BIOGRAPHY AND GENERAL LITERATURE.
BARLOW, J. W.-The Immortals' Great Quest. Translated from an unpublished manuscript in the Library of a Continental University. Pp. xiv +178. (Smith, Elder.) 3s. 6d. net. A philosophical jeu d'esprit.
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LORD, Peace and Happiness, 233
BARTON, Dr. G. A., Commentary on . . . Ecclesiastes, 428 BEECHING, Rev. H. C., D.Litt., William Shakespeare, 480 BELIEF IN GOD, THE GROUNDS OF AN ESSAY IN APOLOGETICS [by the Rev. F. R. Tennant, D.D.], 102 sqq. the meaning of grounds of belief,' 102 ; faith must be rooted in know- ledge, 104; the idea of God is not innate in the mind, nor can it be directly intuited, 105; the present tendency to base religion upon the individual's immediate experience, 106 sq.; the obsolete argument e con- sensu gentium, 107; the four
AMERICAN DIOCESE, AN [by AVEBURY, Ethelbert Talbot, D.D., Bishop of Central Pennsylvania], 47 sqq.; Constitution of the Ame- rican Church: dioceses and missionary districts, 48; elec- tion of bishops: translations, 49; share of laymen in Church affairs, ib.; composition of the House of Clerical and Lay Deputies: the General Con- vention and the diocesan con- vention, 50; officers of a diocese, 51; duties of the standing committee, ib.; lay readers object of the Lay- man's Missionary Movement, 52; salaries of bishops, and formation of new dioceses, 53; work of domestic mis- sionary districts, 54; duties of bishops, ib.; projected use of suffragan bishops, 55; method of election to a vacant see, 56; appointment and duties of the parochial clergy, 57; missionary work at home and abroad, 58; the Board of Missions, 58; its officers, 59; method of raising money for missions, 60; foreign missions, 61; place of the Sunday school in diocesan work, 62; the Woman's Auxiliary to the Board of Missions, ib.; the St. Andrew's Brotherhood, 63; the various problems confront- ing an American bishop, ib. ANDREWS, Rev. C. F., North India, 468
ANGELS, A BOOK OF (Anon.), 207 ASTLEY, Rev. H. J. D., Litt.D.,
Prehistoric Archaeology and the Old Testament, 187
Proofs of the Being of God,' 108; the flaws in these: the cosmological proof, 109; Kant's and Hume's criticism, 110; the teleological argument, 110 sqq.; the nature of our so- called knowledge of the world, 113; what science consists of, ib.; we literally live by faith, in science as well as in theology, 114; the cosmological and the teleological arguments may be stated in forms in which they are not liable to Kant's objections, 115 sq.; the Life and Personality of Jesus Christ are the most reliable ground on which to base belief in a Personal God, 117
BELL, Rev. G. M., Social Service, 226
BENNETT, Rev. W. H., D.D., The
Religion of the Post-Exilic Prophets, 188
BOND, Mr. F., Fonts and Font Covers, 456
BOOKS RECEIVED, NOTES ON, 252, 494
BOUSSET, Professor W., What is Religion? 442
BROWN, Mr. C. C., China in Legend and Story, 464
AN HISTORICAL ESTIMATE (by the Rev. A. T. S. Goodrick], 275 sqq.; two former views of Calvin: recent works on him, 276; his birth and early training: at the 'Montaigu,' Paris, 277; source of his first Protestant ideas : dangers thence incurred, 278; his first work, on the De Cle- mentia of Seneca: its reputed and its real object, 279; account of the Institutes, 280; the working out of his system, 'the scheme of damnation,' 281; relations and correspond- ence with Duchess Renée of Ferrara, 282; legendary stories of his flight from Ferrara, ib. ; Calvin at Geneva: anomalous constitution of the town, 283; troubles of Geneva and Berne with Savoy, 284; Reforma- tion firebrands: Farel and his friends, 285; the moral con- dition of Geneva: deplorable excesses, 286; Farel's en- deavours to keep Calvin there, 287; the scheme of Church Ordinances, and the Confession of Faith, 288; varied cha- racter of the opposition to these the Anabaptists, 289; Berne's position against Calvin and Farel, 290; their exile, 291; Calvin at Strassburg: polemic with Cardinal Sadolet, 292; Calvin's treatment of his friends, 293; his want of sense of humour, 294; the causes which led to his recall to Geneva: the over- throw of his foes, 295; details of his new' Ordinances: ' the
