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scheme which makes nothing of baptism and the organic unity of the house; that looks upon the children as being heathens or aliens, requiring, of course, to be converted. But, according to the scheme here presented, they are not heathens or aliens, but they are in and of the household of faith, and their growing up is to be in the same. Parents, therefore, in the religious teaching of their children, are not to have it as a point of fidelity to press them into some crisis of high experience, called conversion. Their teaching is to be that which feeds a growth, not that which stirs a revolution. It is to be nurture, presuming on grace already and always given, and, for just that reason, jealously careful to raise no thought of some high climax to be passed.-P. 381.

On p. 372 he says:

As little are young children to be taught that they are of course unregenerated. This, with many, is even a fixed point of orthodoxy, and of course they have no doubt of it. They put their children on the precise footing of heathens, and take it for granted that they are to be converted in the same manner. But they ought not to be in the same condition as heathens.

Now it seems to us that very little room is left here for depravity, and it is putting a very fine edge on conversion if it be taught at all. Yet the developments of depravity, and the beginning of the Christian life in an infant soul, may be quite imperceptible. We have found that all the advocates of this theory of Christian nurture mingle the shadings of nature and grace very delicately at this point. The case of a conversion in adult years is thus narrated:

A young man happens accidentally one Sunday, while his friends are gone to ride, to take down a book on the evidences of Christianity. His eye floating over one of the pages, becomes fixed, and he is surprised to find his feelings flowing out strangely into its holy truths. He is conscious of no struggle of hostility, but a new joy dawns in his being. Henceforth, to the end of a long and useful life, he is a Christian man.-P. 19.

Now this is changing masters, passing from death unto life, being born again, and made a new creature in Christ Jesus very quietly indeed. This easy, almost imperceptible transition from nature to grace presented by our author is one of the principal points upon which we hesitate.

The book is divided into two parts: I. The doctrine, with its definition and the arguments sustaining it. Christian nurture, is nurturing infant Christians. It is not a process to make Christians by seeking to bring about a change, but taking the subjects as we find them, simply training and developing them into Christians. The arguments in favor of the doctrine are drawn from "the organic unity of the family," which is a strong and beautiful one, and from the ordinance of "infant baptism," and the right of "children to Church membership." The importance of the doctrine to the Christian Church is presented in a chapter on "the outpopulating power of the Christian stock." Of this doctrine

and the arguments sustaining it we must say they are beautiful, beneficial, reasonable, traditional, and not anti-scriptural.

The author is very severe on the present mode of religious training, by which children are brought up for conversion in converting times. It is characterized as very much like raising sheep for the shambles. There is a remarkable coincidence between the author's views as to the duties of the Church toward baptized children and the chapter on the same subject in the Discipline of the M. E. Church. One might readily suppose that they were the product of the same mind.

Part II contains eight chapters, on the MODE of Christian nurture: 1. When it begins. 2. Parental qualifications. 3. Physical nurture. 4. That which discourages children. 5. Family government. 6. Plays and pastimes, holidays and Sundays. 7. Christian teaching of children. 8. Family prayers. The author thinks that "the age of impressions" is the most important of a child's life, and the period when the parent can do most for it. On this subject he says:

I have no scales to measure quantities of effect in this matter of early training, but I may be allowed to express my solemn conviction that more, as a general fact, is done, or lost by neglect of doing, on a child's immortality in the first three years of his life, than in all his years of discipline afterward.

The age of impressions, he thinks, covers three or four times this number of years.

Let every Christian father and mother understand, when their child is three months old, that they have done more than half of all they will ever do for his character.-P. 248.

No Christian parent can read this portion of the book without having his views of responsibility to his children quickened, if not greatly enlarged, and the humbling conviction of past delinquency pressed heavily upon him.

Notices of the following works, lately received, will appear in our next number.

Bancroft's History of the United States. Vols. 7 and 8, from Little & Brown.

Carthage and her Remains. By DAVIS. Harper & Brothers. Recreations of a Country Parson. Second Series. Ticknor & Fields. The new edition of Dr. HICKOK's Rational Psychology. Phinney.

Ivison &

INDEX.

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.Page 329

Adams's Evenings with the Doctrines. Page 688 | Atonement, new works on the.....
Africa, Barth's Northern and Central...... 287 Automatic Excellence and Moral Desert... 488

Africa of ancient and medieval times..... 287

Qualities of automatic excellence........ 484
Edwards's definition of a moral agent... 485
Necessitated volition not responsible...
. 486
The Divine will not a mechanical autom-
atism...

489

Kano, the emporium of Central Negro-

Necessitated holiness or depravity not re-

land..

294

sponsible

490

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Fallen man apart from redemption reces-

Country of the Bagarmi..

299

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Display of barbaric pomp..

801

Self-produced necessity is responsible.... 495

Close of Dr. Barth's expedition..

809

Its results...

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Prospects of commercial intercourse.

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Alexander's (J. A.) Posthumous Works..

840

Bible Lands, Little Footprints in..

518

America, British Quarterly on the Civil
War in..

Biblical Repertory.

152

686

discoveries in Jerusalem

675

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468

Cotton State Confederacy, Future of a. Page 467 | Fast-Day Sermons.
Influence of slavery on society...
Labor in the South being rendered dis-
graceful must be performed by slaves 469
No scientific agriculture there...
469
It produces only raw material
Commerce carried on chiefly by foreigners 470
Cotton an exhaustive plant...
Governmental expenses of the confederacy 472
Will need a large army and navy.
474
Enormous taxation to meet expenses.... 477
Other sources of cotton supply.
478
Ultimate conflict between the two races. 480
Comparative white and negro population
in the cotton states..

471

470

Page 852
Fathers, Latin and Greek,entire works of the 505
Fleming's Vocabulary of Philosophy.
Fowler's works on English Grammar
France, Ce qu'il faut à la..
France, Godwin's History of..

166

254

679

127

Origin and career of the French

193

The ancient Gauls...

182

The Druids....

183

Introduction of Christianity.

184

Monasticism

135

Social and moral decay of the Roman
empire....

187

Invasion of the Huns.

138

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