. Arena magazine - Volume 40. f the Primitive Church. The present volume by the Rev. SamuelCarter is the earnest plea of a Presbyteriandivine for a broader and truer conception ofGod than the creed-worshipers of the oldchurch are willing to accord the SupremeBeing. It is a vital work that merits thewidest possible circulation among orthodoxChristians who yearn for something more thanthe husks of scholastic or creedal principal chapters concern God,Christ, Man, Future Punishment,and The Church. In the opening chapterMr. Carter shows that the pulpit has lost itsold-time hold on the


. Arena magazine - Volume 40. f the Primitive Church. The present volume by the Rev. SamuelCarter is the earnest plea of a Presbyteriandivine for a broader and truer conception ofGod than the creed-worshipers of the oldchurch are willing to accord the SupremeBeing. It is a vital work that merits thewidest possible circulation among orthodoxChristians who yearn for something more thanthe husks of scholastic or creedal principal chapters concern God,Christ, Man, Future Punishment,and The Church. In the opening chapterMr. Carter shows that the pulpit has lost itsold-time hold on the people. All over-mastering power has gone from it and neverwill come back till the preachers have foundthe true theology, based on the love of Godand the brotherhood of man. Having shownhow the old theology has slandered Deity, theauthor turns to a consideration of Jesus Christ: Having darkened for us the beautiful faceof God, the old theology went on to confuseand disturb our knowledge of and delight inJesus Christ, His WILLIAM SALISBURY,Author of The Career of a Journalist. One of the chief marks of the greatness andgoodness of the Lord Jesus is that men lovehim so much in spite of all that the scholasticshave said and done about him. And some ofthe worst of this saying and doing has been inthe Councils themselves. Dean Milman inhis Church History says, A general Councilwas a field of battle. Men met with all theexcitement, the estrangement, the jealousy, theantipathy engendered by fierce bishop was committed to his own opinionand was exasperated by opposition. Theytried to triumph over their adversaries ratherthan dispassionately seek the truth. GregoryNazianzen, a church father of high name andsanctity, writes: I have never known anassembly of bishops to terminate well. Theystrive only for power, they behave like angrylions to the small and like fawning spaniels tothe great. It would seem as though a heraldhad convoked to the Council all the gluttons,vil


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