In
a recent issue of a semi-religious weekly we were told that while Christian Science contains some marked virtues of a spiritual nature, it pushes its reliance upon spiritual revelation too far and thus becomes unreasonable; that it "refuses to submit its vision to the test of experience," and to "prove all things," as we have been advised to do by St.
In
the 1907 second revised edition of our text-book, Science and Health, some changes have been made in the line numbers since the Quarterly for January, February, March was prepared.
The attitude of certain of the local ministers of the orthodox persuasion toward Christian Science as exhibited on numerous occasions of late, both in sermons and published criticisms, has increasingly impressed me, first, with its unfairness toward the members of the Christian Science Church, who are also cautioned by their Leader to follow her only as the she follows Christ.
When we affirm that the Christ, Truth, is as effective to-day as in the time of the Master and the apostles, the affirmation is based upon the constant experience of the healing of sickness, many sufferers having been wrested from the verge of the grave, all material means having failed them.
The head of the Christian Science Church offers to make a donation for education of the people in the principles of that faith—a movement that has accomplished marvelous results in the very few years since it was first started.