I wish that every Jew would heartily endorse the plea of Henry Deutsch, made by him in the daily press, for "the equal right of every individual to worship and practise his religion as it seems best to him, without harm or injury to, or interference with, his neighbor.
The evangelist whose meetings are reported in a recent issue of your paper did not state what in his judgment constitutes a Christian, so it is not possible to see why he says the word should be dropped from the term Christian Science.
The fees which Christian Scientists pay to their lecturers may be a proper subject of friendly interest, but there is nothing connected with it which can be distorted into an occasion for adverse comment.
Pamphlets misrepresenting Christian Science have been extensively circulated recently in your city, and I beg the courtesy of your space for brief comment.
The reprinting by The Scoop of an article from the National Press Reporter containing a harsh criticism of the Christian Science Board of Directors, the directors of The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, has been the occasion for no little surprise.
In
spite of darkness so thick that it was felt for three days throughout Egypt, the land of bondage to false conditions, the Israelites, as we are told in Exodus, "had light in their dwellings.
In
talking with an older student, one who had just turned to Christian Science for the solution of his problems remarked: "If my supply is from God, I do not see how God is going to pay my rent and my grocery bill.
When
through Christian Science one has grown out of many evil habits, it appears to him that because the truth has found and rescued him, he has not one minute to waste, and that he must learn all he can of Love and Truth.
Seated
in a rowboat under the drooping branches of a tree that overhung the mirror-like waters of a lake, the writer was studying the Lesson-Sermon for the week, and came upon these words from our text-book: "What, then, is the material personality which suffers, sins, and dies?
There
is nothing more beautiful in the Scriptures than the records of the Lord's supper, the spiritual breakfast, and the unfoldment of truth to the disciples on the way to Emmaus.