vailed, or than the United States or those colonies in which the Church, being disestablished, can make canons of its own.
Mr. Burdett's Hints in Sickness, where to go and what to do (Kegan Paul, 1883), is a little book too valuable to be passed over. It will be invaluable to the parish priest, as giving information about all institutions in England and Wales for the relief of sickness or bodily infirmity.
Private Prayers by the Rev. E. B. Pusey, D.D. (Rivingtons, 1883), edited by Dr. Liddon, with a Preface, will be welcome to many among us. There is reason to think that these devotions were used habitually by the revered author himself.
An Address by Canon Hole to a meeting at the Reading Church Congress has been published by the Free and Open Church Association, under the title of The Gentleman in the Loose Box. It is as brilliant and effective as might be expected from its author, and deserves a wide circulation.
The Archdeacon of Middlesex has printed an admirable paper on the Deceased Wife's Sister question, which he read at the Reading Church Congress. It may be bought at the office of the Marriage Law Defence Union, 20 Cockspur Street. The Union stands in need of additional pecuniary support.
Under the title of The Fiftieth Year of the Reformation of the Nineteenth Century (Rivingtons, 1883), Mr. Berdmore Compton has published a Sermon in Three Parts,' which is extremely well worth reading. Besides giving a succinct account of the leading points of the Catholic revival, these brief scholar-like sermons afford some much-needed warnings against some of the evils which have attended it.
The enormous number of tales and illustrated books, some of them exceedingly beautiful, which have been published as Christmas presents or school prizes by the S.P.C.K. in particular, and some other publishers, quite defies any detailed notice. Where all are so good, it is scarcely fair to single any out for special praise. But we think Only a Girl, by Miss C. A. Jones, and Andersen's Snowr Queen, illustrated by Pym (both published by Messrs. Wells Gardner and Co.) are particularly excellent. From the S.P.C.K. list we select Fackanapes and A Soldier's Children, both by Mrs. Ewing, and a story called Kate Temple's Mate. A word, too, ought to be said in commendation of the S.P.C.K.'s monthly paper, The Dawn of Day. It is a wonderful halfpennyworth. Nor is My Sunday Friend (published by Mowbray and Co. at the same price) less to be recommended. The energy of the venerable Society is one of the most hopeful features of the time. That Professor James Stuart, of Cambridge, should contribute A Chapter of Science to its People's Library, and that another eminent scientist, the Rev. T. W. Webb, should also write for it a volume on Optics without Mathematics, are very notable facts. Nor is it less remarkable that Sir John Lubbock should have prepared for the National Society an advanced readingbook, called Chapters in Popular Natural History, embodying the results of his investigations into the habits of ants, bees, and wasps, and the relations of insects to flowers and plants.
ADVERTISEMENTS (of 1566),
Archbishop Parker's, consi- dered, 52 sqq.; did they ever re- ceive official royal sanction? 59 Alexandria, Patriarchs of, 9 sq. American Revised Book of Com-
mon Prayer, the, 472 Analogies of sound and light,318 sqq. Anglo-Israelism, the so-called ar- guments for, 34-47
Animal sacrifice, universal prac- tice of, in the ages previous to Christ, 98
Appellate system of Rome, the, development of, under Pope Gregory the Great, 388 Aquileia, Patriarchate of, translated to Grado, 372 n
Aquileian revolt against the Papacy,
Aquinas, S. Thomas, on Mammon- ism and Pauperism, 397 n A Religious Encyclopædia (Dr. Schaff's), vol. ii. 216
Atterbury, Dr.: his political views, 22 sq.; Prolocutor of Convoca- tion, 23; his influence in Church and State, 24 sq.; gives his alle- giance to the Stuarts, 33 Aubé, Mons. B., Polyeucte dans Phistoire, 249
Augustine, S., his name not in the
Kalendar of the Church of Con- stantinople, 389 n
BALDWIN, Dr., Dean of Mon- treal, appointed Bishop of Huron, 468
Balme, Mr. E. B. Wheatley, on the ornaments rubric and the vestments, 47-69
Baptism as a witness to the doc- trines of Christianity, 91 Barry, Canon, The Teacher's Prayer Book, 246; his appointment as Bishop of Sydney, 469
Bassett, Rev. F. T., Examination of... Texts in the New Testa- ment that relate to the Deity of our Lord, 209
Belgian schemes of Christian So- cialism, 406 sqq.; successes in the field of literature, 407 Bellett, Rev. J. C., his translation of Pelliccia's Polity of the Chris- tian Church, 3 sq., 14, 18 'Benediction,' the modern Roman rite of, 13 sq.
Beresford, Rev. W., Diocesan His- tory of Lichfield, 357 sqq.
