Since
the dawn of Christianity the activity of the Christian has been likened to warfare, and his office to that of the soldier, and the many points of the analogy have been perennially helpful.
True
idealism may be defined as the system of Christianity right thinking and right doing, based on the spiritual understanding of God and His creation.
Edgar McLeod, Committee on Publication for Northern California,
The report of a sermon by a traveling evangelist, printed in your issue of March 20, contains the following statement: "Five thousand people in a Boston church deny that there is such a thing as sin!" Manifestly, this statement is intended to refer to Christian Scientists, and is calculated to misrepresent their religion.
The
German proverb, "To understand a man rightly, one must read his whole story," gives a semblance of reason to the growing tendency to record the facts of human history in the form of biography.
Mortals
believe in good and evil, truth and error, life and death, as if they were all equally real, with the result that they are often in a dilemma as to the present and the future.
Over twenty-five years ago Christian Science was brought to the attention of my mother, who began to study "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy, and with the help of practitioners was healed of many discordant conditions.
From earliest childhood I was reared in a Christian home, early joined an orthodox church, and until I had grown up had never heard of Christian Science.
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