A Treatise on Good Works - A Treatise on Good Works by Martin Luther
Excerpt:
The Occasion of the Work. -- Luther did not impose himself as reformer upon the Church
The Faith of Islam - The Faith of Islam by Edward Sell
Excerpt:
The following pages embody a study of Islám during a residence of fifteen years in India, the greater part of which time I have been in daily intercourse with Musalmáns. I have given in the footnotes the authorities from which I quote
Miscellaneous Pieces - Miscellaneous Pieces by John Bunyan
Excerpt:
How a young or shaken Christian should demean himself under the weighty thoughts of the Doctrine of the Trinity or Plurality of Persons in the eternal Godhead
The Otterbein Hymnal - The Otterbein Hymnal by Edmund S. Lorenz
Excerpt:
To he useful, a hymnal must express the peculiar type of Christian life characterizing the denomination it is to serve
Commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians - Commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians by Martin Luther
Excerpt:
The preparation of this edition of Luther's Commentary on Galatians was first suggested to me by Mr. P. J. Zondervan, of the firm of publishers, in March, 1937. The consultation had the twofold merit of definiteness and brevity
How to become like Christ - How to become like Christ by Marcus Dods
Excerpt:
"But we all, with unveiled face reflecting as a mirror the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord
Mohammedanism - Mohammedanism by C. Snouck Hurgronje
Excerpt:
The American Lectures on the History of Religions are delivered under the auspices of the American Committee for Lectures on the History of Religions
The Religious Duty of Obedience to Law - The Religious Duty of Obedience to Law by Ichabod S. Spencer
Excerpt:
There are two great classes of human duty. One of them embraces duties which we owe to God, the other embraces duties which we owe to men
A History of the Moravian Church - A History of the Moravian Church by Joseph Edmund Hutton
Excerpt:
When an ordinary Englishman, in the course of his reading, sees mention made of Moravians, he thinks forthwith of a foreign land, a
foreign people and a foreign Church. He wonders who these Moravians may be, and wonders, as a rule, in vain