Human sacrifice discarded by Jews long before other races discarded it, 50

Hyginus’s myth of Bacchus and the two asses, 25, 76

Hypercriticism of Drews, Robertson, and W. B. Smith involves the unreality of Solon, Epimenides, Pythagoras, Apollonius of Tyana, 4–6;
its wilful improbabilities, 31;
resembles old-fashioned orthodoxy in its failure to appreciate evidence, 43;
consents in profane history to separate off miracles from normal events, yet refuses to do so in sacred history, 45 foll.;
becomes mere credulity, 124, 182;
would abolish all history, 167;
is a repercussion from orthodox obscurantism, 168;
damages the cause of Rationalism, 186

Ignatius of Antioch on Docetism of the early second century, 105

Ignatian testimony to Pauline Epistles, 126

Independent witnesses to the same facts, their importance explained, 8, 9, 96, 97, 123

Interpolations of New Testament, hypothesis of, invoked at random by the hypercritical school as suits their argument, 125, 135

Jackson, Cyril, Dean of Christ Church, his educational ideals, 216

Jacob’s prayer, a Jewish apocryph, cited by Origen, 198 note

Jairus’s daughter, miracle of her being raised from the dead paralleled in the life of Apollonius, 47