Page:The Quimby Manuscripts.djvu/182

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
178
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

15. “Can any one bear any amount of excitement and fatigue without a reaction?”

No, no more than a mathematician can solve every problem without a reaction, but as he becomes master of the science, the reaction diminishes, till all error is destroyed.


Dr. Quimby's writings are not to establish any religious creed or bolster up any belief of man, but they are simply the out-pouring of a truth, that sees the sick cast into prison, for no other cause than a belief in the opinions of man, there to linger out a miserable existence, driven from society into the dark cell of disease where no friend is allowed to enter to soothe their woes. The knowledge of this condition is known to him from their own feelings and calls forth his plea in their behalf. He stands to the sick as an attorney to a criminal, a friend. This is what he believes Jesus intended to communicate to the world when he said, “they that are well need not a physician, but they that are sick.” So he pleads their case and destroys their opinion, breaks the bars of death and sets the prisoner free. This was Jesus' religion, that he believed, taught, and practised.[1]

  1. This paragraph was added by Dr. Quimby for the sake of the general inquirer.