The person charging this material is re- sponsible for its return to the library from which it was withdrawn on or before the Latest Date stamped below. Theft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reasons for disciplinary action and may result in dismissal from the University. To renew call Telephone Center, 333-8400 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN L161— 0-1096 DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE F RELIGIOUS LITERATURE PUBLISHED FOR FREE DISTRIBUTION BY THE merican Unitarian Association nitarian Temperance Society he Alliance of Unitarian Women Date of issue of this catalogue, Sept, i, 1913 A revised edition is published every September [please read first inside page] JOSTON: 25 BEACON STREET HE pamphlets and booklets contained in the following lists, which are de- scriptive of Unitarian principles, doctrines and methods, are published for free dis- tribution, and will be furnished to any one upon application to the societies issuing them. Please order by series and number only, not by title. If more than one copy is desired, state the exact quantity wanted of each title. Kindly be careful not to order more than will with certainty be put to good use ; a further supply can be had at any time upon request when those first sent are exhausted. Postage or expressage on quantities is prepaid without charge. Before asking for a newer or later issue of the tract catalogue please note the date of publication of this edition at the bottom of the preceding (title) page, and see if one of later date is yet ready. Otherwise a request may bring simply a duplicate of the one in hand, with consequent waste. The latest edition will be cheerfully sent to those who do not have it. This list sup- ersedes all previous ones, which please destroy. A LIST OF THE FREE PAMPHLETS ISSUED BY THE American Unitarian Association WITH AUTHOR AND SUBJECT INDEXES Orders for any material in this section of the catalogue should be addressed to the above organization at 25 Beacon Street, Boston. T HE American Unitarian Association is the working missionary organization of the Unitarian churches of America. It seeks to promote sympathy and united action among Liberal Christians, and to spread the prin- ciples which are believed by Unitarians to be essential to civil and religious liberty and progress and to the attain- ments of the spiritual life. To this end it supports missionaries, establishes and maintains churches, holds conventions, aids in building meeting-houses, publishes, sells, and gives away books, sermons, tracts, hymn-books, and devotional works. A list of free tracts will be sent on application. A full descriptive catalogue of the publications of the Association, including doctrinal, devotional and practical works, will be sent to all who apply. The Association is supported by the voluntary contri- butions of churches and individuals. Individuals desiring to co-operate with this Association may receive a certificate of Associate Membership by signing an application card (sent on request to the Associate Department) and the payment of one dollar. Address communications and contributions to the Secretary at his office, 25 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. FORM OF BEQUEST. I give and bequeath to the American Unitarian Associa- tion, a corporation established by law in the State of Massa- chusetts, the sum of ' dollars, the principal to be securely invested and the income to be used to promote the work of the Association . 21 Se ’14 *A£CWTtLP, A SUBJECT INDEX TO THE ASSOCIATION’S PUBLICATIONS ONLY It is hoped that this Index to the tracts of the American Unitarian Association will enable Post-office Mission workers to use systematically the entire body of the tracts, and also aid inquirers to find easily the answers therein offered to questions concerning religion and theology. The Index does not refer to the tracts in foreign languages nor to the “Memorable Sermons and Addresses of the Nineteenth Century,” nor to the material in the Sunday School, Temperance, and National , Alliance sections of this catalogue. The initials I. S. refer to the International Series. Suggestions of topics and references which could to advantage be added to this Index will be gratefully received. In making such sug- gestions address the Secretary, American Unitarian Association, 25 t Beacon Street, Boston. 1 s Agnosticism. 30, 126, 137, 268. Atonement, The. 22, 23, 48, 88, 162, 195, 201, 247. Baptism. 112, 133. Beliefs. ( See General Statements.) Bible, The. 2, 8, n, 17, 24, 28, 33, 39, 46, 48, 54, 60, 63, 69, 80, 85, 1 15, 120, 122, 145, 160, 208, 225, 234, 237, 265. Christ. (See Jesus.) Christmas, 234. Church, The. 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 18, 31, 35, 40, 49, 52, 53, 63, 73» 70, 87, 91, 1 12, 1 14, 1 19, 126, 142, 147, 148, 158, 162, 165, 167, 178, 207, 212, 223, 230, 231, 232, 235, 240, 244, 254, 259, 262, 269. Communion, The. 112, 130, 162. Congregationalism. 255, 266, 267. Conversion. 36, 86, 176, 200, 242, 247. Conviction. 84, ill, 162, 200. Creeds. 8, 11, 14, 17, 25, 94, 101, 109, no, 212, 223, 224,243. (See General Statements.) Criticism. (See Higher Criticism.) Cross, The. 88, 127, 134, 199, 201. Death. 17, 28, 30, 37, 39, 44, 78, 228. (See Immortality.) Depravity. 3, 22, 34, 48, 136, 149. Discipline. 3, 64, 127, 199, 232, 263. Doubt. 44, 54, 243, 272. Dut y- 35> 49> 63, 66, 67, 87, 1 19, 142, 262, 263. Easter. (See Immortality.) Education, Religious. 