Are you sure?
This bookmark will be removed from all folders and any saved notes will be permanently removed.
Letters
Comfort from the Psalms
We’re starting a new Sentinel column called “Comfort from the Psalms.” We invite you to share with readers the comfort and spiritual strength that the Bible’s book of Psalms can bring to each of us in our practice of Christian Science. If a particular psalm or verse has been integral to a healing, or has been a guidepost in your life, the ideas you have to share could be very helpful to others. For submission information visit jsh.christianscience.com/submit. Please indicate the column title in the “Author comments” field.
Thanks for “We can be freed from sin” [July 13, 2015, Sentinel]. What a wonderful proof of God’s transformative love. I was particularly struck by the author’s mention that “the addiction had seemed not only pleasurable but natural.” This got me thinking how many other human activities and ways of thinking slip past our primary commitment to love God and to open up to God’s love and live our lives with God’s loving guidance because the world considers these activities not only pleasurable but natural.
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
August 10, 2015 issue
View Issue-
Letters
Steven Price, Paula, Jean Jillings-Warner, Wendys
-
What thoughts are we entertaining?
Katherine Stephen
-
A spiritual foundation for motherhood
Inge Schmidt
-
Prayer, not place, brings peace
Anne Holway Higgins
-
The choice to love
Evan Mehlenbacher
-
We should strive to reach the Horeb height
Photograph by Ann Blamey
-
A depth of joy I’d never felt before
Margaret Wylie
-
Hello, good thoughts! Goodbye, bad thoughts!
Shannon Naylor
-
Freed from aftereffects of an injury
Paula Williams
-
Gratitude for three healings
Rachel F. Henderson
-
Dental visits free of anxiety and pain
Rosemary Denson Miller
-
How debt mercy helps drive US recovery
The Monitor’s Editorial Board
-
A sure basis for forgiveness
Stephen Carlson
-
The stubbornness that does yield
David C. Kennedy