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THE

CONGREGATIONALIST.

"Da quod jubes et jube quod vis."-AUGUSTINE.

VOL. XIV.

JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1885.

LONDON:

HODDER AND STOUGHTON,
27, PATERNOSTER ROW.

UNWIN BROTHERS, THE GRESHAM PRESS, CHILWORTH AND LONDON.

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INDEX.

Adolphe Monod, 91.

Ambleside Alps under Snow, 302.
American Papers, Gleanings from, 711,
794.

Atonement, Prominence of the, 346,
443.

Bampton Lecture, Canon Fremantle's,
577.

Belgium, Recent Crisis in, and the

Religious Difficulty, 425, 526, 622.

Cecil Harvey, 21, 99, 188, 291, 357,

433, 515, 609, 677, 754, 815.

China, London Missionary Deputation

to, 643, 867.

Christian Work Abroad, 153, 254, 334,
415, 573, 726, 779, 878.

The Church and the Stage, 81.

Church History of the Times, 373.

Churches, Our; their Work and their

Prospects, 729.

Claims of Labour, 45.

Commonplace Book, Leaves from the
Editor's, 38, 140, 318.
Congregational Items, 155, 413.
Contemporary Pulpit in its Influence
upon Theology, 263.
Congregational Churches, Missions in,

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Notes of the Month, C3, 148, 403, 481,
634, 704.

Preparation of the Soil, 535.

Problems, Social, in the Pulpit, 549,
687.

Prince of Peace, The, 675.

Pulpit, The Contemporary, in its In-
fluence upon Theology, 263.
Puritans and their Psalm Tunes, 199.
Pyramid, Up the Great, and Inside It,
388.

Religious Work of the London Congre-
gational Union, 137.
Religious Pessimism, 847.

Reviews, 71, 157, 241, 325, 405, 485,
565, 855.

Revised Version, The, 417.

Sacraments, The Christian, and Chris-
tian Worship, 12.

Scotland, Disestablishment in, 778.
Second Gospel and its Author, 145.
Social Helps, 378, 549, 603, 749.
Problems in the Pulpit, 687.
Summer Ramble, 739.
Supper, The Lord's, 169.
Sympathy, Reality in Christian, 179.

Times, The, on the Liberation Society,
132.

Welch, John Kemp, 209.

Years, Our, and Thine, 11.

The Congregationalist.

JANUARY, 1885.

FIVE HUNDRED YEARS AGO AND NOW.

THE year 1385 opened on England impoverished to an extent. of which her people themselves were utterly unconscious. Professor Montagu Burrows speaks of John Wiclif, Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Milton as the four men who have exercised the greatest influence on the English language and literature. On the last day of 1384 had passed away John Wiclif, who, when we consider the effect which his translation of the Bible produced, may be regarded as in some sense the most influential of them all. But great as the work which he did for our literature, it was the least part of the service which he had rendered to his country. We employ no language of extravagant eulogy when we say that by the death of Wiclif England had been deprived of the greatest of her sons. In a generation of distinguished men he was the most eminent and illustrious of all. In the university, in the closet of the statesman, in the public gatherings of the people, in the quiet labours of the parish, he had done a work which did not end with his mortal life, and much of which remains to this day. It is a singular feature in a career so illustrious that he should have died as the Rector of Lutterworth; but even this is a testimony to the solid worth and true greatness of the man. The trusted friend and counsellor of the great Duke. of Lancaster, who for years was the virtual ruler of the country, the idol of his university on the one hand and of the populace on the other, the honoured representative of the nation and the champion of its cause as against the Papacy

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