meeting of the Governing Body, 256-8; its Official Report, 258; the services of Mr. Justice Sankey, 259-60; appointment and functions of the Representative Body, 260; chief subjects of discus- sion at the Convention: (1) the veto of the Bishops, 261- 2; (2) position of women in Church Councils, 262-3; (3) diocesan representation on the two bodies, 264; (4) the name of the Church, 264-6; (5) discipline, faith, and cere- monial, 266-70 ; subjects dealt with by the Further Chapters,' 270-1; some criti- cisms the Convention defi- cient in enterprise, 272-3; its hesitation to adopt the name The Church of Wales,' 273-4; the Church checked and cramped by the heavy hand of the lawyer, 274; scant consideration paid to the Welsh people, 275; labour and the masses unrepresented, 275-6; compensating features, 277; Lord Justice Bankes on the future of the Church, 278 CHURCH ORDER OF ST. HIPPO- LYTUS, II [by Dr. C. H. Turner], 93 sqq. summary of first article on this subject, 93-4; the Church Order the
greatest common measure' of the related documents, 95; presumption in favour of Hippolytean authorship estab- lished on external evidence, 96-100; clue furnished to orientation of patristic docu- ments by references to minor orders, 100-6; some indica- tions of early date or Roman origin, 106–11; test of phrase- ology supplied by doxologies, 111-16; summing-up, 116 CHURCH RECONSTRUCTION: THE ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM [by the Rev. Dr. Headlam], 1 sqq. :
the five Archbishops' Com- mittees the outcome of the National Mission, 1; quota- tion from the Report on Ad- ministrative Reform, 2; its leading fault, a doctrinaire radicalism, 3; the country dioceses poorly represented, 4; the attitude of Dr. Rash- dall, 4-5; The Committee's recommendations as to ap- pointment of Bishops, and objections thereto, 5-8; as to the Parson's Freehold, 8-11; its proposal to vest all Church property in the Ecclesi- astical Commissioners, 12-14; its proposals to create new Provinces, and with regard to Cathedrals, and Deans and Chapters, 14-16; edi- torial suggestions for diocesan reform, 16-17; regarding parochial organization, 17; management of Church pro- perty, 17-18; amalgamation and rearrangement of parishes, 18; clerical pensions, 18-19: equalization of livings, and clerical discipline, 19; desirability of making London and its outlying districts a separate Province, 20; two outstanding problems — the granting of self-government and financial readjustment, 21 CHURCH RECONSTRUCTION: THE WORSHIP OF THE CHURCH [by the Rev. Dr. Headlam], 279 sqq.: three Reports issued by the Archbishops' Com- mittees of Inquiry, 279; causes of the falling-off in Church attendance: (1) the failure of tradition, 280; (2) the failure of religious educa- tion, 281; (3) changed in- dustrial conditions, 282-3; the decreasing observance of Sunday, 284; the Church's attitude towards labour, 284- 5; absorbing interest of
national life at the present moment, 285; intellectual failure of many of the clergy, 286-7; evidence of want of care in the services, 288; the use of unsuitable music, 289-90; autocratic changes in the services, 290-1; various recommendations: (1) the spirit inspiring a service of more importance than its form, 291-2; (2) need for greater simplicity, 292–3; and (3) for briefer services, 293; the danger of the indiscreet liturgiologist, 293-4; suggest- ions regarding the Evening Service, 294-6; and the Com- munion Office, 296-8; the suggestion of two alternative services deprecated, 297; the proposal as to 'The Principal Service,' 298-301; extra-litur- gical services, 301; present- day aspirations towards the Kingdom of God, 301-2 COOKE, Rev. Dr. G. A., Joshua, 352
COULTON, G. G., Social Life in Britain from the Conquest to the Reformation, 169 CRUICKSHANK, Canon A. H., The Future of Greek, 345
form of the invocation, ib. ; acknowledgement of sources and obligations, 318; the Nestorian Liturgy, 319-28 EDMUND BISHOP, LITURGIST [by Rev. Dr. W. H. Frere], 145
