Daniel A. Scott, Committee on Publication for the State of Kansas,
The anonymous poem which appeared in your issue of November 27 under the caption "Christian Science versus Common Sense" is so misleading that I should like to offer for the consideration of your readers a few facts about Christian Science.
At
a time when the human race is confronted by limiting beliefs and the cry of lack is heard, echo like, day after day, it is helpful to consider the higher significance of currency and learn its broader meaning.
How
many of us, in the rush of a busy day, forget to be grateful for the innumerable little things that help to make that day harmonious! Often our thought is so fixed upon some definite thing we wish to see accomplished that we fail to be grateful for the right ideas that come to us, enabling us to achieve that which is right for us to do.
On
page 255 of the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," our Leader, Mary Baker Eddy, has written, "In league with material sense, mortals take limited views of all things.
An
aircraft beacon, seventy-five feet high, was to be placed atop a tall building; but the task seemed impossible, as there was at hand no adequate means of raising the giant steel girders.
At
no time in the history of the Christian Science movement has there been a more glorious opportunity than is offered today for Christian Scientists to prove that God is supreme and active.