12, 40, 49, 67, 148, 171, 175, 230, 231, 232, 270. (See also Catalogue of Publications of the Unitarian Sunday School Society.) Please order by number only SUBJECT INDEX Evangelical. 206. (See also Gospel.) Evil. 3, 13, 30, 44, 88, 127, 141, 143, 144, 146, 198, 204. Experience (Personal). 223, 272. Faith. 92, 101, 104, 107, hi , 1 14, 132, 141, 198, 257. Fall, The Doctrine of the. 3, 81, 122, 261. Fear, Right Uses of. 253. Fellowship. 41, 61, 72, 73, 121, 137, 159, 271. Forgiveness. 174, 247. General Statements Concerning the Unitarian Doctrines. 2, 8, 9, 14, 17, 18, 19, 28, 34, 37, 39, 45, 46, 48, 51, 54, 58, 71, 74, 91, 96, 98, 100, 101, 109, 115, 116, 117, 132, 150 178, 191, 192, 195, 197, 205, 206, 210, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218,219, 220, 221, 224, 227, 248, 249, 252, 258. God, Beliefs about. 2, 8, 11, 17, 34, 37, 46, 51, 54, 58, 68, 70, 90, 98, 100, 107, 108, 126, 132, 133, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 195, 202, 204, 210, 216, 263, 265, 272. Gospel, The. 45, 87, 95, 100, 136, 138, 151, 178, 206, 211, 213, 233, 234, 259. (See General Statements.) Growth. (See Progress.) Heaven. 8, 11, 27, 28, 34, 78, 99, 188. Hell. 8, 11, 27, 28, 34, 78, 99, 201, 261. Helps to Daily Living. 7, 15, 16, 20, 29, 30, 35, 36, 41, 44, 49, 64, 66, 78, 84, 86, 88, 92, 97, 102, in, 120, 124, 126, 127, 129, 137, 138, 140, 141, 143, 144. 146, i47> 155* 156, 1 57* 15 8 . l66 * 170, *75. l 7 ^ 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 193, 198, 229, 238, 241, 250, 264, 270. Higher Criticism. 69, 145, 160, 208, 225. (See Bible ) History of Liberal Christianity. 2, 4, 10, 39, 51, 57, 71, 83, 91, 109, 121, 132, 135, 136, 178, 207, 214, 226, 255, 267. Holy Spirit, The. 108, 114, 133. Human Nature. 2, 3, 8, 11, 136, 149, 155, 197, 200, 209, 220, 238, 242, 252, 261, 264, 272. Immortality. 2, 8, 27, 28, 34, 37, 42, 46, 51, 54, 64, 70, 78, 81, 98, 100, 125, 127, 189, 190, 196, 203, 228, 229, 234, 236, 251, 258, 261. Incarnation, The. 103, 108, 126, 134, 135, 162, 185, 186, 187, 260. Indifference. 7, 31, 56, 74, 129, 162, 168, 200, 231, 250, 257, 270. Inspiration. 8, 11, 24, 28, 33, 46, 60, 80, 85, ill, 145, 237, 245. Jesus. 2, 3, 8, 11, 17, 22, 23, 25, 26, 28, 34, 39, 45, 46, 47, 51, 54, 55, 70.77* 79. 88 > 9 8 » Joo, 105, 109, 118, 122, 123, 126, 128, 131, 134, 135, 138, 139, 151, 195, 199, 205, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 218, 222, 234, 260. Judgment. 26, 27, 34, 38, 76, 99, 125, 247. Kingdom of God, The. 35, 245, 259, 264. Liberalism. 4, 18, 56, 76, 87, 94, 96, 98, no, 115, 117, 132, 136,137, 147, 150, 154, 156, 199, 212, 214, 215, 227, 235, 237, 246, 248, 266, 272. Life. (See Helps to Daily Living, Immortality.) Lord’s Supper, The. (See Communion.) Loyalty. 1, 5, 7, 10, 13, 32, 52, 58, 87, no, 119, 142, 148, 165, 168, 200, 262. Please order by number only SUBJECT INDEX Man. 8, 17, 30, 34, 46, 47, 51, 54, 58, 70, 98, 100, 122, 125, 149, 197, 217. Miracles. 8, ioi, 105, 145, 228, 233, 241, 246. Missionary Work. 1, 5, 13, 32, 49, 167, 168, 239; 1 (I. S.); Inter. 4. Morality. 62, 66, 74, 102, 105, 157, 242, 250. Organization. 1, 5, 8, 10, 13, 71, 91, 165, 167, 168, 244. Pain. 44, 198, 238, 241, 256, 261. Prayer. 8, 43, 46, 82, 98, 104, 106. Progress. 3, 18, 58, 64, 86, no, 127, 132, 147, 154, 223, 240, 243, 246, 249, 256, 268. Proof Texts. 11, 19, 123, 145, 265. Punishment. 8, n, 26, 27, 28,34, 39, 81, 99, 201, 204, 247, 256, 261, 264. Reason. 17, 94, 223, 243, 257. Religion. 5, 7, 18, 62, 63, 66, 76, 84, 95, 97, hi, 114, 120, 132, 138, 140, 141, 147, 156, 157, 158, 178, 184, 189, 205, 207, 212, 215, 235, 246, 252, 270, 272. Revelation. 2, 8, n, 33, 58, 94, 100, 115, 240. Reverence. 62. Sacraments, The. 2, ?7, 45, 112, 130. Salvation, n, 17, 26, 27, 39, 46, 100, 101, 126, 174, 200, 201, 205, 206, 219, 242, 247, 264. Service. 102, 114, 115, 244, 245, 254, 263, 269. Sin. 3, 17, 22, 26, 37, 99, 122, 155, 197, 201, 256. Sincerity. 84,110,200. Sunday. 17, 262. (See Church and Worship). Sunday School, The. (See Education, and also tracts of Unitarian Sunday School Society.) Temperance. (See tracts of Unitarian Temperance Society.) Thanksgiving Sermon. 202. Theology. 2, 3, 8, 18, 22, 23, 25, 34, 37, 48, 54, 56, 71, 74, 85, 89, 94, 95, 101, 103, 105, 108, 109, no, 114, 116, 132, 136, 195, 201, 249, 265. Trinity, The Doctrine of the. 89, 108, 109, 123, 128, 133, 135, 195, 206, 260. Unitarianism. (See General Statements.) Unity, Christian. (See Fellowship.) “Word,” Logos. 2, 105, 136. Worship. 31, 53, 62, 63, 67, 114, 162, 230, 231, 232, 235, 244, 250, 262, 266, 270. Young People. (See Education.) Please order by number only AUTHOR INDEX TO THE ASSOCIATION’S PUBLICATIONS ONLY Allen, Charles A. 45, 141, 159. Ames, Charles G. 76, 84,96, 104, 155, 241, 263. Badger, George H. 268. Barber, Henry H. 40. Batchelor, George. 62, 156, 261. Beach, Seth C. 97. Beane, Samuel C. 81. Bixby, James T. 116,201. Bowser, Alexander T. 128. Boynton, Richard W. 124. Brigham, Charles H. 17. Brooke, Stopford A. 47. Brooks, Arthur. 226. Brown, Howard N. 73, 79, 108, 138, 205. Brundage, William M. 223, 254. Bulfinch, Ellen A. 21 1. Calthrop, Samuel R. 68. Carpenter, J. Estlin. 213. Casson, Charles W. 210, 240. Chadwick, John W. 42, 99, 154. Chaffin, William L. 39. Christie, Francis A. 136, 200. Clarke, James Freeman. 23, 24, 28, 34, 53, 60, 80, 149, 183, 184, 188, 189. Clayton, Thomas. 223. Collyer, Robert. 31, 36. Cressey, Geo. Croswell. 59. 192. Crooker, Joseph H. 2, 72, no. Crothers, Samuel M. 74, 98, 117, 120, 137, 231. Cruzan, J. A. 237. Cuckson, John. 82. Curtis, George William. 