There
is cause for gratitude that when Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, established the Wednesday testimony meetings and the Christian Science periodicals she made due provision for testimonials of healing.
Those
who do not comprehend the standpoint of Christian Science might wonder why the Directors of The Mother Church began in a period of financial depression to arrange for the building of the new Publishing House.
A comparatively
young student of Christian Science found it necessary to leave the shelter and association of her home and take up her residence in a far-distant state, where she had no friends, and where new business connections must be formed.
Albert E. Lombard, Committee on Publication for Southern California,
A book review in Saturday's Post was correct when it made clear that in "personalities, beliefs, and histories" Mesmer and Freud were dissimilar to Mary Baker Eddy.
Ralph W. Still, former Committee on Publication for the State of Texas,
As an item recently appearing in your columns tends to create an erroneous impression as to the attitude of Christian Scientists towards the world's financial distress, no doubt your readers will be interested in an explanation.
Extracts from an Address delivered by Alfred Johnson, Christian Science Committee on Publication for Yorkshire, England, before the Malton Clerical Society
The teaching that God is All-in-all is the corner stone of Christian Science.
By
its demonstrations of spiritual healing during the last half century, Christian Science has been awakening mankind to the futility of reliance upon matter as a healing agent.
This Item will take you, if you wish, on a journey up through the nine floors of Section "A" of the new Publishing House and into the two-story penthouse.
One way I may prove my gratitude for the healing through Christian Science of what was diagnosed as fibroid tumor or carcinoma is by sending my testimony to the Christian Science periodicals.
I turned to Christian Science for help when I did not know what to do next, for I had done everything I could humanly to support my mother and my sister.
Until the spring of 1917 I knew nothing of interest pertaining to Christian Science, although I had often heard its teachings ridiculed and had not been backward in doing my bit along this line, even though I had never read any of Mrs.
Extracts from an Address delivered by Alfred Johnson, Christian Science Committee on Publication for Yorkshire, England, before the Malton Clerical Society