Charles W. J. Tennant, District Manager of Committees on Publication for Great Britain and Ireland,
In reply to the letter of a clergyman in your issue of April 9, let me point out the distinction made by Christian Science between divine Mind, God, and the so-called carnal or mortal mind.
In
II Kings it is recorded that on one occasion the king of Syria sent by night a large army to Dothan, a village in the hill country of Israel, for the purpose of surrounding it and so capturing Elisha, the man of God.
In
his epistle the Apostle James writes: "Count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations; knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience.
Although
"redistribution" is a word frequently heard, its current use may be confusing, because the usual thought about it is based on the premise that substance is material, and on its subsequent that in order to bring out a right sense of social order and balance a redistribution of material things upon a basis of complete material equality must be effected.
Miss Kathleen O'Connor, Committee on Publication for Somersetshire, England,
An anonymous correspondent in your last issue expresses somewhat confused views on the subject of Christian Science, and on the age-long enigma as to the so-called origin of evil.
William K. Kitchen, Committee on Publication for the State of New Jersey,
Mary Baker Eddy in her various writings repeatedly declares that the Bible was her sole guide in leading to her discovery of the unchanging law of God, which, when spiritually understood and applied in accordance with the teachings of Christ Jesus, heals disease and reforms the sinner today as in his time.