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INDEX TO VOL. XXXII.

APO

APOSTOLICAL succession, the

loss of, in Denmark, 149 sqq.;
beginning of the breach with
ancient order: Christian II.
(1513) and the claims of the
Rigsraad, 151; the king's 'loans'
from the churches and clergy,
153; Bishop Jens Andersen, 154;
the Stockholm Bath of Blood,'
155; the king's desire for Church
reform, 157; Paul Turncoat'
(Eliesen), ib.; Luther's position
towards Denmark, 158; Chris-
tian's autocratic legislation re-
garding the Church, 160; insur-
rection, 161; Christian replaced
on the throne by Frederick I.,
163; the new king's promise to
put down heresy (Lutheranism),
164; papal confirmation to Danish
bishoprics no longer sought, 166;
the new bishops not consecrated,
167; Frederick's 'letters of pro-
tection' to preachers, 169; de-
cisive victory of Lutheranism in
Denmark, 171; confusion and
civil war after Frederick's death,
176; Paul Eliesen's proposed
Church reforms, 178; the Con-
fession of Augsburg promulged,
179; Joachim Rönnov, 180; John
Tausen, 181; the bishops re-
open communications with Rome,
182; Christian III. on the throne,
183 the bishops deposed and

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superintendents' put in their
places, 185 triumph of Luther,
186; present state of the Danish
Church, 187

Aristotle on the Constitution of
Athens (Mr. Kenyon's edition),

BRI

410 sqq.; discoveries of papyri in
Egypt, 412; description of the
papyrus on which this work was
founded, 413; the Constitution
much used by ancient school-
masters, 415; the authorship,
416; date of composition, 418;
style, 419; value of the contents,
422; a key to the literature of its
period, 424; the author's method,
425; relation of the work to the
Politics, 426; Mr. Kenyon's edi-
torial work, 428

Arnold, Sir E., The Light of the
World, 543

Assisted Education (the Govern-
ment Bill, 1891), 492 sqq.; sub-
stance of the proposal, 492; dif-
ferences in the position of schools
in the North and in the South of
England: class feeling, 493; dif-
ference between various classes
of schools as to fees, 494; the
limits of age, 495; amendments
needed in the Bill, 496; payment
of local rates, 497; date at which
the change is to come into force,
498; need of maintaining volun-
tary schools, 499; the managing
bodies of Church schools, ib.

BELCHER, Rev. Dr., Our

542

Lord's Miracles of Healing,

Blore, Rev. Dr., The Weighty

Charge, 537

Bourazan, Rev. F., A Sacred Dic-
tionary, 278

Bright, Rev. Canon, Fidelity and
Sympathy united in True
Teachers, 510

CART

CAR

'ARTER, Rev. F. E., Prepara-
tion for Worship, 276

Christ or Plato?-review of the
late Dr. Hatch's Hibbert Lec-
tures, 1888 (The Influence of
Greek Ideas and Usages upon
the Christian Church), 380 sqq.;
outlines of Dr. Hatch's method,
381; criticism of his conclusion
that for all outside of the Ser-
mon on the Mount, Christianity
is indebted to the mind of Greece:
exegesis and doctrine, 383; ethics
and organisation, 386; specula-
tion and dogma, 389; the
Church's use of terms belonging
to current philosophic systems,
391; the idea of God among the
Greeks, 393; Greek and Chris-
tian uses of the words λόγος,
εἰκών, γεννάω, 397 ; Dr. Hatch's
conclusions mean individualism
in religion, 407; a mechanical
view of history, 409
Classical Review, 279
Clayton, Rev. H. E., The 'Advance-
ment' of our Lord's Humanity,
514
Clement (St.) of Rome: review of
Bishop Lightfoot's work, 49 sqq.;
who was Clement? 51; Letter to
the Corinthians, 52; analysis of
it, 53; its style rather homiletic
than epistolary, 55; St. Clement's
strong sense of the reign of law
in nature, 56; his illustration of
the Resurrection from the phoenix,
ib.; argument from the principle
of order in the material world,
ib.; of high priest, priests, and
Levites': various interpretations,
57; testimony to the New Testa-
ment, 58; his co-ordination of
St. Peter and St. Paul as leaders
of the Church, 59; why the
epistle was not included in the
canon, 59; the model liturgy in
the Apostolical Constitutions
largely copied from it, 61; the
Eucharistic references, 62; the
so-called second epistle of St.
Clement, 63; doubts and conjec-
tures about it before Archbishop
Bryennios's edition of the Con-
stantinopolitan MS., 64; ancient

