However many of us may differ in our religious opinions, there is much food for thought in the excellent address on Christian Science given by Bicknell Young in the high school.
You inquire, "Is there on earth another legislative body besides the United States Senate which would listen to, or pretend to listen to, and admit in full to its official minutes, a five-hour lecture on Christian Science?
Christian Science explains the life and words and work of Jesus the Christ, and shows how his teachings are as practicable today as when he walked the Galilean shore, healing the sick and the sinning.
The clerical critic who is quoted in a recent issue as disapproving of Christian Science, because in his opinion its appeal is only to the "educated class," might well be recommended to a fellow clergyman who in a neighboring Pennsylvania city a few weeks ago declared that persons of education could not be attracted to Christian Science.
In
looking over some old copies of the Journal, I came upon an article in which the writer emphasizes the need of an "uninfluenced majority" in our business meetings, and of protecting and trusting that majority as the avenue through which God's will may be made manifest.