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CONTENTS.
I.
FAITH.
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PAGE
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| Faith the condition of Life |
3
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| and of Religion |
5
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Opposed to Credulity, Superstition, Conviction
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6
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The idea of Faith
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7
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Faith a principle of Knowledge
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8
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a principle of Power
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10
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a principle of Action
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11
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Faith the touchstone of Life
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13
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II.
CREEDS.
| No man without a Creed
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17
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| The efficacy of a Creed
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18
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| A Creed the occasion of Confession
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19
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| the mark of the universality of the Faith in
place
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20
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| in time
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21
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| guards the fulness of Faith
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22
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| guides to the study of Scripture
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id.
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| The Apostles' Creed personal in its object
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23
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| and historical
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25
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| To this 'we have been delivered'
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26
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xiv
Contents.
III.
I BELIEVE IN GOD THE FATHER, ALMIGHTY,
MAKER OF HEAVEN AND EARTH.
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PAGE
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| The first article of the Creed
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31
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| The significance of belief in God
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32
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| God the Father
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34
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| All-sovereign
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36
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| Maker of heaven and earth
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38
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| The range of our belief in God
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39
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| For us God is One Who rules, Who can be served, Who
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| loves and can be loved
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40
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| There may be an orthodox atheism
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41
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| The apparent absence of God from the world
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id.
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| His real presence
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42
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IV.
AND IN JESUS CHRIST HIS ONLY SON OUR
LORD.
| The presence of God given back to us in Jesus Christ
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45
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| Our belief in Jesus Christ involves a belief in His Person,
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| and in His Nature
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46
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| By the belief in Jesus as the Christ we recognise the ful-
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| filment of the work of Judaism wrought in
unexpected
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| ways
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47
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| The Divine Nature of Christ is presented to us by the con-
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| fession that He is The Son of God, our Lord
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49
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| Belief in Jesus as the Son of God. Consequences of the
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| belief
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50
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| Belief in Jesus as our Lord
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51
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| The obligation of the confession of Faith
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52
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| Christianity a belief in Christ
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54
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| Hence flows our trust in the institutions of society
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55
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Contents.
xv
V.
WHO WAS CONCEIVED BY THE HOLY GHOST,
BORN OF THE VIRGIN MARY,
SUFFERED
UNDER PONTIUS PILATE, WAS
CRUCIFIED,
DEAD, AND BURIED.
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PAGE
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| The work of Christ on earth
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59
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| Danger of realism
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60
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| This article of the Creed gradually enlarged
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id.
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| Significance of each element
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61
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| The lesson of Christ's humanity
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62
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| Christ truly man
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id.
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| Christ perfectly man
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63
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| Christ representatively man
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64
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| The importance of this truth, the consecration of
all
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| that is human
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65
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| The lesson of Christ's sufferings
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66
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| The Redemption and the Fall
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id.
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| Conquering love
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67
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| The discipline of sons
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68
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| The victory
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69
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VI.
HE DESCENDED INTO HELL; THE THIRD
DAY HE ROSE AGAIN FROM THE DEAD;
HE ASCENDED INTO HEAVEN AND SIT-
TETH ON THE RIGHT HAND OF GOD
THE FATHER ALMIGHTY.
| The revelation of Christ's glory
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73
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| Cautions in dealing with this revelation
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74
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| Words suggestive not expressive of the truth
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75
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| The descent into Hades
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76
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| No clear disclosure of the purpose
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77
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| The Resurrection
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78
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| The lesson of the Resurrection
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79
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xvi Contents.
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PAGE
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| The Ascension
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80
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| The lessons of the Ascension
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81
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| The Session at the right hand of God
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82
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| Practical bearing of the Revelation of Christ's work in
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| the world of Spirit
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83
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VII.
FROM THENCE HE SHALL COME TO JUDGE
THE QUICK AND THE DEAD.
| Universal belief in the Return in the apostolic age
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87
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| as instant
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88
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| Vagueness of our own idea
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89
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| Christ came in the Fall of Jerusalem
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90
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| The lesson of that Coming
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id.
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| Other Comings
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91
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| Belief in future Comings
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93
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| A present Coming
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id.
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| recognised by believers
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94
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| A future Judgment
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95
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| universal
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| personal
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| self-executing
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96
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| The power of the revelation
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97
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| its present efficacy
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98
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VIII.
I BELIEVE IN THE HOLY GHOST.
| The belief developed in regard to the Society, the indivi-
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| dual, the final
issue
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103
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| characteristic of Christianity
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104
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| Revelation of the Holy Spirit in the New Testament
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105
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| an interpretation of life
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106
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| The Holy Spirit unfolds Christ's name in the manifold-
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| ness of being
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108
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Contents.
xvii
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PAGE
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| We live in the dispensation of the Spirit
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109
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| There is for us
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| a divine message
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110
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| a personal call
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111
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| a personal consecration
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id.
