Putting on record insights into the practice of Christian Science.

Editorials
The acme of anything is its highest point reached, its culmination. It is helpful to note that Mary Baker Eddy, in a passage found in "Miscellaneous Writings" ( p.
The history of early Christianity reveals the struggle which took place between the primitive purity of the Gospel message and the numerous philosophies and pagan cults of the ancient world. These cults held sway for centuries; in fact, they constituted the science, theology, and medicine of mortal, material thinkers.
Among the followers of the Master, John is known as the beloved disciple, and his words and life indicate why he was loved. Sitting at the feet of Jesus, he caught perhaps more clearly than all the others the essential quality of the Christ as demonstrated in Jesus' life and works.
The edifice of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts, is unique. There is no church building exactly like it.
The very name "Church of Christ, Scientist," implies activity, for the Christ, God's infinite idea, manifests or exhibits the activity of divine Mind. The Christ is always acting to accomplish good—waking mankind from the mortal dream, destroying the delusions of sense, healing the sick and sinful, revealing brotherhood, bringing Love's justice and mercy to light, inspiring mankind to recognize real life in Spirit.
Christian Science has often been beautifully described as the redeemer of human consciousness; and this it truly is, for the mission of Christ is purely redemptive. In human experience the Christ is revealed in spiritual ideas.
In her explanation of real being Mary Baker Eddy uses the Latin Ego, or I, as one of the terms for God. A dictionary definition of "ego" which conforms to her usage is "the conscious and permanent subject of all experience.
All real being is in God, spiritual and perfect. Apart from the divine Mind and its ideas nothing really exists.
Until the patriarch Moses presented to his people the law from Mount Sinai the wisdom and the necessity of right conduct and right living were but dimly appreciated. Men generally knew no moral law and therefore felt no impulsion to obey a code which advocated or compelled a loving consideration one of another.
" All history is a Bible. " These words A of Thomas Carlyle's echo a great truth.