Hugh Stuart Campbell, Committee on Publication for the State of Illinois,
Kindly allow me to comment in your esteemed columns by reason of misstatements about Christian Science and ridicule of its Founder, published in your recent issue under the heading "Communications.
Charles W. J. Tennant, District Manager of Committees on Publication for Great Britain and Ireland,
In reply to a clergyman, writing in a recent issue of your paper on Christian Science, let me say that although we are grateful for his kindly reference to the good he recognizes in Christian Science and its fruits, we must take exception to much of his explanation of the subject.
New allies of the antiprohibition forces are trying to make it appear that the Christian Scientists of the United States are divided on the liquor question.
"Wherefore
laying aside all malice, and all guile, and hypocrisies, and envies, and all evil speakings, as newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby: if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious.
In
the business world, the success of a factory largely depends on the care each of the employees takes to do his work well, and on the intelligent and appreciative interest they all have in the finished article, which represents the vision of the employer and the externalization of that vision by each one employed in the manufacture of it.
No
one who is acquainted with the best literature of this period can fail to see that the world's thinkers are reaching out as never before for a grasp of spiritual things.