For
some time after the Monitor first came into our home, we read the head-lines, an occasional article, and then turned to the special article on the Home Forum page, as with our regular Science reading, the daily papers, and the weekly and monthly magazines which had already become established with us, there seemed to be no time for a thorough perusal of another paper.
One
of the greatest wonders that has ever filled the human mind is the discovery, with its positive proof, that the celestial bodies move in definite, determinable paths.
A very little trouble would have saved our critic, the vicar, from committing himself to such statements as that Christian Science denied the personality of God, the sonship of Christ Jesus, his death and resurrection, and others of a like character.
A recent issue reports a clergyman as referring in his sermon to Christian Science as a "non-Christian faith," and classing it with oriental religions.
Our clerical critic has referred to a few people as having passed away under Christian Science treatment, dying with cancer and tuberculosis, and the public must be the judge whether or not charity was here made manifest.
Christian Scientists have no wish to press their views on those who are satisfied with their present understanding of Christianity; the appeal of this Science is to the unsatisfied.