George C. Palmer. Committee on Publication for the Province of Saskatchewan, Canada,
In a recent issue there appeared a kindly reference to Christian Science which, although correct in itself, is apt to convey a mistaken impression on account of the context in which it appears.
Frank J. Linsley, Committee on Publication for the State of Connecticut,
During the course of a lecture delivered in Woolsey Hall on the subject of "Vital Religion and Health," the Dean of the Yale Divinity School repeated many of the unfair statements regarding Christian Science that have appeared in his public addresses and writings.
THE
keynote of right distribution of the Christian Science periodicals is surely contained in our Master's words, as recorded in the seventeenth chapter of John's Gospel, "I have given unto them the words which thou gavest me; and they have received them," and in our Leader's reference to the periodicals in the Church Manual.
MANY
times mortals endeavor to adjust things to their way of thinking, and try to bring about in the manner that pleases them best certain results which they desire, regardless of how others may be affected thereby.
IT
may seem strange to the beginner in the study of Christian Science that problem after problem will come into his experience; and even to the older student at times it may seem as if something has arisen that is not good—that a great trial or tribulation has come upon him.
THE
true Christian attitude is set forth in Paul's fine definition of charity as spiritual love, in the thirteenth chapter of his first letter to the Corinthians.