“As an example of thorough and painstaking scholarship, as a serviceable handbook for all Bible students, and as a popular defence of revealed truth, it will take high rank, and fill an important place which up to this time has been conspicuously vacant.”—Congregationalist.
“It would be difficult, by any amount of labor, to produce anything more convincing and satisfactory.”—The Interior.
Haley. The Hereafter of Sin: What it will be; with Answers to Certain Questions and Objections. By Rev. John W. Haley, author of “Alleged Discrepancies of the Bible.” 16mo. 75 cents.
“It presents, in a calm and admirable manner, the Scriptural doctrine of future retribution, divested, indeed, of the literalism with which it is sometimes presented, and showing its accordance with the deductions of a sound philosophy.”—Zion’s Herald.
“It is a scholarly, clear, dispassionate, and conclusive argument in favor of what is known as the common or orthodox view of future punishment. The whole discussion is conducted in a spirit of courtesy and fairness towards all opponents which does credit to our current controversial literature.”—The Interior.
Wright. The Logic of Christian Evidences. By Rev. G. Frederick Wright. 16mo. $1.50
“Beginning with a general statement of the principles of inductive and deductive logic, which are illustrated by ample examples drawn from the whole field of modern science, it advances to the consideration of the personality, wisdom, and benevolence of the Creator, as seen in nature; to the place of miracles in the Christian system; to the specific evidences of Christianity as discerned in the early history of the New Testament, and in the characteristics of the Christians of the first and second centuries; and to the historical probability of Jesus and his immediate followers having been either impostors or deluded enthusiasts.”—Literary World.
“The book would form an admirable text-book for Bible-classes or college classes, and will give solid comfort and strength to all readers who have any desire to be able to give a reason for believing.”—Rev. Dr. Thomas Hill in the Bibliotheca Sacra.
Wright. Studies in Science and Religion. By Prof. G. Frederick Wright, author of “The Logic of Christian Evidences.” 16mo. $1.50
“The chapter on inductive reasoning, with which the book opens, is as full, explanatory, and convincing as any one could wish, despite the fact it occupies only twenty-six pages.... The grand point contended for and carried is that ‘Christianity, in its appeal to historical evidence, allies itself with modern science rather than with the glittering generalities of transcendentalism,’ and that in its beginnings science has no advantage over religion in solidity of basis.”—The Leader.