The Bible from Genesis to Revelation teems with assurances that all is well with him who consistently and continuously turns to and trusts in God and obeys His law.
In
every right endeavor where success of a permanent, progressive nature is hoped for, the desire to succeed and to progress should be actuated and dominated by right motive.
Of
what vital import to every individual is the message of Christian Science that because God is omnipresent, and man, His image and likeness, is everywhere, the unlikeness of God is nowhere in reality.
Nils A. T. Lerche, Committee on Publication for Norway,
A recent issue of Bergens Aftenblad contains a review of a book, in which the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy, is mentioned in a derogatory manner.
Frank K. Poe, Committee on Publication for the State of Maryland,
I have before me a recent issue of your paper containing a brief report of a lecture given in Baltimore by a prominent member of the medical profession.
Leslie Burn Andreae, Committee on Publication for Norfolk, England,
In view of the statement in your "Free Church Notes" today, discussing a "Church of Healing," that "the growth of Christian Science has tended to force the issue," I think the following quotation from the writings of Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, will be of interest to your readers.
Meinrad Schnewlin, Committee on Publication for German-speaking Switzerland,
You designate Christian Science as "healing thinking," whereby matter with all its effects, as pleasure and pain, enticement and aversion, is to be overcome by thinking, and you mention a few instances of how small sufferings could be mastered.
When I was a child in school one of the teachers gave out "gems," as she termed them, for the pupils to learn, and one of them was the saying of Jesus, "Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.