231. Day, John W. 130, 157. DeLong, Henry C. 162. Dodson, George R. 257. Dole, Charles F. 16, 20, 22, 29, 30, 41, 43, 87, 107, 158, 180, 181, 182, 229, 270. Eliot, Charles W. 12, 115, 140, 194, 231, 246; Inter. 2. Please order by number only AUTHOR INDEX Eliot, Samuel A. 4, 168, 178. Eliot, Thomas L. 77, 94. Everett, Charles C. 3, 92, 101. Fenn, William W. 85. Fiske, John. 252. Foote, Henry Wilder. 208. Forbes, Elmer S. 269. Frothingham, Paul Revere. 198, 203. Gannett, William C. 44, 103, 144, 193, 234, 264. 4 Garver, Austin S. 165. Gilmore, Frank A. 152. Gilpin, Victor J. 223. Goodridge, Benjamin A. 253. t Hale, Edward E. 35, 51, 57, 91, 129, 131, 133, 202, 207, 231, 245. Herford, Brooke. 13, 27, 46, 48, 54, 70, 214. Herford, Mrs. Brooke. 175. Hoar, George F. 230, 231. Holmes, John Haynes. 251. Hopps, John P. 265. Hornbrooke, Francis B. 55. Horton, Edward A. 9, 10. Hyde, Salem, 262. Jaynes, Julian C. 102, 134, 185, 186, 187, 244. Jones, William S. 259, 271. Jordan, David Starr. 231. Kent, Frederic H. 222. Kent, George W. 122. Kimball, John C. 25. King, Thomas Starr. 26. Knapp, Arthur M. 50. Littlefield, Arthur W. 169. Livermore, Leonard J. 6. Long, John D. 32, 231. Lord, Augustus M. 106. Lyon, William H. 61, 86, 88, 132, 199, 225, 267. -MacCauley, Clay. I. S. 3. * Martineau, James. 65, 66, 89. May, Joseph. 5. 105, 228. Milsted, Thomas G. 75. Moore, Edward Caldwell. 255. * Morgan, William S. 223, 249. Mott, Frederick B. 14, 153. Mott, Herbert H. 119, 123. Please order by number only AUTHOR INDEX Park, Charles Edwards. 146, 255, 260. Peabody, Francis G. 114, 126. Pearson, Charles W. 145. Perkins, Frederick W. 235. Pierce, Ulysses G. B. 196, 209. Powell, Frank A. 272. Pressey, Edward P. 151, 190. Reccord, Augustus P. 112, 206, 250. Reid, John D. 143, 266. Reynolds, Grindall. 118. Robinson, George D. 52,231. Robinson, John L. 223. Rowlett, John W. 243. St. John, Charles E. 7, 125, 127, 197, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 258. Savage, Minot J. 1, 15, 49, 58, 67, 78, 90, 100, 109, 142, 148. Shippen, Rush R. 38, 71. Simmons, Henry M. 150. Simons, Minot. 238. Slicer, Thomas R. 63, 95, ill, 248. Smith, Jonathan. 171. Spencer, Edward G. 195. Sprague, Leslie W. 113. Stanley, Arthur P. 21. Stebbins, Roderick. 242. Street, Christopher J. 247. Sunderland, Jabez T. 11, 56, 135, 139, 160, 233, 239 ; Inter. 4. Thayer, George A. 64. Tilden, William P. 33, 37. Tolstoi, Leon. 191. Towle, Edward D. 215. Toy, Crawford H. 69. Van Ness, Thomas. 204, 236. Ware, John F. W. 161, 163, 164, 172, 173, 174, 177, 179. Wells, Miss M. P. 176. Wendte, Charles W. 8, 121, 227. White, Andrew D. 212. Wilson, Lewis G. 232, I. S. 1. Wolcott, Roger. 231. Woodbury, Augustus. 93. Wright, Carroll D. 147, 231. Please order by number only 1 UNITARIAN PAMPHLETS FOR FREE DISTRIBUTION i. Our Mission and our Missions. A Message to Unitarians. By Minot J. Savage, D.D. The truth that maketh free ; our mission to the spiritually hungering ; our methods. a. The Unitarian Church : Its History and Characteristics. By Joseph H. Crooker, D.D. A pamphlet of 64 pages. Historical and doctrinal. * 3. Human Nature not Ruined, but Incomplete. By Charles C. Everett, D.D., LL.D. The relation in which good and evil stand ; God not honored by degrading, in thought, the nature of man ; faith in human nature as it is and is to be. 4. Liberal Christianity in the United States. ^ By Samuel A. Eliot, D.D. An address at the Second International Council of Unitarian and Other Liberal Religious Thinkers and Workers, Amsterdam, Holland. 5. Rational Religion the Want of the World. (For Unitarians.) By Joseph May. The importance of church work. Vital religion versus authoritative religion. *6. Baptism. (Out of print.) By Leonard J. Livermore. The origin of baptism ; its significance as a symbolic rite. 7. Zeal without Dogmatism. A Message to Unitarians. By Charles E. St. John. A philosophy of appreciation. A work of education. A mission of inspiration. 8. What do Unitarians Believe ? By Charles W. Wendte. A statement of faith. Appendices on the Unitarian Church and its great rep- resentatives. 9. Unitarianism : What does it stand for ? By Edward A. Horton. Love of truth ; enthusiasm for humanity ; the Spirit of Jesus. 10. Unitarianism : What did it set out to do ? What has it accom- plished ? What is its future ? By Edward A. Horton. An account of Unitarianism in New England. Illustrious Unitarians, their work and influence. 11. What do Unitarians Believe ? (Small.) By J. T. Sunderland. A comprehensive statement with Scriptural references. Representative Uni- tarians. ★12. The Education of Our Boys and Girls. (For Unitarians.) See R. E. Bulletin, No. 3.) By Charles W. Eliot, LL.D. i The influence of noble literature. The Unitarian heritage. Character the ab- ject of education. 13. Business Enterprise in Religion. (For Unitarians.) By Brooke Herford, D.D. The need of men in religious work. Enthusiasm for the church and its orgami- | zations. Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 14. Unitarianism : What does it mean? (Short.) By Frederick B. Mott. Faith in God, Christ, religion, the Bible. Importance of character and service- 15. Living in the Upper Stories. (Short.) By Minot J. Savage, D.D. How to find happiness ; thinking and doing. 16. A Chivalrous Religion. To our Young Men and Women. (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. An appeal to live the Golden Rule. 17. Unitarian Principles and Doctrines. By Charles H. Brigham. Unitarian principles are the working force of the denomination, whereas the doctrines are only its temporary opinions. A positive and clear statement of both principles and doctrines. 