Christian
Science takes no joyous holiday away from mortals, but it lifts these occasions to a vision of Christliness that adds to their permanence, usefulness, and refreshment.
Herbert Hoover
with contributions from Henry L. Stimson
We
approach the season when, according to custom dating from the garnering of the first harvest by our forefathers in the New World, a day set apart to give thanks even amid hardships to Almighty God for our temporal and spiritual blessings.
That
the statements of Truth contained in our hymns heal so-called physical disease, as well as the condition more specifically analyzed as mental, is well known to those who rely on Christian Science for their well-being.
A Little
volume of poems, translated from several foreign languages, which recently came into the hands of a student, bore the apt title "Strangers and Foreigners," taken from Paul's words in his great epistle written from the prison in Rome to the Ephesians, "Now therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellowcitizens with the saints, and of the household of God.