Theology in the University of Halle, translated by Leonard Woods, D. D., noticed, 189. Libraries, a Plea for, with especial refer- ence to the wants of Western Institu- tions, by Rev. N. Porter, Jr.. 166. Yale College library, 167. Professors in our institutions_testify to the need of libraries, 168. The nature of edu- cation shows the need, 170. Ad- vancement of the mode of thought in- creases the demand for books, 173. A good library makes a college the cen- tre of literary attraction and influence, 174. Libraries especially needed in the institutions of a new country, 176. Danger from the uneducated minds of the West, 177. The remedy, 178. Infidelity and Romanism at the West, 181. D'Aubigne's History answered by Romanists, 182. Western mind peculiarly fitted to be influenced by error, 183. Advantage of learning, 184. A striking instance, 185. Life and Writings of Madame Guyon, by Rev. Henry T. Cheever, 608. Prefa- tory remarks, 609. Use to be made of the book, 613, Extracts, 614. Cha- racter of Madame Guyon, 616. Glance at her life and writings, 618. Her con- version, 619. A remarkable incident, 622. Remark of Professor Upham, 623. Providential trials, 624. Leaves Paris, 627. Inward conflicts-delive- rance, 629. Her life at Gex, 631. Her imprisonment, 633. Her release and second imprisonment, 635. Fenelon's defence of her, 635. Banished in con- sequence, 638. Further trials of Ma- dame Guyon, 640. Closing remarks,
Literature of the Saracens, influence of, by Edward Beecher, D. D., 145. Ten- dency to overlook it-Guizot's Histo- tory, 145. Frederick Schlegel still more one-sided, 146. Not a question of authority but of facts, 147. Baba- rian invasions, 148. Their extent, 149. Deliverance-mental, 150. A new de- velopment, 151. Saracenic develop- ment in Spain, 152. Ommiades of Spain, 154. Arabian philosophy, dia- lectical, 155. Remains of the Escuri- al library. 156. God's providence in the mixture of the races in Europe, 158. Arabia gave birth to the Euro- pean scholastic theology of the Middle Ages, 159. Arabic influence in the case of individuals, 160. Do., authors, 161. Do., on the forming literature of Europe, 163. Arabs gave the first im- pulse to European commerce, 163.
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Man and his Motives, by Geo. Moore, M.D., noticed, 747.
Marryatt Captain. His Children of the New Forest, noticed 570. Mason, Erskine, D.D. The Promise of the Spirit, 67.
Melchisedec, who was he, by Rev. Isaac Headley, 495. Not a mere man, 496. What Paul says of him, 49. Identity of Christ and Melchisedec, 500. But two priesthoods named in the Bible, 501.
Milton, John. His Poctical Works, with a Memoir and Critical Remarks, by James Montgomery, noticed. 188. Missionary Enterprise, Skepticism in Re- lation to the, by Rev. J. P. Thompson, 453. First, in relation to the condi- tion of the heathen, 455. Secondly, as to God's purpose to have the world evangelized, 463. Do as to the time, 468. Do as to any known instru- mentalities, 471. Evil of such skep- ticism, 474. It is unreasonable and wicked, 475.
Montgomery James. His work on Milton, noticed, 188.
Montgomery, Robert Rev. His Gospel in Advance of the Age, noticed, 748. Moore, George, M.D. His Power of the
Soul over the Body-Uses of the Body in Relation to the Mind-and Man and his Motives, noticed, 747. Niagara, a Poem, by Rev. C. H. A. Bulk- ley, noticed, 569. Nicodemus, by Rev. J. Macdonald, 502. Opinions of him cited, 503. Are these opinions just? 504. Probable reasons
of his visiting Christ at night, 505. Conclusion drawn from the fact false, 507. Further notice of him, 508. Notes, Critical, Explanatory, and Prac- tical, on Isaiah, by Albert Barnes, no- ticed, 379.
-on Epistles of James, Peter, John and Jude, 568. Oratory, Philosophy of Expression in, by H. P. Tappan, D. D., 698. Sound ad- mits of two divisions, 698. Elementa- ry sounds, 699. Province of philoso- phical criticism, 701. How the lan- guage of the tone appears, 702. Can the language of passion be taught, 703. Great orators were never made in the schools of oratory, 705. Other facts confirmatory, 706. Methods of cuiti- vating oratory, 708.
