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

Articles
There are various ways to attend church, but we are most blessed when we find a way to take an active part in the service. I learned this when I began attending the Sunday morning service of my branch Church of Christ, Scientist, after many years of teaching in the Sunday School.
The thinking of the world is largely centered on the human body, its health, beauty, weight, and physical condition. Don't we all feel we need a better understanding of the true nature of body? What actually is body? In Christian Science we learn that because God is Spirit, His entire creation must be spiritual.
As a new bride in an unfamiliar town, I was longing for more companionship and activity. This I found when I joined the small branch Church of Christ, Scientist, in the community.
When I was just out of Sunday School and a fledgling worker in my branch Church of Christ, Scientist, a former Sunday School teacher told me something that had happened in our church years earlier. Her mother, who from all accounts was wonderfully compassionate and wise, was working in the Christian Science Reading Room one day when a poor woman came in.
Is your Christian Science Students Association meeting a date reserved on your calendar? How grateful every class-taught student of Christian Science can be for this special day! It is more than just a happy occasion, as it promises a renewal of the essence of class teaching. Attending the association meeting is a privilege no student can afford to miss.
Writing the hundreds of religious articles published each year in the Christian Science periodicals is one of the privileges and duties that Mrs. Eddy has assigned to students of Christian Science.
Many Christians and others as well are searching for something higher than themselves. They yearn naturally for that deeper understanding of God which will ultimately satisfy their innermost cravings.
The article "Reformers" in Mary Baker Eddy's book Miscellaneous Writings concludes with three questions. She writes: "Let one's life answer well these questions, and it already hath a benediction: "Have you renounced self? Are you faithful? Do you love?" Mis.
Parenting truly is a solemn responsibility. For a parent there should be nothing so vital, of such great concern, as the well-being of his or her children.
Where do we find peace? Is it something outside or inside us? We generally conceive of two separate states of peace. One is the tranquillity we sometimes discover when we withdraw from what we call the outside world and spend some time alone in quiet contemplation.