To choose reality requires humility and self-abnegation. The false sense of self, which claims to be an entity separate from God, is always desirous of adding something to itself to adorn, to glorify, and to increase its sense of self-importance. From its very nature it could choose nothing real or good, because Truth, when turned upon it, would dissolve it as light dispels a shadow. True humility, self-abnegation, and unselfed love abide in the heart that yearns for good only. Regardless of what the material senses may be claiming, such a consciousness steadfastly refuses to recognize aught but the eternal harmony of God's allness. It chooses to become as a little child, putting aside the pride of place and power. It chooses to have one God, and that one omnipotent and omnipresent Mind.
Choosing the right is the basis of progress. Christian Science is absolute, complete, final. God is perfect. Harmony is now the fact of being. Because the real man is the reflection —the image and likeness—of God, he is perfect now. Harmonious in every detail, man is now expressing freedom and harmony. To compromise with the gods of the Amorites, to be content with anything but complete reliance upon God, is not Christian Science. How prone is mortal mind to excuse its own failures by saying glibly, We have not yet reached the perfect state! When confronted with the temptation to use, even in a degree, the methods of materia medica, of so-called mental science, of hypnotism, we should remember the command of God to the Israelites to "make no covenant with them." To-day, as yesterday, it is impossible to serve two masters: "Ye cannot serve God and mammon."
If, after seeing the vision of the longed-for goal, the Israelites had chosen to tarry in the lands of the heathen nations, desiring their gold and silver or their material goods or treasures, how different would have been the subsequent history of their nation! Suppose they had decided that the completion of their tedious wandering was too long delayed, or suppose they had yielded to the subtle suggestion that the material practices of the peoples whose lands they passed through could be carried with them into the promised country— had they done anything else, in fact, except complete the entire journey, could they have stood in the annals of the ages as the chosen people, the nation which became cognizant of the one God?