THESE
words convey a world of meaning in human experience; they stand for a military decoration given for prompt action taken oblivious of personal safety; for a recognition of achievement, of victory.
IN
these days of rapid change, amid the restlessness of peoples all the world over, one has hardly time, supposedly, to pause, so great seems to be the endeavor for a man to attain the height of his ambition—it matters not in what direction that ambition lies.
The rabbi's sermon, "The Problems of Evil," extracts of which were printed in a recent issue, takes plain issue with some Old Testament teachings on the question of God's knowing or permitting evil.
An Episcopal layman recently declared in the World-Herald that the Nicene creed is practically the constitution of orthodox Christianity, and finding that Christian Science does not accept the theory that Christ is God, stated in that creed, he jumped to the conclusion that Christian Science has no Christian basis.
THOSE
uninstructed by Christian Science may spend most of their seemingly perplexed existence in the "valley of decision," so named by the prophet Joel in his exclamation: "Multitudes, multitudes in the valley of decision: for the day of the Lord is near in the valley of decision.