OUR REFORMED CHURCH AND ITS PRESENT TROUBLES. Small post 8vo, cloth boards, 6d.

SALUTARY DOCTRINE. Small post 8vo, cloth boards, 1s. 6d.

SPIRITUAL NEEDS IN COUNTRY PARISHES. Small post 8vo, cloth boards, 1s.

THE BEING OF GOD (Six Addresses on). Small post 8vo, cloth boards, 1s. 6d.

SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE.
London: Northumberland Avenue, W.C.

Footnotes:

[6] The following Resolution was passed unanimously by the Upper House of the Convocation of Canterbury on Feb. 10, 1899, after the presentation of the Report of the Committee (well worthy of being read) by the Bishop of Rochester. The Report is numbered 329, and, with other Reports of Convocation, is sold by the National Society:—

“That in the opinion of this House the use of the Revised Version at the lectern in the public service of the Church, where this is desired by clergy and people, is not open to any well-founded objection, and will tend to promote a more intelligent knowledge of Holy Scripture.”

[10a] Among others may be named the Edinburgh Review for 1855 on Paragraph Bibles, in which it was said that it was now high time for another revision (p. 429); the Christian Remembrancer for 1856 on the Revision of the Authorised Version (an interesting article); the Quarterly Review for 1863, intimating that as yet we were not ripe for any authorised text or translation; the Edinburgh Review for 1865; and the Contemporary Review for 1868, a careful and elaborate article, contending that the work must be done by a Commission.

[10b] In February, 1856, when Canon Selwyn gave notice of proposing a petition on the subject to the Upper House. The proposal in a somewhat different form a year afterwards was disposed of by a characteristic amendment of Archdeacon Denison.