'Venerable Company,' the
Consistory' and its powers, 296; Calvin claimed that he could give an infallible inter- pretation of Holy Scripture, 297; the support he got from French lay refugees, ib.; the 'Libertines': Calvin's victory over them, 298; ministers afraid of the plague, 299; Ameaux punished for speaking evil of Calvin, ib.; other similar cases: trial of Bolsec, 300; account of Servetus, 301; Calvin's attempt to get him condemned by the Romanists, 301 sq.; his trial (prosecuted by Calvin) and death in tor- ment, 303; social and religious tyranny of' Protestant Rome' (Geneva), 305; a point in Cal- vin's favour: he was zealous for education, 306; evils which followed the spread of Cal- vinism, 307; why it has in- creased the moral vitality of every nation which has accepted it, ib. CAMBRIDGE MODERN HISTORY, Vols. V. and XI., 450 CHANDler, Right Rev. A. (Bishop of Bloemfontein), Ara Coeli an Essay in Mystical Theology, 208
CHRYSTOSTOM, ST. JOHN, WORKS ON (by Dom Baur, Dr. J. A. Nairn, T. A. Moxon, &c.), 214 CLARK, Mr. J. WILLIS, Liber Memorandorum Ecclesie de Bernewelle, 218 CODY, Rev. H. A., An Apostle of
the North (Bishop Bompas), 46 CRAIK, Sir H., Impressions of India, 240
DARWIN and Modern Thought, 411 sqq. celebrations of his centenary: a striking spec- tacle, 411; his predecessors who taught the doctrine of evo- lution, 412; why he and Wal- lace are now both honoured, 413; the latter's lighting upon the theory of natural selection
was independent of Darwin's, 414; origin of Darwin's con- fidence in his theory, 415; opinion of Lamarck, 416; Mendel's discovery as affect- ing Darwin, 417; significance of sports,' 418; adaptation and mutation, 419; the tele- ology of Darwin, 420; the Eugenic' movement, 421; Darwin's influence on psycho- logy, 422; on logic and episte- mology, 423; on ethics, 424; our indebtedness to his scien- tific method, 425 DATTA, SURENDRA KUMAR, The Desire of India, 472
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DE BARY, Rev. R., The Spiritual Return of Christ within the Church, 206
DIVISION, THE ETHICS OF [by the late Alfred Pearson, D.D., Bishop of Burnley], 92 sqq. : general manifestation of the desire for unity, 92; toleration unknown in Europe prior to the French Revolution, 93; need of the adjustment of perspective in our view of Church questions, 94; the Church's true attitude to- wards divisions, 95 ; the exist- ence of parties in the State is not a parallel case, ib.; the Church is the greatest effective agency for what is highest and purest in life, 96; the varie- ties of human character and thought that each of the Church's Schools' affect, 97; the Apostles' treatment of the sectarianism of their time, 98; can all schools of thought within the Church theologi- cally coalesce, without com- promise of personal conviction? 98 sq.; a continual obstacle : our incurable propensity to define, 99; the dissociation of religious faith and opinion: spirituality, 100; recent signs of the lessening of party bitter- ness, 101; increased desire to cherish a unity of spirit,
DOBSON, Mr. AUSTIN, De Libris -Prose and Verse, 236
ELWIN, Rev. E. F., S.S.J.E., Indian Jottings, 241 ENGLISH CHURCH EXPANSION, HANDBOOKS OF: Australia (by the Rev. A. E. David), 473; North India (by the Rev, C. F. Andrews), 468; South Africa (by Bishop Hamilton Baynes), 473
