Ralph G. Lindstrom, Committee on Publication for Colorado,
"Why I am not a Christian Scientist," as a recent pulpit topic in a North Side church, proved to be a strange misapplication of statements about the real, spiritual man to the mortal, physical man, and vice versa.
Ernest L. Buchanan, Committee on Publication for Manitoba,
Your report of a sermon entitled "Through Faith to Health," recently delivered by a visiting clergyman in Knox church, contains a reference to Christian Science which may have conveyed a wrong impression; hence space for correction will be appreciated.
Ralph W. Still, Committee on Publication for the State of Texas,
In a dispatch appearing in your columns recently, covering proceedings of a Methodist conference in Lufkin, one of the attending bishops is reported as having "assailed modern literature which attacked the humanity of Jesus.
Could
anything be more satisfying, when we get our first glimpse of the perfect God and His perfect man, than to have our entire family share the vision, and to see all of our loved ones going forward with us! To be able to talk about our new-found treasure, and to feel the sympathetic and tender interest of those with whom we spend most of our waking hours, would be gratifying indeed; but it seldom occurs that way, and after traveling on alone we see that each step has to be one of individual demonstration.
The
paths by which the seeker after Truth and the sick, the sinning, the sorrowful, enter Christian Science are as varied and numerous as are the individuals who thus seek spiritual satisfaction or surcease from pain.
In
Christian Science, if we are obedient and seek to progress, we put aside every term, every thought, everything that could circumscribe or limit our concept of God, the one creator.