See Also: Christian Science(dictionary)
christian science(medicine)
Christian Science(encyclopedia)
Christian Science Monitor, The(encyclopedia)
Christian Science Monitor, The(dictionary)
Graeco-(dictionary)
Graeco-(dictionary)
Science(medicine)
science(dictionary)
Science(health)

Graeco- (iou) and Christian Science (sh)


Graeco- (iou)



Graeco- combining form. .
[from Latin Graecus GREEK noun + -O-.]
Forming: (a) adjectives with the senses 'relating to Greek settlements or states established abroad' as Graeco-Asiatic or 'Greek and' as Graeco-Latin; (b) adjectives and nouns with the sense 'Greek, of Greece'.
Graeco'mania noun a craze or excessive liking for Greece and things Greek E19.
Graecophil(e) noun & adjective (a person who is) friendly towards Greece or fond of Greece and things Greek L19.
Graeco-Roman adjective Greek and Roman; spec. (of a style of wrestling) like that of the Greeks and Romans, attacking only the upper part of the body: L19.
Graecotrojan adjective relating to the Greeks and the Trojans M17.

Christian Science (sh)




officially Church of Christ, Scientist

Religious denomination founded in the U.S. in 1879 by Mary Baker Eddy.

Like Other Christian churches, Christian Science subscribes to an omnipotent God and the authority (but not inerrancy) of the Bible and takes the Crucifixion and Resurrection of Jesus as essential to human redemption. It departs from traditional Christianity in considering Jesus divine but not a deity and in regarding creation as wholly spiritual. Sin denies God's sovereignty by claiming that life derives from matter. Spiritual cure of disease is a necessary element of redemption from the flesh and one of the church's most controversial practices. Most members refuse medical help for disease, and members engaged in the full-time healing ministry are called Christian Science practitioners. Elected readers lead Sunday Services based on readings from the Bible and Eddy's Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. At the end of the 20th century, the church had about 2,500 congregations in 70 countries; its headquarters is at the Mother Church in Boston. See also New Thought.