From the story:
But the reality of the existential crisis remained elusive to church 
officials. In 2005, Nathan Talbot and J Thomas Black, longtime church 
leaders who had promoted recklessly irresponsible policies encouraging 
the medical neglect of children, endorsed ambitious plans for raising 
the dead. Black argued that Eddy wanted to keep alive the possibility of
 defeating mortality, saying, “What would set us apart as a denomination
 more than raising the dead?” What indeed? Black himself has had ample 
opportunity to demonstrate it: he died in December 2011, and hasn’t been
 seen since. ...
So did the softening of some Christian Science attitudes suggest that
 the church was undergoing a genuine change of heart? Or were they 
trying to save their jobs, their pride and the institution? At that 
time, officials were grasping at relationships with ecumenical groups 
and New Age alternative healers – anything to boost membership. Shirley 
Paulson, for example, sister-in-law of former US treasury secretary Hank
 Paulson (also a Christian Scientist, taught by Nathan Talbot), 
contributed to a series of summit meetings – known as “Church Alive” – 
which sought to jazz up services with ideas fresh from the 1950s: 
reading from recent translations of the Bible (more recent than the King
 James version, that is), singing hymns a cappella, and urging Sunday 
School students to rap their narcotic weekly “Lesson Sermons”.
 
 