EUCKEN, Prof., The Life of the Spirit, 196
FAIRWEATHER, Rev. W., The Background of the Gospels, 432 FREEMAN, Miss F. L., Our Work- ing Girls and how to help them, 226
GAUSSEN, Miss A., Percy, Prelate and Poet, 229
GILBERT, Rev. G.H., D.D., Inter- pretation of the Bible, 189 GREEK CONTRIBUTION TO SPIRI- TUAL PROGRESS, THE [by Miss Hilda D. Oakeley], 384 sqq. : cause of revived interest in the subject, 385; kinship between carly Greek religious feelings and those of barbarian races, 387; ideas that Greek thinkers contributed to Christian theo- logy, 389; the philosophers, 390; tragic poets, 391; Euripi- des' teaching, 392; Heraclitus and Plato, 393; Aeschylus and Sophocles, 394; the Eleu- sinian mysteries, 395; Hero- dotus and Thucydides, 396 ; Plato's attack on poetry, 397; the gods and heroes of Homer, 398; Greek attitude towards the poets, 399; Platonic con- ception of education, 401; in- fluence of Socrates on Plato, 402; his obedience to the voice,' 403; aspects of Pla- tonism which are of chief religious interest, 404; rela- tion of Plato's Good' to his idea of God, 405; development of the monotheistic concep- tion, 407; religious meaning of
HUTTON, Rev. W. H., The Age of Revolution, 454
JACQUIER, M. l'abbé E., Histoire des livres du Nouveau Testa- ment, 434
JERSEY, GUERNSEY, ALDERNEY AND SARK, 119 sqq.: the
Channel Islands' do not form a unit with some common bond, 119; constitutions of Guernsey and Jersey: the Royal Court, the President, the Bailiff, the jurats, the Hauts Justiciers, 120; the States of Election, the States of Deliberation, the douzaniers and the Constable (a magis- trate), 121; effect of their environment on the indepen- dence of the islanders, ib.; St. Peter Port: its old parish church, 122; markets and libraries, 123; fruit cultiva- tion districts: land registra- tion, 124; the coast: a strong sea-wall, 125; attractions for visitors, ib.; charms of Sark, 126 sqq.; sketch of the history of Jersey, 129; the popular antipathy to the French, ib. ; St. Helier its libraries, 130 Mont d'Orgueil Castle, ib. St. Brelade's Bay and church, 131; agricultural and fruit products of Jersey, 132; oppor-
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tunities for public worship provided in Guernsey and Jersey, 133; recent awaken- ing of Church life, ib.; reforms needed, 134; suggested forma- tion of two dioceses following the lines of the civil divisions, 137
KEMPSON, Rev. F. C., The Future Life and Modern Difficulties, 198
KING, Dr. H. C., The Seeming Unreality of the Spiritual Life, 449
LEWIS, Mrs. A. S., and GIBSON, Mrs. M. D., Forty-one Facsim- iles of Dated Christian Arabic MSS. (Studia Sinaitica,' No. XII), 211
M'NEILE, Rev. A. H., The Book of Exodus, 426
MARTIN, Dr. W. A. P., The Awakening of China, 464 MILLARD, Mr. B. A., The Quest of the Infinite, 203 MODERNISM [by the Rev. H. H. Jeaffreson], 1 sqq. attitude of Anglicans towards internal difficulties in the Roman Church, 1; character of the present contest, 2; perpetuity of dissension, 3; the older method of controversy, 4; Newman's theory of develop. ment,' 5; Rome's treatment of the growth of science and the spread of the democratic spirit, 6; lack of signs of progress, 7; M. Loisy's life and present teaching, 8; views about Christ and the Gospels, 9; his historical method is very dangerous, 10; his condem- nation by Rome, 12; the case of Father Tyrrell, 13; his ex- communication and its cause, 16; his views on Christianity, 17; case of Don Romolo Murri, founder of the Demo- crazia Cristiana, 18; religion degraded into a political mat- ter, 19; Papal documents
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