Owen, John J., D.D. Notes on Thucy- dides' History of the Peleponessian War, noticed. 565.
Peninsular War, Story of the, by General Charles William Vane, 751. Philosophy, Fundamental, from the Ger- man of W. T. King, noticed, 567. Pioneer History, by S. P. Hildreth, 705. Plumer, William S., D. D. His Bible true and Infidelity wicked, 752. Pond, Enoch, D. D. Republican Ten- dencies of the Bible, 283.
The Justice of God, 586. Porter, Noah, Jr., Prof. A Plea for Li- braries, with especial reference to the wants of Western institutions, 166. Power of the Soul over the Body, by Geo. Moore, M. D., noticed, 747. Pulpit Eloquence, as affected by Divine In- fluence, by Prof. J. Few Smith, 571. Eloquence held in high estimation, 572. Dependence on Divine influence not inconsistent with effort to attain to the best mode of preaching, 573. It should call out every energy, 576. Demosthenes' power, 577. Facts sus- tain the above views, 579. Pulpit elo- quence rightly affected by this doc- trine, 580. Preachers ought to study eloquence, 582. The relation of rhe- toric in theological training, 583. Puritans, Ecclesiastical Discoveries of, by Rev. G. B. Cheever, D. D. 1, Ed- wards' History of Redemption. 2. Carlyle's work on Oliver Cromwell, 5. D'Aubigne's vindication, 5. Niles' History of the Puritans, 7. Spirit of the Reformers, 13. Exodus of the Pilgrim Fathers, 14. John Robinson, 17. The embarkation, 20. The Land- ing, 21. The principles wrought out by the Puritans, 27. As to the true nature of the church, 28. The falla- cies which have prevailed, 30. As
to the freedom of the church, 33. Christ's kingdom not of this world, 34. Unity of the church taught by the dis- cipline of the Puritan Fathers, 44. The rule of the church, 49. The true mission of the church is to give the Word of God to the world, 54. Dis- cipline by which the Puritans were taught the true life and dependence of the church, 57. Singular objection raised to the American mission in Turkey, 60. Blessings secured through the instrumentality of our Puritan an- cestors, 61. Cromwell's true charac-
ter, 64. Redemption-Its Glory, by the Editor, 521. Dick's views, 523. The Bible representation of Redemption, 524. Edward's views, 526. Harris' ditto and Jenkyn, 557. Redemption the ultimate end of God's works, 229 The Plan of Redemption and its his- tory illustrative of its glory, 531. The Resurrection further declares it, 537. Bearing of the Judgment on the uni- verse, 539. The sentence of the Judgment do., 546. The Separation do., 548. The Rewards and Punish- ments of the future world an illustra- tion, 550. Redemption honors our world, 552. Glory and dignity of the church, 553.
Religion of Merit and Religion of Grace, by Rev. R. W. Hill, 478. First cha- racteristic, 479. Second, 480. Third, 483. Fourth, 485. Fifth, 486. Sixth, 488. Seventh, 489. The two sys- tems of doctrine manifest, 490. Re- veals the nature of the conflict, 492. shows the necessity of a learned and pious ministry, 493.
Revelation, a Key to the Book of, by Rev. J. M. Macdonald, noticed, 567. Revolutionary Spirit, the, by Prof. Tay- ler Lewis, LL.D., 670. Conservatism, false and true, 671. A liberal spirit, 673. The right of revolution not denied, 675. The great problem of political philosophy, 676. Character of the recent French revolution, 678. A prevalent heresy, 680. Church and state, 682. Revolutionary Spirit a great obstacle to Christianity, 684 Time and Christianity the great re- formers, 688. Individualism a radical tendency, 690. We are in no danger of feudalism, 693. Have we made progress, 694. Political virtue is at a low ebb, 695. The cause, 696. The remedy proposed, 697.
Robbins, R., D. C. His Xenophon's Me-
morabilia of Socrates, noticed, 187. Romanism and Barbarism, by Rev. H. P.
Tappan, D.D., 252. Quotations from Dr. Bushnell, 253. Connection be- tween Romanism and Barbarism, 258. Errors in determining the influence of Romanism, 259. Greek and Roman civilization, 261. Nature of Roman- ism, 263. As a religious system, 266. Divides the world into two great classes, 268. Papacy and the state, 269. Condition of the papal states, 271. Mexico, 273. Character of our emigrant population, 275. Their so- cial and political condition, 277. The remedy for the evil, 280.
