with contributions from Alexander MacLaren, John Stuart Mill, H. W Beecher
A writer in the Homiletic Review, treating the subject of obscure passages of the Bible, says very sensibly: "Why not let the perplexing questions wait for the hour of higher elevation and clearer light?
Sometimes
when people see a Christian Scientist suffering with a trouble which does not seem to yield to treatment at once, they say, if he would only use a certain drug he might be relieved.
Having
attended the Annual Meeting at the Mother Church in Boston, and partaken of the feast so bountifully prepared by our beloved Leader and Mother, we have returned to our field of labor refreshed and strengthened.
In
the article entitled "A Christian Scientist's View," which appeared in the Sentinel for June 7, the quotation marks were omitted from the poem "Where is God?
A special despatch from Chicago in the Herald of last evening stated that the Christian Scientists of that city were united in an effort to influence events and shape destinies in China by concentrating their mental powers upon that object.