[6] Deut. XXXII, 4: "He is the rock, his work is perfect." See also a hundred similar passages in the Old and New Testaments.
[7] Isaiah XLIV, 8: "Now, O Lord, thou art our Father; we are the clay and thou our potter; and we all are the work of thy hand."
[8] "The Constitution of the Presbyterian Church in the United States," pp. 16 to 20: Philadelphia, 1841.
[9] To the end of his days Huxley believed that, to the average human being, even of the highest class, some sort of faith would always be necessary. "My work in the London hospitals," he said, "taught me that the preacher often does as much good as the doctor." It would be interesting to show how this notion has been abandoned in recent years. The trained nurse, who was unknown in Huxley's hospital days, now takes the place of the confessor, and as Dr. Osler has shown us in "Science and Immortality," men die just as comfortably as before.
[10] "Der Antichrist," § 5.
[11] "Der Antichrist," § 6.
[12] "Der Antichrist," § 7.
[13] Alfred Russell Wallace: "Darwinism," London, 1889.
[14] Alexander Tille, introduction to the Eng. tr. of "The Works of Friedrich Nietzsche," vol. XI; New York, 1896.
[15] John Fiske: "The Destiny of Man;" London, 1884.