Mrs. Mary Blanch Jones, Committee on Publication for Gloucestershire, England,
Your correspondent in a recent issue again expresses his views upon spiritual man and says, "If spiritual man, misusing his God-given right, should seek to unfold divine Mind to himself faster than God unfolds Himself to him, then all such supposed knowledge would be erroneous and would tend to obscure the knowledge of true being that he already possessed.
W. Archibald Wallace, Committee on Publication for the State of West Virginia,
Only one whose information was obtained from unreliablo sources could have made statements such as those in the letter printed in the Shepherdstown Register concerning Christian Science and its Discoverer and Founder, Mary Baker Eddy.
Alfred Johnson, Committee on Publication for Yorkshire, England, in the
In your issue of the 9th, which contained a report of a lecture given in the Wesley Hall, Christian Science is mentioned in close connection with hypnotism, suggestion, occultism, clarivoyance, fortune telling, and spiritualism.
Thomas A. Wyles, Committee on Publication for South Australia, in the
Two letters in a recent issue of the Advertiser under the caption "Divine Healing" refer to the "blood atonement" as the basis of faith, and state that Christian Scientists deny this.
Even
before the beggar who, "at the gate of the temple which is called Beautiful," asked an alms, and responded to Peter's words, "Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk," the world had been gradually learning that money can buy neither happiness, health, nor harmony.