Sweet
indeed is the voice within—spiritual sense—that points the way and leads into untrod paths where one gains a larger vision of God-given opportunities.
Confronted
with the problem of unemployment, slack business, or insufficient supply, a Christian Scientist may be tempted to query: How is it that some people who know little or nothing about spiritual law have been able to secure or maintain satisfactory employment or a flourishing business and abundant supply, whereas some faithful students of Christian Science, or divine law, have apparently failed to secure the desired results?
The
word "assimilation," from a physiological standpoint, means a building up of the so-called nutritive substances and absorbing or appropriating of needed nourishment.
Bringing
to fulfillment a worthy undertaking, achieving success in legitimate business, proving the presence of wisdom, understanding, and ability with which to meet pressing problems, are worth-while accomplishments.
When
the Psalmist entreated, "Set a watch, O Lord, before my mouth; keep the door of my lips," he uttered a prayer the spirit of which every student of Christian Science may wisely make his own.
Mrs. Florence S. Smith, Committee on Publication for Queensland, Australia,
In the "Points from the Pulpit" column a clergyman is reported to have said, "Practically every religious crank of today had his prototype at the end of the first century—the ancestors of theosophists, Christian Scientists, and all the rest.
Charles W. J. Tennant, District Manager of Committees on Publication for Great Britain and Ireland,
Your issue of June 8 contains a letter on spiritual healing, in which Christian Science is referred to as though it were not strictly in line with the Gospels.
John A. C. Fraser, Committee on Publication for the Province of Alberta, Canada,
With reference to your library feature last week, I should like to say that the records of Edmonton Public Library are not a sufficient indication of the public interest in Christian Science and demand for its authorized and approved literature.
William K. Kitchen, Committee on Publication for New Jersey,
Your issue of December 21, 1934, reports a minister of the gospel as saying in a recent sermon, "The Christian Science attitude is akin to that of Hindu Vedantism," and that "the whole philosophy of Christian Science teaching has a spirit of unreality about it.
In
a Christian Science Sunday School class of senior high school girls, the question was asked by one student, "Why is it that whenever I go anywhere thinking I am going to have a good time, I find that I don't?