Albert E. Lombard, Committee on Publication for Southern California,
Although the sermon report with the caption "Faith Healer of Today Criticized," which was published in the Press and Enterprise recently, made no mention of Christian Science, and although Christian Science practitioners are more than faith healers, some of your readers may have thought mistakenly that statements in the article applied to Christian Scientists.
We
who are young have a great responsibility, namely, to show by our example that since youthfulness is a state of consciousness, all should and can attain and retain it.
What
a joyous privilege it is to be associated with a Christian Science church that is preparing to build, and how necessary to know that the visible structure is but the outcome of the correct concept of Church! There must be a mental preparation before we are ready to build, and this preparation consists of the spiritualized thinking of the members.
As
the writer sat by the window one sunny autumn day studying the Bible Lesson from the Christian Science Quarterly, her eye fell upon a sunflower whose head was bowed with the weight of the rich seed.
Christian scientists
who have experienced the healing effects of Christian Science are naturally desirous of spreading the knowledge of the truth which has healed them; and to do the greatest good to the greatest number is their constant desire.
Plato's
assertion, "What thou seest, that thou beest," is a truism which might be further rendered, What thou seest, that thou doest, or havest, or makest—as exemplified in the attainments of the statesman, the inventor, the artist, the writer.