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This Is A New Release Of The Original 1899 Edition.
1899. Griffith-Jones writes in the preface that the purpose of the
book is a study of certain spiritual facts, which cluster round the
Mystery of Divine Redemption, viewed in the light of that great
principle of Development which has taken possession of the mind of
today, and which seems destined in its broader aspects, permanently
to affect human thought in all its departments. These facts are,
Sin and its correlative theory of the Fall of Man; the Person of
Christ, His atoning death and Resurrection, and the New Life in
Him, which embodies the highest moral and spiritual evolution of
human character, and which is the Christian's surest ground for
believing in a blessed Immortality; together with such subsidiary
problems as radiate from these focal centers.
1899. Griffith-Jones writes in the preface that the purpose of the
book is a study of certain spiritual facts, which cluster round the
Mystery of Divine Redemption, viewed in the light of that great
principle of Development which has taken possession of the mind of
today, and which seems destined in its broader aspects, permanently
to affect human thought in all its departments. These facts are,
Sin and its correlative theory of the Fall of Man; the Person of
Christ, His atoning death and Resurrection, and the New Life in
Him, which embodies the highest moral and spiritual evolution of
human character, and which is the Christian's surest ground for
believing in a blessed Immortality; together with such subsidiary
problems as radiate from these focal centers.
1899. Griffith-Jones writes in the preface that the purpose of the
book is a study of certain spiritual facts, which cluster round the
Mystery of Divine Redemption, viewed in the light of that great
principle of Development which has taken possession of the mind of
today, and which seems destined in its broader aspects, permanently
to affect human thought in all its departments. These facts are,
Sin and its correlative theory of the Fall of Man; the Person of
Christ, His atoning death and Resurrection, and the New Life in
Him, which embodies the highest moral and spiritual evolution of
human character, and which is the Christian's surest ground for
believing in a blessed Immortality; together with such subsidiary
problems as radiate from these focal centers.
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