DID

use of the combined homily and
epistle, 65

Colonial Episcopate, the, 429 sqq.;
former spiritual neglect of colo-
nists by England, 430; the first .
colonial bishop (1787), 431; the
Colonial Bishoprics Fund started
(1841): the first meeting, 432;
work done by the aid of the
Fund, 434; Lord Blachford's
account of the old letters patent
to colonial bishops, 436; Dr.
Colenso's case, 438; claims of
the Crown to nomination, 439;
the Church in South Africa, 440;
Mr. Gladstone's views on this
subject, 441; yet more bishoprics
needed, 442

Cozza Luzi, Abate: phototype re-
production of the Codex Vati-
canus of the LXX, 247
Critical Review of Theological and
Philosophical Literature, 280

DARKEST England: review of
Booth's work, 223

sqq.; contrasted with a kindred
work by Mr. Charles Booth,
224; their respective classifica-
tions, 226; 'General' Booth's
'submerged tenth,' 227; Mr. C.
Booth's suggested remedies, 229;
the Church Army has anticipated
'General' Booth, 230; his re-
marks on the training of children,
232; his diatribe against present
day emigration and private phil-
anthropy, 233; his scheme of re-
generation, 235; his shelters'
and labour-yard,' 236; difficul-
ties of these schemes, 237; the
'labour bureau,' 238; country
farm, ib.; Over-Sea Colony,'
239; condition of the expelled'
from his colonies, ib.; other
benevolent projects, 240; his
'Shelter Trophies,' 241; the
Salvation Army's work in East
London, 242; General' Booth's
schemes have been all antici-
pated, 244

Deane, Rev. W. J., Pseudepigrapha,

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DUB

assertion of the rights and limits
of criticism in regard to Scrip-
ture, 282; the Conception, Ado-
lescence, and Youth of Jesus,
284 sqq.; the Temptation in the
wilderness, 286; deficiencies in
the book: lax and slovenly
scholarship, 293; exegesis of the
fourth word from the Cross, 294;
the walk to Emmaus, 297; the
unity of principle in all the
accounts of the Risen Lord, 300;
the Leading Ideas of the Gospels,
303; 'informal memoirs,' ib.;
the fullest specimen of a 'primi-
tive Gospel' that spoken by St.
Peter (Acts x. 34-44), 304; the
special presentation of the life of
Christ by each of the four Evan-
gelists, 305; application of Ezek.
i. 5 sqq. to the Evangelists, 308;
analogy found in the biographies
of remarkable men, 310; various
treatment by the Evangelists of
one incident common to them
all, 313; general appraisement
of Père Didon's work, 315
Dublin Review, 280

ECONOMIC REVIEW, The

279

English Historical Review, 279

GOD

OD Incarnate: review of Bishop
Kingdon's 'Bishop Paddock
Lectures,' 131 sqq.; need of popu-
lar instruction in America on the
Incarnation, 132; Bishop King-
don's statement of the plural Per-
sonality of the Supreme Being,
134; Creation and the theory of
Evolution, 135; the Bishop's in-
terpretation of 'For us men, and
for our salvation, was made Man,'
136; reasons for holding the Sco-
tist view, ib.; the 'Theophanies'
considered as 'proleptic mani-
festations of the Incarnate Lord,'
137; the 'perfection of sympathy'
in Christ Incarnate, 138; Christ's
'growth in wisdom,' 139; His
immunity from disease, 140; the
Atonement, 141; necessity of Sa-
craments, 142; Confirmation,
144; the use of chrism in Con-

HEB

firmation, 145; Confession and
Absolution, 146; Holy Eucharist,
ib.; its Communion aspect, 147;
Ordination, Matrimony, Extreme
Unction, 148; the relation of
Justification to Revelation, 149
Gospels, Recent works on the: Mr.
J. Estlin Carpenter's The First
Three Gospels, 29 sqq.; treat-
ment of the testimony of Irenæus,
30; of the Fourth Gospel, 31;
his neglect of the supernatural as
a possible factor in the Gospels,
33; the essential unity of the
New Testament writings, 35;
the entrance and early progress
of Christianity, 37; Mr. Car-
penter's views on the 'formation
of the Gospel tradition,' 37 sqq.;
how the followers of Jesus arrived
at the conviction that He was the
Messiah, 41; the miraculous birth
of our Lord, 42; Rev. A. Wright's
work on The Composition of the
Gospels good qualities in the
book, 46; Dr. Dale's The Living
Christ and the Four Gospels, 46;
analysis of its arguments, 47
Grimley, Rev. H. N., The Prayer
of Humanity, 275

