A preliminary survey is the more necessary lest the general reader fail to grant the facts of history a competent hearing and a just consideration. Unconsciously men think of the earliest Christianity as being like that which they profess. They measure the early centuries by their own. Their Church, its doctrines, forms, creeds and customs, stands as the representative of all Christianity. It seems like a "rude awakening" to ask men to believe that there is a "pagan residuum" in their faith, or in the customs of their fathers. The average Christian must pass through a broadening process, before he can justly consider such a question. Unhappily, there are too many who are unwilling to undergo such an enlargement of their religious and historical horizon as will make them competent to consider those facts which every earnest student of history must face. But the Christian who believes in the immortality of truth, and in the certainty of its triumph, will welcome all facts, even though they may modify the creed he has hitherto accepted.
Women Who Dared : To Break All the Rules
Jeremy Scott
bookThe Alter Ego Effect : The Power of Secret Identities to Transform Your Life
Todd Herman
audiobookWhite Feminism
Koa Beck
audiobookbookFierce Self-Compassion : How Women Can Harness Kindness to Speak Up, Claim Their Power, and Thrive
Kristin Neff
audiobookYhteinen kieli : Traumatietoisuutta ihmisten kohtaamiseen
Kati Sarvela, Elisa Auvinen
bookCome As You Are: Revised and Updated : The Surprising New Science That Will Transform Your Sex Life
Emily Nagoski
audiobookKnow Yourself Through Zodiac Signs
Baldev Bhatia
bookThe Return of the Russian Leviathan
Sergei Medvedev
audiobookShame & Guilt : Masters of Disguise
Jane Middelton-Moz
bookNot in My Neighborhood
Antero Pietila
audiobookThe Souls of Black Folk
W.E.B. Du Bois
bookViholliset keskellämme : desantit Suomessa 1939-1944
Atso Haapanen
book