Your note on the Christian Science publishing house in the current number of Truth should be interesting to those who are capable of understanding what it means.
Not only Christian Scientists but members of the community at large have been gratified by the decision of the New Hampshire supreme court, which upholds the will of the late Mary Baker Eddy, or rather the clause by which she bequeathed the bulk of her fortune to the Christian Science propaganda.
Most unprejudiced people will note with satisfaction that the New Hampshire supreme court has upheld in one most important particular the legal validity of the will by which Mrs.
In
Paul's second epistle to the Corinthians we read: "Henceforth know we no man after the flesh: yea, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now henceforth know we him no more.
In
Article XX, Sections 2 and 3, our Manual lays down very clearly the course of instruction to be followed in the Sunday school; but the clause, "The next lessons shall consist of such questions and answers as are adapted to a juvenile class," seems to require a broader interpretation than is often given it.
The clergyman who undertook recently from his pulpit to say why he is not a Christian Scientist, is quoted as having set forth at the outstart what he professed to believe to be the fundamentals of Christian Science; deducing therefrom that Christian Science is all wrong.