The
common credence given to corporeality, belief that a physical body expresses the real identity of man, has become so tenacious in its continued acceptance that it constitutes a reason why it should seem to offer a strong resistance to spiritual facts and take a stand against every advance of the truth.
Adverting to a review in a recent issue of News of the Week, in the course of which reference was incidentally made to the Christian Science religion as characterized in large degree by an exaltation of thought produced by mental concentration and resulting in a form of autohypnosis, David Anderson writes:—
It is not altogether a pleasing spectacle to witness the denunciation of the followers of one Christian religion by another of that faith, even though there may be differences on certain doctrinal points.
A sincere study of Christian Science is attended by a marked spiritual uplift and moral regeneration which is freely acknowledged and commented upon by all classes of people who are in a position to observe and know.