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views, 249, 250. The chief characteristic of his theology, 250. Various writings, 251. Conception of Church history, 251, 252. Valuable service to evangelical theology, 252. Relation to his times, 252. Personal appearance, 253, 254. _Life of Christ_, in reply to Strauss, 272, 273. Newman, F. W., his life resembles Blanco White's, 517. His _Phases of Faith_, 518. Became a Missionary, 518. His opinions, 518, 519. Nicolai, his Universal German Library, 147. Object of that journal to oppose all orthodox publications, 147. Its great influence, 147, 148. Berlin affected by it, 148. Norton, Andrews, professor in Harvard University, 540. Opzoomer, professor at Utrecht, 371. His manual of logic, 371. Orthodoxy, inactivity of, in the Church of Holland, 356. Parker, Theodore, as a reformer, 564. Personal history, 565. His radicalism, 566. His theological opinions, 566-571. Pattison, M., writes in _Essays and Reviews_ on Tendencies of Religious Thought in England, 1688-1750, 492. Paul, Jean, called attention to necessity of parental training of children, 187. Paulus, attempt of, to prove Luther a Rationalist, 31. Pecaut, holds that Deism should be substituted for the doctrines of Protestantism, 402. His opinions, 402, 403. Periodical skeptical press of England, 477. Pestalozzi's labors for the amelioration of orphans, 188. His ideal of a school, 188. Philosophy of the period anterior to rise of Pietism, 82, 83. Service of speculative philosophy in aid of religion, 167. Philosophers do not communicate directly with the people, 471, 472. Pierson, his relation to Opzoomer, 371. His opinions contained in two works, 371, 372. His exposition of the "New Theology," 372. He holds that reason must determine what is revelation, 373. Specimen of Pierson's style, 374. Pietism, agencies leading to rise of, 55. Objection brought against Pietism, 85. What Pietism proposed to do, 85. It was confounded with mysticism, 88. Pietism commenced upon the principle that the Church was corrupt, 88. The means proposed by Pietism to improve the Church, 88, 89. Secret of the fall of Pietism, 102. Mistake of Lutheranism in failing to adopt it in the Church, 102. Relation of Pietism to the German Protestant Church, 102. Pietists, charged with literary barrenness, 101. Positivism, the work of Compte alone, 390. Powell, Baden, on the study of
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