Friday, March 14, 2025

A reading of the Mary Baker Eddy biography "Mrs. Eddy" by Dakin shows she acted like a Hindu guru

  Table of Contents

Essay: Mary Baker Eddy as the Negative Archetype of a Hindu Guru
Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of Christian Science, emerges from the pages of history—and particularly from Edwin Franden Dakin’s Mrs. Eddy (1929)—as a figure eerily reminiscent of the most deplorable archetype of a Hindu guru: a self-aggrandizing, manipulative charlatan who cloaks greed, narcissism, and delusion in spiritual veneer. Like the worst of India’s fraudulent spiritual leaders, Eddy peddled promises of miracles—mirroring the siddhi powers touted by Hindu gurus—only to leave a trail of broken hopes, plagiarized ideas, and sabotaged lives. Dakin’s biography, alongside the broader parallels with Hinduism’s Vedanta and Yoga traditions explored earlier, reveals Eddy as a liar, thief, plagiarist, quack, and paranoid narcissist, obsessed with power and money, insufferably difficult, and convinced of her singular righteousness. This essay excoriates Eddy as a terrible person, drawing direct comparisons to notorious Hindu gurus like Osho (Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh) and Bikram Choudhury, whose exploitative behaviors echo her own. Far from a divine healer, Eddy was a predatory fraud whose legacy is a cautionary tale of spiritual tyranny.

A Liar and Plagiarist: Stealing Wisdom, Claiming Divinity
Eddy’s foundational text, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, is touted as divinely inspired, yet Dakin exposes it as a patchwork of stolen ideas, much like a corrupt Hindu guru pilfering ancient texts for personal gain. Dakin notes that Eddy drew heavily from Phineas Parkhurst Quimby, a mesmerist and healer whose “mind cure” concepts she encountered in the 1860s. Quimby’s unpublished manuscripts, which Eddy accessed, preached healing through mental power—a notion she repackaged as her own “revelation” without credit (Dakin, pp. 70-75). Her claim that Science and Health came from God mirrors the grandiose lies of gurus like Osho, who plagiarized Eastern philosophies and Western psychology, blending them into his “unique” teachings while asserting divine insight. Eddy’s early editions even quoted the Bhagavad-Gita—as Swami Yogananda observed—only to scrub these Hindu influences later, concealing her debt to Vedanta’s idealism (e.g., “Never the Spirit was born,” 33rd edition, per Yogananda). This theft of intellectual heritage, masked as originality, marks her as a plagiarist akin to India’s charlatans who exploit sacred traditions for profit.
Her lies extended to her personal narrative. Dakin details how Eddy fabricated tales of a miraculous recovery from a spinal injury in 1866, attributing it to divine revelation rather than Quimby’s methods (pp. 50-52). This parallels the exaggerated origin stories of gurus like Bikram Choudhury, who claimed yoga mastery from a near-death experience, inflating his mystique to lure followers. Eddy’s deceit was not mere embellishment but a calculated foundation for her cult of personality, proving her a liar who built her empire on stolen and falsified grounds.

A Thief and Money-Hungry Power Seeker: Exploiting Devotees
Eddy’s greed rivaled that of the most avaricious Hindu gurus, extracting wealth and control from her followers with ruthless efficiency. Dakin chronicles her establishment of the Christian Science Publishing Society and her tight grip on its profits, amassing a fortune estimated at over $1 million by her death in 1910—a staggering sum for the era (pp. 300-305). She charged exorbitant fees for classes—$300 per session, equivalent to thousands today—demanding blind loyalty and financial tribute, much like Osho, who flaunted Rolls-Royces bought with devotees’ money while preaching detachment. Eddy’s “Mother Church” in Boston, funded by coerced donations, became a monument to her ego, not a spiritual haven (Dakin, pp. 280-285).
Like a bad guru, she sabotaged rivals to protect her empire. Dakin recounts her expulsion of loyal students like Josephine Woodbury, who dared to challenge her authority, accusing them of “mental malpractice” (pp. 250-255)—a paranoid smear echoing the excommunications of Hindu cult leaders like Swami Muktananda, who silenced dissenters to maintain dominance. Eddy’s thirst for power and money, cloaked as divine mission, turned her followers into pawns, their resources and faith plundered for her gain.

A Charlatan and Quack: False Miracles and Dangerous Delusions
Eddy’s promise of miracles—-healing without medicine—marks her as a quack, peddling unprovable siddhi-like powers akin to the worst Hindu frauds. Science and Health claims, “The physical healing of Christian Science results... from the operation of divine Principle” (p. xi), yet Dakin exposes her failures: she relied on morphine for pain in her later years, contradicting her anti-material stance (pp. 400-405). Her followers died needlessly—children from untreated infections, adults from curable diseases—while she dismissed these as illusions, much like Bikram Choudhury’s reckless yoga claims endangered students’ health with no evidence of miraculous benefits. Yogananda’s praise for her “complete abandonment of medicine” (pamphlet) rings hollow when her miracles didn’t materialize, proving her a charlatan whose quackery cost lives.
Like Hindu gurus offering siddhis—levitation, materialization—Eddy dangled the impossible, yet delivered nothing verifiable. No controlled study supports her healings, just as no yogi dematerializes in a lab. Her insistence on miracles, despite their absence, mirrors the empty boasts of Osho, whose followers chased enlightenment through sex and drugs, only to find exploitation. Eddy’s fraudulent miracles were a lure, not a reality, cementing her as a quack preying on the desperate.

