The writer whose opinions on the subject of Christian Science are printed in a recent issue, is not original in his conclusion that if Christian Science were to dispense with everything wherein it appears to differ from his views, it might thereby become unobjectionable to persons of intelligence.
The committee having the matter in charge have just accepted a design for the monument to be erected to the memory of Mary Baker Eddy in Mount Auburn cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
I had
been wrestling with a sense of discord, trying to realize in consciousness the character and nature of the perfect man, made in the image and likeness of God, in contradistinction to the mortal concept of man, made in the likeness of mortals, and in the struggle my thoughts were directed back to my boyhood days in the north country.
Arrangements for the erection of a splendid monument to the memory of Mary Baker Eddy have been perfected, and the near future will assume definite expression in the granite column which the members of the church she founded will erect in Mt.
At
a missionary exhibition held in London a few years ago, there was given a dramatized representation of the introduction of Christianity into heathen lands.
When
the writer became interested in Christian Science and found that it is a religion of love, it seemed quite impossible for her to love her fellow men as we are taught to do.