B. Palmer Lewis, Committee on Publication for the State of New York,
In a recent issue of II Progresso, an author writes very entertainingly concerning the discussion as to whether women are inferior to men in intellectual accomplishment.
A pupil
in a Christian Science Sunday School once said to her teacher: "What we are learning about ourselves here in class is so contrary to what we are being taught in school that I find it confusing.
One
of the principal difficulties confronting students in their approach to Christian Science is their belief in the reality of both Spirit and matter, good and evil, Truth and error, Love and hate.
The
light in a lighthouse through storm or calm emits its beneficent rays, shining, whether the sea is smooth or rough, whether the boats within its radius are large or small.
What
an assurance that his earthly mission had been fulfilled must have come to our Master when he heard the thief on the cross beside his own declare of him, "This man hath done nothing amiss"! And in the ordeal which the repentant thief was suffering, what hope of new life and joy must have been his when, in response to his petition, "Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom," he received the heartening promise of our Lord, "To day shalt thou be with me in paradise"! Thus the final act of Christ Jesus as he faced the portals of the grave was healing.
It is apparent to the Christian Science workers at the Tehachapi Institution that many of the inmates are desirous of learning something of the nature of divine Love and its application.