Exploring in depth what Christian Science is and how it heals.
Articles
Dear Journal :— I am glad to be numbered among your readers, who eagerly look for your monthly visit, and greet your appearing with ever fresh delight. Being fully convinced that an interchange of experiences and accounts of our work must be mutually helpful, I offer the following: First of all, we are glad to note an increasing interest in and appreciation of the "New order" of church service.
There was a true conservatism shown by Jesus in his claim not to destroy the law but to fulfill it. The law was spiritual, was holy, just and good, but the people, the world, had not reached this higher meaning: he led them to it.
One of the great mistakes among men is a belief in a diversity of causes and effects. People think they can live in harmony with one cause and have a certain good effect, while every other part of their life can go unheeded, without affecting the certain result desired.
The experience of every student of Truth is marked from time to time by periods of illumination, of expanded views and larger comprehension of the heights and depths of meaning included in such statements as St. Paul addressed to the Colossians, Chap.
In one of the Canadian towns where Science is still young and the numbers few, it is the practice to take a special subject as the keynote to the Friday evening meeting. This topic is given out on the Sunday previous so that all may work upon it during the week.
The editorial in the February Journal is quite to the point T. — is honeycombed with false Scientists and insane trash called Christian Science literature.
There is an unwritten law, with which we are all familiar that makes our welfare and happiness in this world, depend as much upon the doing of certain things as abstaining from the performance of certain other things. This law makes it as obligatory for us to be faithful in the discharge of certain duties as to avoid other acts which we know to be trangressions of the law.
The sacrifice of material things is essential to spiritual growth and prosperity. The first act of worship was one of sacrifice, when Cain brought of the fruit of the ground, and Abel brought of the firstlings of his flock.
A beautifully gotten up book entitled "New Hampshire Women" has recently been published by the New Hampshire Publishing Company of Concord, N. H.
The marvelous Oxford India paper was first introduced in 1875. Since then it has revolutionized the Bible and prayer book trade, and it is now used for all the more popular devotional books throughout the world.