The statement that pain should not be regarded as "an interference with normal living" is not only startling, but is contradicted by human experience, for pain unquestionably interferes with the conscious harmony and activity of the human mind and body, and unless it is overcome the limits of human endurance are soon reached.
In
giving our readers a twenty-four page paper this week, instead of the usual twenty pages, we have had in mind their desire for full information concerning the answers under oath filed by the defendants in the proceedings now pending in the Superior Court at Concord, as the demands upon the space of most newspapers do not permit full reports of such matters.
In
the second chapter of Isaiah we read that "the mountain of the Lord's house shall be established in the top of the mountains,"—in other words, that the Divine idea will be exalted above all human concepts, and that all nations shall seek to know the truth.
The
objects of the National Arbitration and Peace Congress, which are expressed in its name, should appeal to all Christian people, and we are sure that they do appeal to Christian Scientists.
No
thoughtful person can fail to note the great change which is taking place in the world's thought—the advance from a physical to a metaphysical basis of reasoning.