14 JAMES GEMMELL, GEORGE IV. BRIDGE, EDINBURGH. 



Treatise on the Lord's Supper ; Its Nature, 



Uses, Ends, and Perpetual Obligation. Exposure of 

 Romanist and Ritualistic Perversions. With Practical 

 Directions for its Observance. By PROF. THOMAS 

 HOUSTON, D.D., R. P. Church of Ireland, Knockbracken, 

 Belfast Crown 8vo, (350 pp.), price 5/. 



" This work, undertaken by Dr. Houston partly at the suggestion of friends 

 who knew his competency, is really a treatise on the Lord's Supper. The 

 author is well acquainted with the history aud literature of the subject, and 

 has succeeded in his aim, which was to present a comprehensive exhibition 

 of the doctrine of the Lord's Supper as it appeared in its primitive institu- 

 tion and apostolic practice, and as it is held forth in the symbolic books of 

 the purest Protestant Churches. The questions, ancient and modern, that 

 have arisen round this sacrament are more or less touched upon the ' un- 

 fermented wine' question, and also simultaneous communion, being referred 



to However the shaking theology of the present day may receive the 



work, it is full of the ' old wine ' of Scriptural and Puritan teaching, such as 

 would have delighted the communicants of other days, and will still be re- 

 lished by those who prefer the old to the new, for the old is better 



This volume is a compact treatise, elegantly got up and full of excellent 

 matter." Presbyterian Monthly. 



"The volume is the result of extensive reading and much thought. The 

 list of books upon the subjects which appear in the Appendix is taken from 

 all sections of the Church of Christ, and will give the reader some idea of 

 the literature of the question The book will repay an attentive per- 

 usal, and is well fitted to impress on devout readers the spiritual advantages 

 to be derived from the frequent observance of the ordinance." Scottish Con- 

 gregational Magazine. 



''Full of excellent matter." Presbyterian Monthly. 



" A most valuable treatise on the Lord's Supper." IRISH BAPTIST MAGA- 

 ZINE. 



" The result of extensive reading and much thought." SCOTTISH CONGRE- 

 GATIONAL MAGAZINE. 



The Dominion and Glory of the Redeemer, 



The Support and Confidence of the Church, and the Joy 



of the Saints. By PROF. THOMAS HOUSTON, D.D., R. 



P. Church of Ireland, Knockbracken, Belfast. Crown 



8vo, c?., with port., (48U pp.), price 5/. 



"We have here twenty -three sermons selected by Dr. Houston from 'the 

 numerous manuscripts that have been accumulating during a lengthened 

 ministry of more than fifty-two years.' .... 'The chief aim in delivering 

 these discourses was to display the Saviour in the transcendent glory of His 

 Person, Character, and Work, .... while some of the subjects are more 

 directly connected with the subjective condition of believers their labours, 

 trials, conflicts, and deliverances in life and death ' . . . . The sermons are 

 Scriptural, sound, earnest, and mingle the doctrinal and practical elements 

 as these should ever be mingled in the preaching of the Word. There are no 

 modern vagaries or aberrations." Witness. 



" From the author's familiar acquaintance with the original languages, he 

 often .... throws what will be to the unlearned reader new or clearer 



light on a word or phrase None more suitable could be found for 



family reading on the evening of the Sabbath." The Covenanter. 



The Scots Worthies. By JOHN HOWIE, of 



Lochgoin. New edition, with Notes, 464 pp., 32mo, 6d, 

 or in cloth I/. 



