Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Bliss Knapp (June 7, 1877 – March 14, 1958), the son of Ira O. and Flavia S. Knapp, students of Mary Baker Eddy, was an early Christian Science lecturer, practitioner, teacher and the author of The Destiny of the Mother Church.
Bliss Knapp (1877-1958) – Christian Science lecturer, practitioner, teacher and author; Annie M. Knott (1850-1941) – Christian Science practitioner, teacher and church leader; Laura Lathrop (1845-1922) – Christian Science teacher in New York; Augusta E. Stetson (1842-1928) – Christian Science teacher in New York, excommunicated in 1909
The First Church of Christ, Scientist is the Mother Church and administrative headquarters of the Christian Science Church. The Christian Science Board of Directors is a five-person executive entity created by Mary Baker Eddy to conduct the business of the Christian Science Church under the terms defined in the by-laws of the Church ...
Tutt became a Christian Science lecturer in 1918, continuing for the next 30 years. He taught the 1943 Normal class in the Christian Science Board of Education, [9] which trains new teachers of Christian Science. The class is held just once every three years and is limited to 30 students.
Later she suggested that Christian Science was a kind of second coming and that Science and Health was an inspired text. [n 10] [48] In 1895, in the Manual of the Mother Church, she ordained the Bible and Science and Health as "Pastor over the Mother Church". [49] Christian Science theology differs in several respects from that of traditional ...
Gottschalk published articles on Christian Science in several encyclopedias and journals, including The Christian Century, Theology Today, and the Union Seminary Quarterly Review. [8] From 1978 until 1990, Gottschalk worked for the Christian Science church's Committee on Publication in Boston, but left after a disagreement about the church's ...
A Christian Science practitioner is an individual who prays for others according to the teachings of Christian Science. [1] Treatment is non-medical, rather it is based on the Bible and the Christian Science textbook, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures (1875) by Mary Baker Eddy (1821–1910), who said she discovered Christian Science in 1866 and founded the Christian Science church ...
There is also an international weekly newspaper, The Christian Science Monitor, which has won several Pulitzer Prizes. [5] The Monitor is a secular newspaper; however, there is one religious article in each issue. [6] The Publishing Society is managed by a three-person Board of Trustees [2] under the authority of the Christian Science Board of ...