HAMMOND, Rev. J., John
Wesley, being Dead, yet
Speaketh, 267

Harris, W. T., Hegel's Logic, 540
Headlam, J. W., Election by Lot at
Athens, 535

Heathcote, Rev. W. S., My Salva-
tion Army Experience, 524
Hebrews, Epistle to the review of
Bishop Westcott's work, I sqq.;
general character of the treatise,
2 ; question of a Hebrew original,
3; the Epistle was written to the
Church of Jerusalem from Italy,
3 sq.; external testimony to the
Epistle and its author, 5; Euse-
bius' account, 6; St. Clement's
statement, 7; Origen's opinion,
9; Bishop Westcott's conclusions,
10; Delitsch's opinion, II; the
Epistle's drift and object, 13;
its argument, 14; Protestant
and Catholic views as to the
priesthood and Sacrifice of

HUN

Christ, 15; the real teaching of
the writer of the Epistle, 17; the
Church's interpretation, 19; ex-
emplified in the Liturgy of St.
James, 20; compared with St.
Paul's Epistles, 21; and other
primitive documents, 22; Eucha-
ristic bearing of Heb. x. 19, 24;
the θυσιαστήριον of Heb. xiii. 1o,25
Hunter, Rev. P. H., After the Ex-
ile, 257

INTE

NTERMEDIATE State, the:
review of Canon Luckock's work,
204 sqq.; need of a proper cor-
rective to the Calvinistic view of
God's punishment of sin, 205;
what is involved in the denial of
the intermediate state, 208;
causes of the popular ignoring of
it, 209; the three states of man's
life, 210; popular depreciation of
the doctrines of the resurrection
and the judgment, 211; proofs of
the belief in an intermediate state,
212; the doctrine traced through
the Jewish Church, 215; Jewish
conception of death, 216; Sheol,
218; Gehenna, 219; parable of
Dives and Lazarus, 220; view of
the Primitive Christian Church
on the intermediate state, 221;
the idea of the Church in the un-
seen world carrying on the work
begun here on earth, 222; the
condition of the heathen, ib.
Iverach, Professor J., St. Paul, 550

LA AY SERMONS for Practical
People, 278
Lightfoot, Bishop, Sermons by, 272
Loraine, Rev. N., The Battle of
Belief, 542

Lyra Consolationis, 539

MARIAN persecution, the (re-

view of vol. iv. of Canon
Dixon's History of the Church of
England from the Abolition of
the Roman Jurisdiction), 188 sqq.;
the respective shares of Mary
and Philip in the persecution,
190; Bonner, 191; Mary's policy,
192; brutality of the judges, 193;
behaviour of Convocation, 194;

NEW

Mary's letters enjoining the pun-
ishment of heretics, 195; treat-
ment of those who recanted, 196;
Cranmer, ib.; character of Pole,
197; constancy of the sufferers,
198; results of the persecution,
200; Gardiner's De Vera Obe-
dientia, 202; Canon Dixon's
character of Pope Paul IV., 203
Methodism and the Church of Eng-
land, by a Layman, 270

Monckton Milnes, Richard (Lord
Houghton), review of Mr. T.
Wemyss Reed's Memoir, 445 sqq.;
Milnes's father, 446; boyhood
and youth of Richard Milnes,
447; University life, 448; life on
the Continent, 450; Rome, 451;
Greece, 452; return to England,
453; fame as a host, 454; M.P.
for Pontefract: political posi-
tion, 456; reformatories, 458;
made a peer, 459; his pamphlet
on the Lombardo-Venetian king-
dom, 460; poetry, 461; friend of
literary men charities, 462; re-
ligious opinions, 463; various
estimates of his character, 464
Moore, Rev. Canon Aubrey L.,
Some Aspects of Sin, 263
Moore, Rev. Dr., Dante and his
early Biographers, 523
Moorhouse, Bishop (Manchester),
The Teaching of Christ, 500
Morris, Mr. Lewis, the poetry of,
115 sqq.; various standards of
critics of poetry, 117; fitness of
moral truths for poetic expres-
sion, 118; Mr. Morris's charac-
teristic of putting into verse the
ethical principles of common life,
119; ungrounded reaction in the
critics' estimate of his verse, 120;
examples of Mr. Morris's style,
122; A Vision of Saints, 125; esti-
mate of its poetry, 126; the pre-
sentment of Elizabeth Fry and
Father Damien, 128; Mr. Mor-
ris's blank verse, 129; defects, 130
Mortimer, Rev. A. G., Notes on the
Seven Penitential Psalms, 554

