A young
student of Christian Science who expressed a desire to do a certain work, was lovingly reminded that her first need was to gain a working knowledge of Christian Science.
Gratitude
for the freedom gained through Christian Science awakens those who have been released from fetters of ignorance, fear, disease, and sin to learn more about its Christlike teachings and to devote their lives to the extension of its good works; in short, to be laborers in the Master's vineyard.
When
they established Thanksgiving Day, the Pilgrim Fathers, thankful to God for having brought them through what seemed a most perilous year, expressed their gratitude for the harvest of corn, as well as for the divine presence which they knew was with them.
At
this season of the year, when the harvest has been gathered in, the thoughts of our forefathers turned toward God with thanksgiving for the blessings of plenty and provision against the needs of winter.
William A. Gilchrist, Committee on Publication for the Province of Saskatchewan, Canada,
Your issue of June 8 contained a letter from a clergyman taking issue with some of the remarks made in my letter of June 1, correcting misleading statements made about Christian Science in a report of one of his recent sermons.
John G. Sumner, Committee on Publication for County Antrim, Ireland,
In reply to the letter in to-day's issue from an archdeacon, I should like to say that I have the utmost sympathy with what I believe to be the archdeacon's kind, religious surveillance.