WORKS BY THE REV. PRINCIPAL FAIRBAIRN, D.D.
CHRIST IN MODERN THEOLOGY. By A.M.
Fairbairn, D.D., Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford.
Sixth Edition. 8vo, cloth, 12s.
"His work is, without doubt, one of the most valuable and comprehensive contributions to theology that has been made during this generation."—The Spectator.
"The volume before us is the most weighty and important which he has yet issued. His treatises entitled 'Studies in the Life of Christ' and 'A City of God' contain much great value, but in a sense they gave promise of better things to come, and this promise has been amply fulfilled ... in this very able and learned and altogether admirable discussion on 'The Place of Christ in Modern Theology."—Scotsman.
"A more vivid summary of Church history has never been given. With its swift characterisation of schools and politics, with its subtle tracings of the development of various tendencies through the influence of their environment, of reaction, and of polemic; with its contrasts of different systems, philosophies, and races; with its portraits of men; with its sense of progress and revolt—this part of Dr. Fairbairn's book is no mere annal, but drama, vivid and full of motion, representative of the volume and sweep of Christianity through the centuries."—Speaker.
RELIGION IN HISTORY AND IN
MODERN LIFE.
Together with an Essay on the Church and the Working
Classes.
Ninth Thousand. Crown 8vo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
THE CITY OF GOD.
A Series of Discussions in Religion.
Fifth Edition. 8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
"We find in the discourses which form this volume much able statement and much vigorous thought, and an admirable comprehension of the great questions which are being discussed in our day with eagerness and bated breath."—Scotsman.
STUDIES IN THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
Seventh Edition. Demy 8vo, 9s.
"There is ample room for Professor Fairbairn's thoughtful and brilliant sketches. Dr. Fairbairn's is not the base rhetoric often employed to hide want of thought or poverty of thought, but the noble rhetoric which is alive with thought and imagination to its utmost and finest extremities."—Expositor.