Putting on record insights into the practice of Christian Science.
Editorials
We all have places of the heart, places where we return from time to time to reaffirm what brings us together, but even more, to look forward to new journeys, new discoveries, new challenges. For readers of the Journal, new or longtime, the pages of this magazine have been such a meeting place.
Roads , bridges, libraries, courts, laws and justice—sometimes it's as if we thought they were natural phenomena like grass and trees. For long stretches of time we may act as though these aspects of organized society are simply there.
The early Christian Church was a powerful force—so powerful that it literally changed the course of human history. Certainly the pundits and social observers of the first century a.
In the winter of 1914 during World War I, a brief, remarkable truce was initiated by soldiers in the trenches. In the darkness of Christmas Eve someone raised a Christmas tree above the parapet.
Waking to a dawn-chorus of birdsong, we can sometimes feel that the whole of nature is giving thanks to the creator. There is an irresistible uplift in this outpouring of praise.
At the head of an incredible string of railroad cars—open-slatted cars for produce and closed refrigerator cars and flatbed cars for industrial steel and low-slung coal cars with hoppers underneath— there is an engine. It may be we can fashion a metaphor from the hundred-or-more-boxcars-long freight train—a metaphor about progress.
Not long ago an editorial cartoon appeared in a West Coast newspaper that caricatured reliance on prayer for healing as little more than irrational faith overshadowed by the specter of death. It was a brutal statement and one that requires a healing response.
According to an account given in an 1897 issue of the Journal, a man who had been an invalid for years and was unable to walk without using canes was visiting Boston. The Christian Science Journal, February 1897, p.
We witness many things in life. Some are so packed with lessons that they go beyond what can be put into a few words.
Religious reformers have usually been convinced the ways of the world weren't right. From the Old Testament's Jeremiah to the eighteenth century's Jonathan Edwards to some of today's spiritually discerning clergy, they have told people—usually outspokenly—to forsake worldly ways and adopt spiritual and moral values.