Are you sure?
This bookmark will be removed from all folders and any saved notes will be permanently removed.
Dear Reader
You never can tell exactly how a first-time reader is going to learn about this magazine or its sister publications—the Journal and Herald. But you can be sure that it usually has something to do with a present reader's wanting to share with a friend, neighbor, or colleague something he or she has found valuable. This is the way it has always been with this family of publications. Word of mouth, hand-to-hand sharing has always been the main method of introduction.
When you think about it, that's pretty natural for publications that are telling about people discovering the reality of God in their own lives. What could be more trustworthy, more naturally Christian, than one person's talking directly to another about something so important?
Our readers are, in effect, our "circulation representatives." Their lives are evidence of what an understanding of man's relationship to God means in terms of healing, regeneration, and deeply caring for the welfare of others.
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
October 8, 1990 issue
View Issue-
Dear Reader
The Editors
-
Why blame God?
Alberta R. Cadmus
-
SECOND THOUGHT
Raymond E. Pierson
-
Is there a remedy for earth's woes?
Sara Veltman Tucker
-
Renewal in the presence of Christ
Luis Alfonso Ballesteros Cano
-
Turning to God for wisdom
Mary Louise Parsons
-
The quality of our conduct and work
Frank Brunner-Schuster
-
Sin: the bad news and the good news
Allison W. Phinney, Jr.
-
How can we have relationships that don't break down?
Elaine Natale
-
Here comes the bus
Lynne Cook
-
Before I had heard of Christian Science, when our daughter...
Louise M. Whitman
-
My mother was introduced to Christian Science as a...
June Claire Bucksot
-
My father became interested in Christian Science when I was...
Mark Swinney with contributions from Richard P. Swinney, Sibylle Swinney
-
My introduction to Christian Science came nearly sixty-five...
Hannah Mary Wright