HALL'S DOGMATIC THEOLOGY 



Journal of Theological Studies, Oxford and Cambridge: 

 "The author's learning and wide reading are as conspicuous 

 throughout the book as is his fidelity to the point of view "... 



Church Union Gazette, London: ... "is a compara- 

 tively small book into which an immense amount of valuable 

 fact and criticism has been compressed . . . there breathes a 

 spirit of large-mindedness, a refusal to be confined within any 

 groove of prejudice. The last chapter, on the literature of 

 Dogmatic Theology, is particularly valuable." 



Church Standard, Philadelphia: "He is a brave man who 

 ventures to undertake a task of such magnitude and character 

 in a country where theological literature does not find nu- 

 merous purchasers. Dr. Hall has this courage, and the Intro- 

 duction leads us to trust that he will persist in his boldness 

 and that a favouring Providence will permit him to complete 

 his undertaking. . . . Dr. Hall is not Latin. He is Catholic, 

 to be sure, very much so, but in the true Anglican spirit he 

 continues to bring the modern into his Catholicity, and give 

 us a modern while he is giving a Catholic theology." 



Expository Times: After referring to the writer's briefer 

 outlines, "the fuller scope of the new volume reveals a new 

 writer, a writer with a very extensive knowledge of the litera- 

 ture of his subject, to which he makes continual reference, 

 and one who has manifestly mastered its literature and made 

 his subject a real personal possession." 



Scottish Chronicle: "Those who have read the author's 

 'Kenotic Theory' will expect to find in this book learning, 

 clear exposition, and lucidity of style, and they will not be 

 disappointed, for here we find all the characteristics of the 

 former volume. . . . Its earnestness and learning are ad- 

 mirable." 



The Tablet, London: "Much in the work we should like 

 to commend; there is a goodly proportion of teaching drawn 

 from St. Thomas and other Catholic theologians, and many 

 acute observations occur on modern difficulties. . . . This 

 book will be of some use for those for whom it is intended." 



