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From the April 2009 issue of The Christian Science Journal


1. Early on, Barbara Cook Spencer's life revolved around art, and some of her paintings appeared in New York galleries when she was as young as fifteen. "In my late teens," she said, "I started my search for the scientific basis, or divine truth, of art." Within a few years, she was painting and doing research in Paris and Tokyo, and studying paintings in the museums of Europe. Love of sculpture led to her business, "Jewelry as a Fine Art." Now, as a Christian Science practitioner, she practices the art of healing. Read Barbara's article, "The Isotropic View." Page 28.

2. Curt Wahlberg began to study Christian Science as a teenager and has never looked back. As he tells it, "I never thought human life quite worked for me—soon after landing the 'right' job, or getting involved in a favorite sport, something always pointed me elsewhere." Today as a Christian Science practitioner and teacher, Curt is enjoying his three-year term as First Reader of The Mother Church in Boston. Read his latest article, "Our True Life Story." Page 32.

3. One of Lois Rae Carlson's favorite childhood photos shows her sitting in a field of bluebonnets, wearing a yellow Easter Sunday dress with multiple petticoats. While Lois' life today in chilly downtown Chicago feels far from that memory of being eight years old in the warm spring of a Texas Easter, the significance of Easter continues to inspire her anew every day of her life. Read Lois' article, "Easter Day—Every Day." Page 46.

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