WORKS BY THE LATE DR. R. W. DALE, of Birmingham.
FELLOWSHIP WITH CHRIST
And other Discourses Delivered on Special Occasions.
Fourth Thousand. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.

"These are certainly among the most massive, and, as a consequence, most impressive sermons of the day. Each is a sort of miniature theological treatise, but the theology is alive—as it were, heated through and through by the fires of a mighty conviction, which has become a passion to convince.... In these sermons there is a fine universalism; they might be addressed to any audience—academic, professional, commercial, artisan. And to hear them would be to feel that religion is a thing to be believed and obeyed."—Speaker.

THE LIVING CHRIST AND THE FOUR
GOSPELS.
Eighth Thousand. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.

"As a man of culture and eloquence he has put the case strongly and well, and it will not be surprising if his book, which is not written, he tells us, for Masters of Arts, but in the first instance for members of his own congregation, and then for all ordinary people who take an interest in such matters, should be the means of convincing many that the assumptions sometimes made about late origin of the Gospels, etc., are utterly unfounded."—Scotsman.

LAWS OF CHRIST FOR COMMON LIFE.
Seventh Thousand. Crown 8vo, 6s.

"Sound sense and wholesome Christian teaching conveyed in pure, idiomatic, and forcible English."—Scotsman.

"A storehouse of wise precepts, a repository of loving counsels—shrewd, practical, and fully cognisant of difficulties and drawbacks; but informed by such sympathy and a sense of Christian brotherhood as should do much to make it acceptable and effective."—Nonconformist.

CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE.
A Series of Discourses.
Fourth Thousand. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.

"Like everything that Dr. Dale writes, these discourses are eminently thoughtful and suggestive. Even when the topics discussed are thoroughly familiar, there is a freshness and originality in the treatment of them which makes the reader feel that he is well repaid for going over old ground. In days such as these, when loud voices are proclaiming that the doctrines of the Holy Trinity and Incarnation are metaphysical subtleties, 'sectarian' and 'denominational' dogmas, it is refreshing to note the power and outspoken vindication of them which is here set before us."—Guardian.