Valdemar Willumsen, Committee on Publication for Denmark,
My attention has been called to a copy of Hojskolebladet which contains some quite inaccurate statements about Christian Science; so, to prevent your readers retaining a wrong impression of this subject I beg you kindly to accept the following:
Albert E. Lombard, Committee on Publication for Southern California,
A letter that was printed in your issue of May 2 was logical when it made the following statement: "If one admits the fundamental proposition that 'God is All,' everything else in Christian Science naturally and inevitably follows.
It
was Jesus' recognition of his divine sonship, his understanding that man is born, "not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God," that gave him his power.
In
the stress and turmoil of material living there are those to-day who long for something that will still the tempest of human doubts and fears, quell the raging sea of ambition and rivalry, bring harmony into families divided by selfishness and misunderstanding, and establish a better understanding between employer and employees.
In
a beautiful article entitled "Love," with which every Christian Scientist should be familiar, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy, writes.
To
one in great need of encouragement came the following message, as though whispered gently into consciousness: "Earth's preparatory school must be improved to the utmost.