Ralph W. Still, Committee on Publication for the State of Texas,
Spiritual healing has been discussed twice of late over station KPRC, those taking part in the discussions attempting to uphold the amazing contention that there is no Scriptural warrant for the expectancy of this manifestation of the divine power in our day and time; that the Christ-healing is not a present possibility; and that no such healing is being accomplished.
THE
subject of congregational singing in Christian Science churches is one that merits careful attention, impressing the stranger, as it does, with a sense of power and joy when the hymns are well rendered.
WHEN
Jesus bade the man sick of the palsy who had been let down through the roof, "Arise, and take up thy couch," it is recorded that "immediately he rose up before them, and took up that whereon he lay.
BECAUSE
Christian Science includes the perfect remedy for every discord that can present itself to human thought it must include medicine, climate, and operation.
WE
find in our Leader's writings many references to gratitude; and as we go deeper into the study of Christian Science, we realize how vital to progress is this quality.
HOW
splendid is the right contemplation of advancing years in the face of so much one hears of the depressing side, such as, "Positions are not to be had," "Things cannot be done as of yore," "Mental capabilities are waning," and so forth.
DURING
the writer's childhood and young manhood, and even after he had adopted Christian Science into his daily life, he entertained the belief that his constitution was specially adapted to hot weather.
IN
the first chapter of Genesis it is written, "And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness," and in the next verse, "So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him.