Unity of Good
Unity of Good
In this compact but radical theological work, the founder of Christian Science advances a provocative claim: evil is not merely opposed to good, but has no actual existence in the divine realm. God, as perfect goodness, cannot comprehend evil; therefore sickness, sin, and death are revealed as mere human illusions, errors of perception rather than immutable realities. Eddy writes with striking confidence, challenging readers to reconsider everything they believe about suffering and its place in the universe. Through incisive essays and dialogues, she argues that spiritual healing becomes possible once one truly understands that the material world cannot override divine perfection. The text pulses with a conviction that feels almost scientific in its rigor: if God is entirely good, then evil must be a misunderstanding, a false belief awaiting correction. For readers willing to entertain its premises, Unity of Good offers a startlingly optimistic metaphysics, one that refuses to accept suffering as inevitable. It remains essential reading for anyone exploring Christian Science, American religious history, or the radical possibilities of metaphysical thought.





