IX. 



Now Ready, Vols. I. II. and III., 8s. each. 



The Scottish Pulpit, 



Containing a Body of Original matter, nowhere to be met 

 with in quality so superior, and at a price so very reason- 

 able. The Sermons are by the most eminent living 

 Divines of the Church of Scotland ; and, for the most 

 part, have either been furnished by the authors themselves, 

 or corrected by them before appearing in print. 



Scottish Pulpit, Vol; III. — " We hail the appearance of 

 this volume with much pleasure. The extensive sale which 

 the work enjoys, and deservedly enjoys, is a favourable 

 symptom, or rather a gratifying proof, that feelings of 

 christian piety still exist to an encouraging extent in our 

 land. It would very greatly benefit society were such writ- 

 ings to become much more prevalent, and take the place of 

 those, which under the name of politics or political economy, 

 and under the pretence of teaching the art of Government, 

 are souring men's minds, and rendering them turbulent, 

 discontented, and unhappy. It signifies very little for a 

 man to have his head stuffed with crude undigested know- 

 ledge, which he probably will never have an opportunity to 

 apply ; but not so with the knowledge here communicated, 

 because it is such as deeply interests every man, not only in 

 his passage through this transitory scene of life, but in 

 future and endless ages. The present volume contains 

 upwards of 70 sermons, some of them by the most eminent 

 ministers of which Scottish Ecclesiastical Literature can 

 boast, while others are. from pens, whose owners, though 

 not yet perhaps much known to fame, are in the fair way of 

 obtaining it, if the sermons, under notice, be fair criteria 

 of their merits. The volume, in addition to its other pro- 

 perties, is very handsomely printed. It is, moreover, em- 

 bellished with a portrait of the late Rev. John Geddes, of 

 whom a memoir is given. We recommend the volume, not 

 as one worthy of a single perusal, and then to be laid aside 

 and forgotten, but as one that may be perused and re- per- 

 used with increasing pleasure and increasing profit."— 

 Paisley Advertiser. 



" I'he third volume of this excellent body of practical 

 theology is completed ; and its merits, we think, are even 

 greater than those of the volumes by which it was preceded. 

 There is a marked improvement in the style of the sermons, 



