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Purity Corrects Pollution
It is generally admitted that, to a large extent, a person produces his own environment. A good housekeeper has a clean, tidy home. An efficient businessman presides over an orderly office and a smoothly running establishment.
It is the quality of our thinking that determines, in large degree, the surroundings in which we live. This being the case, it behooves us to keep our thought clear and pure if we would dwell in a healthy environment and an invigorating atmosphere. When enough individuals maintain purity of thought, the entire community enjoys conditions that are more conducive to happy and harmonious living.
At a time when much is being said and written about pollution of the air, the water, and even of the soil that surrounds us, we may well ask ourselves if we are contributing to this defilement or are, by the purity of our thinking, helping to cleanse and brighten the total environment.
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
October 10, 1970 issue
View Issue-
Purity Corrects Pollution
REX MILLER
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How's Your Attic?
MILTON SIMON
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Be Inspired!
OLGA COSSI
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Our Ever Friend
MELISSA R. FOULKE
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A House in the Country
RALPH J. SCHROEDER
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Be Unpolite to Error
CHARLES MORRISON BAXTER
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Ousting the Self Family
HELEN L. CONNELLY
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The Right Road
JOHN A. LENFESTY
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SHARING
Althea Brooks Hollenbeck
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No Corner on God
Carl J. Welz
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Men and Mechanism
Naomi Price
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On hearing recently of a healing through Christian Science of a...
Margaret M. Wardley with contributions from Maurice G. Wardley
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Christian Science has been in my home since my marriage, but I...
Robert B. Lundy with contributions from Marie Lundy
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A profound sense of gratitude prompts this testimony
Betty Mills Keefe with contributions from Clarence O. Mills
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Through the healing of an older brother in Christian Science...
Goldie Vinson Taylor
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Signs of the Times
M. Graham Clark