Exploring in depth what Christian Science is and how it heals.

Articles
IT was Shakespeare who had one of his characters say, So every bondman in his own hand bears The power to cancel his captivity. When we can realize that with Christian Science we have the ability to cast off the shackles of human sense if we want to, the problem at hand no longer seems so immense.
IT is through Spirit's infinite attraction that men and women are drawn to God. This eternal, spiritual impulsion attends all that is truly good and pure in human experience, for real attraction expresses the omnipotence and tenderness of Love.
NO one wants to be sick. Everyone who is sick desires to be healed.
MANY people—the mature as well as the young—want more adventure in their daily lives. They long for relief from tedium and routine.
THE thought of a happy home, the love, security, and protection for which it stands, appeals to men, women, and children the world over. As we gain through our study of Christian Science a more spiritual sense of home, we become assured that God in His infinite wisdom and impartial, tender care for all His ideas provides a home for everyone.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE indicates that man's source, indeed the source of all that is real, is God, good. Those to whom this truth is becoming known are doing all in their power to come close to this source which supplies true happiness.
IT was the scene of the Last Supper. Judas had left, and Jesus knew that he had gone to betray him, his Master.
WHERE unlimited banking is permitted geographically, many major banking institutions in the United States are growing by virtue of the establishment of branches in outlying districts. These new branches, which make the banks' services more accessible to their customers, are recognized as being definitely a part of the parent banks.
GOD measures man in terms of spirituality. Good deeds, pure motives, righteous acts, divinely intuitive thoughts, all these bear witness to God's standard of excellency.
A WOMAN , obviously disturbed, once insisted to a friend in my presence, "But I don't hate. " He smilingly rejoined, "I see; you merely dislike.