Eschylus, late editions of, 411. African Languages, 745. In North Africa, number of languages is very great, 746. In South Africa, dialects closely related, 747; lat- ter remarkable for beauty, ele- gance and philosophical arrange- ment, 747. Mandingo, Grebo and Mpongwe compared, 748. Gre- bo and Mpongwe people, 749. Difference in the three dialects, 751; compared in respect to or- thography, 753. Particles, 755. Nouns, 757. Adjectives and defi- nite pronouns, 761. Personal pro- nouus, 763. Verbs, 765. Mpon- gwe verb, 767. Conjugations of regular verbs, 769. Syntax of the Mpongwe, 771. 'Ain, site of, 408.
Alschefski's Livy, noticed, 182. Andover Theol. Seminary, Library, 604.
Antiquities in Syria, 403. Apamea, site of, 406.
Apostles, Canons of the, essay by Dr. Chase, 1.
Assyrian Monuments, excavated, 794.
Bara-El, site of, 407.
Baur, Prof., his work on History of
Doctrines characterized, 578. Becker, Prof., death of, 212. Biblical Works lately published, 208. Boise, Prof., on the Study of Ho- mer, 323.
Brown, John, D. D., Essay on 1 Pe- ter 3: 18-21, on Christ preaching to the spirits in prison, 708.
Buch, Carl W., translation of Hagen- bach's History, 552. Bunhill Fields, burying-ground, 582.
Canons of the Apostles, Essay ou, 1. Krabbe's essay, 1. Effects of the Reformation on theological learn- ing, 2. Opinions concerning the canons, 3. Daillé and Beveridge, 5. Probable origin in the 2d and 3d centuries, 6. Only fifty canons admitted by the Latin church, 7. Traces in early times, 9. Num- bered with apocryphal books, 12. Called apostolical from their doc- trines, 13. Fifth canon danger- ous to Romish church, 15. Elev- enth to the twenty-fourth, 17. Ca- nons which refer to bishops, 19. On baptism, 21. Later canons, 23. Capital Punishment, Goodwin's Es- say on, 270, 435.
Chase, Irah, D. D., Essay on the ca-
nons of the apostles, 1. Christ," preaching to the spirits in prison," exposition of, 708. Chrysostom, Apb., viewed as a preach- er, 605. Sketch of his life, 606. Education, 607. Preaching at An- tioch, 608. Disputes with the em- press, 609. First banishment, 610. Recal, 610. Second banishment, 611. Sufferings and death, 612. Excellence as a biblical interpre- ter, 615; as a preacher, 616. Man- ner of discussion, 617; force, ar- dor and vivacity, 618; applause, 619; richness in imagery, 620 ; faults in thinking, style and prac-
tical principles, 621; playing on words, 622. List of his principal productions, 623; mostly homilies, 624. Specimens of his discourses, 625; on almsgiving, 626; touch- ing exordiums, 627; introductions disproportionate, 630; appeal a- gainst the theatre, 631; confidence in God, 633; on the vanity of earthly things, 637; comparisons, 639; examples from his own life, 640; touching eloquence, 641; use of circumstances, 643; faults and mistakes, 647. His preemi- nence, 649.
in America, 161. Dr. Marsh, 163. New England theology, 165. Ec- lectic students of Coleridge, 167. Undigesting recipients, 168. Fig- urative philosophers, 168. Ten- dency of his system, 169. Confessing Christ before men, Müller's sermons, 232. Correspondence, 598, 793.
Day, Prof. H. N., Essay by, on Mood in Language, 68. Dignity of Man, Müller's Sermon on, 221.
Church History, Neander's, noticed, Dimmick, Rev. L. F., Essay on Pro- 386.
Church Christian, festivals of, 650. Cicero's Laelius, 202. Coleman, Lyman, D. D., on Festivals
of the Christian Church, 650. Coleridge and his American Disciples,
117. Renown of Coleridge, 118. Birth and parentage, 119. Uni- versity life, 121. Residence in Germany, 122. His intellectual peculiarities, 123. Character of his prose writings, 125. Influence on theology, 127. English theology before his time, 128. His man- ner of pursuing theological inves- tigation, 131. His distinction be- tween speculative and practical views, 133. His objections to the Tri-unity of God, 135. He would vindicate Christianity from its na- ture and evidences, 137. His ac- tual influence was great, 139. His error in seeking philosophical truth in the Bible, 141. His view of the incarnation unauthorized, 145. View of redemption erron- eous, 147. His weakness in the solution of single passages, 149. Other defects in his theory of the atonement, 151. His view of ori- ginal sin, 153. Loose views of inspiration, 155. Speculative rea- son, 157. Coleridge's influence
phecies in relation to the Jews, 337, 471.
