3° 



Works Piihlished by Henry S. Xing &* Co., 



Theological — contiimed. 



WORKS BY THE REV. H. R. HAYvEIS, MA 



Second Edition. 



SPEECH IN SEASON. A New Volume of Sermons. Cr. 8vo. Price 9J-. 



Eighth Edition.. 



THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES. CroAva 8vo, Price 7^. *6rt^. 



Mr. Haweis writes not only feavlesslj', but with 

 remarkable freshness and vigour. In ail that he 

 says we perceive a transparent honesty and single- 

 ness of ^m^os&."—Safnr(iay Review. 



" Bears marks of 

 and individuality of 



Gazette. 



ch originality of thought 

 expression." — Pall .Va L' 



UNSECTARIAN FAMILY PRAYERS, for Morning and Evening for r. 



Week, with short selected passages from the Bible. Square crown 8vo. Price 3.?. cd. 



" These prayers are tender, devotional, and I household. They are brief, but very beautiful.' 

 helpful, and may be used with great profit in any | Cltristui 



ley ; 

 Id. 



WORKS BY THE REV. CHARLES ANDERSON, M.A- 



Second Edition. 



CHURCH THOUGHT AND CHURCH WORK. Edited by the Rev. 



Charles Anderson M. A., Vicar of St. John's, Limehouse. Containing articles 

 by the Revs. J. M. Capes, Professor Cheetham, J. LI. Davies, Harry Jones, Brooke Lam- 

 bert, A. J. Ross, the Editor, and others. Demy 8vo. 7.^. 6d 



" Mr. Anderson has accomplished his task well. • healtliy moral earnestness is conspicuous in every 

 The brief papers with which his book is filled are j one of them."— I restminster Rezu'eic. 

 almost of necessity sketchy, but they are none the [ " It is a book which may be profitably studied by 



less valuable on that account. Those who are con- 

 tending with practical difficulties in Church work, 

 could hardly do better thnn study Mr. Anderson's 

 suggestions for themselves." — Spectator. 



" This new series of papers, edited by Mr. 

 Charles Anderson, will be heartily welcomed. A 



all, whether clergymen or laymen, members of the 

 established or other churches, who attempt any kind 

 of past-oral work, for it is full of wise practical sug- 

 gestions, evidently the result of earnest observation 

 and long e.xperience, and not the mere guesses of 

 an d priori speculator.'' — Koficoii/orinist. 



Second Edition. 



WORDS AND WORKS IN A LONDON PARISH. Edited by 

 the Rev. Charles Anderson, M.A. Demy 8vo. Price 6^. 



" It has an interest of its own for not a few minds, 

 to whom the question ' Is the National Church 

 worth preserving as such, and if so, how best in- 



crease its vital power?' is of deep and grave \m^ 

 ^oxtdLWce."— Spectator. 



THE CURATE OF SHYRE. A Record of Parish Reform, with its at- 

 tendant Religious and Social Problems. By the Rev. Charles Anderson, M.A., 



Vicar of St. John's, Limehouse. Editor of " Church Thought and Church Work," and 

 *' Words and Works in a London Parish." Demy 8vo. 7.?. 6c/. 



WORKS BY THE REV. G. S. DREW, M.A. 



Vicar of Trinity, Lambeth. 



Second Edition. 

 NAZARETH : ITS LIFE AND LES- 

 SONS. Crown 8vo, 5^. 



"_We have read the volume with great interest. 

 It is at once succinct and sug-gestive, reverent 

 and ingenious, observant of small details, and yet 

 not forgetful of great principles."— .5r//zJ-/» Quar- 

 terly Review. 



" A very reverent attempt to elicit and develop 

 Scripture intimations respecting our Lord's thirty 

 years' sojourn at Nazareth. The author has 

 wrought well at the unworked mine, and has pro- 

 duced a very valuable series of Scripture lessons, 

 which will be found both profitable and singularly 

 'n\t.exesX.iv\%."—Gieardia7t. 



THE SON OP MAN. His Life and Ministry, Crown 8vo. 7.?. 6d. 



THE DIVINE KINGDOM ON EARTH AS IT IS IN HEAVEN. 8vo, loy. 6d. 



" Entirely valuable and satisfactory There is no living divine to whom the authorship 



would not be a OYe&it."— Literary Churchma^i. 



"Thoughtful and eloquent Full of "original thinking admirably expressed."— .Sr//ij/V 



Quarterly Revie7u. 



Second Edition. 

 SCRIPTURE LANDS IN CONNECTION 

 WITH THEIR HISTORY, Bevelled 

 Boards, 8vo. Price 10^. (id. 



"Mr. Drew has invented a new method of 

 illustrating Scripture history— from observation 

 of the countries. Instead of narrating his travels, 

 and referring from time to time to the facts of 

 sacred historj' belonging to the different countries, 

 he writes an outUne history of the Hebrew nation 

 from Abraham downwards, with special reference 

 to the various points in which the geography 

 illustrates the history. . . . He is very successful 

 in picturing to his readers the scenes before his 

 own mind." — Saturday Review. 



65, Cornhill ; 6^ 12, Paternoster Rozv, London. 



