HALL'S DOGMATIC THEOLOGY 



VOLUME III — THE BEING AND ATTRIBUTES 



OF GOD 



Church Union Gazette, London: "An atmosphere of 

 solid, hard work breathes through this book. The reader is 

 made to feel that every sentence has been deeply weighed, 

 and more than once rewritten. The task ... is of an in- 

 tensely difficult nature, but the result . . . can be generally 

 described as successful in the better sense of the word. The 

 success chiefly consists of the lucid classifications of argument 

 and criticism which surround these first principles of theology. 

 . . . Some of the sentences, from their condensed nature, are 

 extremely valuable." 



Expository Times: "Its doctrine of God is not in every 

 respect our doctrine. What of that? We shall learn the 

 more from it. It is the book of a student, the book of a 

 thinker, the book of a believer. There is not a loose sentence 

 in it, and there is no trivial rhetoric. It is above all the book 

 of a student. Professor Hall's knowledge of the subject is 

 an amazement." 



Pacific Churchman, San Francisco: "This is the third 

 volume of what bids fair to be a monumental work, and that 

 not in the brainal sense of the phrase, but a really enduring 

 work based on a solid foundation of adequate learning . . . 

 we may be allowed to bear such witness as we can, not merely 

 to the profound learning in which its arguments are rooted, 

 but to the lucid way in which those arguments are marshalled 

 and worked out. We cannot just now recall any book which 

 covers anything like the ground this does." 



Sewanee Review, Tennessee: "In spite of the above 

 strictures which we have felt it our duty to make (and which 

 of course by no means indicate the positive and constructive 

 value of Dr. Hall's work), we feel that we ought not to lay 

 down these volumes without saying that in our judgment 

 the present series, as it has thus far appeared, is making a 

 significant and encouraging addition to the somewhat scanty 

 theological literature of the Protestant Episcopal Church." 



