Catherine Hellman

by Catherine Hellman

Have you ever gotten so down and depressed that it is a struggle to see the light of day? Have you ever felt like you would never feel good again? Does it seem like good things happen to some people and not others?

I’ve been working through a tough relationship problem. And it made me completely depressed—I felt unhappy and worthless. It seemed like I had no value because this specific relationship problem proved that I was worthless to everyone. At least that’s how it felt.

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Topic: Depression | 1 Comment »

by Judy Huenneke

This is Women’s History Month, and it’s time to highlight a very inspiring Christian Scientist, a woman who achieved some pretty amazing things. Her name is Annie Knott.

Annie Knott was born Annie Macmillan, in 1850, in Scotland. In the early 1860s she and her family emigrated to North America, as did so many families in the 19th century. She grew up, married, and became a mother. Then things changed. Her husband left her, and she was a single mother, with three very young children. This was in an age when society offered little support to women, and virtually no opportunities. You could say that she was near the end of her rope!

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Topic: Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy | 1 Comment »

Passport

by Steven Cramer

It’s something you need when you travel to any country. It’s proof of your national identity. It gives you a right of passage. In a way, it gives you a purpose for being where you are. It’s your passport.

I know the practical importance of having a passport when traveling, but lately I’ve been thinking a lot about what that document really represents. Is it just something that is used when exploring foreign regions, or can we have a sense of identity, a right of passage, and a purpose no matter where we are?

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Topic: Inspiration, New Perspective | 4 Comments »

Burma Border

By Tim Heinemann

Before returning to the Burma border region, I had gotten wind of assassination teams targeting key leaders of the Karen ethnic resistance movement with whom I had been working for some time. We had struggled uphill for several years trying to gain the approval for a youth-leader development concept that was now in the works. We wanted to develop a kind of grassroots initiative, to train ethical servant leaders so that they could then serve in the Karen’s decades-long resistance effort against Burma’s military dictatorship.

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Topic: World Issues | 5 Comments »

Topic: Inspiration, Happiness, Creativity | 4 Comments »

Keith Wommack

by Keith Wommack

A story from the book of Genesis tells of Jacob’s long night. In part, it says, "Jacob was left alone; and there wrestled a man with him until the breaking of the day. … And he said, Let me go, for the day breaketh. And he said, I will not let thee go, except thou bless me. …And he blessed him there." Science and Health explains, "Jacob was alone, wrestling with error, — struggling with a mortal sense of life…."

Jacob’s night reminds me of one of mine. I’d been in the Christian Science healing ministry for five years and was living near a university in a split-level house. My bedroom was on the second story. It had eight floor-to-ceiling windows. It was peaceful—until a fraternity moved into a two-story house nearby.

One night, a party started. A stereo and TV blared on a balcony. The sounds boomed into my bedroom through my closed windows. I prayed, grumbled, tossed, and turned.

Around 4 in the morning, the yelling stopped, but the stereo and TV were still booming. I had had enough. I dressed, walked to the corner, then downhill to the fraternity house, past a car with a young man asleep in the backseat, stepped over two individuals lying in the backyard, and climbed up a trellis to the second-story balcony. I turned off the stereo, unplugged the TV, picked it up, and carried it to my house. I then climbed into bed. Ah, peace and quiet!

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Topic: Relationships, Social Problems | 4 Comments »

John Biggs

by John Biggs

I’ve been in South Africa a week now, visiting with my family and working on my uncle’s ranch in the Karoo. On Saturday, my grandparents and I visited the Valley of Desolation in the Camdeboo National Park, just outside the town of Graaff-Reinet.

I was expecting a barren landscape, something dreary and empty to go along with its name. Instead I saw life blooming everywhere, atop majestic rock formations and in hidden little clefts, with so many colors on the rocks around. The sky had enough scattered clouds that the light came down in sheets and beams, bathing the towers of red rock and making the cliff edges look even steeper.

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Topic: Inspiration | 1 Comment »

Shirley Paulson

by Shirley Paulson

One of the things that surprised me when I attended seminary was the discovery of people long before Mary Baker Eddy’s day who were unusually spiritually minded. I grew up in Christian Science thinking (incorrectly) that I didn’t really need to know much about other spiritually minded people, since I got everything I needed from the Bible and from Mary Baker Eddy’s writings.

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Topic: Interfaith, Bible Related | 3 Comments »

Estey Masten

by Estey Masten

Hi! I’m Estey (or Esperanza when I speak Spanish), and I’m the new TMC Youth blogger in town. I have volunteered to blog for many reasons, but the two most important ones are these: 1) I love connecting with other citizens of the world, and this blog is a perfect way to do it! 2) This is a great way for me to think introspectively about myself and realize where I need to go up higher and align myself with divine purpose.

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Topic: Happiness, Career, Stress | 7 Comments »

Roger Gordon

by Roger Gordon

“Man! I only got a 1450 on my SAT’s! I have to take them over again!”

I heard this type of remark from friends and fellow students all the time in high school. My high school was rated one of the best public schools in the country, and my thinking was challenged more in some of my high school classes than in some college classes I took. Unlike many people, I loved my high school experience and I will always be grateful for it. But it did have its drawbacks. Not only were the students I went to school with incredibly bright, but my high school was minutes away from the prestigious Stanford University, and I sometimes felt stuck in a sea of intellectual superiority.

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Topic: Self-esteem, School | No Comments »

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