18. What O’Clock is it in Religion? By Minot J. Savage, D.D Old and new ways of religious reckoning, with a look toward the future. 19. A Statement of Belief adopted by the New Hampshire Unita- rian Association. (Short.) Unitarian beliefs supported by texts. ao. The Bright Side Out. (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. The ideal life ; the gospel of the beneficent God ; the problems of life. *21. Our Common Christianity. (Out of print.) By Arthur P. Stanley, Dean of Westminster. A view behind the forms and doctrines of the outward ordinances into the in- ward principles, as seen in the Fatherhood of God; our judgment of our fellow- men ; the gospel of sorrow ; spiritual communion. 22. Two Stories of the King. (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. The doctrine of original sin, total depravity, eternal punishment, contrasted with the true relation between God and his children. (An allegory.) 23. Orthodox Views of the Atonement Examined. By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. An historical survey of three theories of the atonement. The Unitarian view. 24. Inspiration of the New Testament. By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. Method of inquiry ; the hiatory of doctrine ; proofs of special inspiration ; it is not infallible. ★25. Christ and the Creeds. (Out of print.) By John C. Kimball A statement of the creeds and a statement of Christ’s teaching in contrast, — which shall be believed ? 26. Eternal Punishment. By Thomas Starr King. Duration of the punishment of sin ; Orthodox doctrine opposed to the teaching of Christ ; reasoning from his principles. 27. The Day of Judgment. By Brooke Herford, D.D. The continual judgment ; the real meaning of heaven and hell. 28. Why am I a Unitarian ? By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. The language of the New Testament enables Unitarians to believe more con- cerning God, Christ, the Bible, salvation, than the usual creeds ; a short ex- planation of beliefs. ( p Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION ag. The Dark Souls and the Light. (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. For hours of weariness. Cheerfulness not dependent on circumstances. 30. The Mighty Contrasts of Life. (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. For the perplexed and the questioning. 31. Worship. By Robert Collyer. The need of worshiping “ in the House of the Lord ” ; the need of help for one’s self and for others ; the touch of sympathy and fellow-feeling. 32. Our Missionary Work. (Short.) (For Unitarians.) By Hon. John D. Long. The crusade against narrowness of dogma ; duty of preaching the gospel of Jesus. 33. The Word of God. By William P. Tilden. The real werth of the Bible; it should be read with reverent criticism and dis- crimination ; it is not infallible. 34. Has Unitarianism done its Work ? , By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. Unitarianism needed to deny the five points of Calvinism, to declare the unity of God, to proclaim the universal Father, to teach that Christianity is not a creed, but life. Prominent reformers, thinkers, writers, and poets who were Unitarians. 35. The Kingdom of God. By Edward E. Hale, D.D. “ Glad Tidings.” The reign of God in the world of God’s children. 36. A Story of the Prairies. (Short.) By Robert Collyer. How a young man was converted. 37. The Rising Star of the Liberal Faith. By William P. Tilden. The five points of Calvinism contrasted with five points of Unitarianism ; the Fatherhood of God, the sonship of man, sin its own sorrow, goodness its own reward, the future life a natural outgrowth. 38. Judgment Days. By Rush R. Shippen. The theological view contrasted with the real judgment. 39. Popular Objections to Unitarianism Considered. By William L. Chaffin. Answers the following charges made against Unitarianism : That it is a new “ ism,” a lax doctrine, a poor faith to die by. That Unitarians do not believe in the Bible or in Christ, and that they expect to be saved by their own merits. ★40. Sunday School and Congregation. (Out of print.) (For Uni- tarians.) By Henry H. Barber. The Sunday School should not be an independent organization, nor a substitute for the services of the church. 41. Christian Unity. (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. The essential points on which all Christians agree. 42. The Immortal Hope. By John W. Chadwick. It is not a groundless expectation ; justice its strong ally ; human affection the ^ purest source of the hope of immortality. 43. The Doctrine of Prayer. By Charles F. Dole. Legitimate and illegitimate objects of prayer. Prayer, an adjustment of our- selves, aspiration, seeing the presence of God in all things. 44. Wrestling and Blessing. By William C. Gannett. v “Wrestling is the condition of blessing.” Pain wrestled with brings endurance; through doubt comes faith ; strife brings patience ; pity is the result of suffering. Please order by number only . * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 45. The Gospel that Jesus Taught. (Short.) By Charles A. Allen. True worship and service. 46. The Main Lines of Religion as Held by Unitarians. By Brooke Herford, D.D. Faith in God; belief in man; prayer; inspiration; the true idea of the Bible; Jesus Christ; redemption; atonement; life eternal. 