Putting on record insights into the practice of Christian Science.

Editorials
A winter's walk along Walden Pond where Henry David Thoreau once beat a determined retreat from civilization always offers food for thought. The most obvious observation is that his retreat wasn't all that far from civilization, and that fact is even more evident today.
At a Wednesday testimony meeting a while ago I was thinking just how much Mrs. Eddy counted on individual members to contribute to the success of the Christian Science movement.
A friend of mine was brought up on the shore of Lake Como in Italy. Her family's house was right at the edge of the water, and of course she learned to swim at an early age.
The majority of readers of this editorial would probably say they are not reading a translation of Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures; they are reading the original English in which it was written. But there is a "translation" of the Christian Science textbook that isn't on any list of languages.
A Christian Scientist tells of an experience he had when swimming. He was caught in a seining net and drawn underwater.
A few years ago I happened to be in Greece at Easter time. The family I was with wanted me to experience the full joy of the Easter celebration, so they took me up to a high place overlooking the city of Athens.
In today's marketplace of sophisticated high-tech medicine, it could seem naive even to raise the question about whether it is necessary to have a thorough knowledge of sickness. Medical practice asserts that the more information a physician and patient can have concerning the detailed physical causes, action, reaction, and symptoms of a disease, the greater is the likelihood of effecting a cure.
A short answer to the question "What is scientific Christianity" might be "It's the Christianity Jesus practiced. " In other words, it's the appearing again in human experience of Jesus' kind of Christianity.
At times there's a strange paradox that confronts people in the search to make sense of their existence. Naturally, in the attempt to find a reason and purpose for living, men and women have long been drawn to religion.
The Bible has a singular place in the Church of Christ, Scientist. Of course this isn't surprising to anyone who is familiar with Christian Science.