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When commitment counts
Who hasn’t at one time or another looked at someone else and wished we had what they had? Maybe it was their professional success, or perhaps a seemingly perfect family, or their worry-free lifestyle. It is tempting to think that such things come easily to some people and not so easily to the rest of us. But things aren’t always as they appear.
Behind every appearance there is often an untold story.
So it is with healing. The ease with which healings can seem to occur for others often belies whole character transformations, tireless life journeys, and sacrifices that forged the healers’ ability to make the process look so effortless. Healing is a result of spiritual mindedness—of acknowledging the operation of divine Principle, God, and rejecting any suggestions of imperfection, anything unlike God. This state of consciousness may come naturally to some, while others seem to struggle greatly to shed the fetters of a material sense of life.
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
October 5, 2015 issue
View Issue-
Letters
Peggy Rothe, Marie in Florida, Anna Willis, Joan Rapaport
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When commitment counts
Brian Webster
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Seeking and finding
Rachel Troutman
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‘How are you?’
Cheryl Ranson
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Our love for our siblings
Lynn G. Jackson
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Loving God’s law
Mary Bothwell
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No making fun!
Kathryn Knox
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‘I turned to Father-Mother God’
Pamela Chaurand
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Blessed by the Christ while in Russia
Debbie Wood
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A ‘short and sweet’ healing experience
Francesca Simpson
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Freed from knee trouble and headaches
Jack Gregory
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How excellent is thy lovingkindness
Belfast, Northern Ireland
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Listening to centrists—and to the fringe
By John Yemma, Editor-at-Large
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God-inspired moderation
Stephen Carlson
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Stress is not inevitable
Barbara Vining