First Church of Christ, Scientist
By Elena Gray-Blanc in The Independent
(Weekly Newspaper)
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Church: First
Church of Christ, Scientist, 120 E. Valerio St.
Service Attended: Wednesday, November
7, 7:30 p.m.
Pastor: elected from membership
Denomination: Christian
Science
Congregation Size: 85; 45 attending
Services and Offerings: Sunday at
10:00 a.m.; Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.; Sunday School
10:00 a.m., ages 3-19; Christian
Science Reading Room, open Monday-Friday from
10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from
1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Contact: Call 966-6661 or visit
christiansciencesantabarbara.com.
Given the current political
debates raging in this country on evolution,
abortion, and other issues many of which
seem to be split along scientific versus religious
lines the words Christian and Science wouldn't be
the first most people would think to put together.
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, however, takes
a very different view, one which is possibly as
far removed from the typical Christian viewpoint as
it is from a mainstream scientific way of life.
The main tenet of Christian Science, aside from their
basic adherence to Biblical truth and the
teachings of Christ, is their belief that
all healing comes from the power and love of God.
They do not go to doctors, hospitals, or clinics;
all physical healing is done either through daily
prayer the Christian Science equivalent of preventative
medicine or through soliciting the assistance of a
Christian
Science Practitioner, who prays on their behalf.
Interestingly enough, another facet of this view
is the idea that healing through faith can be demonstrated
through use of the classic scientific method; it's
empirically effective, according to Christian
Scientists, and a portion of the Wednesday evening
service is given over to testimonials to the way in
which healing through prayer really works.
Anecdotal evidence may not be the best example of
an application of scientific enquiry, but the members
of Santa Barbara’s Christian Science congregation
certainly seem as healthy and as vigorous
as any other cross-section of the public. When I asked
one member of the group if Christian Science worked
for him, he asked me if he looked healthy — and
he did, seeming to be more energetic and fit than
one columnist in her mid-twenties who shall remain
anonymous, even at an age which could no longer be
called young, or even middle-aged.
Aside from the portion of the service given over
to witnessing examples of God’s presence in the
lives of congregation members, the service itself
is a fairly standard Christian offering — and on
Sundays, the witnessing is absent from the service.
Hymns, Bible readings, and commentary read from Mary
Baker Eddy's Science and Health With Key to
the Scriptures comprise the bulk of the service.
The one truly unique aspect of the readings, aside
from the addition of Science and Health,
a specifically Christian Science text, is that they
are given by members of the congregation. The First
Church of Christ, Scientist, has no pastor — if
most churches could be seen as a totalitarian model,
the Christian Science church is a democracy with term
limits on elected officials.
This organizational change makes the Christian Scientists
unusually connected to the operation of their
church. Every detail of the service and the
care of their church itself, an exceptionally attractive
building, is in the hands of the congregation. They
are as dedicated to the smooth functioning of their
place of worship as they are to their own lives, and
the result is a very welcoming, inclusive feeling
extended even to the occasional visitor.
To invite The Independent to your place of worship,
email yourworshipsb@gmail.com.
© 2007 The Independent