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

Articles
Temptation in some form or other enters into the common experience of almost everyone. It is continually knocking at the door of consciousness to get in somehow and find lodgment.
Those of us who are active in branch church work often have to contend with arguments pertaining to the conduct of our church's affairs. Ours may be a new church, or it may be one with many years of service to its community.
When my brother and sister and I were children, there were still cart horses in London. And no traffic lights.
Physical science places the faculty of hearing at the mercy of organic structure, and is convinced that structural disorganization lessens or even destroys one's ability to hear. Christian Science comes with divine authority to correct these falsities by revealing that man's origin and faculties are truly spiritual.
Christian Science is not a hideaway for escaping into. It's a base from which we can cope with the insistent demands of contemporary living.
People say we are living in a revolution, and it is becoming obvious that we are. The violence and alienation of this time, as well as the often fumbling efforts for freedom and justice, make a strong demand on any thoughtful member of society to collect his resources to do what he can.
Jesus' period of obscurity in Nazareth had now come to an end, and he was ready to undertake his public ministry and gather around him those who would become his disciples. They would be the ones specially privileged to be with him in his daily work of preaching, teaching, and healing.
In Science and Health Mrs. Eddy says, "Whatever inspires with wisdom, Truth, or Love—be it song, sermon, or Science— blesses the human family with crumbs of comfort from Christ's table, feeding the hungry and giving living waters to the thirsty.
Many people are devoted to good human causes. But how many are devoted to the cause that underlies them all—the cause of achieving "the glorious liberty of the children of God"? Rom.
Patience is widely recognized as a virtue. And so it is if it is active, not merely a passive proclivity.