Harold Molter, Committee on Publication for the State of Illinois
A news item in the Times of October 29 reports that a woman, purporting to be a Christian Science practitioner, visited a man at his home, offered to examine him for a physical ailment, and prescribed a material cure.
Gordon William Flower, Committee on Publication for Gloucestershire, England,
In reply to your correspondent, your readers will observe that most of his questions were answered in my last letter; and one does not wish to take up your valuable space and your readers' time, by reiteration.
Albert E. Lombard, Committee on Publication for Southern California,
A minister was quoted in the Star-News as saying that certain groups, including the Christian Science church, "are offering something that people sense as a value.
Many
great men and women have written on the subject of peace, and there is nothing more worth striving for and more happifying than the understanding of peace in its spiritual essence.
On
page 9 of her book "Unity of Good" Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, writes, "The talent and genius of the centuries have wrongly reckoned," adding, "They have not accepted the simple teaching and life of Jesus as the only true solution of the perplexing problem of human existence.
It
is recorded in the tenth chapter of Luke's Gospel that, when they returned, the seventy disciples whom Christ Jesus had sent forth joyfully told him that even the devils were subject unto them through his name.
Each
one of us has a possession which is distinctly his own, and which could belong to no one else; something from which he can never be separated, and which he can never lose.