47. What Think ye of Christ? By Stopford A. Brooke, LL.D. Paul’s idea of Jesus ; Jesus the revealer of the Father ; what Jesus said about man. 48. Christianity as Christ preached it. By Brooke Herford, D.D. Christ said nothing about the Trinity, original sin, total depravity, endless hell, or the atonement as commonly set forth. Christ’s gospel was simple faith and trust. 49. A Word with the Pew ; or, Helping the Minister. By Minot J. Savage, D.D. Reasons for attending church ; for giving the minister sympathy ; his personal help ; social work ; missionary work ; the Sunday School. *50. Semi-detached Unitarians. (Out of print.) By Arthur M. Knapp. The reasonable ground of the obligation to attend and support the church. 51. The Unitarian Principles. By Edward E. Hale, D.D. Origin of the word “ Unitarian” ; the religious system of the Unitarian church ; the leadership of Jesus; the brotherhood of man ; purity of character. 52. The Layman’s Responsibility for the Church. By Hon. George D. Robinson, LL.D. What a church is for ; the active co-operation of laymen ; children in church. 53. Church-going, Past, Present, and Future. By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. In the past a personal motive ; in the present and future “ to get good in order to do good.” 54. What is Left after the Questionings of our Time? By Brooke Herford, D.D. The truths that remain are God, Jesus, immortality, discipleship, the Bible. 55. Christianity Permanent. By Francis B. Hornbrooke, D.D. Christ’s mission to save men ; a revelation from God ; the significance of his life. 56. True and False Liberalism. By J. T. Sunderland. The meaning of the words “liberal,” “radical,” “progress,” “liberty.’* What it is to be a liberal. 57. Unitarianism and Original Congregationalism in New England. (Short.) By Edward E. Hale, D.D. 58. Unitarianism : It is a Positive Faith, and rightly claims our Loyalty. By Minot J. Savage, D.D. Intellectual advance ; progressive revelation ; all truth is one. *59. Rational Spirituality. (Out of print.) By George Croswell Cressey, D.D. Conviction ; reverence ; consecration to duty. 60. Keep the Bible. (Short.) By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. The letter and the spirit of the Bible. Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 6x. What do the Evangelical Denominations hold in Common? (Short.) By William H. Lyon, D.D. The Bible as the ultimate source of knowledge on religious subjects ; the deity of Christ ; reliance upon miracle. 62. Religion its own Evidence. By George Batchelor. Religion : its phases, emotions, forms of expression. Christian and scientific evidence, ethical basis ; religious experience. 63. Religious Habits. By Thomas R. Slicer. “ Waiting upon the Lord ” ; obedience ; church service ; the use of the Script- ures ; the need of prayer. ★64. The Making of a Soul. (Out of print.) By George A. Thayer. Law, not chance, guides the world; the object of life; discipline; faithfulness amidst discouragements ; immortality. 65. Ideal Substitutes for God. By James Martineau, D.D., LL.D. Morality; collective humanity; moral idealism. The attempt to retain the religion of human character while discarding all conscious relation with the Living God is impossible, for in that relation centres the very life of religion. 66. The Relation between Ethics and Religion. By James Martineau, D.D., LL.D. Religion, as containing the Supreme Personal Relation, completes Ethics, which treats of the right ordering of Personal relations, and in so doing transfigures it. 67. The Religious Education of Children. By Minot J. Savage, D.D. Children should be trained to a consciousness of God; of the conscience; to a response to love and worship. The atmosphere of the home; books; church attendance ; Sunday School. 68. God. By Samuel R. Calthrop, D.D. God, all in all: His power, exactness, economy, justice, wisdom, and love. 69. Modern Biblical Criticism. By Crawford H. Toy, LL.D. Its spirit, method, and results. 70. The Mind of Christ. By Brooke Herford, D.D. The thought of Jesus about God, man, the life to come, as shown in the Gospels. 71. Unitarianism. By Rush R. Shippen. A history of the belief, in the early church, in Italy, France, Holland, Switzer- land, Germany, Poland, Transylvania, England, Scotland, Ireland, America. Organization. Doctrinal views. 72. Co-operation for Holiness. By Joseph H. Crooker, D.D. Religious co-operation consistent with intellectual freedom. Fellowship should not be conditional upon dogma. 7J. The Unitarian Church in its Relation to Other Protestant Churches. (Short.) By Howard N. Brown 74. The Unitarian Attitude towards Theology. (Short.) A protest against indifference. B ? SAMUEL M. CROTHERS, D.D. 75. The Growth of Christianity from the Mustard Seed. By Thomas G. Milsted. The first statement of doctrinal Christianity ; the Apostolic doctrine. The word “ Trinity ”; original sin; the New Testament; the “Real Presence the atonement. Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 76. The Judgment Day of the Church. By Charles G. Ames, D.D. The judgment day is a day of new opportunity and of glorious hope. The test of religious work must be found in its life, movement, progress. 77. “Is not this Joseph’s Son ? ” By Thomas L. Eliot, D.D. The Unitarian faith in Jesus ; his human personality the key and inspiration of the Unitarian mission. 78. How to Die. By Minot J. Savage, D.D. Tradition of the origin and cause of death ; life after death ; need of trust ; how to prepare for death. 7g. The Real Jesus. By Howard N. Brown. His greatness of soul, embodied in love to God and love to man. 80. The Bible. By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. Its origin; the doctrine of verbal inspiration ; its true inspiration and power. 