luence upon the youth of Germany, 188.
His works, 188.
Capadose, an agent in the revival in the Dutch Church, 359.
Carlyle, Thomas, parent of Literary Rationalism in England, 473.
Derived his system from the German philosophers, 473.
Opinions, 473-476.
His influence upon the young, 475, 476.
Vicious influence of his sentiments, 477.
Channing, W. Ellery, leader of American Unitarianism, 541.
His works, 541.
Mental transitions, 542.
Repudiation of orthodoxy, 542.
His opinions, 543, 544.
Chantepie de la Saussaye, one of the leaders of the Ethical-Irenical
School in the Dutch Church, 375.
Preaches in Rotterdam, 376.
Assisted in forming society called Seriousness and Peace, 376.
His work on modern materialism, 379.
His opinions, 379, 380.
His view of the future of the Church, 380.
Charities of Protestant Germany, 311.
They do not interfere with each other, 331.
Charities of French Protestantism, 423.
Christ, opinions of German Rationalists on person of, 214-217.
Life of Christ described by numerous replies to Strauss, 274, 275.
Christianity, Theo. Parker's view of, 567, 568.
Chubb, his three principles, 115, 116.
Church and State, union of, presupposes great purity, 535.
Church, affiliations of Rationalism with the German, 26, 27.
The church has yet to vanquish thoroughly the attacks upon her faith,
35.
Condition of the German Church when Rationalism was at its height,
197.
Reconstruction of the church by Frederic William III., 230, 231.
Church history, improved indirectly by the labors of the Rationalists,
581-583.
Church of England, two parties in, 507.
Tabular view of the clergy of the Established Church, 532.
Classes in Germany, immorality of higher, 77, 78.
Clergy, immorality of German, in seventeenth century, 73, 74, 76,
_note_[Transcriber's Note: Reference is to Footnote 23].
The clergy were the agents of spiritual declension in Germany, 76.
Cocceian Controversy, literature of, 337.
The excitement occasioned by the conflict, 343.
Cocceians and Voetians, the leading parties in the Dutch Church, 340.
Principles of each, 340.
Cocceians studied the Scriptures, but differed from the text, 341.
Cocceius, opponent of Scholasticism in the Dutch Church, 336.
Studies and early writings, 336, 337.
Professor in Leyden University, 337.
His opinion on the Sabbath, 337.
Disciples, 337.
Charges against Cocceius, 33
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