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Page "Church of Christ, Scientist" ¶ 25
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Eddy and even
Mrs. Eddy had approved his appointment even while her own students such as Calvin Frye said that he was hopelessly shy.
But even at that time, students of Mrs. Eddy such as the highly successful lecturer, Edward Kimball, CSD, were of the opinion that Mrs. Eddy discovered Christian Science because she simply climbed the mountain of spiritual inspiration until, like someone ascending a mountain during the night, she was the first to glimpse the sun from that elevated point.
Their records sold well " outselling even Eddy Arnold " regionally.
Like many performers, Eddy was active in " war work " during World War II, even before the United States entered the war.
Variety wrote, " Nelson Eddy, vet of films, concerts, and stage, required less than one minute to put a jam-packed audience in his hip pocket in one of the most explosive openings in this city's nitery history .... Before Eddy had even started to sing, they liked him personally as a warm human being ".
As a crooner and showman, Eddy Wally has toured worldwide, from China, to Australia, all of Europe and the United States, and even 24 tour dates in 1979 within the former USSR.
The " twangy " sound of his guitars ( which include Duane Eddy custom-builts by Guild, Grestch and Gibson ) augmented the even deeper twangy sound made by the Danelectro baritone.
Upon hearing the whale sing, the crewmen try to stop Tetti-Tatti from killing the whale, as they want to continue listening to him sing, even to the point of tying up Tetti-Tatti and sitting on him, however he still manages to escape and fire the harpoon gun. Nelson Eddy narrated and performed all the voices in this segment.
He'll Have to Go would become not only a platinum record for Reeves, but a song that would be recorded successfully by more than one hundred other artists including Elvis Presley, Bing Crosby, Tom Jones, Eddy Arnold and even big band leader Guy Lombardo.
Both Jim Reeves and Eddy Arnold had major influence on their RCA labelmate Elvis Presley, apparent not only in secular songs, but even more so in country gospel songs.
Although he panned " Declaration of Love " and the cover of Eric Carmen's " All by Myself ", Chuck Eddy of Entertainment Weekly gave the album a B rating and found " something compellingly eccentric about even the mushiest ballads ".
In the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, the segment of former Route 3-a from Port Jervis to Callicoon was designated as NY 97, even though two sections of the route — between NY 42 at Sparrow Bush and Mongaup and from Pond Eddy to near the hamlet of Tusten — were still incomplete.

Eddy and her
The readers of her book gathered into an organization and gradually developed into a church, with Mary Baker Eddy as its pastor.
Another minority believed that Eddy intended various requirements for her consent ( in their view, " estoppels ") to effect the church's dissolution on her death, since they could no longer be followed literally.
Ironically, one of the stronger arguments against this position came from an individual highly respected by their theological quarter, Bliss Knapp, who claimed that Eddy understood through her lawyer that these consent clauses would not hinder normal operation after her decease.
* Christian Science Mark Twain's famous, vitriolic 1907 polemic mocking Mary Baker Eddy, her writings, and the church's financial arrangements.
She also met keyboardist Eddy Quintela ( 12 years her junior ), whom she married on October 18, 1986.
Prince Eddy had visited the area under an assumed name and Annie is unaware of her husband's royal position.
Eddy runs her own PR firm, and Patsy holds a sinecure position at a top British fashion magazine.
Her sister Phyllis ( who never converted to Christian Science ) had given her Science and Health by Mary Baker Eddy because she thought Nancy might find it interesting.
Joseph Eddy Fontenrose suggests that for Nonnus Campe is a Greek refiguring of Tiamat and that " she is Echidna under another name, as Nonnos indicates, calling her Echidnaean Enyo, identifying her snaky legs with Echidna's ", and " a female counterpart of his Typhon ".
He noted that works Eddy was known to have written ( such as the prefaces to various versions of Science and Health ) revealed her peculiar, opaque, and generally poor writing style, as distinguished from the clear, grammatical style of Science and Health.
Although Eddy claimed to have first privately published biblical studies as early as 1862 ( Eddy, 1934: pp. viii: 24 – 32 ), she wrote that her discovery of Christian Science, which inspired the book, took place in 1866.
She was also known from her third marriage as Mary Baker Glover Eddy or Mary Baker G. Eddy.
" In her discovery of Christian Science, Eddy found that healing the sick was an integral part of Christian service.
Mary's letters from this time, now at the Mary Baker Eddy Library for the Betterment of Humanity in Boston, Massachusetts, portray her sufferings and search for relief.
Originally, Eddy gave Quimby much credit for his hypnotic treatments of her nervous and physical conditions and initially thought his brand of mesmerism entirely benign.
An experience in 1866, when Eddy had a physical healing of serious injuries while reading the Bible, led her to investigate more and more into the system of healing she would eventually term “ Christian Science .”
Quimby ’ s work and writings, as seen above, included references toChristand “ scientific man ” and “ wisdom ,” all words which Eddy used in her writings and teachings.
In contrast, Eddy ’ s healing method became firmly grounded in The Bible and the healing example of Jesus before the first edition of her book Science and Health was published in 1875.
In her autobiography, Retrospection and Introspection, Eddy writes " I then withdrew from society about three years ,-- to ponder my mission, to search the Scriptures, to find the Science of Mind that should take the things of God and show them to the creature, and reveal the great curative Principle, -- Deity.

