Strange
as it may seem, there has always been opposition to Christian healing, whereas people would naturally think to Christian healing, people would naturally think it would be a welcome visitor, an angel guest.
In a recent article on "Back Bay Churches," Boston, George Willis Cooke says in the Boston Transcript: "The tendency in this denomination [Unitarian], as in most others is just now decidedly away from a vigorous intellectual consideration of problems that search the minds of inquiring men.
The
Associated Press has doubtless made every one acquainted with the recent occurrence in connection with the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.
The
abiding consciousness of ever-present Good, in the working out of each problem, should, it seems to me, be the so-called larger demonstrations, or the continuous routine of daily duties.
The
other night I lifted the curtain for a moment and looked back over some of the past scenes in my life, which were indeed very dark, for I seemed in those past days (long before I knew what Christian Science was) to be called upon to pass through many deep waters until at length I cried out in my anguish:—
If
you are sick to death of the commonplace, if the debit and credit of life's "daily pit-a-pat" wearies you past endurance, if the modern world with its hard, matter-of-fact ways has "got on" your nerves, steer your course for the Marble Arch any Wednesday evening a few minutes before eight.