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| an illumination of life
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112
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IX.
THE HOLY CATHOLIC CHURCH : THE
COMMUNION OF SAINTS.
| There is a Body of Christ seen and unseen
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115
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| This fact an object of Faith
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116
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| The Unity of the Church in spite of divisions
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117
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| The Holiness of the Church in spite of failures and sins
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119
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| The Catholicity of the Church in spite of outward divi-
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| sions
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121
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| The Bible and the Church both Catholic
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122
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| The Communion of Saints
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123
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| The influence of this twofold belief
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124
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X.
THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS : THE RESURRECTION
OF THE BODY.
| The action of the Holy Spirit on the believer
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129
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| An object of belief
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130
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| The mystery of forgiveness
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id.
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| No forgiveness in nature
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131
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| The Gospel a message of forgiveness
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132
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| Forgiveness comes through 'the blood' of Christ, whereby
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| we share in his
life
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133
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| Thus belief in the forgiveness of sins becomes
pos-
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| sible
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134
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xviii
Contents.
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PAGE
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| Belief in the Resurrection of the flesh gives the comple-
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| mentary truth
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135
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| The idea of 'flesh'
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136
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| Our present 'body' the seed of that which shall
be
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137
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| The power of this faith
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139
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XI.
THE LIFE ETERNAL.
| Need of caution in speaking of the eternal
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143
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| The 'life eternal' is the 'life of the world to come'
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144
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| This life we can apprehend only in part
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145
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| The Scriptural description of eternal life
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id.
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| The eternal life not essentially future
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146
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| The fulness not the cessation of realised
fellowship
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147
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| A consciousness of corporate union
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id.
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| The interdependence of finite things recognised in this
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| truth which answers to the Divine Nature
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148
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| We have no power to discuss how the end can be
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| attained
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149
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| Reason leaves us with an antithesis which Scripture does
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| not resolve
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150
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| 'From God unto God' the sum of all history
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152
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NOTE I.
THE IDEA OF
RELIGION.
| The elements of Religion
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157
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| Man born Religious
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158
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| Religious ideas slowly shaped
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159
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| often imperfect and partial
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160
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| The view of Religion in the New Testament
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161
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| The end, the power and the failure of man
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162
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| The elements of Religion: Knowledge, Feeling, Will
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163
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| The outward expression of Religion
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165
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| The final harmony of finite being
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166
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| All rests upon the Grace of God
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168
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Contents.
xix
NOTE II.
THE IDEA OF
FAITH.
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PAGE
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| The universality of Faith
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173
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| Religious Faith
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174
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| The elements of Faith
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175
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| The view of Faith in the New Testament
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177
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| Its sphere and object
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id.
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| Its elements
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178
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| Its seat
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179
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| Its activity
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180
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NOTE III.
THE CREEDS.
| The Baptismal Confession
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191
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| General differences of Eastern and Western Creeds
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192
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| The Apostles' and Constantinopolitan ('Nicene') Creeds
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194
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| The Nicene and Constantinopolitan Creeds
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200
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| Eastern and Western Creeds
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208
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| The Christology of the Creeds
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212
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NOTE IV.
THE DIVINE FATHERHOOD.
| The Doctrine of the Divine Fatherhood in the Old Testa-
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| ment
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215
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| in the Synoptic Gospels
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216
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| The contrast of the two views
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218
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| The idea of the Divine Fatherhood in St John
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220
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NOTE V.
ALL-SOVEREIGN AND ALMIGHTY.
| Use of the word All-Sovereign (παντοκπάτωρ)
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225
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| Patristic interpretation of the word
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226
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| The importance of the idea
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227
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xx
Contents.
NOTE VI.
THE CHRISTOLOGY OF THE NEW
TESTAMENT.
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PAGE
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| Outline for the study
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234
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NOTE VII.
THE UNIVERSALITY OF THE CHARACTER
OF THE LORD.
(Extracts from a Lecture by MR
GOLDWIN SMITH.)
| The Christian type of character final and universal
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240
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| unaffected by any transitory peculiarity
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242
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NOTE VIII.
THE BLOOD OF CHRIST.
| The idea of Blood in Mosaic Sacrifices
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247
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| The Levitical type fulfilled in Christ
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250
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| The idea of Blood in the New Testament
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251
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| Christ's Blood presents His Life through Death
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253
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NOTE IX.
THECOMMUNION OF SAINTS.
| The fellowship of dependence
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257
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| reaches beyond time
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258
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| The imperfection of our Commemoration of Saints
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260
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| Difficulties in filling up our Kalendar not insuperable
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262
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| The Festival of the Transfiguration
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264
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| Commemoration made effective by Meditation
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266
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| The need of recalling by systematic effort the greatest
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| ideals
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268
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| Universal fellowship assured by the Revelation of Christ
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270
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