Eddy and Church
The Church of Christ, Scientist was founded in 1879 in Boston, Massachusetts, USA, by Mary Baker Eddy.
Church services are regulated by the Manual, the set of by-laws written by Eddy, that establishes the church organization and explains the duties and responsibilities of members, officers, practitioners, teachers and nurses ; and establishes rules for discipline and other aspects of church business.
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 Manual.
From the moment Mark Twain published his 1907 attack on Christian Science, the Church, and Mary Baker Eddy, herself, Christian Science has been subject to significant criticism and public controversy.
* God's Perfect Child: Living and Dying in the Christian Science Church by Caroline Fraser ( 2000 ), a biography of Mary Baker Eddy and a history of the Christian Science church from its founding to the present day, with a detailed section on the " child cases " of the 1980s.
* Mary Baker Eddy ( 1821 – 1910 ), founder of the Church of Christ, Scientist ; born in Bow
Mary Baker Eddy ( July 16, 1821 – December 3, 1910 ) was the founder of Christian Science ( 1879 ), a Protestant American system of religious thought and practice adopted by the Church of Christ, Scientist, and others.
Eddy devoted the rest of her life to the establishment of the church, writing its bylaws, The Manual of The Mother Church, and revising Science and Health.
By the 1870 ’ s Mary was telling her students “ Some day I will have a church of my own .” In 1879 she and her students established the Church of Christ, Scientist, “ to commemorate the word and works of our Master, which should reinstate primitive Christianity and its lost element of healing .” In 1892 at Eddy ’ s direction, the church reorganized as The First Church of Christ, Scientist, “ designed to be built on the Rock, Christ ....” Some years later in 1881, she founded the Massachusetts Metaphysical College, where she taught approximately 800 students in Boston, Massachusetts between the years 1882 and 1889.
In 1895, however, Eddy ordained the Bible and Science and Health as the pastor of The Church of Christ, Scientist, and the Sunday sermon consists of readings from these two books.
* Former Church treasurer and clerk, John V. Dittemore teamed up with Ernest Sutherland Bates, in 1932, to write a biography, Mary Baker Eddy – The Truth and the Tradition.
Knapp's Book, The Destiny of the Mother Church, which was rejected by the Church but privately published, was quite controversial, and Knapp's opinions of Eddy remain controversial to this day in the Christian Science Church.
Eddy acknowledged that Christian Science healing could not be used on all occasions, and so there are a number of exceptions from going to the dentist, and fixing broken limbs to other basic surgery and procedures, but the officially, the Church of Christ, Scientist is against diagnosing illness.
The Christian Science Church founded by Mary Baker Eddy ( not to be confused with The Church of Scientology ) has a major centre of worship on Oatlands Drive in Oatlands.
It was started in 1908 by Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of the Church of Christ, Scientist.
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.
The Destiny of The Mother Church ( 1991, ISBN 0-87510-231-X ) is the primary and theologically disputed work of Bliss Knapp, the son of Ira O. and Flavia S. Knapp, trusted students of Mary Baker Eddy.
According to the Introduction to the Twentieth-Century Biographers Series published by The Christian Science Publishing Society, Mary Baker Eddy trusted Ira greatly, making him one of the original Directors of The Mother Church and " one of her closest workers over more than two decades ".
While some members believed the decision to publish the book was prompted by the financial needs of The Mother Church, The Christian Science Board of Directors argued that because Knapp knew Mary Baker Eddy personally and was intimately involved in the workings of the church during her lifetime, his biography presented a valuable historical record.

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