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FOR CHILDREN
Not one is forgotten
Mrs. Dixon raised parakeets. She had dozens of the colorful little birds in an aviary in her backyard. Marianne loved to go next door to visit Mrs. Dixon and watch her feed and care for these pretty birds.
One day Mrs. Dixon offered to give Marianne a parakeet for her very own if she could provide a cage for it. Marianne rushed home to ask if she could buy a birdcage, but her mother said the family budget didn't have any extra money.
However her mother also said that God is divine Love and supplies all good to His children. Marianne thought about that. She quietly admitted to herself that His care and goodness were very special, and she could trust in them.
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
November 8, 1982 issue
View Issue-
See things as they really are
NANCY ALLEN
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Love's consciousness
BARBARA E. LESTER
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Who am I?
ADRIAN DeWINDT
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Our real estate and the divine economy
VIRGINIA J. WOOD
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The accepted time
JEAN M. LANGERMAN
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Pray as you go
MARQUE H. CAMPBELL
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Take your Father's hand
ERWIN S. CORNELIUS
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Acoustics
JANE RENNER SELBY
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Dissolving apathy
WILLIAM E. MOODY
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Healing: waiting until after the resurrection?
NATHAN A. TALBOT
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Not one is forgotten
Ann S. Laughlin
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About a week after our son was born, our next-door...
BETSY BAY RAMP
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Almost sixty years ago my mother was healed of migraine headaches...
RUTH CRAIG CALDWELL
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Before the fall of 1963 I knew nothing about Christian Science
ROBERT ABBOTT SHEPHERD