<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h2><span class="smcap">The Principle of Health.</span></h2>
<p>In the personal application of
the Science of Being Well,
as in that of the Science of
Getting Rich, certain fundamental
truths must be
known in the beginning, and accepted
without question. Some of these truths
we state here:—</p>
<p>The perfectly natural performance
of function constitutes health; and the
perfectly natural performance of function
results from the natural action of
the Principle of Life. There is a Principle
of Life in the universe; it is the
One Living Substance from which all
things are made. This Living Substance
permeates, penetrates, and fills
the interspaces of the universe; it is in
and through all things, like a very refined
and diffusible ether. All life<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 10]</span>
comes from it; its life is all the life
there is.</p>
<p>Man is a form of this Living Substance,
and has within him a Principle
of Health. (The word Principle is used
as meaning source.) The Principle of
Health in man, when in full constructive
activity, causes all the voluntary functions
of his life to be perfectly performed.</p>
<p>It is the Principle of Health in man
which really works all healing, no matter
what "system" or "remedy" is employed;
and this Principle of Health is
brought into Constructive Activity by
thinking in a Certain Way.</p>
<p>I proceed now to prove this last statement.
We all know that cures are
wrought by all the different, and often
opposite, methods employed in the various
branches of the healing art. The
allopath, who gives a strong dose of a
counter-poison, cures his patient; and
the homeopath, who gives a diminutive
dose of the poison most similar to that<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 11]</span>
of the disease, also cures it. If allopathy
ever cured any given disease, it is
certain that homeopathy never cured
that disease; and if homeopathy ever
cured an ailment, allopathy could not
possibly cure that ailment. The two
systems are radically opposite in theory
and practice; and yet both "cure" most
diseases. And even the remedies used
by physicians in any one school are not
the same. Go with a case of indigestion
to half a dozen doctors, and compare
their prescriptions; it is more than
likely that none of the ingredients of
any one of them will be in the others.
Must we not conclude that their patients
are healed by a Principle of Health
within themselves, and not by something
in the varying "remedies"?</p>
<p>Not only this, but we find the same
ailments cured by the osteopath with
manipulations of the spine; by the faith
healer with prayer, by the food scientist
with bills of fare, by the Christian
Scientist with a formulated creed state<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 12]</span>ment,
by the mental scientist with
affirmation, and by the hygienists with
differing plans of living. What conclusion
can we come to in the face of all
these facts but that there is a Principle
of Health which is the same in all people,
and which really accomplishes all the
cures; and that there is something in all
the "systems" which, under favorable
conditions, arouses the Principle of
Health to action? That is, medicines,
manipulations, prayers, bills of fare,
affirmations, and hygienic practices
cure whenever they cause the Principle
of Health to become active; and fail
whenever they do not cause it to become
active. Does not all this indicate that
the results depend upon the way the
patient thinks about the remedy, rather
than upon the ingredients in the prescription?</p>
<p>There is an old story which furnishes
so good an illustration on this point that
I will give it here. It is said that in
the middle ages, the bones of a saint,<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 13]</span>
kept in one of the monasteries, were
working miracles of healing; on certain
days a great crowd of the afflicted gathered
to touch the relics, and all who did
so were healed. On the eve of one of
these occasions, some sacrilegious rascal
gained access to the case in which the
wonder-working relics were kept and
stole the bones; and in the morning,
with the usual crowd of sufferers waiting
at the gates, the fathers found themselves
shorn of the source of the miracle-working
power. They resolved to keep
the matter quiet, hoping that by doing
so they might find the thief and recover
their treasures; and hastening to the
cellar of the convent they dug up the
bones of a murderer, who had been
buried there many years before. These
they placed in the case, intending to
make some plausible excuse for the failure
of the saint to perform his usual
miracles on that day; and then they let
in the waiting assemblage of the sick
and infirm. To the intense astonish<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 14]</span>ment
of those in the secret, the bones of
the malefactor proved as efficacious as
those of the saint; and the healing went
on as before. One of the fathers is said
to have left a history of the occurrence,
in which he confessed that, in his judgment,
the healing power had been in the
people themselves all the time, and never
in the bones at all.</p>
<p>Whether the story is true or not, the
conclusion applies to all the cures
wrought by all the systems. The Power
that Heals is in the patient himself; and
whether it shall become active or not
does not depend upon the physical or
mental means used, but upon the way
the patient thinks about these means.
There is a Universal Principle of Life,
as Jesus taught; a great spiritual Healing
Power; and there is a Principle of
Health in man which is related to this
Healing Power. This is dormant or
active, according to the way a man
thinks. He can always quicken it into
activity by thinking in a Certain Way.<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 15]</span></p>
<p>Your getting well does not depend
upon the adoption of some system, or the
finding of some remedy; people with
your identical ailments have been healed
by all systems and all remedies. It
does not depend upon climate; some
people are well and others are sick in all
climates. It does not depend upon avocation,
unless in case of those who work
under poisonous conditions; people are
well in all trades and professions. Your
getting well depends upon your beginning
to think—and act—in a Certain
Way.</p>
<p>The way a man thinks about things
is determined by what he believes about
them. His thoughts are determined by
his faith, and the results depend upon
his making a personal application of his
faith. If a man has faith in the efficacy
of a medicine, and is able to apply
that faith to himself, that medicine will
certainly cause him to be cured; but
though his faith be great, he will not be
cured unless he applies it to himself.<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 16]</span>
Many sick people have faith for others
but none for themselves. So, if he has
faith in a system of diet, and can personally
apply that faith, it will cure
him; and if he has faith in prayers and
affirmations and personally applies his
faith, prayers and affirmations will cure
him. Faith, personally applied, cures;
and no matter how great the faith or
how persistent the thought, it will not
cure without personal application. The
Science of Being Well, then, includes
the two fields of thought and action. To
be well it is not enough that man should
merely think in a Certain Way; he must
apply his thought to himself, and he
must express and externalize it in his
outward life by acting in the same way
that he thinks.</p>
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<p><span class='pagenum'>[Pg 17]</span></p>
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