THROUGHOUT
past centuries, patient and loving followers of Truth have accounted it a privilege to serve God amid whatever trials and persecutions have seemed to come to them, earnestly seeking divine guidance, willingly paying what might be required of them for the sake of good, and sometimes forfeiting even what seemed to be life itself for the cause of righteousness.
George E. Martin, Committee on Publication for Victoria, Australia,
There are so many excellent points in the address of the Moderator of your great denomination, such as where he points out that "the general habit of our thinking is materialistic," that I was surprised to find a reference to Christian Science which is not in accordance with facts.
Gordon V. Comer, Committee on Publication for the State of Colorado,
A letter from one of your readers, appearing in your issue of August 30, mentions Christian Science and his thought about nonreligious cults which appear to-day and are gone to-morrow, and which teach vague metaphysics.
Frank C. Ayres, Committee on Publication for the State of Indiana,
Contrary to the opinion recently expressed by an eminent physician in a published article in your paper, Christian Science seeks for definite causes of human misery and attacks them.
Conrad Bernhard, Jr., Committee on Publication for the State of Maryland,
In reporting a hearing before the Hygiene Committee of the House of Delegates at Annapolis, in a recent issue of the Sun, you said that a certain Health Commissioner, in speaking against the "Christian Science" bill, said that "practitioners in the city never reported communicable diseases, and in two instances did not report deaths because they could not diagnose them.