Having
recently read in our periodicals reports of the progress made by the Christian Science movement during the past year, may we not profitably turn in retrospect to the beginnings of that movement?
An
American poet gives us a picture of how selfishness and greed have stolen from men their right to rejoice in the fruits of their labor, and have deprived them of the ability to sing that is theirs.
Why
do Christian Scientists need to "stand porter at the door of thought," as our beloved Leader, Mary Baker Eddy, has admonished us to do on page 392 of "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures"?
Alfred Johnson, Committee on Publication for Yorkshire, England,
Those of your readers who have followed this correspondence will know that the categorical questions your correspondent asks have been specifically answered during the correspondence, except, perhaps, his last question: "Does Christian Science teach there is no sin, sickness, and death—they are illusions?