I recall having previously read a few the healings recounted in the new book from The Christian Science Publishing Society (available in CS Reading Rooms) Christian Science: Continuing Evidence of Christ-healing.
The testimony on pages 215-217, written by Dianne Dallas Selover from Brighton East, Victoria, Australia and published in the July 2022 edition of The Christian Science Journal, is one of them. It is very memorable, and yet very worthwhile re-reading in the context of the chapter "Peace, Protection, and Progress".
The testimony reminds me that Jesus expressed both meekness and might. He knew that God is the supreme power of the universe and holds us tenderly.
Dianne's recounting of an experience which could have resulted in rape, assault and subsequent trauma offers a different outcome. It also demonstrates that even if we can't "concentrate" due to a "feeling of dread", we can always reach out for a lifeline and grab it. In this case, it was the twenty-third Psalm which comforted her and provided such a "great sense of peace" that "all fear departed".
What happened next is quite remarkable. I won't spoil the story for readers who may not have read it yet.
As is often the case, the writer considered the whole incident "a turning point in [her] experience and practice of Christian Science". She had "felt God's tangible presence and power and been protected".
One line of Psalm 23 was especially applicable: "Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me".
Julie Swannell