Narcissistic and Convinced of Singular Righteousness
Eddy’s narcissism rivaled the most egomaniacal Hindu gurus, her belief in her exclusive truth a toxic hallmark of her character. Dakin portrays her as viewing herself as a divine figure, akin to Christ, declaring in Science and Health, “I am the way” (p. 271)—a claim of infallibility echoing Osho’s self-proclaimed “Bhagwan” (God) status. She brooked no dissent, expelling students who questioned her, as Dakin notes with her treatment of Edward Kimball, a once-trusted aide cast out for independent thought (pp. 260-265). Like Muktananda, who demanded absolute obedience while hiding abuse, Eddy saw herself as the sole arbiter of truth, her followers mere vessels for her vision.
Her paranoia fueled this narcissism. Dakin describes her obsession with “malicious animal magnetism” (MAM)—a supposed psychic attack by enemies—blaming it for every setback (pp. 200-205). This superstition, akin to a guru’s fear of curses or rival siddhis, drove her to isolate herself, surrounded by sycophants she micromanaged. Her conviction that only she was right turned her into a tyrant, her narcissistic delusions a mirror to the self-worship of India’s worst spiritual despots.

Paranoid, Superstitious, and Difficult: A Tyrannical Presence
Eddy’s paranoia and superstition made her a nightmare to deal with, much like the volatile tempers of corrupt gurus. Dakin paints her as a recluse in her later years, barricaded in her Concord home, convinced of constant mental assaults (pp. 390-395). She demanded followers perform “watches” to fend off MAM, a ritual as absurd as a guru’s talismans against evil spirits. Her superstitious dread of unseen forces paralleled the irrational fears of Swami Prabhupada, who saw demonic influences in dissent, creating a cultish atmosphere of control.
Her difficult nature was legendary. Dakin recounts her tantrums, firing servants for trivial slights, and her domineering treatment of students—expecting blind devotion while offering little warmth (pp. 310-315). Like Bikram Choudhury, whose abusive rants alienated followers, Eddy’s imperious demeanor and capricious demands—shifting doctrines, rewriting history—made her a terror, her paranoia and superstition amplifying her insufferability.

A Terrible Person: Sabotaging Others for Self-Gain
Above all, Eddy was a terrible person, her money-hunger, power-lust, and sabotage of others a dark reflection of the worst Hindu gurus. Dakin details her betrayal of Quimby, claiming his ideas as hers after his death, and her ruthless purges of loyalists like Woodbury and Kimball, who dared to shine independently (pp. 75-80, 250-260). She sabotaged rivals’ careers, hoarded wealth, and left a legacy of suffering—followers dead from her quackery, families bankrupted by her fees—all while living in luxury. This mirrors Osho’s Oregon commune, where he exploited disciples financially and emotionally, or Muktananda’s sexual predation under a spiritual guise.
Her narcissism, paranoia, and greed coalesced into a persona that crushed those around her. Eddy’s promise of miracles—paralleling siddhi boasts—was a hollow lie, her failures blamed on others’ lack of faith, never her own fraudulence. She was no healer, no sage—just a power-hungry charlatan who, like the vilest Hindu gurus, turned spirituality into a tool for domination.

Conclusion: Eddy as the Dark Guru Archetype
Mary Baker Eddy embodies the negative archetype of a Hindu guru—a liar who stole from Quimby and Hindu scriptures, a thief of devotees’ wealth, a plagiarist of ideas, a quack peddling false miracles, and a paranoid, superstitious narcissist who sabotaged others for her gain. Her difficult, domineering nature and unshakable belief in her righteousness mirror the tyranny of Osho, Bikram, and Muktananda, whose cults thrived on exploitation. Like these gurus, Eddy offered miracles—healings akin to siddhis—but delivered only delusion, her claims collapsing under scrutiny as surely as a yogi’s unproven levitation. Dakin’s Mrs. Eddy unveils her as a terrible person, a charlatan whose money and power hunger left a wake of ruin. Far from a divine light, she was a dark shadow, her Christian Science a twisted echo of Hinduism’s worst excesses—a cautionary tale of spiritual fraud masquerading as truth.

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  Vincent Bruno Vincent.Bruno.1229@gmail.com This blog has been established to compare and contrast Christian Science and Hinduism so as to ...