured convictions in about two-thirds of 29 spiritual healing-related child death cases reviewed in legal scholarship up to the 1990s, though appeals frequently succeeded on free exercise or vagueness arguments, resulting in few sustained penalties like imprisonment. These incidents spurred reforms; by the 2010s, states including Oregon, Washington, and Massachusetts repealed or narrowed exemptions, enhancing prosecutorial leverage in subsequent faith healing neglect probes, though Christian Science-specific convictions remained rare amid declining membership. Civil suits, such as the 1995 Minnesota wrongful death verdict against a Christian Science practitioner in the case of 11-year-old Ian Lundman (who died untreated diabetic ketoacidosis in 1989), have imposed financial liabilities exceeding $1 million but spared parents criminality due to jurisdictional limits.

Theological Objections from Orthodox Christianity

Orthodox Christian theologians and converts from identify its as fundamentally incompatible with Eastern Orthodox doctrine, particularly in denying the reality of the created material world. , as articulated in Mary Baker Eddy's Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, posits that is an illusion or "error" of mortal mind, with sickness, sin, and death lacking objective existence apart from erroneous belief. This view echoes ancient Gnostic heresies condemned by the early , such as those refuted at the Councils of (325 AD) and (451 AD), where Orthodox affirms creation ex nihilo as inherently good yet fallen, redeemable through divine energies rather than mental denial. A core objection centers on , where separates "Jesus" as a historical man from "Christ" as a divine idea or , denying the full divinity and humanity of the Incarnate . describes as the "wayshower" who demonstrated divine science but not as the eternal Son consubstantial with the Father, rejecting the defined in the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed (381 AD) and . Orthodox critiques liken this to (denying Christ's full deity) and (denying his full humanity), heresies anathematized for undermining the Incarnation's salvific role—God truly assuming flesh to divinize human nature via theosis. Further divergence arises in and . Christian Science reinterprets atonement not as Christ's sacrificial death reconciling humanity to but as an intellectual realization of divine perfection, dismissing the cross's objective efficacy and bodily . Orthodoxy, drawing from patristic (e.g., St. Athanasius's On the , ca. 318 AD), insists salvation involves participation in the real events of Passion, , and , with the Church as Christ's mystical body administering grace through tangible sacraments like and —elements absent or symbolic in practice. The elevation of Eddy's writings to co-equal authority with Scripture, functioning as the "pastor" for services since 1895, contravenes Orthodox reliance on , ecumenical councils, and the Holy Fathers. Critics from Orthodox backgrounds describe this as reviving Sabellian modalism (blurring Trinitarian persons into a unitary "" or Mind) and fostering a around Eddy as a modern prophetess, diverging from the Orthodox veneration of the and saints within the canonical communion. Such positions render , in Orthodox estimation, a syncretic system blending Unitarian influences with , incompatible with the patristic faith preserved in the Eastern Church.

Defenses and Internal Perspectives

Adherents' Views on Autonomy and Efficacy

Adherents of the Church of Christ, Scientist, maintain that spiritual healing through is highly efficacious, operating via immutable divine laws akin to those demonstrated by , which correct false material beliefs and reveal humanity's inherent spiritual perfection as reflections of , defined as infinite Mind, Truth, and Love. This efficacy stems from the understanding that and are illusions of mortal mind, not objective realities, and aligns with divine , yielding verifiable healings as reported in church periodicals and testimony meetings. , the church's founder, taught that "Truth has a healing effect, even when not fully understood," emphasizing that emerges from recognizing the unreality of and through reliance on 's all-powerful goodness. Regarding autonomy, adherents assert that each individual bears personal responsibility for their healing choices, with the church imposing no doctrinal mandate against medical treatment and respecting decisions to incorporate it alongside or instead of . Sole reliance on is viewed as the purest expression of and most effective demonstration of principles, but practitioners and members alike affirm freedom in decisions, as Eddy investigated various systems before prioritizing spiritual methods without prohibiting others. This extends to self- without intermediaries, empowering individuals to apply persistently—often multiple times daily—fostering a sense of spiritual grounded in biblical promises like "the truth shall make you free." The Church of Christ, Scientist maintains that its practice of spiritual through constitutes a legitimate religious treatment, emphasizing in decisions for adults while acknowledging legal obligations for minors. Church officials assert that does not prohibit medical care, leaving the choice to seek it or rely solely on to the personal discretion of adherents, though practitioners decline to provide treatment to those concurrently using medical interventions. In response to critiques questioning the over empirical medicine, the church cites biblical precedents for through and compiles anecdotal testimonies of cures in its periodicals, arguing that such outcomes demonstrate the operation of divine rather than mere suggestion or effects. Regarding child welfare controversies, the church has defended parental rights to provide spiritual treatment as an alternative to conventional medicine, historically advocating for statutory religious exemptions in laws to protect First freedoms. In landmark cases, such as the 1992 Florida Supreme Court ruling in Hermanson v. State, convictions of parents for third-degree felony were unanimously overturned, with the court holding that the parents' reliance on satisfied statutory requirements for "treatment" and did not constitute absent proof of deliberate endangerment. The church has argued in legal briefs and public statements that prosecutions infringe on religious liberty, pointing to instances where children recovered through alone and contending that equating spiritual healing with medical neglect imposes a secular on minority faiths. In addressing theological objections from mainstream Christian denominations, which often label Christian Science as heterodox for denying the reality of matter and sin, church representatives counter that their teachings restore primitive Christianity's emphasis on spiritual reality and healing as integral to salvation, as outlined in founder Mary Baker Eddy's Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. Legally, the church has pursued defenses framing its practices as protected under the Free Exercise Clause, successfully challenging attempts to revoke tax-exempt status or corporate charters on grounds of inadequate medical provision, as in early 20th-century cases where courts upheld spiritual healing as a bona fide religious activity. Despite repeals of some exemptions in states like Oregon (2011) and Colorado (2001), the church maintains that empirical evidence of prayer's effectiveness—drawn from member testimonies spanning over a century—vindicates its approach, urging critics to consider the full record rather than isolated failures attributable to incomplete application of principles.

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