HUMANITY'S
appreciation of safety, and its resistance to forces that threaten safety, point to the intuitive realization that safety is a natural heritage of man.
Miss Lily Florence Brown, Committee on Publication for Worcestershire, England,
In a recent letter I endeavored to make it clear that Christian Scientists, relying on the ministrations of Christian Science for healing, are not allowed to "suffer," as the writer of the article on "Spiritual Healing" suggests.
William Carson Blackburn, Committee on Publication for the State of North Carolina,
The statement by a clergyman, as quoted in a recent issue under the caption "Irreligion," that "Christian Science is neither Christian nor Science," only serves to illustrate that the gentleman is not sufficiently informed to discuss such an important subject intelligently.
Meinrad Schnewlin, Committee on Publication for German-speaking Switzerland,
An article in a recent issue states that much of Christian Science is unsound and not clear, and that the greatest power in this world, the power of sin, is not taken seriously.
On
page 304 of "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy, we find the statement, "Harmony in man is as beautiful as in music, and discord is unnatural, unreal.
Possibly
each individual has some one ability in which he thinks he excels; perhaps he rather prides himself that he does some particular thing just a little better than any of his neighbors.
Today,
when so many long-cherished theories are being exploded, and men and nations seem to be moving in an unstable world of conflicting beliefs, Christian Science comes with certainty and strength to comfort and support us.