With respect to the discussion on faith-healing, reported in a recent issue of the British Medical Journal, and referred to in a late issue, will you permit me to point out that, with all due respect to the writers in question, there is a distinct absence of logic in their views.
It is undoubtedly true that a number of actors and actresses have become students of Christian Science, because they have been enabled by its teachings to rise above many of the difficulties which they have to encounter in their profession.
Some
movements owe their success to argument based along the common material lines of reasoning, but it has been otherwise with the advance of Christian Science.
Glancing
up from study one morning, attention was attracted to a bright spot of light on the darker side of the room under a heavy chair, where the color of the carpet was intensified into a brilliant red.
Students
of Christian Science who may be tempted to complain of the barrenness of their experience, will find a most effective rebuke of their meager receptivity, and an unfailing recipe for the increase of their sense of good, on page 3 of Science and Health, where Mrs.