● ● ● that had confronted her in her dealings with Wiggin, Gill, Adams, and Day, were two other small books, Rudiments and Rules of Divine Science and Unity of Good and Unreality of Evil , which gave less attention to traditional theology and more to the metaphysical implications of biblical Christianity. 80 Yet in all three there was not a trace of the syncretizing tendency which made Emma Hopkins, for instance, feel more at home with the Hindu Upanishads than with the Christian Gospels.
Want to view this biography?
Subscribe to JSH-Online, and access The Christian Science Journal, Christian Science Sentinel, and The Herald of Christian Science—online. Get unlimited access to current issues, the searchable archive, podcasts, audio for issues, biographies about Mary Baker Eddy, and more.