All
the Gospels tell the story of Jesus' feeding the five thousand in a desert place near the Sea of Galilee; and three of them, Matthew, Mark, and John, tell of the return of the disciples and Jesus across the lake.
Sometimes
in our study of Christian Science we pause for a moment with a prayerful expression akin to the following: Oh, if I could only retain all these glorious truths clearly in my thought! How can I best accomplish this end?
Arthur J. Chapman, Committee on Publication for the State of Louisiana,
Your issue of the 23d instant publishes a dispatch from London to the effect that the Canterbury Convocation had, by a large majority, given "its approval to faith healing and asked that it be given the official sanction of the church.
Charles W. J. Tennant, District Manager of Committees on Publication for Great Britain and Ireland,
In reply to a clergyman writing in your issue of November 15, one is surprised that he declares that it is not a Christian belief that God is All-in-all.
Ralph W. Still, Committee on Publication for the State of Texas,
As reported by a resident of Rocksprings, a visiting minister took occasion recently severely to attack Christian Scientists and their religion, and shamefully to asperse the life and character of the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy.
H. Ernest Vincent, Committee on Publication for Natal, South Africa,
In a letter published in the Natal Witness of April 2, a writer advises those of your readers who may desire to know something of the teachings of Christian Science to read a certain book.
Last
November, Sir Arthur Eddington, famous for his knowledge of astronomy and physics, delivered an address to an international radio audience of great size.
To mankind matter seems to be real—very real at times; and material sense, if believed in, ultimates in sin, disease, or some other form of error with which the so-called human mind appears to be acquainted.
The gavel always used by the President of The Mother Church at the Annual Meeting and handed by the outgoing President to the incoming President as a symbol of office has a history which is set forth in part on pages 171 and 172 of "The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany.
with contributions from Grete Radlow, James Potter Brown, Harry Russon, M. Elizabeth Carey, Isabella R. Findlater, Charles E. Walling, Robert A. Duncan, Arthur J. L. Macfarlane, Gertrude H. Jackman, Arthur H. Vignes, Nesta Kerdel
To insure that complete lecture notices be printed in the Sentinel, detailed information should reach the Editorial Department regarding lectures in the United States and Canada, at least four weeks before the date of the lecture; in Great Britain and Ireland, at least five weeks before; in other European countries, at least eight weeks before.
I became interested in Christian Science over twenty-one years ago, at which time I was quickly healed of the social drinking and smoking habits through reading the textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy, and other authorized Christian Science literature.
When I was four years old I was placed in a Christian Science Sunday School, where the teachers tell the pupils what the truth is, and how to apply it.
For some time past my heart has been so filled with praise and gratitude for Christian Science that I have felt I should publicly express my gratitude, and thus share it with others.
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with contributions from Grete Radlow, James Potter Brown, Harry Russon, M. Elizabeth Carey, Isabella R. Findlater, Charles E. Walling, Robert A. Duncan, Arthur J. L. Macfarlane, Gertrude H. Jackman, Arthur H. Vignes, Nesta Kerdel