J. Latimer Davis, Committee on Publication for the State of Iowa,
The writer of the article "Mind Over Matter," published in the January number of the Chiropractic Journal, spoke most kindly of Christian Science as having "restored to health many thousands of sufferers," and said that it is still doing this.
Much
is still heard these days about unemployment; and it is quite generally conceded that there is a seeming lack of opportunity and available positions for many who are out of employment, as well as for young people leaving colleges and schools of vocational training.
The
following admonition from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy, is priceless in the clearness and directness of its instruction.
In
a study of the teachings of the Master, Christ Jesus, it is interesting and instructive to note how frequently he employed simple illustrations drawn from casual and commonplace human experience to emphasize some great and vital truth.
Extracts from an Address on Christian Science delivered by Joseph G. Alden, Committee on Publication for Nebraska, to the students of the University of Nebraska,
If God is good and is divine Principle, and man is His image and likeness, as the Scriptures declare him to be, then man cannot be sick, sinful, inharmonious, and mortal.
Stanley M. Sydenham, Committee on Publication for Yorkshire, England,
According to the report in your last issue, a vicar in one of his services said, "Christian Science, in our day, is based on the contention of the undoubted fact of mind as different from matter, and a no less certain fact of the influence of suggestion and belief over physical health.