[Christian Science by Mark Twain]@TWC D-Link book
Christian Science

CHAPTER IX
8/9

Provided what?
That it can secure that thing which is worth two or three hundred thousand times more than an "appeal to the intellect"-- an environment.

Can it get that?
Will it be a menace to regular Christianity if it gets that?
Is it time for regular Christianity to get alarmed?
Or shall regular Christianity smile a smile and turn over and take another nap?
Won't it be wise and proper for regular Christianity to do the old way, Me customary way, the historical way--lock the stable-door after the horse is gone?
Just as Protestantism has smiled and nodded this long time (while the alert and diligent Catholic was slipping in and capturing the public schools), and is now beginning to hunt around for the key when it is too late?
Will Christian Science get a chance to show its wares?
It has already secured that chance.

Will it flourish and spread and prosper if it shall create for itself the one thing essential to those conditions--an environment?
It has already created an environment.

There are families of Christian Scientists in every community in America, and each family is a factory; each family turns out a Christian Science product at the customary intervals, and contributes it to the Cause in the only way in which contributions of recruits to Churches are ever made on a large scale--by the puissant forces of personal contact and association.
Each family is an agency for the Cause, and makes converts among the neighbors, and starts some more factories.
Four years ago there were six Christian Scientists in a certain town that I am acquainted with; a year ago there were two hundred and fifty there; they have built a church, and its membership now numbers four hundred.

This has all been quietly done; done without frenzied revivals, without uniforms, brass bands, street parades, corner oratory, or any of the other customary persuasions to a godly life.


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