HALL'S DOGMATIC THEOLOGY 



London Quarterly Review: "Dr. Hall uses his space 

 well ... he writes with candour and ability." 



Church Times, London: "Everything that is said in this 

 book about oecumenical authority, the authority of Councils, 

 of National Churches, and so forth, is admirable . . . [Referring 

 to the whole series]. That is a great enterprise, worthily 

 begun." In this paper's annual summary of theological 

 literature occurs the passage, "Dr. F. J. Hall's great work on 

 dogmatic theology has come to its second volume." 



Pax, England: "As a really good compendium with valu- 

 able references, this book deserves all praise." 



Sewanee Review, Tennessee: " Prof. Hall has a very dis- 

 tinct gift for systematizing." 



Irish Theological Quarterly, Dublin: " Viewing this 

 volume independently on its merits there are many things 

 in it, as in the Introduction, which we can heartily praise and 

 commend. . . . His volume is well worthy of being read, not 

 only by those Anglicans for whom it is intended, but by 

 Catholic theologians and apologists." 



Living Church, Milwaukee: On the authority of the 

 papacy, "Perhaps no concise statement of this subject in 

 Anglican literature excels that which Professor Hall gives 

 to it. . . . Not less important ... is the writer's considera- 

 tion of biblical authority. He succeeds in doing that which 

 so many have essayed to do and have often failed; that is 

 to say, in harmonizing the undoubted position of the Church 

 to the effect that 'the Bible is the Word of God' with the rec- 

 ognition of the manifold elements which make up the books 

 collected in the sacred scriptures. . . . We believe that . . . 

 Dr. Hall states most adequately and most accurately the 

 answer of the Anglican communion to the questions that 

 divide Christians to-day, and that on substantially the lines 

 of his answer must be built up the position that will ulti- 

 mately prove the factor that will unite Christendom." 



