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

Articles
Changing our lives for the better begins with changing the model we hold in thought.
As I watched news clips of this year’s commencement speakers giving advice to the new graduates, I couldn’t help but remember with gratitude my own post-graduation “pounding the pavement” experience—and the incredible spiritual journey it started. While my thoughts had always tended toward spiritual searching, I was not raised in Christian Science, nor had I even heard of it at that point in my life.
A service trip to Central America raises the question, “How can we best help our neighbor?”
Every year since 1987 my city, Austin, Texas, has hosted an event called South by Southwest (SXSW). It’s a ten-day film festival, technology conference, and music festival, and is considered a breeding ground for innovation and new talent.
A man purchases two copies of the Spanish translation of Mary Baker Eddy’s book Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures to take to his brothers during a visit to his home country. A woman, originally from Mexico and now going through a difficult divorce, finds help from a Spanish translation of Science and Health , a copy of El Heraldo, and a Spanish translation of the pamphlet “ God’s Law of Adjustment.
The answer to a question in the March 2014 Journal about the actuality of the Daniel in the lions’ den story reminded me of a story my mother often shared with me. One day when she was three years old, her family drove to a gas station, where the owner kept a large, vicious, snarling dog chained up on the property.
Many years ago while reading through the Manual of The Mother Church by Mary Baker Eddy, I came across the following By-Law: “Christian Science Nurse. SECT.
I have heard many times among students of Christian Science that Soul is the synonym for God that is the most difficult one for them to understand. Isn’t this belief simply the carnal mind, the enemy of God (see Romans 8:7 ), trying to hide from our understanding one of the most important things for us to understand? There is really nothing vague or mysterious about Soul.
How do you know you’re making progress when you’re climbing a mountain? The trail may be full of twists and turns, so it isn’t always easy to judge where you are by looking ahead or behind. So how do you know you’re getting where you want to go and are not just walking in circles? You can always check out the view.
When a friend sent me a fridge magnet with the words “Never, never, never give up,” I thought it an admirable sentiment to follow. However, there’s more to it than just the human element of striving to achieve a goal.