THE STUDY OF THE GOSPELS. By the Very Rev. J. Armitage Robinson, D.D., Dean of Westminster.

'Nothing could be more desirable than that the Anglican clergy should be equipped with knowledge of the kind to which this little volume will introduce them, and should regard the questions with which Biblical study abounds in the candid spirit, and with the breadth of view which they see here exemplified.'—Spectator.

'The little book on the Gospels, which the new Dean of Westminster has recently published, is one to be warmly commended alike to clergy and laity. Any intelligent person who takes the trouble to work through this little volume of 150 pages will be rewarded by gaining from it as clear a view of the synoptic problem as is possible without prolonged and independent study of the sources.'—The Pilot.

A CHRISTIAN APOLOGETIC. By the Very Rev. Wilford L. Robbins, Dean of the General Theological Seminary, New York; Author of An Essay toward Faith.

'We commend this handbook with confidence as a helpful guide to those clergy and teachers who have thoughtful doubters to deal with, and who wish to build safely if they build at all.'—Church of Ireland Gazette.

PASTORAL VISITATION. By the Rev. H.E. Savage, M.A., Vicar of South Shields, and Hon. Canon of Durham.

'This is an excellent book.'—Spectator.

AUTHORITY IN THE CHURCH. By the Very Rev. T.B. Strong, D.D., Dean of Christ Church.

'This is a valuable and timely book, small in bulk, but weighty both in style and substance.... The Dean's essay is an admirable one, and is well calculated to clear men's minds in regard to questions of very far-reaching importance. Its calm tone, and its clear and penetrating thought, are alike characteristic of the author, and give a peculiar distinction to everything he writes.'—Guardian.

THE STUDY OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY. By the Right Rev. W.E. Collins, D.D., Bishop of Gibraltar.

'A book which displays the master-mind on every page, and has what many master-minds lack, a sober, practical, common-sense strain about it, which is hardly ever found in those who set out to instruct us in Church History, or Canon Law, or Catholic use.'—Church Bells.