81. Is Future Punishment Everlasting ? By Samuel C. Beane, D.D. “The Fall ” ; “ Hell ” ; everlasting imperfection and punishment, improve- ment and final perfection considered from Orthodox and Unitarian points of view. 82. The Logic of Prayer. By John Cuckson. A God who hears ; prayer lifts us into closer harmony with God. 83. Teaching of the Twelve Apostles. Translated from the Greek. A translation of a document believed to have been written in the second century. 84. Will Mankind outgrow Religion ? By Charles G. Ames, D.D. States various objectiens that are made to religion ; what is meant by religion ; its permanence based on the divine in the human. 85. The Bible in Theology. By William W. Fenn. Biblical theology and absolute theology. The Liberal admits no bonds or limitations save those in the constitution of the mind itself. How to approach the Bible ; the ethics of the Bible ; how it should be studied. 86. The Perfect Law of the Lord. By William H. Lyon, D.D. Application of the idea of law to the moral life ; the making of character not the work of a moment, but the slow growth of years. 87. What the World wants of us. By Charles F. Dole. The liberal church stands for light. Co-operation for spreading light. 88. The Preaching of the Cross. By William H. Lyon, D.D. The cross stands for victory over hardship and for loving self-sacrifice. 8g. The Three Stages of Unitarian Theology. By James Martineau, D.D., LL.D. The relations of creature to creator; of son to father ; of the weak and tempted to the all-quickening spirit. go. The Modern Conception of God. (Short.) God omnipotent, eternal, on. Father. B Y MlNOT J' SaVAGE ' DD ' gx. The Unitarians. By Edward E. Hale, D.D. A sketch ©f the Unitarian Church in America (1904). Its doctrines. ★g2. The Faith of Charity. (Out of print.) By Charles C. Everett, D.D., LL.D. Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION *93. The Divine Unity. (Out of print.) By Augustus Woodbury, D.D. Divine sovereignty and divine paternity ; man a fellow-laborer with God ; the “Larger Hope.” 94. The Radical Difference between Liberal Christianity and Orthodoxy. By Thomas L. Eliot, D.D. The authority of different sects, and the sources from which they draw their beliefs. 95. The Old Motives and the New Motives in Religion Contrasted. By Thomas R. Slicer. The old fear, the new freedom ; the old obedience through law, the new if obedience through love. 96. Unitarian Christianity. By Charles G. Ames, D.D. Christianity not a doctrinal system ; the union of the human and divine ; the method of freedom; spiritual culture; the true living church. ^ 97. Experiencing Religion. By Seth C. Beach. The essential elements of religion ; the experience of religion should be a part of every-day life,?enlarging and deepening from stage to stage. 98. The Faith of a Free Church. By Samuel M. Crothers, D.D. The Unitarian faith in God, in Christ, in man, in prayer, in immortality. 99. The Punishment of Sin. By John W. Chadwick. The ethical sternness of the Unitarian faith. The traditional hell and the hetero- dox hell. 100. Our Gospel. By Minot J. Savage, D.D. The old and new belief about God, revelation, man, human destiny. 101. The Theology of Unitarians. By Charles C. Everett, D.D., LL.D. Unitarians make no formal statement of belief; the “Scheme of Salvation;” miracles ; the dignity of human nature ; the authority of Jesus ; future life. 102. Unitarianism as a Social Force. (Short.) By Julian C. Jaynes. Man’s dignity and worth, personal righteousness, knowledge, religious freedom. 103. Incarnation. By William C. Gannett. Oriental and Greek incarnations ; early Christian beliefs in incarnation con- trasted with those of the present day. 104. Let Us Pray. By Charles G. Ames, D.D. Prayer no longer believed to be a means of changing the laws of the world. Life a prayer. 105. The Strict and Normal Humanity of Jesus. By Joseph May. The meaning and derivation of the word “Christ”; “False Christs”; the Messianic hope. Paul’s belief of the Hebrew Messiah and Son of God; the Logos. 106. The Service of Prayer in the Work of the World. By Augustus M. Lord. The essential fact of prayer ; it is a real need ; how to come into communion with God. ^ 107. The Consciousness of God. By Charles F. Dole. The aspiration after God ; the outward channels of approach ; the infinite com- munion . Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION xo8. Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. By Howard N. Brown. The unity of the Godhead; the Fatherhood of God ; the sonship of man ; the Holy Spirit a living bond between God and man. 109. What is Christianity ? By Minot J. Savage, D.D. Growth of the doctrines concerning Jesus; the essential things in Christianity. no. A Plea for Sincerity in Religious Thought. By Joseph H. Crooker, D.D. What should liberals in conservative churches do ? hi. The New Inspiration of Religion. By Thomas R. Slicer. A conviction of reality ; the reconciliation of religion and science ; communion with God ; a new interpretation of faith. \ 1 12. Baptism and the Lord’s Supper as Interpreted and Observed by Unitarians. By Augustus P. Reccord. Services of dedication and reconsecration. The history of baptism. The his* tory of the Lord’s Supper ; a symbol of human brotherhood. 1 13. The Heritage of Liberal Christianity. By Leslie W. Sprague. We inherit faith, discipleship, the Bible, the Sabbath, freedom, and worship. 