Not
the least among the many blessings which Christian Science has revealed to the world, is its disclosure of the impersonal nature of evil; and the illumination thus thrown on many passages of the Bible which have heretofore been more or less obscure, makes the Scripture more practical in its application to our present needs.
MORTAL
thought revolves around the supposition that life is a creation or development of what it terms matter, and that man has therefore a material origin, personality, and environment.
The gentleman of the medical fraternity who attacked Christian Science in a recent issue, objects to it because it teaches the fallibility of the material senses.
A recent critic, who signs himself "A Student of History," presents five dilemmas, which he hopes, I imagine, rather than expects, I shall be unable to reply to.
Every
line of human activity may, in its every-day incidents and conditions, offer to the student of Christian Science analogies at once interesting and helpful.
As all are supposed to know the value of system in the affairs of life, we should at once see the importance of it in the greatest of all affairs, that of gaining a better understanding of Truth.