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

Articles
My address before the Christian Scientist Association has been misrepresented and evidently misunderstood by some students. The gist of the whole subject was not to malpractise unwittingly.
A Chicago man, during the whole of his lifetime, has never taken any medicine. He has constantly consulted doctors and chemists, and all the medicine they prescribed for him he put away in a room.
The above is the title of a lengthy article in Leslie's Weekly illustrated of New York, of May 9,1895, which contains a very good portrait of Rev. Mary Baker Eddy; also good portraits of several other Christian Scientists, as well as a finely reproduced photographic view of the Mother Church.
The general belief that the 20th Century Club house was to be used exclusively for intellectual and social purposes is proven to be erroneous by the recent occupation of the beautiful new Delaware avenue club house by the Central Church of Christ, which is that branch of the Christian Science Church in Buffalo over which Mrs. C.
A student of Christian Science was employed in the Massachusetts State Prison at Charlestown, to teach the prisoners to make shoes. He carried his Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, and the Journal with him, and as he had the opportunity would tell the men what this wonderful Truth could do for them, setting them free in a larger and higher sense than they had dreamed of.
Those who speak for God shall rule in his name. That which must precede ruling is obedience.
I believe that the laws of Nature, which are the angels of the Most High, and obey His mandates, are rolling on the time when "the child shall die a hundred years old," Isaiah Ixv. 20.
Few realize what a glorious range of thought the idea of a revelation should arouse in the human mind. It is literally lifting the veil which seems to hide the unseen and eternal things, revealing heaven to earth, the divine to the human, for every good thing comes down from above.
The most simple and comprehensive of the many parables or object-lessons which Jesus gave to the multitudes and his disciples, is that of the "Sower who went forth to sow. " Agriculture was the common occupation of a large portion of his hearers.
As I have read the experiences of others from time to time in the Journal , I have wondered if mine would be of use in the putting together of this structure which we are building. My early training was in the Methodist church, where I remained until dissatisfied.