Editorials

The Work of the Practitioner

The one who asks such a question as that in Jeremiah, "Why is my pain perpetual, and my wound incurable, which refuseth to be healed?

Capacity

The world, which uses all words with extraordinary slovenliness, does a greater despite to genius than to most of them.

A Sabbath for the World

The Sabbath which the world needs after a seeming period of upheaval is neither a mere truce with erroneous conditions nor a reaction into material inertia, but the true understanding of Principle which continues through all eternity.

Daniel

The great characteristic of Daniel was his ability to stand alone, which really is the measure of his moral courage.

"Not as the flying"

With the fullness of real joy, there can be no fear.

Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving is the expression of men's discernment of something better than themselves.

Friendship in War and Peace

In some respects, there is not so much difference between a condition called war and a condition called peace as has been popularly supposed.

The Hope of the Machinists

The decision of the machinists of the United States to call an international conference of the machinists throughout the world, for the purpose of rendering future wars impossible by the curtailment or nonproduction of the engines of war, is an indication of the growing solidarity of human thought, a phenomenon capable of many extraordinary possibilities.

Accepting the Solution

In relying upon Christian Science for relief of one sort or another, one must be willing to accept the true solution which divine Principle provides.

On Hoeing Your Own Row

One of the first things which a man learns in Christian Science, if he is wise enough, is that he has his own work to do, and that no one can do it for him.

The Equitable Price

At a time when prices are changing, there is every reason to rejoice and nothing whatever to fear.

Science

Doctor Angelicus , writing, in his philosophic way, in defense of the great order to which he belonged, declared that, properly considered, there is but one absolute Science, that of theology, and, consequently, that all the older so-called sciences are but relative to this in the theories they propound.