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RIGHT DECISIONS

The longing to rise above uncertainty has persisted for centuries.

"AS GOD'S OWN CHILD"

Those who are at home with the things of Spirit are never lonely.

SUBSTANCE AND HONOR

Throughout human history there have been mighty struggles to see who or what should be greatest.
Our Leader, Mary Baker Eddy, points out in her autobiography, "Retrospection and Introspection," that no person can fill another's place or fulfill another's mission.

"TREASURES IN HEAVEN"

Christ Jesus said.

TRUE SUCCESS

Almost every young person desires to achieve success in some line of endeavor.
In God's kingdom there are no conflicting laws, no inconsistent statutes, no inequitable rules.

CHRISTIAN UNITY

In a letter to a branch Church of Christ, Scientist, Mary Baker Eddy once wrote: "The chain of Christian unity, unbroken, stretches across the sea and rises upward to the realms of incorporeal Life—even to the glorious beatitudes of divine Love.
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Very often we hear members exclaim, "How glad I am to be a member of The Mother Church!" They go on to add how grateful they are to take part in this great movement that is doing so much for the world.
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Speaker: "There is no power apart from God.
[Original testimony in Dutch]

Mary Baker Eddy writes in...

Mary Baker Eddy writes in "Rudimental Divine Science".

A number of years ago, when I...

A number of years ago, when I was young in Christian Science, I was at home alone with my little daughter, who was very sick and delirious.
The priceless nature of the teachings of Christian Science has been brought home to me so surely that my gratitude is deep and sincere.
Christian Science was presented to me about forty years ago while I was suffering from an attack of quinsy.

During the First World War, I...

During the First World War, I was employed on war work.
My gratitude to God for Christ Jesus, the Way-shower, and for Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, is unbounded.
The example of a Christian Science co-worker at the office where I was employed thirty-five years ago implanted in me a firm desire to be a Christian Scientist.
In 1929 I found myself suffering from a rheumatic condition.
In their day, the poems of Adelaide Proctor were as well known as Tennyson's.
From an editorial in the Marion Chronicle-Tribune, Indiana