BY THE SAME AUTHOR. Tenth edition, crown 8vo, cloth, price 7s. 6d. THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES. The author shows that the position of a clergyman in the National Church is that of a member of a National Community. As any citizen may give his opinion on any branch of State administration, or any professional man may express his views on the established dogmas of his profession, so, as a citizen and a professional man, the clergyman ought to be allowed a similar freedom of speech. "Mr. Haweis writes not only fearlessly but with remarkable freshness and vigour.. As a preacher he commands a large and attentive audience."Saturday Review. "Our mental attitude towards the book was rather that of disciple than critic."-Spectator. "Much originality of thought and individuality of expression."-Pall Mall Gazette Fourth edition, crown 8vo, cloth, price gs. SPEECH IN SEASON. "These discourses prove Mr. Haweis to be the possessor of very rare gifts of eloquence."-Spectator. Both in thought and language Mr. Haweis's discourses differ considerably from those ordinarily delivered from the pulpit."-Pall Mall Gazette. 66 A wider and more rapid popularity than the late F. W. Robertson.” Academy. "There is in them that which will commend them to the approval of the reading public. They are marked by a freshness and novelty of treatment, a catholicity of spirit, and an earnestness of faith which make them pleasant and profitable reading, even to those who may least concur in the views of the preacher. . . . All the subjects are treated with great power."-Leeds Mercury. Second edition, Square crown 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d. UNSECTARIAN FAMILY PRAYERS, For Morning and Evening for a Week, with short selected passages from the Bible. "These prayers are tender, devotional, and helpful, and may be used with great profit in any household. They are brief, but very beautiful."- Christian World. HENRY S. KING AND CO., LONDON. BY THE REV. H. R. HAWEIS, M.A., Incumbent of St. James's, Marylebone, Lon lon. Author of Thoughts for the HENRY S. KING AND CO., LONDON. 1876. 270 555 "I do not think that the controversy of the present day is with Superstition. I do think the controversy of the present day is with growing Infidelity, and I do think that if the Clergy of this our Church are not equal to the emergency, some great catastrophe will befall not only the Church but the Nation."-ARCHBISHOP TAIT'S CHARGE IN CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL, September 26, 1876. (The rights of translation and of reproduction are reserved.) |