Roman Chancery, Tax Book of the, by Rev. Albert Guernsey, 359. The be- lief in regard to it, 360. Character of this so-called tax-book, 361. Confu- sion of works, 362. Two copies pro- fessedly authentic, agreeing, 363. Edi- tion of 1514 not the earliest, 365. The identity of the edition of Silber and that of Dr. Mont, 367. The charge of for- gery, 368. The tax-book in question genuine, 371. Does not permit the commission of crimes, 372. Compa- rison of items, 374. Character of the penitentiary taxes, 375. Abuses of it, 377. Conclusion, 378.
Sabbath Manual, by Justin Edwards, D. D., noticed, 754.
Sabbath Readings, by Thomas Chalmers, noticed, 752.
Scripture Readings, by Thomas Chalmers, noticed, 379, 567.
Salkeld, Joseph, A. M, First Book in Spanish, noticed, 754.
Sanborn, Prof. Aids to Classical Study,
Sherman, Rev. James. His Guide to Acquaintance with God, noticed, 752. Sherwood, Rev. J. M. Redemption-its Glory, 521.
Skinner, T. H., D. D. Nature of the Atonement, 86.
Smith, Prof. J. Few, Pulpit Eloquence, as affected by Divine Influence, 571. Spanish, First Book in, by Joseph Salk- eld, A. M., noticed, 754.
Spear, Rev. S. T. His Family Power, 750. Spencer, Rev. J. A. His gospels in Greek, noticed, 187.
Spirit, Promise of the, by Rev. Erskine Mason, D. D., 67. Meaning of the promise, 68. Miraculous endowments, 69. The point established by an ana- lysis, of Pentecostal scenes, 70. The natural mind does not apprehend re- vealed truth, 71. The change wrought by the Spirit, 73. The reality of this
agency, 75. Success of the gospel de- pendent upon it, 76. Necessity of making this truth more prominent, 79. Power of religion is in its facts, not in its theory, 82. Hopes of the church built on the promise of the Spirit, 83. Spiritual Heroes, by John Stoughton, no- ticed, 749.
Stoughton, John. His Spiritual Heroes, noticed, 749.
Tables of Logarithms of numbers and of sines and Tangents, by Prof. Loomis, noticed, 748.
Tacitus, the Germania and Agricola of, notes by Prof. Tyler noticed, 380. Tappan, H. P. D. D. Romanism and Barbarism, 252.
-Philosophy of Expression in Oratory, 698.
Tayler, C. B. Rev. His Thankfulness, noticed, 754.
Thackeray, M. W. His Vanity Fair, 754. Thankfulness, by Rev. C. B. Tayler, 753. Thompson's Seasons, noticed, 190. Thompson, Rev. J. P. Skepticism in re- lation to the missionary enterprise,453. Torrey's Neander, by Rev. S. M. Hopkins, A. M., 126. Character of the trans- lation, 127. The main idea of the work, 129. An instructive chapter, 131. Temptations to which Christians were subjected in the Decian persecu- tion, 134. Cyprian's Efforts, 137. Novatus, 138. The struggle between them, 141. Novatus opposes the Bishop of Rome, and organizes a sepa- rate church, 142. The strife which ensued, 143.
Tyler, Prof. His Notes on Tacitus, 380. Undesigned Coincidences in the writings of the Old and New Testaments, by J. J. Blunt, D. D., noticed, 190. Upham, Thomas C. His memoir of Ma- dame Guyon, noticed, 187.
Vane, General. His Peninsular War, 751. Vanity Fair, by W. M. Thackeray, 753. Vernon Edward, by E. V. Childe, 752. Webster, Noah, LL.D. His American Dictionary, noticed, 188. Western New York, by Rev. James H. Hotchkin, noticed, 747.
White, Charles, D.D. Influence of col- leges especially on Western Education and Civilization, 383. William the Cottager, noticed, 570. Wilson, Rev. R. His Infant Baptism, 749. Xenophon's Memorabilia of Socrates, with
notes, by R. D. C. Robbins, noticed, 187. Young Schoolmistress, by Joseph Alden, D.D., noticed, 752.
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