NEW BOOKS, New Editions,
Periodicals, &c.: Brief Notes
on, 276

NEW

Newman, F. W., Contributions
chiefly to the Early History of
the late Cardinal Newman, 541
Notes and Questions on the Catho-
lic Faith and Religion, 545

OFFICIAL Year Book, Church

of England, 1891, 277

Orr, Mrs. Sutherland, Life and
Letters of Robert Browning, 545
Overton, Rev. Canon, John Wes-
ley, 267

Oxford Movement, the review of
Dean Church's work, 271, 318
sqq.; simultaneous appearance
of Cardinal Newman's Letters
and Correspondence, 320; esti-
mate of Newman, ib.; workers
preparatory to the Movement,
322; Keble's Assize Sermon, 323;
Newman the real originator of
the Tracts the beginning of
the Movement, 324; Pusey the
greatest factor in it, 325; Isaac
Williams's Tract On Reserve,'
327; Keble's on 'Mysticism,'
328; No. 90,' 329; the begin-
ning of the end of Newman as
an Anglican, 330; Mr. Ward, ib.;
the early Tractarians were men
of deep piety, of learning and
culture, 332; they were hard
workers in their parishes, 333;
present-day High Churchmen,

ib.

PAGET, Rev.

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The

Canon,
Spirit of Discipline, 275
Pearson, Bishop, An Exposition of
the Creed, 277

Perpetua and Felicitas, The Acts of
the Martyrdom of (review of
Messrs. Harris and Gifford's edi-
tion of), 68 sqq.; interest to be
found in matters relating to the
Christians of the Early Church,
70; characteristics of ancient ac-
counts of martyrdoms, 72; Ruin-
art's Acta Sincera, 74; criteria
of the genuineness of Acts of
Martyrdom, 75; the martyrdom
of Polycarp, 76; the persecution
of Christians in Gaul in 177, ib. ;
the story of the African martyr-
doms in the beginning of the

ROY

third century, 77; Perpetua and
her companions, 79; Perpetua's
character, 80; her vision, ib.;
the vision of Saturus, 82 n.; the
condition of children dying
unbaptized, 83; the manner of
Perpetua's and her companions'
death, 84; why the Acts of Per-
petua's martyrdom were origin-
ally written in Greek, 87
Pitchford, Rev. J. W., Beata Spes,
548

Prayer Book, the original Manu-
script of the, 276, 465 sqq.; the
Facsimile of the Black Letter
Prayer Book of 1636, 467; Mr.
Parker's work on the various re-
visions of the Book, 468; the
recent facsimile of 'The Annexed
Book,' 469; the signatures of
bishops, &c., 470; erasures and
insertions, 471; the Black Ru-
bric,' 475; Ordination Service,
476; version of the Psalms :
mistakes copied into modern
Prayer Books, 477; marked pass-
ages from the LXX, 482; other
minor differences, 484; the Com-
munion Office, 485; Epistles,
Gospels, and Collects, 486; irre-
gularity as to stops and capitals,
488; the Thirty-nine Articles,
489

RAWLINSON, Rev.

Canon,
Men of the Bible: Ezra and
Nehemiah, 255

Reany, Rev. G. S., Why I left Con-
gregationalism, 524

Röhricht, Reinhold, Bibliotheca
Geographica Palestina, 259
Romestin, Rev. H. de, How

knoweth this Man Letters? 514
Rossetti, Christina G., Poems, 264
Royal Edinburgh: review of Mrs.
Oliphant's work, 335 sqq.; Mrs.
Oliphant's fitness for the task of
recording its history, 336; the
illustrations, 337; Queen Mar-
garet, 338; her chapel, 339;
Holyrood House, 341; Canon-
gate, ib.; the Stewards of Scot-
land': origin of the Stuarts,
342; misfortunes of the early
kings of that family, 343; gene-

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