Footnotes
1. Through Nature to God, p. 189.
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 God, 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.