Miss Maude A. Law, Committee on Publication for Barbados,
The saying that "constant dripping of water wears away a stone" is as applicable metaphysically as physically; hence I am again asking the favor of space in your paper to refute an oft-repeated and oft-corrected misstatement concerning Christian Science.
John Murray Burriss, Committee on Publication for the State of Kansas,
Writing under the caption, "Christian Science and Art," in the column entitled "The One-Minute Pulpit," in your recent issue, a contributor states he understands, after reading the court decision in a New York case, that the adherents of Christian Science "believe that matter has no existence except as a manifestation of the mind.
Conrad Bernhard, Jr., Committee on Publication for the State of Maryland,
It is much to be regretted that we still occasionally find a writer on religious subjects who cannot discuss the problems of his own denomination without a covert sneer at the religious beliefs of others.
How
often these words of the prophet Amos, "Prepare to meet thy God," have been used to frighten people, the impression conveyed being that at any moment one may be called upon to answer for a life of sin before a frowning Deity seated upon a judgment throne! Through the spiritual unfoldment of the Scriptures as revealed in Christian Science, one may come to see and use this text in an entirely different sense.
Certain
travelers who were riding from Darjeeling—about eight thousand feet above sea level—to Tanglu—over ten thousand feet—once had an interesting experience.