What
a thought-provoking name our beloved Leader, Mary Baker Eddy, gave to the church which she and her early students established in 1879—the Church of Christ, Scientist.
The
stillness and beauty of the heavens as they are described by a research balloonist ascending to new and unexplored altitudes in space, above the diminishing physical views of earth and over black and threatening storms, awaken one's feeling of wonder and awe.
As
grateful and sincere students of Christian Science, do we fully appreciate and support the mission of the Christian Science periodicals in the world today?
During
the long and weary period of forty years in which the children of Israel wandered in the wilderness before entering the Promised Land, they often murmured against Moses, the servant of God.
Christian Science Activities for the Armed Services, which include arrangements for regular Christian Science services, treatment, and other assistance for men and women in the Armed Forces, extend throughout the United States, Canada, and many overseas areas.
The opening paragraph in the chapter on Prayer in Science and Health by Mary Baker Eddy supported me during many trials when I was a young student of Christian Science, living in a foreign country where there was neither a Church of Christ, Scientist, nor a practitioner listed in The Christian Science Journal.
Immanuel Kant,
a German philosopher who probably never traveled more than forty miles away from Königsberg, his birthplace, greatly influenced the thought of his day.
As a subscriber, you can download any Sentinel issue published within the last 90 days (PDF, eBook, and audio). You can also take a look inside each issue as it originally appeared in print, starting with the very first issue from 1898.