Besant's (Mr. W.) Life and Achieve- ments of E. H. Palmer, reviewed, 101 sq.
Bert, Mons. Paul: his designs against religion in France, 79 Binterim's recast of Pelliccia's work, 4
Bithell, Mr. R., The Creed of a Modern Agnostic, 219
Bitter Cry of Outcast London, The,
Bovet, Mons. Felix, Egypt, Pales- tine, and Phænicia, 498 Burdett, Mr., Hints in Sickness, 500 Burnet, Bishop, on the relations of Convocation and the Crown, 25 Bute, Marquess of, on the Egyptian Liturgies, 10
CAIRD, Principal, An Introduc tion to the Philosophy of Reli- gion, 261 sqq.
Caird, Professor, Hegel, 264 sqq. Campello, Count di, acknowledg-
ment of, by Bishop Littlejohn, 471; joined in his work by Mon- signor Savarese, 471
Canada, Synod of the Church of, at Montreal, 467
Candidus, Hugo, the earliest Peter- borough chronicler, 341
Canon of the Mass, how said an- ciently, 13
Cape Town, position of the Bishop of, 468
Carpo, Rev. Father, his Compendiosa Bibliotheca Liturgica noticed, I
Catacombs near Naples, Pelliccia's account of the, 17 sq. Catholic associations for masters and men in France, 405 'Catholic Socialism,' the main strength of, 414
Celtic Churches: their repudiation of Papal claims, 393 Ceriani, Canon, Il Rotolo Opisto- grafo del Principe Antonio Pio di Savoja, 225
Challemel-Lacour, Mons., speech of, against the French clergy, 76 Chartism and the Christian So- cialists of its time, 396 Chasuble, derivation of the, 60 Chichester, Mr. Stephens's Dio-
cesan History of, criticized, 347- 357; S. Wilfrid's work, 349 sq.; the see of Selsey, 350; removal to Chichester, 351; the fall of the Templars, 352; general condition of Sussex monasteries, ib.; Bishop Pecock, 353; the troublous days of the 16th century, 353 sq.; later history, 356
Childebert I. (King of Paris): his
action towards Pope Pelagius I., 373 'Christian Social Labour Party' (Berlin), the, 416; its programme, 417 n
Christian Socialism: its line of thought, 395 sqq.; the Duke of Saint-Simon's schemes, 398;. sketch of Le Play's scheme, 400 sqq.; of that of Comte de Mun, 403 sqq.; the Cercles Catho- liques d'Ouvriers,' 404 n; Périn and Laveleye in Belgium, 407; Christian Socialism in Germany, 410sqq.; Bishop Ketteler's theory, 412; German association of mas- ters and workpeople, 415; Chris- tian Socialism in the Protestant Church of Germany, 415 sqq. ;· Todt's ideal, 416; Programme and Bylaws of the Christian Social Party,' 417 n; position of Protestantism, 419
Clarke, Dr. Samuel: his Arianism. censured by Convocation, 29 Clerical marriage in the 13th cen- tury in England, 362 n Counter-revolution, the, in France, 400, 405
'Constitutional' clergy (in France), unpopularity of the, 73
Copes, use of, in Queen Elizabeth's reign, 50, 52, 57; in Bishop Cosin's time, 60 n
Cotterill's (Right Rev. Bishop), Does Science aid Faith in regard to Creation? reviewed, 169 sqq. Curci, Padre, new work by, 472 Cyriacus (of Constantinople): his relations with Pope Gregory the Great, 385
'Cramming' in French schools, 80 Creed, the, as the basis of Apology: periods of apologetic activity, 298; differences of method, 299; dis- crepancy between dogmatic and apologetic theology, 301 sqq.; a work desiderated to meet present needs in theology, 331 sq.; Dr. Westcott's The Historic Faith appraised, 303; removal of the misconceptions of popular the- ology, 305; analogy as a method of apologetics, 306; Dr. West- cott's analogy on the subject of
forgiveness, 307 sq.; human an- alogies applied to the Atonement, 309 sqq.; use of 'practical re- sults' in treating theological doc- trines, 311 Croyland, the story of a massacre of monks at, 341
AUDET, Mons.: his picture of Protestantism in France, 84 Deists, English, of the 18th century: their influence on thought in France and Germany, 70 Delitzsch, Prof. Franz, The Hebrew
New Testament of the British and Foreign Bible Society, 209 Denton, Rev. W., The Ancient Church of Egypt, 256
D'Héricault, Mons. C., La Révolu- tion, 252
Dinoth, Abbot of Bangor-Iscoed,
on the Papal claims, at the Synod of S. Augustine's Oak, 393 Diocesan Fund, Bishop of Ro- chester's, 436
Diocesan Histories: York, Oxford,
232; Peterborough, 339; Selsey: Chichester, 347; Lichfield, 357 Dodwell's (Henry) book on the immortality of the soul, 29 Dress (vestments) of the clergy, Pelliccia's account of the origin of the, 10
Drummond, Mr. H., Natural Law in the Spiritual World, 483
provision for the case of peccant bishops, 463
Egyptian Christians Monophysites merely in name, 10 English Hegelianism and its Re- ligion; Bishop Thirlwall's and Schopenhauer's opinions on He- gel, 257; relations of philosophy and religion, 258; How can I know?' 260 sq.; Hegel's Logic, 264; Prof. Green on 'studying the book of nature,' 264; defini- tion of religion according to the school of Hegel, 265; Hegelian notion of a Revelation, 266: of the objectivity of God, 267; Prof. Green's views of the Divine Per- sonality, 268; Hegelianism and Evolution, 269; basis of morality, 270; history of the just man's conscience,' 272; estimate of Prof. Green's works and doctrine, 272 sq.; his adoption of Christian ideas, 275; meaning of super- natural,' 275; Hegelian views of Christ and the Incarnation, 276 sqq.; definition of Prayer, 281; Prof. Green on Holy Communion, 282 sq.
