Starting in June, if you’re not yet a subscriber, you can enjoy one free monthly piece of online content from each of the following periodicals—the Christian Science Sentinel and The Christian Science Journal.
Each month, choose one free article or podcast from the archives or a current issue. If you want to read or listen to additional content, you can subscribe to JSH-Online (subscription aid available) or try our free trial (no credit card required). You will always have full access to any content that is shared with you.
Starting in June, if you’re not yet a subscriber, you can enjoy one free monthly piece of online content from each of the following periodicals—the Christian Science Sentinel and The Christian Science Journal.
Each month, choose one free article or podcast from the archives or a current issue. If you want to read or listen to additional content, you can subscribe to JSH-Online (subscription aid available) or try our free trial (no credit card required). You will always have full access to any content that is shared with you.
ALL
are as yet pupils in the study of Christian Science, having acquired a smaller or greater degree of understanding in proportion as they have put its teachings into practice by demonstrating the power of Spirit, as Jesus did, in healing sickness and sin.
It
has often been maintained that the very general employment of symbol and metaphor throughout the books of the Bible has made it difficult for western thought to regard their teaching as practical and adequate to the daily needs of modern life.
IN
reading the Bible, the writer has often been impressed with the statement that the prophets and others, looking to their heavenly Father for guidance in their extremity, in many instances "heard the voice of the Lord.
The
writer enjoys and appreciates all the Christian Science literature so much that she longs to share her pleasures with others, and so she often leaves a copy of the Monitor on the street-car seat when she has finished reading it.
Judge Law of Gallatin country, by sustaining the demurrers to the complaints against certain people in Bozeman who were accused of violating the law in practising Christian Science, has in effect held that the medical practice act of Montana does not apply to the practitioners of that cult.
The sermon dealing with Christian Science, published in a recent issue, is filled with erroneous statements about the teaching and practice of this religion.
Your genial contributor, who in a recent issue wrote under the heading "Teuton Science," had no desire, I am sure, to do any injustice to Christian Science; but his reference to it, given on the alleged authority of another genial writer, may convey a wrong impression.
For
ages mankind has believed that evil is real and always impending, and in this belief is the foundation for the fears which so largely influence the thought and actions of humanity.
It
is of the utmost importance to all students of Christian Science that they ponder the question of their own progress and watch carefully their thoughts, words, and deeds, in order to see whether they are advancing toward a fuller realization of the kingdom of God, with its perfect harmony.
The
teaching of Christian Science begets a new and most significant sense of the greatness of man, of the Christlikeness of his nature, the richness of his endowments, the relatively unlimited range of his appointed rule.
with contributions from F. C. Runkle, William A. McClelland, Willard F. Ottarson, Paul F. Chamberlain, Baxter McClain, C. E. Farrington, Louis J. Marsh
At the Shrine Temple on Shawnee street, a large audience heard Virgil O.
It is quite generally admitted by the open-minded, that through the ministrations of Christian Science the sick are healed and the sinful are reformed.
The Christian Science Text-book, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures.
Other formats
As a subscriber, you can download any Sentinel issue published within the last 90 days (PDF, eBook, and audio). You can also take a look inside each issue as it originally appeared in print, starting with the very first issue from 1898.
with contributions from F. C. Runkle, William A. McClelland, Willard F. Ottarson, Paul F. Chamberlain, Baxter McClain, C. E. Farrington, Louis J. Marsh