[11] Work cited, pp. 335–353. [↑]
[12] Williams and Norgate, 1895. [↑]
[15] The Historic Jesus, p. vii. [↑]
[16] In this connection he puts the theory—derived from the celebrated Herr Chamberlain—that Jesus was not a Jew but an “Amorite.” [↑]
[17] H.J. chs. xvii and xix. [↑]
[18] H.J. 199. On this compare The Four Gospels as Historical Records, chs. vi–xiii. [↑]
[19] Canon Cheetham, Hulsean Lectures on The Mysteries, 1897, p. 115. [↑]
[20] “The primitive idea of the sacrificial meal, namely, that it is by participation in the blood of the god that the spirit of the god enters into his worshipper.”—Prof. Jevons, Introd. to the Hist. of Religion, 1896, p. 291. “Originally the death of the god was nothing else than the death of the theanthropic victim.”—Robertson Smith, Religion of the Semites, 1889, p. 394. [↑]