1 14. The Church of the Spirit. By Francis G. Peabody, D.D. A church of faith, hope, and love ; Jesus’ emphasis on the mission of the Holy Spirit; other interpreters. Witnesses of the Unitarian faith, — Channing, Parker, Martineau. 1 15. Progressive Liberalism in the Closing and Opening Century. By Charles W. Eliot, LL.D. Liberalism has created a change of opinion regarding the Bible, authority, so- ciology, revelation, religion. xi6. Our Beliefs ; and Some of the Reasons for Them. By James T. Bixby. Discipleship as shown in doctrinal beliefs about God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, salvation, human nature, forgiveness of sin, heaven and hell. List of represen- tative men holding Unitarian views. 117. An Introduction to Unitarianism. By Samuel M. Crothers, D.D. Many persons are unaware that there exists any church to which they may belong without giving up their freedom of thought. This tract is to bring to their knowl- edge the ideals of the Unitarian Church. 1 18. The Power of Jesus’ Life. By Grindall Reynolds, D.D. The perpetual witness given by Jesus; the immortality of his teaching; the growth of Christianity. xig. Why go to Church? Bv Herbert H. Mott. Reasons for going to church simply stated. X20. The Simplification of Life. By Samuel M. Crothers, D.D. What is most worth knowing, most worth doing. The ideal purpose and prac- tical life should be one. The reading of the Bible. xax. The True Basis of Religious Unity. By Charles W. Wendte. “The teaching of Jesus that practical religion is summed up in love to God and love to man.’’ History of efforts for Christian unity. 122. The Divinity of Man. By George W. Kent. The divinity, not the depravity, of man illustrated by the life of Jesus. Please order by number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 123. God or Man ? A Brief Examination of the Doctrine of the Deity of Jesus Christ. By Herbert H. Mott. A study of the doctrine with arguments against it from Bible texts. 124. The Divine Meaning of Life. By Richard W. Boynton. A message to those lacking enthusiasm, hope, and faith. Life a service. 125. Bringing Immortality to Light. By Charles E. St. John. Immortality revealed in the present life. 126. The Thirst for the Living God. By Francis G. Peabody, D.D. The moral lift of religious inspiration ; the need of more study, a larger loyalty, consecration. Positivism ; agnosticism ; the ethical movement. 127. The Interpretation of Life. By Charles E. St. John. “ The path of duty is the way to glory.” Difficulties offer progress to us immortals. 128. The Divinity of Jesus. By Alexander T. Bowser. Jesus as Deity; the true divinity; the revelation of God. 129. The Worth of Enthusiasm. By Edward E. Hale, D.D. Achievement will come to those who act with unselfish enthusiasm. 130. Why Unitarians observe the Lord’s Supper. By John W. Day. A much misunderstood position explained in a plain and candid way. 131. What Think Ye of Christ ? By Edward E. Hale, D.D. The well-beloved Son of the living God, commissioned and anointed to bring in the kingdom of God. “ Follow thou me.” 132. The Religious Gains of the Nineteenth Century. By W. H. Lyon, D.D. The great scientific doctrines of the century inspire deeper reverence for God’s universe, and prepare the way for stronger faith and more consecrated service. 133- Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. By Edward E. Hale, D.D. “ As we really come to live and move and have our being in God, we shall come to know that to child and Father there is one life in each and in both.” 134. The Place of Jesus in the Religion of To-day. By Julian C. Jaynes. “He stands as a spiritual leader. He inspires by his example. He oommands by his teaching. He marks out the way to God by the footprints of his own life.” 135. Was Jesus God? By J. T. Sunderland. An endeavor to answer this question by interrogating : (1) Reason, or Common Sense ; (2) The Bible ; (3) History, Secular and Church. 136. The Unitarian Vantage-ground. By Prof. Francis A. Christie. The development of dogma during the early Christian centuries. The unison between the modern intuition about human life and the Unitarian affirmation of the highest spiritual capacity of man. 137. The Common Faith. By Samuel M. Crothers, D.D. The best development of the human soul can come to no man alone. Together we reach the deep grounds of faith. 138. The Gospel of Personality. By Howard N. Brown. This gospel is the real foundation and beginning of man’s higher life. The personal leadership of Christ. Please order by number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 139. Jesus as Humanity’s Ideal. By J. T. Sunderland. The loftiest ideal of life and character is the one we have in Jesus of Nazareth. 140. Religion. By Charles W. Eliot, LL.D. Religion, as a sentiment and a mystery, but not as a mystification, is the real foundation of character, the very atmosphere of life. The truly religious man. 141. Faith, Hope, and Love, the Children of Sorrow. By Charles A. Allen. The fundamental convictions of religion are made clear in times of sorrow. Suffering a means of an awakening to higher aims. 142. Is Going to Church a Duty? By Minot J. Savage, D.D. Church-going is an aid toward the deepest spiritual culture, is both a duty and a necessity. The church the only organization whose sole aim is the highest good of the individual and of society. 143. Accepting Life’s Limitations. By John Dumont Reid. Personal adjustment to outward circumstance, — its trial and its blessing. 