As
supplementary in extending the teachings of this vast movement of Christian Science, there are certain messengers, the Quarterly, Sentinel, Journal, Herold, and Monitor, and often it is in this order that they appeal to those who are just awakening to the fact of spiritual healing.
Rodin's
statue of The Thinker in front of the Pantheon in Paris, representing primitive man in the act of receiving his first idea, is an apt illustration of the hostile attitude which mortals invariably adopt when compelled to think in new channels.
In
The Christian Science Journal for January, 1901, is an article written for a newspaper by our Leader on what the last Thanksgiving day in the nineteenth century should signify to all mankind.
There have been various founders of faiths, in all ages, who showed that the appeal they made to an absolute unquestioned, undoubting trust and belief in the spiritual and in its immediate revelation to and knowledge by every human being who accepts and seeks it, meets a need in human nature.