[26] In his address at the Church Congress held at Weymouth in 1905.

[27] In his work, Verbal Inspiration. Quoted by Bishop Colenso in The Pentateuch Examined.

[28] The Dean of Canterbury, speaking on the Bishop of Winchester’s paper at the Church Congress, 1903.

[29] The Dean of Canterbury, speaking in St. Mary Bredin’s Church, Canterbury, December 4th, 1904.

[30] See Appendix.

[31] See Bk. VIII., chap. ii., par. 2, on p. 324, vol. i. Eusebius (Oxford: Parker & Co.). His candour here is deserving of all praise; but his methods can hardly be termed scientific; while an impartial perusal of his Vita Constantini, a panegyric on the Emperor Constantine, should be enough to shake the confidence of all but the blindest of his admirers.

[32] See p. 179, chap. xv., of Gibbon’s Rome (Oddy, 1809).

[33] See Appendix.

[34] In note A, pp. 42–3, of his book, The Study of the Gospels.

[35] At the discussion on Christian Science during the London Diocesan Conference, May, 1906.