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Academic: Christian Scholar's Review: 0017-2251 CSR Christian Scholar's Review: Holland, Minnesota 49422 United States Evangelical Science and Christian Belief: 0954-4194 CSB 1989–present Victoria Institute: United Kingdom Evangelical Christianity Magazine: 1747-7395 Premier Christian Media Trust: United Kingdom Christianity Today: 0009-5753
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 ...
Christian Science at the time was the fastest growing religion in the United States. The church had 27 members in 1879, and 65,717 in 1906 when McClure's began its research. [23] [b] In 1890 there were just seven Christian Science churches in the US; by 1910, a few years after the McClure's article, there were 1,104. [25]
The ASA journal published various views in the creation–evolution controversy.It carried Bernard Ramm's view that the theory of evolution had logical weakness, [6] a 1949 article on "presuppositions in evolutionary thinking" by Young Earth creationist E. Y. Monsma, [7] [8] J. Laurence Kulp's 1950 indictment of "Deluge Geology", [9] and Henry M. Morris's anonymous reply to it.
The Christian Science Journal is an official monthly publication of the Church of Christ, Scientist through the Christian Science Publishing Society, founded in 1883 by Mary Baker Eddy. [1] The first edition appeared on April 14, 1883, bearing the subtitle, "An Independent Family Paper to Promote Health and Morals". [ 2 ]
Science and Christian Belief is a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal published by Christians in Science and the Victoria Institute. [1] [2] The editors-in-chief are Keith R Fox [3] and Meric Srokosz. The journal was established in 1989, with Oliver Barclay and A. Brian Robins as co-editors-in-chief. [4]
It was a Christian scholar and Bishop from Nisibis named Severus Sebokht who was the first to describe and incorporate Indian mathematical symbols in the mid 7th century, which were then adopted into Islamic culture and are now known as the Arabic numerals. [165] [166] [167] [168]
Christian Science went on to become the fastest-growing American religion in the early 20th century. The federal religious census recorded 85,717 Christian Scientists in 1906; 30 years later it was 268,915. [222] In 1890 there were seven Christian Science churches in the United States, a figure that had risen to 1,104 by 1910. [178]