Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
Mary Baker Eddy founded Christian Science, a worldwide spiritual movement, in the late 1800s. The first church built for Christian Science services was in Oconto in 1886. Services are held every ...
TIM O’BRIEN, guest anchor: The Christian Science Church, founded in the nineteenth century, teaches that physical affliction can be healed through spiritual means rather than medical procedures.
CINCINNATI -- Greg Pullem, 68, has called himself a Christian his entire life. So the Madisonville resident felt hurt when not one but two pastors called Christian Science a cult. Pullem attends three ...
Happy Wednesday. Yesterday, we heard from Washington. Today, Stephen Humphries, who watches the culture on many fronts for the Monitor, goes deep on what AI meant across his beat – and in his life – ...
Is Christian Science true to the Bible? Or does it exalt Mary Baker Eddy’s writings above the Scriptures? Christian Scientists claim to be true members of the body of Christ. Their leaders who have ...
What Goes on in a Christian Science Reading Room? In nearly every major American city and in many small towns, Christian Science reading rooms are found mixed in with storefronts. Passersby may hardly ...
If Kelly Brother comes down with flu symptoms, he turns to prayer and God for healing. Brother, a lifelong Christian Scientist who lives in Memphis, believes in a spiritual approach to his health care ...
The tallest building in Boston, at this moment, is 200 Clarendon Street, the site of the old John Hancock Tower. The building rises 60 stories into the Boston skyline and is the 59th tallest building ...
Sociologists explain the data behind the gender gap in STEM careers. National Institutes of Health director Francis Collins—an outspoken Christian—has also spoken out about science’s glaring need to ...
GREEN BAY - The Christian Science Reading Room, a fixture in downtown Green Bay since 1971, is pulling up stakes. It will move from Pine Street to the Christian Science building at 130 N. Monroe Ave.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results