Mary Baker G. Eddy
with contributions from Editor, R. D. Rounsevel, H. M. Morse
[We
are republishing this article because in our desire to secure its insertion in last week's Sentinel the matter was rushed into type at such short notice that a correction in the name of a town was overlooked, and not discovered until too late to rectify the mistake in that issue.
For
some time I have been specially interested in the meaning of the words discovery and revelation, especially in their application to religious thought.
No dwelling-place in palace walls,No cant of creed, no vain display,No cushioned couch nor gilded hallsCould mark the Revelator's way;But on a rock all drear and bare,A wave-washed, desolate abode,—The lone apostle praying thereDrew nearer to his loving God,On Patmos.
Because
of the wide circulation given McClure's Magazine, and the general concern manifested in its attempt to write the biography of the Founder of Christian Science and the history of the Christian Science religion, all will be interested in reading the communication that appears to-day in The Patriot and in the other papers of the State and of the country, from Rev.
Upon
the occasion of the recent dedication of the new buildings for Harvard Medical College one of the distinguished representatives of the institution spoke eloquently and at length respecting the relation of materia medica to chemistry, bacteriology, biology, etc.
Much
interest has been expressed in the recent utterance of a professor of English literature at Yale, in which he advocates the use of the Bible for college entrance examinations.
with contributions from Daisette D. S. McKenzie, Louie C. Hook, Ida A. Hodkinson, Clara E. Seiberling, Mae Blanchard, F. N. Riale, Annie R. McCully, Alice Edmunds, Ceylon B. Taylor, S. Edward Way, M. Ella Randall, Claudia Marx, Laura C. Tucker, James E. Comstock
When I first heard of Christian Science I had suffered for twelve years from a severe pain in the side, which was diagnosed as kidney trouble and necessitated frequent lying down in order to get any relief.
When Christian Science came to me I was a chronic sufferer from rheumatic trouble, having had it from childhood in various forms; and I had never been free from pain any length of time, as physicians were able to give me only temporary relief.
I was treated by many reputable physicians in Indiana, and failing to receive aid, one doctor suggested my going to California, and although others opposed it as being useless, I came as a last resort to Los Angeles.
About eight years ago I was healed, in four weeks' treatment in Christian Science, of ailments extending over a period of twenty-five years and as a result of which I had paid on an average one hundred dollars a year to physicians, without any good effect.
The picture of The Mother Church which The Christian Science Publishing Society now has for sale is a half-tone reproduction, 12 x 15 inches in size, of a view giving the St.
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with contributions from Daisette D. S. McKenzie, Louie C. Hook, Ida A. Hodkinson, Clara E. Seiberling, Mae Blanchard, F. N. Riale, Annie R. McCully, Alice Edmunds, Ceylon B. Taylor, S. Edward Way, M. Ella Randall, Claudia Marx, Laura C. Tucker, James E. Comstock