Exploring in depth what Christian Science is and how it heals.

Articles
WITH careful consideration of Mrs. Eddy's words on page 422 of "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" one begins to realize the reconstructive nature of chemicalization.
THE usual secular government is subject to the ebb and flow of changing human concepts. The government of the Church of Christ, Scientist, and its members is based upon the inspired teachings of Christian Science, given in "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," the Church Manual, and other writings by Mary Baker Eddy.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE gives not only a true understanding of spiritual law, but also an understanding of true obedience. Without the latter the former would not be of practical value to mortals.
IN the first chapter of Genesis is the significant declaration, "God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them. " It is obvious that this image or reflection must express exactly its original.
HUMAN judgment may and does appraise our Leader as a great, outstanding woman, but it is the Christian Scientist who discerns through spiritual sense and demonstration her real individuality, and the spirituality which constitutes her leadership. And what of this leadership? Whither does it tend? What human theories does it forsake, and what new and hitherto unexplored vistas does it open up to eyes before closed? Unequivocally our Leader states the starting point and the goal of this whole mental journey.
WHEN Shakespeare said, "There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so," he voiced a momentous fact. Therein he showed pointedly that thought is solely responsible for whatever is apparent in human affairs, and that a man's master is his own mentality, his own thinking.
Everything which the book [of Daniel] contains of comfort and promise is pure hope, for the whole book was composed at a time of extremest need.
Of the literary qualities of Daniel it is not necessary to speak at length. The Revelation of Daniel was the most prominent example of a long course of apocalyptic literature culminating, for the biblical reader, in the Revelation of St.
The book of Daniel, when interpreted in the same way as other "apocalyptic" writings, is found "profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness. ".
Christian Science was discovered by Mary Baker Eddy in Massachusetts in 1866. She began to publish her writings on this subject there in 1875.