McClure's Magazine, Vol. 31, No. 1, May 1908 by Various
page 71 of 293 (24%)
page 71 of 293 (24%)
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Again, the by-laws state that "Any member of this church who is found living with a child improperly, or claiming a child not legally adopted, or claiming or living with a husband or a wife to whom they have not been legally married, shall immediately be excommunicated," etc.[9] This seems a strange subject for especial legislation. The Manual, however, is chiefly interesting as an exposition of Mrs. Eddy's method of church government and as an inventory of her personal prerogatives. Never was a title more misleadingly modest than Mrs. Eddy's title of "Pastor Emeritus" of the Mother Church. _How the Mother Church is Organized_ Next to Mrs. Eddy in authority is the Board of Directors, who were chosen by Mrs. Eddy and who are subject to her in all their official acts. Any one of these directors can at any time be dismissed _upon Mrs. Eddy's request_, and the vacancy can be filled only by a candidate whom she has approved. All the church business is transacted by these directors,--no other members of the church may be present at the business meetings,--and if at any time one of them should refuse to carry out Mrs. Eddy's instructions, or should grumble about carrying them out, her request would remove him. The members of this board, in addition to their precarious tenure, are pledged to secrecy; they "shall neither report the discussions of this Board, _nor those with Mrs. Eddy_."[10] These directors are Mrs. Eddy's machine; they are her executive self, created by her breath, dissolved at a breath, and committed to |
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