ΤΟ WILLIAM HENRY CHANNING, MY FRIEND AND FELLOW-STUDENT DURING MANY YEARS, This Work IS AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED. PREFACE. THE HE first six chapters of the present volume are composed from six articles prepared for the Atlantic Monthly, and published in that magazine in 1868. They attracted quite as much attention as the writer anticipated, and this has induced him to enlarge them, and add other chapters. His aim is to enable the reader to become acquainted with the doctrines and customs of the principal religions of the world, without having to consult numerous volumes. He has not come to the task without some preparation, for it is more than twentyfive years since he first made of this study a speciality. In this volume it is attempted to give the latest results of modern investigations, so far as any definite and trustworthy facts have been attained. But the writer is well. aware of the difficulty of being always accurate in a task which involves such interminable study and such an amount of details. He can only say, in the words of a Hebrew writer: "If I have done well, and as is fitting the story, it is that which I desired; but if slenderly and meanly, it is that which I could attain unto." CONTENTS. §1. Object of the present Work 2. Comparative Theology; its Nature, Value, and present Position 3. Ethnic Religions. Injustice often done to them by Christian Apol- 4. How Ethnic Religions were regarded by Christ and his Apostles 5. Comparative Theology will furnish a new Class of Evidences in 6. It will show that, while most of the Religions of the World are Eth- nic, or the Religions of Races, Christianity is Catholic, or adapted § 7. It will show that Ethnic Religions are partial, Christianity universal 21 8. It will show that Ethnic Religions are arrested, but that Christianity 81 |