W. Archibald Wallace, Committee on Publication for the State of West Virginia,
My attention has been called to an article which appeared in a recent issue of your paper in which a writer, under the heading "Everyday Living," makes reference to Christian Science in a way that calls for some explanation.
John G. Spangler, former Committee on Publication for Southern California,
My attention has been called to an article published in a recent issue of your esteemed magazine, in which it was stated that Rudolph Hess "was the head of the Christian Science movement in Germany.
The
one and only true basis from which to attain to spiritual consciousness is shown in the first chapter of Genesis, where the nature of God's creation is stated as follows: "And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, it was very good.
What
a joyful experience it is when the realization first comes that the earnest study and honest practice of Christian Science reveal the perfection of the universe, of creation, of man; that they give us the means of working out individual redemption; that they actually enable us, step by step, to manifest our true spiritual nature and being in human experience, and to see the false material concept of man disappear from view.
The account of Paul's eloquent defense before King Agrippa, as given in the twenty-sixth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, has for centuries captured the attention and commanded the admiration of Bible students.
Man
possesses and expresses all the qualities and attributes of God by reflection, somewhat as the sunbeam possesses and expresses the qualities and attributes of the sun.