W. Stuart Booth, Committee on Publication for the State of Colorado,
Your remarks about Christian Science, called forth evidently by a local preacher's sermon, indicate a desire to be fair, and in so far as they are correct should help your readers.
The
truth as revealed through Christian Science enables the student, step by step, to separate between material sense and spiritual sense; and for this workable, demonstrable Science we are exceedingly grateful.
The
writer has often been greatly impressed by seeing the untiring, unselfish love of a mother for her child—that mother-love which tries so earnestly to guide and protect her children.
When
one has been appointed an usher in a Christian Science church he should realize that he has been given not only a reward, but a duty to perform that will require work and demonstration.
A Common
experience of the young student in Christian Science is to approach the writings of its Discoverer and Founder, Mary Baker Eddy, with a certain challenging, critical sense toward her use of words,—a trick of supposed intellectual superiority by which those ignorant of spiritual truth are often deceived; prejudice having a way, like the ventriloquist, of making its voice seem to come from a direction quite other than its real source.
Because
Christian Science is the Science of Christianity or the exact, provable knowledge of God and His laws, which was declared plainly and demonstrated fully by Christ Jesus, it is the one and only means whereby all human needs can be met.