the singular charm of being direct, to the point, lucid, and 

 without verbiage from beginning to end. . . . Dr. Hall . . , 

 lays down, with exactness and precision, the question at 

 issue. . . . Dr. Hall has done good work in discriminating as 

 he has done between the views of Kenotic Schools. . . . No- 

 where have we seen a better answer to the baseless assump- 

 tions which have been made in England and America to 

 formulate a complete doctrine of the Incarnation out of a 

 single passage in St. Paul's w^ritings." — Living Church. 



"Professor Hall has presented us with a strong plea for the 

 orthodox and traditional teaching on the side of the doctrine 

 of the Incarnation." — The Churchman, Toronto. 



"Dr. Hall's book ... is valuable and opportune. . . . We 

 can commend it to the clergy and to students of theology and 

 to general readers as containing a powerful argument very 

 clearly expressed, and as bearing marks of much careful 

 study and thought." — Church Quarterly Review, Jan. 

 1899. 



"Many a larger treatise lacks the note of distinction so 

 evident here. Really this book is a patient, scholarlike and 

 judicial examination of the most pressing problem of present 

 day Christology. . . . The book is a fine study in dogmatic 

 method. . . . No sufficient insight in so brief a review can be 

 given into his constant alertness, his scholarlike prepared- 

 ness, and his entire freedom from remarks that may wound." 

 — Alfred Cave, in the Critical Review. 



"The book should be in every circulating library, and 

 should be not merely read, but studied, as a treatise which 

 from its merits is a candidate for a place as a handbook 

 upon an integral question in theology." — Church Times. 



"Dr. Hall has given us in a small compass a really learned 

 and able treatise on a doctrine which has recently been made 

 the subject of much earnest discussion among. us. He writes 

 with real knowledge of his subject, and brings to bear upon 

 it a singularly acute and thoughtful mind." — Guardian, 



LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. 



NEW YORK, LONDON, BOMBAY, and CALCUTTA 



