In order to work out a plan of close cooperation between the office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the bank examiners, and the various clearing house associations of the United States, Comptroller Murray will ask the various clearing house associations to send a committee to Washington to consult with him and the bank examiners in the large cities.
One
of the slowest of the processes of development that take place after one has accepted the Principle of Christian Science as his rule in life, is usually that of attaining a normal attitude.
In
Exodus we read that when God commanded Moses to go to Pharaoh and ask him to let the children of Israel go, He said, "Now therefore go, and I will be with thy mouth, and teach thee what thou shalt say;" and in the prophecy of Isaiah we read, "The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together: and a little child shall lead them.
From
Genesis to Revelation are scattered exhortations to mankind to "serve God;" and there can be no doubt as to the duty of all Christians to obey the command.
When Christian Science states that sin, disease, and matter are unreal, it is equivalent to affirming that they are temporal and destructible, the phenomena of our present material sense of that "heaven and earth" which Jesus said should "pass away.
If Christian Science should seem obscure to some who have not grasped its propositions with sufficient understanding to demonstrate them, they should remember that the gospel of Christ, and him crucified, was to the Jews a stumbling-block and to the Greeks foolishness; yet that gospel has been the most potent force for good the world has ever seen.
The headline, "Church's Duty not Healing of Body," in the Inquirer some days ago, virtually threw down the gauntlet to all Christians on the question of religious healing.
In a recent issue of The News Tribune, an English writer is credited with a sharp criticism of what he is pleased to state is the teaching of Christian Science.
The atonement or at-one-ment, a condition of being at one with God, is one of the most important features of the teachings of Christian Science, though its interpretation differs somewhat from the ideas held by other churches.
with contributions from H. Boardman, Lena H. Chamberlain, A. Florence Mead, E. Nora Yoder, Douglas Campbell, Bret Harris, Beatrice F. Hutchinson, Jessephene Johnson, Elsie B. Carveth, Berenice H. Goodall, Edith S. Stewart
The Christian Science church of Palo Alto has been growing so fast of late that it has been impossible to accommodate the people in attendance at the quarters it has heretofore occupied in the Madison-Thoits Building.
As a child, without Christian training, without schooling beyond the art of reading and writing crudely, I was forced to face the world and live by my own efforts.
Hoping that my wonderful release from bondage through Christian Science may be of encouragement to some one who is but slowly realizing his own freedom, I would say that Truth does heal.
When I think upon the many blessings which have come to me and mine since this demonstrable Science has been presented to us, and how small a part I have made known, I deem it a duty and esteem it a privilege to grasp this opportunity of so doing.
Trusting that my testimony will be of benefit to others, I feel that I should give it in gratitude for what Christian Science has done for me and my family.
In grateful acknowledgment of the blessings that have come into my life during the past two years, I write this testimony, for I have had many proofs of the ever-presence of divine Love and have unbounded faith in this blessed truth.
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with contributions from H. Boardman, Lena H. Chamberlain, A. Florence Mead, E. Nora Yoder, Douglas Campbell, Bret Harris, Beatrice F. Hutchinson, Jessephene Johnson, Elsie B. Carveth, Berenice H. Goodall, Edith S. Stewart