In the Christian Science Bible Lesson

In reply to a recent article in which Christian Scientists are criticized in connection with arguments made for the establishment of a national department of health, permit me to say that Christian Scientists are working just as intelligently and effectively to prevent and cure disease as any other class of people, and that this statement is provable.
Christian Science and methods which seek to combine drugs and prayer are not only not akin, philosophically or otherwise, but they bear no resemblance to each other in any important particular.
Inasmuch as there is hardly an individual in any community who has not at least one friend that has experienced the benefits of Christian Science and become a "believer," it is indeed a surprise that a clergyman, whose duty it is to bring to suffering humanity the salvation taught and practised by our Master, should make the statements of our critic.
To Christian Scientists, Mrs.
If Christian Science has done nothing else for modern religious thought, it is worth while simply for the demonstration it affords in crowded congregations, assembled through no enticements of pulpit oratory or celebrated singers and organists, but chiefly through the spontaneous impulse of personal religious experience.
Jesus plainly assured his followers, "He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also.
The letter of our critic, published in your issue of the 27th inst.

SINGING PILGRIMS

The psalmist says, "Thy statutes have been my songs in the house of my pilgrimage," and in Science and Health we read.

ECONOMY

Mrs.

FORMULATED OPINION

Hanging in a prominent place in a certain practitioner's office is this motto: "Don't criticize.

"WHAT SHALL WE DO?"

We are all more or less familiar with the account of Jesus' feeding of the five thousand, and have gained therefrom an assurance that there is a law of supply which if understood and put into operation silences forever under all conditions the belief in or fear of limitation and poverty.