FAITH (THE) OF A CHURCHMAN [by Goudge], 47 sqq.: Laing's Modern Science and Modern Thought, 47; difficulty of giving the expression 'Modern Thought any definite meaning, 48; the term Modern Churchmen,' to designate a particular school, deprecated, 49; frank acceptance of Biblical criticism by Broad Churchmen, 50; inquiry into the causes of Modern Churchmen's prejudice against miracles, 51 sqq.: the two chief sources of this prejudice, 52-3; clean-cut dualism between material and spiritual' of Canon Glazebrook and his school, 53-4; the meaning of
nature' and of the super- natural,' 55-6; evidence for Old Testament miracles, 57- 8; our Lord's miracles signs of His redemptive activity, 59; the supernatural in the life of the Church, not an interference with order, but the restoration of a higher order, 60; Canon Glazebrook's doctrine of God examined, 61-4 Hebrew view of the Transcendence of God, 61; the Greek conception of Pantheism, 62; need for dis- tinguishing Divine 'Divine Imma- nence' in the Hebrew and Christian sense from that of the Stoics, 62-4; examination of Canon Glazebrook's Christ- ology, 64-7; and of his view of Atonement, 67-74: his language likely to give a
misleading impression to those ignorant of actual Church teaching on the subject, 67-9; his under-estimate of the force of New Testament teaching, 69-71; criticism of his account of the power which Christ's death has exercised in the world, 71; the Modern Churchman's prejudice against the supernatural fits in with English tendencies to Pelagia- nism, 72-4; the position of Modern Churchmen in the Church considered, 74-6 FENOLLOSA, ERNEST, Noh,' 365 FIRTH, J. B., Highways and By- ways in Nottinghamshire, 366
HARDY, THOMAS, THE POETRY OF [by Rev. Dr. A. Nairne], 150 HASTINGS, Rev. Dr. J., Encyclo- paedia of Religion and Ethics, Vol. ix, 156
HERFORD, Dr. C. H., The Poetry of Lucretius, 363
HODGES, Rev. Dr. G., Faith and Social Service, 174
How Is GREEK TO BE KEPT ALIVE? [by F. W. Pember], 345 sqq.
WILBERFORCE, London Churches before the Great Fire, 172
JONES, Dr. RUFUS M., The Inner Life, 159
LANCHESTER, REV. H. C. O.,
Obadiah and Jonah, 352 LANDRIEUX, Mgr., Courtes Gloses sur les Evangiles du Dimanche, 157
LIBERTY, Rev. STEPHEN, Politi- cal Relations of Christ's Minis- try, 357 LONDON COLLEGES, HOSPITALS, AND SCHOOLS IN XVITH AND XVIITH CENTURY LITERATURE [by Wilberforce Jenkinson], 77 sqq. instances of schools attached to Churches and
Cathedrals, 78-9; St. Paul's School, 80-3; Westminster School, 83-5; Christ's Hospital, 85-7; Merchant Taylors, 87-8; Mercers' School, 88; St. Anthony's, Broad St., 89-90; an Abc- darian' school (1657), 90; St. Margaret's, Tothill Fields, 91; Alleyn's College of God's Gift,' Dulwich, 91-2 LOUISMET, Dom S., The Mystical Life and The Mystical Know- ledge of God, 158
MATHESON, Miss M. CECILE, Citizenship, 173 MCNEILE, Rev. Dr. A. H., After this Manner pray ye,' 361
of Comtist writers and thinkers, 29-30; Lord Mor- ley's editorship of the Fort- nightly Review, 30-1; his book on Compromise, 31; Mill's posthumous Essay on Theism, 32; portraits of leading Liberal-Rationalists, ib.; Lord Morley's share in the govern- ment of Ireland and India, 33-5; ecclesiastical interest uppermost in Lord Acton's Correspondence, 35; his
Apologia,' 36; letter to Gladstone on Dean Church's Oxford Movement quoted, 37; his opinion of Döllinger, ib. ; and of Creighton's History of the Papacy, 38; his opposition to the Vatican Decrees, 38–9; Acton's hatred of love of power, 39-40; individual human liberty the lodestar of his thought, 40; his judge- ments on Newman and Laud, 41; on Macaulay and Kant, 42; little new or important light thrown on Gladstone's character, 42; letters from Ruskin; and Burne-Jones, 43; Prof. J. Stuart and Lord Stan- more, 44; George Wyndham and Canon Scott Holland, 45 ; Lord Acton on Gladstone quoted, 46
Registrum Edmundi Lacy, Epis- copi Herefordensis, and Regis- trum Thome Poltone, Episcopi Herefordensis, 165 RELTON, Rev. Dr. H. M., A
Study in Christology, 155 ROBERTS, Dr. W. RHYS, Patriotic Poetry Greek and English, 364
