Exploring in depth what Christian Science is and how it heals.
Articles
I marvel at the Shunammite woman who looked death in the face and was not moved. The very day her son died in her arms (see II Kings 4:18–37 ), she walked about 16 miles to beseech Elisha, “the man of God” at Mount Carmel, to raise her son to life.
Everywhere, every day, people are being told—and we are hearing on the news—that something or other is hopeless. The word hopeless is applied to relationships, the search for employment, physical and mental conditions, attempts to bring peace to inflamed parts of the world, the search for individual and collective justice, and so much more.
Late one beautiful morning in Boston soon after Christmas, I paused for a moment to contemplate what I had been studying and turned to my window, scanning the horizon from my eighth-floor apartment. The view constantly changes.
I was sitting in church, turning my thoughts toward God before the service, when I began doing mental math problems with the hymn numbers posted at the front of the church. What is it that pulls our focus off the spiritual and onto lesser subjects? What is it that distracts us from feeling our natural love for God and the goodness of His creation? The answer is a pivotal term used in the practice of Christian Science: animal magnetism.
The lives of great men and women always inspire us. Individuals who break barriers or overcome adversity raise our sights and encourage us to be our own best selves.
A humorous cartoon inspires a helpful lesson in healing.
When the writer faced bouts of depression and doubt in college, she began to reexamine Christian Science and its system of spiritual healing.
Facing financial ruin and a bleak future, Linda Doty set her sights on the Bible’s promises of prosperity.
There is no room for frustration or discouragement when we turn to Love.
When their view of home expands to embrace the infinite, a couple’s house-hunt takes an unexpected turn.