The sense of wideness, of liberality, of fearlessness, of freedom, is a stimulating feature of many Scriptural passages, and recurs constantly in the Old and the New Testament.
Mrs. Mary Blanch Jones, Committee on Publication for Gloucestershire, England,
In your last issue, a gentleman speaking at Weston-super-Mare is reported to have referred at considerable length to what he believes to be the teaching of Christian Science.
Thomas A. Wyles, Committee on Publication for South Australia,
The weekly article, "Diary of a Doctor," in last Saturday's Advertiser, under the subheading "Faith Healing," contained certain misrepresentations concerning Christian Science.
Albert E. Lombard, Committee on Publication for Southern California,
An article entitled "The Duty of Being Happy," in your issue of April 24, included Christian Science among organizations "to make people happy," but implied mistakenly that Christian Science is fundamentally the same as other systems mentioned in the article.
When
Jesus was about to send his disciples out into the world equipped with nothing tangible to the material senses as a means of defense against the onslaughts of error, which he well knew would be forthcoming against any emissary of Truth, he gently warned them to be "wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.