William K. Primrose, Assistant to the District Manager of Committees on Publication for Great Britain and Ireland,
May I point out to a doctor whose letter appears in your issue of December 20 that the difference between his method and that of Christian Scientists is one of basis?
WE
who have shared the immeasurable blessings of the Christian Science Sunday School well know its Godgiven guidance in helping us to know ourselves as God's children.
THE
writer had always loved Bible stories, but it was not until the light of Christian Science illumined them that their practical value to the world was realized.
THE
student of Christian Science who meets with opposition or finds himself in a position where he must work out his own problems, need not be dismayed nor discouraged.
When
Christ Jesus said to his disciples, in that matchless address known as the Sermon on the Mount, "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect," he placed before humanity an entirely new standard of thought and conduct, a standard perhaps hitherto undreamed of.
Charles M. Shaw, Committee on Publication for Lancashire, England,
The statement by a speaker at the Convocation of Canterbury, "I do not suppose there is any more fantastic theory than that on which Christian Science is founded — the theory that matter and the body do not exist, and that therefore pain cannot exist" — is incorrect and misleading.