Education that guarantees success

A Christian Science perspective: On a lifetime of spiritual growth and learning.

June 5, 2017

Graduation can be an especially happy time for graduates who know what is coming next and are looking forward to it with eagerness and confidence. But graduation can also bring trepidation about one’s future – perhaps because of student loans to repay, having no job pinned down, or some other factor.

In order to find answers to such concerns, it helps to realize that though academic graduations are important milestones, real progress in any situation comes when education is understood as a form of lifetime development. And looking at education as a spiritual pursuit can make all the difference in the world in how a person graduates, if you will, from both the minor and major challenges that come up in every human being’s experience.

My study of Christian Science has helped me understand that no one is, or ever can be, stuck in a thwarted state of educational development. Based on the teachings of the Bible, Christian Science defines God as the divine Mind. This Mind is infinite and is everyone’s true source of intelligence. Because of this, there is nothing to stop anyone from being led to higher and higher mental development and achievement. True education is actually a leading out of the infinite possibilities already within each individual as God’s spiritual image and likeness.

In Kentucky, the oldest Black independent library is still making history

This leading out has certainly been true in my own experience. Having curtailed my college education to marry and raise a family, I often felt at a disadvantage educationally.

But wow! – I can remember the exact moment when I realized I had infinite possibilities within me as God’s image, and that true education was in letting the divine Mind draw out those possibilities. Then, I knew there were no limits to what I could accomplish if I would just be receptive to God’s guidance day by day.

So, without aspiring to any particular goal other than to learn from God each day and to be of service to others, I began writing for the Christian Science periodicals.

Gradually, through the years my writing skills have increased, and – to my surprise – I have been tapped for editorial positions, speaking assignments, and managerial responsibilities for which I have had no formal training. The work has always seemed natural to me, and I remain on a joyous and surprising journey of learning from God what I am capable of as His reflection.

Every challenge we face is an opportunity to graduate to a higher understanding and demonstration of our unlimited spiritual capacities. And this growth serves to expand our opportunities for higher and higher service and productivity in our experience as we move forward spiritually.

A majority of Americans no longer trust the Supreme Court. Can it rebuild?

Adapted from "Education, graduations, and lifetime milestones," in the May 15 issue of the Christian Science Sentinel.