[Footnote 33: P.F. 192.]
[Footnote 34: P. 245.]
[Footnote 35: P.F. 222.]
[Footnote 36: Thus he assumes Mr. Spurgeon's definition of inspiration as the basis of operations (See H.O. 189), and says, "It is perfectly obvious that for those who accept these confessions of faith … all the discoveries of modern science, from Galileo and Newton down to Lyall and Darwin, are simple delusions.">[
[Footnote 37: M.S. 215.]
[Footnote 38: Ibid. 251.]
[Footnote 39: "The simplest straightforward evidence of the earliest Christian writer who gives any account of their origin, viz., Papias." (P.F. 236.) "What does Papias say? Practically this: that he preferred oral tradition to written documents…. This is a perfectly clear and intelligible statement made apparently in good faith without any dogmatic or other prepossession…. It has always seemed to me that all theories … were comparatively worthless which did not take into account the fundamental fact of this statement of Papias." (238.) "The clear and explicit statement of Papias." (250.)]
[Footnote 40: PP. 258—260.]
[Footnote 41: P. 262.]
[Footnote 42: P.F. 266.]