In the Christian Science Bible Lesson

Seeing the 'face of God'

As the opening credits roll on the Friday night CBS series Joan of Arcadia, the theme song, "One of Us," plays in the background, posing provocative questions about God.
A woman's tendency to feel constant gloom, heaviness, and concern about hereditary depression ends with the spiritual understanding that "life is for enjoying."
The best alternative to acute or chronic worry is prayer, which stops it in its tracks.

I was angry at God

Angry at God? At first she thought she was furious at Him. That is, until she realized that meant being angry at good itself— the very good she yearned for.
When divorce put everything in his life on the line, the writer was impelled to learn an important lesson: The nature of your problems isn't as important as the way in which you deal with them.
Even when the financial picture is bleak, prayer offers a way out of debt and into God's blessings.
God is a restorer. If things are falling apart in your life, that doesn't have to continue.
On February 4, 2004, the anniversary of Mary Baker Eddy's discovery of Christian Science in 1866, The Christian Science Board of Directors convened a special meeting to make some important announcements.

Never beyond GOD'S HELP

After sustaining gunshot injuries, a man relies on prayer to bring him through the ordeal.
Governments, institutions, families, and we ourselves, can be seen as conduits of God's care.
When this writer was in doubt about actions she'd taken, she called on God. Then healing ideas began to come.
As a student majoring in political science, I have been inspired by leaders such as Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.