CHRISTIAN SCIENTISTS
have before them a glorious opportunity to prove to a world which believes it is depressed and discouraged that "thoughts are things.
IN
the thirteenth chapter of Ezekiel we are told that a wall daubed with "untempered morter" is unable to stand against an "overflowing shower," "hailstones," or "a stormy wind"; that because the mortar is untempered the wall must necessarily fall.
EDUCATION
nowadays is coming to be regarded as the process by which youth is prepared for the experiences of life, and in this age of competitive commercialism the methods adopted are those best calculated to enable the individual to establish himself in a career such as will insure the maximum of human comfort and the provision of what is termed the necessities of life.
EVEN
as the thirteenth chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthians is rightly regarded as a song of love, so the eleventh chapter of Hebrews may be looked upon as a paean of praise to faith.
William K. Kitchen, Committee on Publication for the State of New Jersey,
In the issues of March 15 and 22 of the Herald there appeared what purported to be excerpts from two addresses recently delivered by a local clergyman in which several statements wholly at variance with facts were made regarding Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, and the practice of this Science by its adherents, who rely upon spiritual means, or prayer to God, to heal the sick and reform the sinner.
Mrs. Myrtle R. Biggins, Assistant to the Committee on Publication for the Province of Alberta, Canada,
Under the title "Health Logic" in the Bulletin of April 23, an osteopathic physician has made some statements regarding Christian Science, Christian Scientists, and Mrs.
I did not seek Christian Science for the physical healing, neither did I seek it to obtain a better knowledge of God, for the sense of God advanced by popular theology—that He is good but permits evil—did not coincide with my line of reasoning, that God is good only.
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