Richard O. Shimer, Committee on Publication for the State of Indiana,
In your issue of July 26 you reported a resume of a sermon in which the clergyman referred to Christian Science and to its Discoverer and Founder, Mary Baker Eddy, in a way which might give a wrong impression among your readers.
Alfred Johnson, Committee on Publication for Yorkshire, England,
Assuming your correspondent, who writes under a pseudonym in your last issue, to be a genuine inquirer, I would advise him to read the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy, where he will find his inquiries fully answered.
William K. Kitchen, Committee on Publication for the State of New Jersey,
Recently the Bergen Evening Record published what purported to be excerpts from a sermon preached by a minister of the gospel in a neighboring city in which, among other statements, he is reported to have said, "There cannot be any worse mark of a community as to its intelligence and its knowledge of Christ than the fact that there are many Christian Scientists and that they are held in esteem.
Individuals
faced with arguments of unemployment, lack, and general depression have offered to them in the teachings of Christian Science a wellspring of encouragement and practical help.
An
explorer, in describing a mighty Himalayan peak, says, "There is about Kinchinjunga the calm and repose of stupendous upward effort successfully achieved.
Board of Trustees of The Christian Science Publishing Society
Depreciation of the currency of several nations has raised some difficult problems as to the purchase of Christian Science literature in such countries.