events denoted by the term ' death,' 304; use of the word in Holy Scripture, 305-6; no- thing answering to' death' in the first forms of animal life, 306; death occurs in the more complex forms, 307; but in these cases ' death' does not imply a break in life, 308; the apparent rule that a lower form of life terminates to make way for a higher, 309; the problem of the survival of the fittest, ib. ; the line of evo- lution points to a continued and higher existence for man beyond this life, 310; Dr. Ray Lankester's The Kingdom of Man quoted, 311; early Biblical teaching on death, 311-2; vague Jewish con- ceptions of a future life, 312; immortality through Christ's redemption the leading fact of New Testament teaching, 313; Science and Scripture alike repudiate a resurrection of the dead body, 314
SCOTT, Rev. Dr. C. A. A., Dominus Noster, 356
STEVENSON, LILIAN, A Child's Bookshelf, 362 SUGGESTIONS ABOUT RELIGIOUS EDUCATION [by the Rev. A. C. Bouquet], 235 sqq.: the present-day dimness of the God-consciousness, 236-7; Mr. Clutton Brock quoted, 238; Germany's success in capturing and training popular religious sense, 238-9; need for stimu- lating the idealism of the masses, 239; character the product of the God-sense, 240; the meaning of training the religious consciousness, 240– I; faith an intuition, not an inference, 242-3; the training of children in the practice of the Presence of God, 244-6; the training of school teachers, 246-7; the influence of en-
vironment, 247; the training of teachers in psychology, 247- 8; the Bible doctrine of God,' 248-9; four books suggested as a basis of religious teaching, 249; the use of modern aids, 250; the inter- pretation of Scripture, 250-1; teachers should be free to give live religious instruction, 251; summing-up of article, 252
TANNER, Dr. J. R., Historical Register of Cambridge Uni- versity, 171
TILLYARD, AELFRIDA, The
Making of a Mystic, 158 TOWARDS RE-UNION: A NON-
CONFORMIST VIEW [by the Rev. Dr. W. F. Adeney], 189 sqq.: economic waste- fulness of sectarian rivalry, 190; paralyzing effect of theological controversy, 191; unity of organism, not uni- formity of external organi- zation, to be aimed at, 192-5; three movements towards re- union already in progress: (i) union of closely allied groups, 195; (ii) association of different religious bodies for philanthropic purposes, 197; (iii) common literary and intellectual interests, 198; the chief difficulty centres in Episcopacy and Episcopal Ordination, 200; several recent lines of approach and points of contact: (i) con- cessions on the Episcopal side, 201-5; (ii) indications of the breakdown of some old Non- conformist contentions, 205-6
WAR, THE A TURN IN THE TIDE, 127 sqq. Mr. Lloyd George's action in securing unity of command justified
by results, 127; importance of efficiency in army com- mands, 128-9; complexity of the Russian problem, 130- 2; Turkish misdeeds in Armenia and Persia, 132-3 ; General Allenby's advance in Palestine, 134; Allied success in Serbia and Italy, 135; the German peace offensive, 135-6; Mr. Davis quoted on the brutality of German public opinion, 137; ill-treat- ment of prisoners, 138; massacre of Hereros and Hottentots, 138-9; Germany's imperialistic aims, 139-40; re- volution and strikes promoted by German intrigues, 140-1 ; surrender of Bulgaria, 142; capture of the Hindenburg Line, 143; German attempt to blackmail Europe, ib. WAR (THE), PEACE AND AFTER, 329 sqq. summary of most recent events, 330-2; Our victory due to three main causes: (i) the work of the Navy, 332; (ii) the work of our soldiers, 333; (iii) the nation at home, 333-5; our debt to Mr. Lloyd George, 335-7; the part played by our Allies, 337; what should demand of Germany, 337-9; the questions of punishment and of Germany's internal future, 339; of Austria-Hungary, 339-40; of Turkey, 340-1; and of the German Colonies, 341-2; the proposed League of Nations, 342; Germany counting upon disunion between the Allies, 343; sea-power a necessity for the British Empire, 343-4 WILLIAMS, Rev. Dr. A. LUKYN, The Minor Prophets Unfolded (i. Hosea, ii. Joel & Amos), 355
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