Aaron E. Brandt, Committee on Publication for the State of Pennsylvania,
Kindly permit the correction of a mistaken implication appearing in your issue of December 21 regarding the teachings of Christian Science, in the headlines of a report from Newark, wherein a physician states that the teachings of a certain cult are not different from Christian Science and not different from Coueism.
To
the average young person of today the task of finding and adhering to the right standard of living may seem difficult, but to the one with a knowledge of Christian Science to guide him the way is made easier.
One
morning a small structure in a city had caught fire; but the firemen arrived so promptly and worked so quickly and effectively that the flames were subdued almost immediately.
"Abreast
of the times"! These words were used by our wise Leader, Mary Baker Eddy, in her instructions concerning the periodicals which are the organs of The Mother Church.
Address by Albert E. Lombard, Committee on Publication for Southern California, before the School of Religion of the University of Southern California,
The teachings of Christian Science are both Christian and scientific.
Mrs. Mary Blanch Jones, Committee on Publication for Gloucestershire, England,
A bishop in his address at the Bristol Cathedral is reported to have said, "Christian Science was something which from the medical point of view they would consider absolutely erroneous.
Leicester LeMont Jackson, Committee on Publication for the State of Alabama,
Your issue of January 7 carried a news item in which a certain person was referred to as a "Christian Science practitioner and spiritualist," and since this is an impossible combination, and the reference falsely interprets both teachings, I ask space for making certain corrective observations.