Myrtle Fillmore's spiritual life focuses on human
relationship to God as Father. This focus ranges from the metaphorical to the
seemingly literal. This relationship leads her to define Jesus as the
"ultimate child." In chapter 1 of How
to Let God Help You, she says, “we are really God’s children and that we
have inherited from Him a perfect mind which is capable of unfolding the
wonderful Christ qualities, as Jesus Christ unfolded His God Given Mind.” This
statement reiterates the image of “child of God,” and introduces the idea of
Christ holding a meaning other than a surname for Jesus. She never defines the meaning
of this word. We are left to assume her definition of Christ is similar to Charles
Fillmore’s which is recorded in the Metaphysical
Bible Dictionary. I won’t repeat this extensive definition here, but it
essentially describes the perfect potential of the divine in all humans. Christ
is an adjective and noun always implying a potential in all humans reached by
Jesus, the man from Nazareth.
This description of Jesus removes the mantle of “only begotten
son” (John 3:16) affirmed by the creeds of Catholic and Protestant Christians. Not
to be sidetracked, but this phrase seems to be a response to Bishop Arius.
Arius claimed that Jesus was made and not begotten and that the author of John
actually wrote that Jesus was a “unique son.” Mr. Fillmore doesn’t discuss the
Arian heresy, but suggests that the only begotten is the Christ that is what
the author of John was writing about.
Occasionally, Myrtle seems to substitute Christ for Jesus
and vice versa. As an example, “The mistake some of our teachers makes is that
they believe in Christ intellectually and deal with his truths intellectually—whereas
spiritual things must be “spiritually judged.” (Chapter 1). She seems to be
talking about Jesus rather than The Christ. This inconsistency appears to be a
component of her embedded theology. Remembering that these are letters rather
than academic papers requires some latitude in interpretation.
As a spiritual teacher and Wayshower, Mrs. Fillmore’s Jesus
is very personal. She even claims oneness with Him and feels his presence. This
connection gives a sense of power to her. She writes, “Our teaching is that
Jesus Christ is ever with us, and is able to handle all these overcoming in the
right way. When we identify ourselves with Him and seek to think, speak, and
live in harmony with the ways of Jesus, we get along nicely, and are able to
handle each and every situation in a splendid way.” Myrtle teaches us to have a
“personal relationship with Jesus Christ.” This phrase is deeply ingrained in current
fundamentalist language and often causes Unity folks to stop listening.
Although Myrtle occasionally appears to use Jesus, Christ, and Jesus Christ
interchangeably, I think she’s deliberate here. She is calling on us to accept
our oneness with the person Jesus through the Christ common to us all. She
wants us to be so close to his teachings that we feel like he is whispering in
our ear when a challenge arises. Like Myrtle, I am comfortable in my personal
relationship with Jesus and might even wear a WWJD bracelet—I will not give
this away to my evangelical brethren.
