Putting on record insights into the practice of Christian Science.
Editorials
Sometimes it’s helpful to be reminded of things we already know very well. That’s the purpose of this little editorial.
Ring! Ring! “Hello?” “Hello! I’m conducting a research project on how alive and relevant church is today. May I ask if you’d have time for a three-minute survey?” “Ehm.
Holding on to images of failur e and evil obstructs progress. It dims hope for our individual prospects, as well as for the future of our churches and society at large.
There’s so much bullying of thought going on in today’s world. People seem to want to tell you what’s best for you—they want you to conform to their way of thinking, impose their will on you, be in control of your experience.
“Those who look for me in person, or elsewhere than in my writings, lose me instead of find me,” wrote Mary Baker Eddy in 1906. She was responding to Rev.
IT'S A QUESTION we can ask ourselves often—even if we've been members of The Mother Church and/or one of its branches for decades. Sometimes my heart sings with the thrill of church membership.
THERE'S A LOT SAID AND WRITTEN ABOUT THE VALUE of forgiveness. People describe how much healing has come into their lives when they were able genuinely to forgive.
IT WILL TAKE SOME TIME, perhaps centuries of mental and spiritual advancement, but eventually we'll find that food isn't the ogre it's cracked up to be. Of itself, food holds no power to condemn people to obesity, food obsessions, or food-related diseases.
WELL, GOOD MORNING, MY FRIEND. Or maybe good evening.
MY FLIGHT OUT of New York had been slightly delayed, but I made my connection in Chicago with ease. In fact, when I got to the gate of my connecting flight they had just started to board, and I could walk right on into the airplane.