Exploring in depth what Christian Science is and how it heals.
Articles
It was Monday morning and I was looking forward to starting a new week. But I woke up with a terrible headache.
In the early hours on Thursday, January 20, of this year, I dreamed I had the flu. I woke up, totally well.
These days, buying or selling a house can seem to be a complicated and stressful experience. We all know stories of prospective buyers who cannot get financing, or of people with homes that have been on the market for a long time.
Christian Science has brought many blessings and great joy to my life. A recent experience proved challenging, but persisting with the truths taught by Christ Jesus and Mary Baker Eddy again led me to healing.
Toward the end of March, I was enjoying springtime at my heavily wooded weekend country home in the rolling backwoods of southern Mississippi. The winter ryegrass was at its peak, brown tree limbs on the beech, white oak, blackjack oak, and sweet gum trees were all sprouting fresh green leaves.
Crossroads seem to be the plot points of our earthly experience. They are those still moments when we can and must—more than anything else—listen.
In northwest Illinois, where I live, we got quite a bit of snow last year. I am accustomed to taking a walk every morning, and as I live in a rural area, my subdivision is surrounded by agricultural land.
Over the years my family and I have been blessed watching God meet our needs. Lately, I have noticed the wonderful beauty of God blessing me from minute to minute, and hour to hour, in the smallest of details.
Many years ago, after completing one phase of my doctoral studies, I determined that it would be necessary to find employment to earn the income needed to sustain a lengthy period of dissertation research. Having no clear idea what I wanted to do, I began a job search that was, to say the least, desultory.
Much of the art we see today causes me—and perhaps you—to question the inspiration and motives of the artist. Every artist has choices to make—do I want my art to uplift or tear down, to stimulate right thoughts and action, or to present erroneous ideas? What is my reason for creating? As an artist, I choose to uplift.