Human
thinking, with characteristic inaccuracy, has made meekness synonymous with timidity and uses the words interchangeably with equal cynicism and contempt.
The
Christian Scientist is as confident of the immortality of the words of Mary Baker Eddy as he is certain that the words of Jesus the Christ are immortal.
In a recent issue is an interview with one who claims to heal through other than material means, in which the statement is made that spiritual healing is not Christian Science.
In the ninety-fifth psalm, the writer says, "To day if ye will hear his voice, harden not your heart," and Paul, in Hebrews, refers to this counsel, in two different instances.
AMONG
the obstacles which confront the beginner in Christian Science are two very common errors: that Science and Health is hard to understand, or that one cannot agree with its statements.
THERE
has never been a time in the world's history, and certainly not in the history of the Christian Science movement, when men have been stirred to a deeper appreciation of God's protection.
IN
Isaiah we read, "For as the earth bringeth forth her bud, and as the garden causeth the things that are sown in it to spring forth; so the Lord God will cause righteousness and praise to spring forth before all the nations.
WHAT
a picture the word "cobwebs" presents,—a fragile net stretched across an open space, at the first glance beautiful in its delicacy of workmanship, but on second thought undesirable because contaminating to its surroundings.