Edwards, Prof. B. B., Translations from Müller's Sermons, 218. Lit- erary Intelligence, 409. Article on Puritan Library, 582. Miscel- lany, 598. Letters, 600. Article on University of Oxford, 773. Se- lect Biblical and Literary Intelli- gence, 791.
Emerson, Prof. R., Translation of the Correspondence between Profes- sor Voigt and the bishop of Ro- chelle, 540.
England, works published in, 204, 797.
Festivals of Christian Church, 650. Christmas, Easter and Whitsun- day, 650. Observance of Christmas began in the 4th century, 651. St. John's day, 652. Circumcision, 652. Solemnities of Easter, 653. Good Friday, 654. Whitsunday and Ascension, 655. Relation of these festivals to the seasons, 657; to the Jewish feasts, 658; both have reference to the seasons and to important historical facts, 659. Transfer of the first two Jewish
er's Hebrew Roots, 369. Hazor, Site of, 403.
feasts to Easter and Whitsuntide, | Hay, Prof. Charles, Review of Mei- 661. Analogy between Christian feasts and those of pagans, 662. Roman feasts in January and Feb- ruary, 663; April and May, 665; remainder of the year, 666. Reli- gious festivals peculiar to all forms of religion, 667. Jewish prescri- bed, 669. Christian result from the free spirit of Christianity, 669. Free Agency consistent with God's purposes, 77.
Hebrew Roots, Meier on, 369. Hebrew Sentence, Structure of, 171. Position of the predicate, 173. Subject, 175. Definitive particle, 177. Repetition of words, 179. Negative particles, 181. Hengstenberg's Christology, 791. Historical Works lately publish- ed, 206.
History of Docrines, much needed, 551. Uses of, 553. Christianity the only system that has doctrines, 554. Produces preachers and the- ologians, 555. Indifference to this history, 557. Church progressive internally and externally, 559. Ob- ject of a history of doctrine to give the order in which divine truth has been unfolded in the church, 560. Hagenbach's work best com- pend, 562. Characteristics of Ger- man church historians, 563. Stu- dy of this subject in Germany, 565. List of able writers, 566. Qualities of Hagenbach's work, 567. Proper divisions of a histo- ry, 568; into general and special, 570. German writers do not treat of the Calvinistic portion of this History, 571. Faults in the trans- lation, 572. Nature of Baur's in- quiries, 577. Bad tendencies of his system, 579. Present contest with Rationalism, 581.
Homer, Prof. Boise on, 323. Value of Felton's Iliad, 323. Influence of Homer, 324. Inadequacy of the best translations, 325. H. N. Cole- ridge's opinion, 326. Useful aim of Felton's notes, 327. Exquisite literary taste of the edition, 328. Proper object of notes, 329. Wolf's Prolegomena, 330. Grote's opin- ion, 331. Beautiful scenes in Ho- mer, 332. His delineations of characters, 333. Vividness of his
pictures, 334. His personifications, 335.
Horace, recent German editions of, 201.
Hug's Introduction, new edition, 792. Hupfeld, Prof., Letter from, 600.
Intelligence, Literary and Miscellan- eous, 201, 409, 598, 791.
Jacobs Frederic, 791.
Jesus Christ, his perfect moral excel- lence, 230. The fisher of men, 231. Jews, Prophecies in relation to the Return of to Palestine, 337, 471. Subject important, 471. Literal and figurative view of the Prophe- cies, 338. Arguments in favor of the literal return examined, 339. Meaning of "everlasting cove- nant," 342. This covenant in one sense everlasting, 345. Alleged fact that the Jews have never possessed the whole of the prom- ised land, 347. Solomon did reign over the whole, 349. Express declarations, 350. Captivity and restoration, 351. Predictions of Isaiah, 353. Much of them re- lates to return from Babylon, 355. Others relate to the Messiah, 358; or the future spiritual glory of his reign, 360. The literal meaning exhausted, 362. Jeremiah to be interpreted in a similar way, 362. Return of Israel and Judah from captivity, 366. Testimony of Eze- kiel, 471. Chapter 36th of that prophet, 473. Last part of the book a glowing picture of the re- stored city and temple, 475. Dan- iel and Hosea contain nothing de- cisive, 476. Joel, 477. Amos, 478. Other minor prophets, 479. Haggai and Zechariah, 480. Mal- achi, 481. Predictions of the Old
Testament figurative and spiritual, 483. Few passages in the New Testament, 483. Spirit of the new dispensation, 485. Saviour's declarations, 487. Passages in Romans, 489. Gentiles and Jews alike favored, 491. Providential circumstances, 493. Separation of Jews, 495. Influence of Jew- ish converts on Gentiles, 497. Lit- eral fulfilment injurious to Jews, 501.
