"Forgetting
those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.
Many
students of the Bible have apparently been unaware of the fact that there is to be found in the Holy Scriptures what might well be thought of as an eleventh commandment — the command to be grateful.
Extracts from Baccalaureate Address delivered at the University of California, at Los Angeles, on Sunday, June 17, by Albert E. Lombard, Committee on Publication for Southern California
You of the graduating class have already seen the value of looking upward.
C. Shelton Agar, Committee on Publication for Natal, South Africa, in the
In reply to the letter of "Veritas," published in your issue of March 24, Christian Science emphasizes that true Christianity is a practicable and demonstrable religion.
Arthur T. Morey, Committee on Publication for the State of Missouri, in the
It has been drawn to my attention that a lecture on Christian Science recently given in Poplar Bluff, and reported in part in the Daily American Republic of March 26, 1934, has aroused two rejoinders—one from a clergyman, who, as recorded in your paper of March 29, thinks the lecturer's explanation of the first and second chapters of Genesis is wrong—and one from another clergyman, as reported in your issue of March 31.
In
contrast to the many panaceas set forth for the economic rehabilitation of the world, all of which are experimental and many admittedly only temporary, Christian Science is revealing the divine economics; and its doctrine has been proved by numerous individuals to be sound and practical.
When
he received the order to go to Egypt and bid Pharaoh free the captive Israelites, Moses, being slow of speech and diffident about expressing himself, felt that he was not the one to undertake such a task.
In
the sixteenth chapter of Exodus it is related that the Lord sent manna to the children of Israel to sustain them in the wilderness, and "Moses said, Let no man leave of it till the morning.