There
are a multitude of people unacquainted with the teachings of Christian Science whose daily experiences seem to be a series of uncertain, haphazard events over which they can exercise little or no control.
After
spending an afternoon in the country a short time ago, I sat on a rustic seat by the roadside, waiting for the electric car which was to carry me to the city.
The
American people, for the most part, are expressing gratitude for the recent pure food act, which assures protection to dealers and consumers alike by maintaining in Washington a commission whose duty it is to test and pass upon all foodstuffs offered the market.
Through
the increasing study and practise of Christian Science, mortal thought is undergoing a gradual change of base in its reasoning with respect to every form of human activity and occupation.
Perhaps
no story in the Old Testament conveys so many or so important lessons to present-day humanity, and especially to those people who have become interested in Christian Science, as does the story of Joseph.
The
light which Christian Science throws on the ten commandments is so illuminating that the limited, material meaning attached to them by the teaching of the schools is changed into what seems an illimitable statement of spiritual law.
In a recent issue an article was printed under the heading of "The Little Talk," in which the writer seems to imply that Christian Science and imagination are one and the same thing.
Whether or not the Owen bill for a federal medical bureau would result in officializing nation-wide the "regular" medical cult, that impression has at any rate been created by the American association of the cult, or some of its dashing leaders.
It seems to be a fair assumption that the different reasons offered by the political doctors are presented, "not for their intrinsic value," but solely for the purpose of justifying, if they can, their campaign for a federal department of medicine which would enthrone, with autocratic powers, the allopathic.