

Are you sure?
This bookmark will be removed from all folders and any saved notes will be permanently removed.
Where is true power?
In an age of communications designed to make our jaws drop, there’s a simple statement that many people would consider much more jaw-dropping. It’s in Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, the textbook of Christian Science by Mary Baker Eddy. She writes, “There is no power apart from God” (p. 228).
What an uplifting thought! Yet with the many unresolved problems in our lives and communities and on the global stage, to claim that God, good, has all power might seem like heresy to human logic. We might find every fiber of our being protesting, “How can this be, with all that’s going on in the world?” Maybe we feel such a claim lacks empathy or compassion for those affected by ill health, war, natural disasters, political oppression, or poverty.
But the conviction that it is material sources—from bacteria to forces of nature to political authority—that hold sway over us makes disease, destruction, and abuses of power inevitable. Isn’t it worth investigating the possibility that all might belongs to a God who is wholly beneficent and always present?
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.

March 31, 2025 issue
View IssueEditorial
-
Where is true power?
Tony Lobl
Keeping Watch
-
A building project
John Tyler
-
The joy of divine law
Todd Wittenberg
Poem
-
The light of divine Love
Carol Dismore
Turning Points in Spiritual Growth
-
Planted in Christ
Linda Vara
-
I wanted to be happy again
Amy Richmond
Testimony
-
Relationship with brother restored
Name Withheld
-
Covid symptoms gone
Carol Rounds
-
Back pain healed
Mandeep Maini
Bible Lens
-
Unreality
March 31–April 6, 2025
-
Letters & Conversations
Karen Carlson, Madelyn Harvey, Sandi Justad,