JAMES H. SNOWDEN, D.D.
The Psychology of Religion
8vo, cloth, net $1.50.
Psychology is one of the most rapidly advancing of modern
sciences, and Dr. Snowden's book will find a ready welcome.
While especially adapted for the use of ministers and teachers,
it is not in any sense an ultra-academic work. This is
evidenced by the fact that the material forming it has been
delivered not only as a successful Summer School course, but
in the form of popular lectures, open to the general public.
WILLIAM HALLOCK JOHNSON, Ph.D., D.D.
Professor of Greek and New Testament Literature in Lincoln University, Pa.
The Christian Faith under Modern
Searchlight
The L. P. Stone Lectures, Princeton. Introduction
by Francis L. Patton, D.D. Cloth, net $1.25.
The faith which is to survive must not only be a traditional
but an intelligent faith which has its roots in reason and experience
and its blossom and fruit in character and good
works. To this end, the author examines the fundamentals
of the Christian belief in the light of to-day and reaches the
conclusion that every advance in knowledge establishes its
sovereign claim to be from heaven and not from men.
ANDREW W. ARCHIBALD, D.D.
Author of "The Bible Verified," "The Trend of the Centuries," etc.
The Modern Man Facing the Old
Problems
12mo, cloth, net $1.00.
A thoughtful, ably-conducted study in which those problems
of human life, experience and destiny, which, in one
form or another, seem recurrent in every age, are examined
from what may be called a Biblical viewpoint. That is to say,
the author by its illuminating rays, endeavors to find elucidation
and solution for the difficulties, which in more or less
degree, perplex believer and unbeliever alike.
NOLAN RICE BEST
Editor of "The Continent"
Applied Religion for Everyman
12mo, cloth, net $1.00.
Nolan Rice Best has earned a well-deserved reputation in
the religious press of America, as a writer of virile, trenchantly-phrased
editorials. The selection here brought together
represent his best efforts, and contains an experienced editor's
suggestions for the ever-recurrent problems confronting
Church members as a body, and as individual Christians. Mr.
Best wields a facile pen, and a sudden gleam of beauty, a
difficult thought set in a perfect phrase, or an old idea invested
with new meaning and grace, meets one at every turn
of the page."—The Record Herald.