[2] _The Victory of the Will_, p. 213.
[3] _First Principles_, p. 14.
[4] _Ibid._ p. 20.
[5] _First Principles_, pp. 99, 100.
[6] Quoted by Walker in _Christian Theism_, p. 47.
[7] _Christian Theism_, pp. 40, 42.
[8] New York _Independent_, September 12, 1907.
[9] Micah iv, 5.
[10] I do not include Confucianism, because it is, primarily, a system of ethics or sociology rather than a religion; and also because it seems to have no missionary impulse, and no expectation of universality.
[11] _Permanent Elements in Religion_, p. 143.
[12] _The Unknown G.o.d_, p. 228.
[13] Professor D. M. Fisk.
[14] Acts ii, 44, 45.
[15] Matt. vi. 5, 6.
[16] James v, 16.
[17] Rauschenbusch: _Christianity and the Social Crisis_, pp. 93, 94.
[18] Page 182.
[19] _The Social Gospel_, Harnack and Herrmann, pp. 216, 217.
[20] _Essays and Addresses_, p. 194.
[21] _Essays and Addresses_, p. 189.
[22] _A History of the Reformation_, vol. i, pp. 85,86.
[23] _Ibid._ pp. 87, 88.
[24] _Op. cit._ p. 96.
[25] Seebohm, _The Era of the Protestant Revolution_, pp. 57,58.
[26] _Op. cit._ pp. 327, 328.
[27] _The Philosophy of Religious Experience_, by Henry W. Clark, pp.
234-236.
[28] Rauschenbusch, _Christianity and the Social Crisis_, pp. 414-416.
The volume is one that no intelligent student of present-day Christianity can afford to neglect.
[29] _The Varieties of Religious Experience_, p. 485.
[30] Dr. J. H. Jowett.