Eucharist, the, as a witness to the facts of Christianity, 92 Eucharistic oblations, Pelliccia's account of the, 14
Eucharistic vesture, a distinctive : why prized and why assailed, 68 Eulogius, Patriarch of Antioch: his relations with Pope Gregory the Great, 385
Evidential value of the Sacra- ments, the, 85-100
AITH and Science, relations of,
Ecclesiastical Courts Commission, Fonsidered, 162 sqq.
Report of the, considered, 177- 201, 437-466; members, 178; scope, 179; proposals: Dio- cesan Court, 182, 455; Provincial Court, 183, 455; Court of Final Appeal, 183; Recommendations, 184 sqq.; estimate of results, 194; Canon Stubbs's share in the work, 196; the Appendices, 198; further consideration of the proposed Court of Final Appeal, 438 sqq.; the 'Episcopal veto,' 460; no
Fifth Council, the, upheld by the
Papacy, 373; not accepted by the Western episcopate, 374 Fraction of the Host, Latin and Greek manners of, 13
France, prospects of religion and society in, 70 sqq.
Fray Gerundio-a clerical Don Quixote imitators of Cervantes, 284 sq.; the author of Friar Gerund, 285; object and cha-
racter of the work, ib.; résumé of its contents, 287 sqq. ; the style of preaching which the author ridicules, 290 sq.; life in the monasteries of the time, 293; rules for writing sermons, 294 sq.; a sermon of Friar Gerund's, 295 sq.; estimate of the book, 297
Mr. Herbert Spencer's Philo- sophy, 477
Guericke, Prof., Manual of the An- tiquities of the Church, 2, 19 Guiana, the Bishop of, elected first Primate of the West Indian Churches, 469
Freeman's (Rev. P.), Principles of Hopic labours in the Val-
Divine Service, noticed, 94 sqq. French schemes of Christian Socialism, 398 sqq.
Froude, Mr. J. A., Short Studies on Great Subjects, 243
GAMS, Rev. Father, his Series Episcoporum Ecclesia Catho- licæ, noticed, 2 General Assembly of German Catholics on the question of social reform, 413
German schemes of Christian
Socialism, 410 sqq.; peculiar circumstances affecting them, 411 Gildenburgh (or Goldenburgh), another name of Peterborough, 342 Glasscock, Mr. J. L., The Records
of S. Michael's Parish Church, Bishop Stortford, 238 Goodwin's (Bishop Harvey,) Walks in the Region of Science and Faith, reviewed, 160 sqq. Green, Prof., Prolegomena to Ethics, 264 sqq.; The Witness of God and Faith, 275 sqq. Gregory the Great, Pope, sketch of his career, 379 sqq.; his profes- sion of faith, 381; disputes with Constantinople, 382; on the title 'Universal Patriarch,' 383 sqq.; controversial value of his utter- ances, 386; development of the appellate system under him, 388; causes of his success, 388 sq.; his missionary zeal, 392; patron- age of monachism, 394
Grindal, Bishop: his letter to his KETTELER, Bishop: his theory
clergy on clerical apparel, 57; his action (as Archbishop of York) in regard to vestments, 58 Ground, Rev. W. D., Examination
of the Structural Principles of
of Christian Socialism, 412
ABARUM, the, depicted on the catacombs, 18; symbol- ism of the monogram, 90
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