Articles

"Go ye into all the world"

We have learned in Christian Science of the joy and strength to be obtained from moments spent on the mountain.

Exercise Which Overcomes

One morning a student of Christian Science who had experienced many proofs of God's care in the way of trials, passed a big hill where a great old tree stood alone.

Audio Collection

Mary Baker Eddy: Her enduring discovery

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

From Faculties indestructible

MAN'S DIVINE HERITAGE

Man's divine heritage as the son of God is not a promise, but is the present fact; it is one's true state of being.

View other Collections →

"They . . . were all filled"

That which stands out most clearly in the narrative of the loaves and fishes is the fact that, in spite of the apparently big demand and small supply, the multitude, numbering "about five thousand men, beside women and children," received all that they needed; for we read in Luke that "they did eat, and were all filled.

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

Signs of the Times

[From the Bournemouth Guardian, Hampshire, England]

Our attention has been called to an article in a recent...

Our attention has been called to an article in a recent issue of the Spokesman-Review bearing the heading, "No Medical Aid—Died.

In any discussion of Coue and his system of healing,...

In any discussion of Coue and his system of healing, namely autosuggestion, the religious teaching, Christian Science, is often drawn into consideration as a parallel teaching, as was done in an obituary notice of the late Emil Coue in Number 311 of the Vossische Zeitung.

Audio Collection

A spiritual approach to mental health

Listen to this Sentinel Watch series on mental health—and find hope, even healing.

Audio Collection

Where is God when bad things happen?

Have you ever asked yourself where God is when you’re faced with bad news? We invite you to listen to each episode and discover ideas that spark hope and inspiration.

From Pregnancy and childbirth

For expectant mothers

The more fully we accept the spiritual nature of birth, the more effortlessly we can demonstrate that nothing has occurred from which one needs to recover.

View other Collections →

From Safety

A safe refuge

Trust in God opens the door to a safe refuge, always available and always at hand.

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

In an editorial in a recent issue of your paper, under...

In an editorial in a recent issue of your paper, under the caption "On Growing Old," the following statement is made about Christian Science: "The Christian Science sect is founded upon the absolute dogma that the mind can control the body—that the will of man is supreme over his physical being; and it is indeed an interesting theory.

In an article which appeared in your recent issue you say,...

In an article which appeared in your recent issue you say, "Mrs.

Will you kindly allow me space to correct a misleading...

Will you kindly allow me space to correct a misleading statement?

The no doubt well-meant criticism, appearing in your...

The no doubt well-meant criticism, appearing in your recent issue, of a statement made by a Christian Science lecturer in a recent lecture on Christian Science, is apparently based on some misunderstanding, and the suggestive inquiry, "Whither are we drifting?

Good will is too often thought of as a mere human quality,...

Good will is too often thought of as a mere human quality, here to-day and gone to-morrow, largely a matter of personal relationships, the subject of personal likes and dislikes, personal inclinations or prejudices, finding more expression at one season of the year than at another.

We note in your recent issue a reprint from the Paris Mercury...

We note in your recent issue a reprint from the Paris Mercury which makes an allusion to "Sister Eddy," evidently referring to Mary Baker Eddy.