Articles

Letting Go

As one studies the true account of creation given in the first chapter of Genesis, it is well to notice how frequently the word "let" is used, beginning with "Let there be light" and continuing to the glorious climax, "And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.

"Waters of Israel"

IN reading of Naaman, captain of the host of the king of Syria, we see his reluctance to acknowledge other waters as superior to the rivers of Damascus.

Audio Collection

Changing your world

Listen to this Sentinel Watch series—and discover how your prayers can make a difference in the world.

From Overcoming grief

What death does not do

We go on gaining moment by moment in the understanding that God is the only real Life.

View other Collections →

"Thou shalt not kill"

EVERY earnest student of Christian Science has longed to express more continuously and clearly the divine nature which he knows to be his true selfhood, has deplored his frequent lapses from the standard which his study has in a measure revealed to him, and has battled with the beliefs which seem to obstruct the way.

Write for JSH

Have a spiritual insight or healing experience to share? Sharing it may bring hope to or even heal others. Visit Writer’s Corner to get started.

Write for JSH

"Under the shadow of the Almighty"

THOUSANDS have been uplifted and sustained by the wonderful truth of God's protecting care as brought out in the ninety-first psalm.

Treasure in Heaven

"Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth; where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal," said Christ Jesus, remembering that mortals tend to go on building for themselves storehouses and barns wherein to place their accumulations of earthly treasures and gains.

Signs of the Times

[President Hoover, as quoted in the Boston Globe, Massachusetts]

Audio Collection

Anthology of classic articles II

Listen to this inspiring collection of articles.

Audio Collection

Shared reflections

Listen to this inspiring collection of articles or download the audio.

From Free from Contagion

Bringing our prayers to the threat of contagion

Prayer can lift us out of the swirl of fear, and it can be a calming, healing influence in our communities as well.

View other Collections →

From Freedom from addiction

LOST AND FOUND

I saw that in order to find my life, I had to first lose it—that is, lose all sense of life as material.

View other Collections →

Write for JSH

Have a spiritual insight or healing experience to share? Sharing it may bring hope to or even heal others. Visit Writer’s Corner to get started.

Write for JSH

Your issue of the seventh instant contains a report of a...

Your issue of the seventh instant contains a report of a lecture in connection with the Malvern Theosophical Centre on the use and meaning of pain.

In your "As It Appears to the Cavalier" column of June...

In your "As It Appears to the Cavalier" column of June 11, there is a reference to Christian Science which requires correction.

It is true that to the so-called carnal mind which has no...

It is true that to the so-called carnal mind which has no understanding of it, Christian Science may seem to manipulate facts and greatly upset human reason, as stated in the editorial "Original Sin" in the issue of your paper of April 3.

Undoubtedly the religion which has gained more than...

Undoubtedly the religion which has gained more than ordinary influence because of its works of healing and regeneration, is Christian Science.

According to your synopsis of a sermon recently delivered...

According to your synopsis of a sermon recently delivered in Wichita Falls, a revivalist went out of his way to misrepresent the teachings of Christian Science, perhaps all unintentionally.

Christian Science healing is complete and lasting—not...

Christian Science healing is complete and lasting —not temporary or fragmentary, as was mistakenly implied by an article in your columns of September 18.