The General Assembly. By Prof. L. H. Atwater, D. D. [pp. 424-442]

The Princeton review. / Volume 43, Issue 3

The General Assembly. away; legal ordinances and ritualistic ceremonies shall be abrogated, ecclesiastical tyranny abolished, and all the enemies of God shall be consumed." A number of minor slips betray the fact that this volume, though evidently the fruit of much reflection and of an earnest spirit, has led its author into a department with which he is not professionally familiar-as where he unintentionally plays into the hands of modern unbelieving criticism by speaking. of the book of Daniel as the work not of the prophet but of a compiler, p. 13, and prepared after the prophet's death, p. 44, or makes our Lord's ministry to have lasted seven years, p. 26, or explains "hlost," Dan. viii. 13, by the Latin "hostia," or substitutes a Septuagint reading for that of the Hebrew, and makes it the basis of his computations, p. 39, or founds an interpretation on expressions in the Septuagint which are wholly out of relation to the original, p. 77ff. ARTICLE VI.-The General ARssembly. The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States met in the First Presbyterian Church of Chicago on the 18th day of June, 1871, and was opened with a sermnon by Rev. J. Trumbull Backus, D.D., the moderator of the last Assembly. The Rev. Z. M. Humphrey, D.D., was chosen Moderator. REDUCTION OF THE RRATIO OF REPRESENTrATION. The body was very large, numbering some 500 members, or mnore. This number was greatly augmnented by a very large attendance of others who, in various capacities, and for various reasons, always crowd around such gatherings. The size of the body, which must constantly increase on the present basis of representation, with the growth of our church, has already become too onerous to Christian hospitality to be endured in any but the largest cities, and in them only on special occa sions, nor more than once in a generation; and it has become 424 [J'ULY,


The General Assembly. away; legal ordinances and ritualistic ceremonies shall be abrogated, ecclesiastical tyranny abolished, and all the enemies of God shall be consumed." A number of minor slips betray the fact that this volume, though evidently the fruit of much reflection and of an earnest spirit, has led its author into a department with which he is not professionally familiar-as where he unintentionally plays into the hands of modern unbelieving criticism by speaking. of the book of Daniel as the work not of the prophet but of a compiler, p. 13, and prepared after the prophet's death, p. 44, or makes our Lord's ministry to have lasted seven years, p. 26, or explains "hlost," Dan. viii. 13, by the Latin "hostia," or substitutes a Septuagint reading for that of the Hebrew, and makes it the basis of his computations, p. 39, or founds an interpretation on expressions in the Septuagint which are wholly out of relation to the original, p. 77ff. ARTICLE VI.-The General ARssembly. The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States met in the First Presbyterian Church of Chicago on the 18th day of June, 1871, and was opened with a sermnon by Rev. J. Trumbull Backus, D.D., the moderator of the last Assembly. The Rev. Z. M. Humphrey, D.D., was chosen Moderator. REDUCTION OF THE RRATIO OF REPRESENTrATION. The body was very large, numbering some 500 members, or mnore. This number was greatly augmnented by a very large attendance of others who, in various capacities, and for various reasons, always crowd around such gatherings. The size of the body, which must constantly increase on the present basis of representation, with the growth of our church, has already become too onerous to Christian hospitality to be endured in any but the largest cities, and in them only on special occa sions, nor more than once in a generation; and it has become 424 [J'ULY,

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The General Assembly. By Prof. L. H. Atwater, D. D. [pp. 424-442]
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The Princeton review. / Volume 43, Issue 3

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