Josephus, Traill's edition of, noticed,
K. Khanásereh, site of, 406. Kühner's Latin Grammar, 203. Kliefoth's History of Doctrines, 554.
L. Language, Mood in, 68. Languages of Africa, 745. Laodicea, site of, 408. Latin Grammar by Zumpt, reviewed, 413, 696.
Lazaro, St., island of, 412. Library, Puritan, importance of in New England, 582. Should in- clude books, etc. 590; Mss., 591; portraits, prints, etc. 592; miscel- laneous memorials, 593. It would form a centre of associations, 594; memorial of theology of Puritans, 594; perpetuate religious princi- ples, 595; aid the historian, 596 ; promote good feeling, exert a fa- vorable influence on literature, and prevent loss of valuable
Lincoln, Prof. J. L., Review of Al-
schefski's Livy, 182. Notice of
Lincoln's Livy, 412.
Livy, Alschefski's edition, 182. Edi-
tions of Drachenborch and Kreys- sig, 183. Mss. used by Alschef- ski, 185. His school edition, 187. New edition by Prof. Lincoln, 412.
Lyman,J. B.,Translation of Extracts, Neumann, Prof.C.F., work on China, from Tholuck's Dialogues, 236.
Machiavelli, note, 471. Mandingo Language, 745. Meier's Lexicon of Hebrew Roots, reviewed, 369. Relation of the Semitic and Indo-European lan- guages, 370. Rödiger's opinion that these two classes do not stand in a close relationship, 271. Hints thrown out by Gesenius, 372. Meier's opinion that there was a kind of linguistic instinct origi- nally active in the formation of the Semitic dialects, 373. Object and use of reduplication, 375. Prae-reduplicated verbal stems, 377. Semitic dialects and the Egyptian, 379. Specimens trans- lated from Meier, 381. Mezzofanti, Cardinal, visit to, 601. Milton John, birth-place and burial, 583.
Miscellany, 598, 791.
Mpongwe Language, Wilson on, 745. Mood in Language, 68. Definitions,
68. Mood as the expression of the copula, 69. Three possible kinds, 70. Moods in actual use, 71. Use of moods in dependent clauses, 73. Uses of the verb in dependent clauses, 75. Objective use of the verb, 76.
Neander's Church History, 386. Early life of the author, 387. Parallel between him and John Foster, 389. Intercourse with Varnhagen and Neumann, 390. Letter to Chamisso, 391. Intellectual and religious history, 393. Letters, 394. Early religious development, 395. Independence of mind, 399. His history, written from the heart, 400. Value of Torrey's transla- tion, 402.
Nineveh and vicinity, Discoveries of Botta, Layard, etc. 794.
Owen's edition of Xenophon, 205. Orontes, river, source of, 408.
Paniel, C. F. W., on Chrysostom, translated and condensed, 605. Park, Prof. E. A., Essay on Power in the Pulpit, 96. Pentateuch, Greek version of, edition by Thiersch reviewed, 188. Prin- ciples on which it is made, 189. Its relation to Classic Greek, 191. Hebraistic character, 193. Use of the Infinitive, 195. Pickering's Greek Lexicon, reviewed, 196.
Porter, Prof. N. W., article on Cole- ridge, 117.
Power in the Pulpit, 96. Direct in- fluence of the Spirit, 96. Preach- ing in order to be powerful must be argumentative, 97; ablest min- isters have been such, 99. Posi- tive character of sermons, 100; opposed to a controversial meth- od, 102. Limits of controversy in the pulpit, 103. Presentation of single truths, 105. Proper com- bination of truths, 106. Freedom of the pulpit, 109; simplicity and affectionateness of feeling, 112; feeling of dependence on God, 115.
Punishment Capital, Essay on, by Prof. Goodwin of Bowdoin Col- lege, 270. Painful subject for re- flection, 271. Propriety of the ar- gument being defensive, 271. Right and expediency, 272. True ground of penal inflictions, 273. Idea of just puuishment involves the idea of crime as such, 274. Distinction between what is just
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