Second Series.

Subscription Price, 24s. Separate Volumes, 7s. 6d. each.

The Epistle to the Galatians

By the Rev. Prof. G. G. FINDLAY, D.D., Headingley College, Leeds.

"In this volume we have the mature results of broad and accurate scholarship, exegetical tact, and a firm grasp of the great principles underlying the Gospel of Paul presented in a form so lucid and attractive that every thoughtful reader can enjoy it."—Professor Beet.

The Book of Isaiah Chapters I.-XXXIX.

By the Rev. Prof. G. ADAM SMITH, M.A., D.D.

"This is a very attractive book. Mr. George Adam Smith has evidently such a mastery of the scholarship of his subject that it would be a sheer impertinence for most scholars, even though tolerable Hebraists, to criticise his translations; and certainly it is not the intention of the present reviewer to attempt anything of the kind, to do which he is absolutely incompetent. All we desire is to let English readers know how very lucid, impressive—and, indeed, how vivid—a study of Isaiah is within their reach; the fault of the book, if it has a fault, being rather that it finds too many points of connection between Isaiah and our modern world, than that it finds too few. In other words, no one can say that the book is not full of life."—Spectator.

The Pastoral Epistles

By the Rev. ALFRED PLUMMER, D.D., Master of University College, Durham.

"An admirable sample of what popular theology ought to be."—Saturday Review.

"The treatment is throughout scholarlike, lucid, thoughtful."—Guardian.

The First Epistle to the Corinthians

By the Rev. Prof. MARCUS DODS, D.D.

"A clear, close, unaffected, unostentatious exposition, not verse by verse, but thought after thought, of this most interesting perhaps, and certainly most various, of all the Apostle's writings."—London Quarterly Review.

The Epistles of St. John

By the Most Rev. W. ALEXANDER, D.D.; Lord Archbishop of Armagh.

"These commentaries are explicitly intended to help the preacher, and in Dr. Alexander's 'Discourses' they will find material ready shaped to their hand—not facts only, but imagery, references, and allusions, none of them cheap or commonplace, and some of them felicitous in a high degree."—Guardian.

The Revelation of St. John

By the Rev. Prof. W. MILLIGAN, D.D., of the University of Aberdeen.

"Lucid, scholarly."—Academy.

"The style is admirably lucid, expressive, and withal stately. The task of the reader could not possibly be easier, and in the case of such an abstruse theme the result is no small feat of intellectual and literary ingenuity."—Aberdeen Free Press.