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The Christian Science Monitor - CSMonitor.com

Why is Christian Science in our name?
Why is Christian Science in our name?
Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that.
The church publishes the Monitor because it sees good journalism as vital to progress in the world. Since 1908, we’ve aimed “to injure no man, but to bless all mankind,” as our founder, Mary Baker Eddy, put it.
Here, you’ll find award-winning journalism not driven by commercial influences – a news organization that takes seriously its mission to uplift the world by seeking solutions and finding reasons for credible hope.
Explore values journalismAbout us
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Monitor articles for May 27, 2016
- From cookstoves to forests, UN puts eye on mending global environment
- More reasons Trump-Sanders debate might blow up politics as we know it
- First LookIowa High Court bans life-without-parole sentences for all juveniles
- First LookShould sacred tribal objects be for sale? Paris auction angers native Americans.
- This is what Donald Trump had to say about climate change
- Why the drought is making California's beaches cleaner
- A quilt club gives its work to a shelter for abused women
- How 48-volt mild hybrid systems change their cars
- Opinion: How to beat ISIS on Twitter
- First LookNational Spelling Bee ends in a tie, but grace was the real winner
- 'Unlocking the Cage' makes a reasonable case for personhood for animals
- 'Wolf Hollow': a powerful middle-grade tale of friendship, courage
- Will the Corvette ZR1 return?
- Did weather defeat the Mongol Empire?
- Vanilla coconut Texas sheet cake
- VW Beetle vs. Mini Cooper: compare cars
- Millennials living with parents? It's not just a weak economy.
- Top Picks: 'Troublemakers: The Story of Land Art,' James Blake's 'The Colour in Anything,' and more
- A Christian Science PerspectiveHonoring selflessness
- Trump wants GOP to be 'worker's party.' Already there?
- Why 'X-Men' series could bounce back from critically panned 'Apocalypse'
- Opinion: The ugliest side of facial recognition technology
- First LookLouisiana becomes first state to etch 'Blue Lives Matter' into law
- Why Australia removed Great Barrier Reef from UN climate report
- First LookWhy Chinese school kids face a treacherous cliff-face commute
- Is that a minivan or a sea sponge? Scientists find possible oldest animal.
- Regulators look for role in the Internet of Things
- 'Bloodline': Good acting, troubled plotting?
- More banks turn to biometrics to keep an eye on security
- Antarctica wasn't a dinosaur refuge, after all, study argues
- First LookWhole Foods serves up venomous lionfish in Florida stores
- First LookHow big a deal is Microsoft and Facebook's underwater Internet cable?
- 'Presenting Princess Shaw' is about an improbable pairing that is ineffably right
- Fla. debates whether black bear 'conflict management' calls for another hunt
- Volvo will build compact electric car in 2019, along with larger model
- Sweden welcomed refugees to seaside towns – until the weather got nice
- New silvery snake species slithers onto sleeping scientist
- With Trump vs. Clinton looming, Libertarians get a look
- First LookWhy many in Silicon Valley breathed sigh of relief at Google-Oracle ruling
- ISIS, losing territory in Syria, signals strategic shift
- Zion Canyon was sculpted by a colossal rockslide, say researchers
- This ancient Aussie marsupial dined on snails, say scientists
- First LookWilderness survival: Do hikers rely too much on technology?