144. Blessed be Drudgery. By William C. Gannett. Culture comes through the very drudgeryjof commonplace duties and the uncom- fortable things of life. 145. Open Inspiration versus a Closed Canon and Infallible Bible. By Charles William Pearson. The tenacious clinging to outworn dogmas concerning the Bible closes the pathway to new truth, and brings just criticism upon those who should be foremost in seeking spiritual light wherever and whenever it may be found. 146. A Man’s Right to Happiness. By Charles Edwards Park. Every man has a right to happiness — when he has earned it ; and the way of earning it is the way of real living, of earnest effort, of true growth and true self-cultivation. 147. The Growth of Practical Religion. By Carroll D. Wright. An optimistic presentation of the evidences of the growth of a true religious spirit at the present time. ^148. The Church and the Young People. By Minot J. Savage, D.D. The things for which the church as an organization stands, and the need of young people to keep in active touch with its ideals and work. 149. The True Self is the Best Self. (Short.) By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. The idea of right and wrong. No natural depravity. 150. Unitarian Principles. (Short.) By Henry M. Simmons. Religious unity. Unitarians have not loet Christ as a divine incarnation. J51. The Law of Christ. (Short.) By Edward P. Pressey. The brotherhood of mai. Altruism. *152. The Leadership of Jesus. (Out of print.) By Frank A. Gilmore. *153. The Unitarian Church: Its Working Forces. (Out of print.) (For Unitarians.) By Frederick B. Mott. The value of the individual ; the church ; Conferences ; Associations ; the Women's Alliance ; Young People’s Religious Union. Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION Unitarianism and Modern Discovery. (Short.) By John W. Chadwick. Unitarianism has found a larger thought of God in the developments of science ; unity the prevailing idea in modern science. Unitarianism as a Character-builder. (Short.) By Charles G. Ames, D.D. The Unitarian movement is, above all, a call to the life of righteousness. Unitarianism : Religion with Liberty. (Short.) By George Batchelor. The first stage of religion, bondage ; second, emancipation. Unitarianism as a Religion for Every Day. (Short.) Life is the test of faith. By JOHN W. Day. Unitarian Ideals. (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. Unitarian churches exist in order to make the highest human ideals actual in the individual life, in society, and in the State. The Unity of the Spirit. By Charles A. Allen. It is clearly manifested in the great enthusiasms of philanthropy and religion, not at all in the acceptance of creeds. Is the Bible Infallible ? (Small.) By J. T. Sunderland. Does the Bible claim infallibility ? Where does the doctrine come from ? “ The whole Bible or none ! ” The Bible’s real value. The simple truth is, there are two Bibles. One is the old and outgrown Bible of tradition, credulity and igno- rance. The other is the new, fresh, living, imperishable Bible of inquiry, scholarship and intelligence. ★ 161. The Ladder. (Out of print.) By John F. W. Ware. ★162. An Epistle to Unitarians. (Out of print.JBy Henry C. DeLong. Our great convictions and the religious earnestness they cultivate. ★163. Through Narrow to Broad. (Outofprint.) By John F.W. Ware. Small beginnings lead to large results, in business, character, personal holiness. *164. The Cost. (Outofprint.) By John F. W. Ware. 165. Church Membership. (For Unitarians) By Austin S. Garver. Concentration of power and collective strength gained by church membership. ★ 166. The Man who Kept Himself in Repair. (Out of print.) 167. The Secret of Happiness. By A Workwoman. How a callous and cynical woman became a messenger of sweetness and light. ★168. The Needs of our Unitarian Work. (For Unitarians.) (Out of print.) By Samuel A. Eliot, D. D. Need of personal service, deeper religious vitality ; co-operative zeal. ★ i6g. The Value of Unitarian Fellowship. (Outofprint.) By Arthur W. Littlefield. The wisdom of all the churches is needed to make safe the new and untried way for each one. 170. The Oiled Feather. ^ A lesson on the need of oil in rusty places, in story form. 154 - 155 . 156. '* 157 - 158. * 159 - 160. Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION ★171. The Religious Training of our Young People. (Out of print.) By Jonathan Smith. It should go hand in hand with physical and intellectual culture, and should be systematic, persistent, and thorough. ★172. Self-consecration. (Out of print.) By John F. W. Ware. The giving of one’s self up to the service of God, as a grand voluntary act of the soul. ★173. I am the Way. (Out of print.) By John F. W. Ware. The Unitarian thought of Jesus as the way to God. *174. The Unpardonable Sin. (Out of print.) By John F. W. Ware. There is no unpardonable sin. 175. The Mother and her Boys. (Short.) By Mrs. Brooke Herford. The mother must teach her boys self-control, truthfulness, honesty, usefulness, patriotism, and, to crown all, religion. ★176. How to be Happy. (Out of print.) By Miss M. P. Wells. Health ; activity ; self-forgetfulness ; determine to be happy ; trust in God. *177. The Parley. (Out of print.) By John F. W. Ware. The story of Nehemiah as an example of steadfastness to duty. ★178. The Results of an Inquiry into the Aims and Characteristics of Unitarian Preaching. By Samuel A. Eliot, D.D. An account of what Unitarian ministers are preaching about and of their purpose and methods in their pulpit work. *179. The Gleaning. (Out of print.) By John F. W. Ware. Self-search. “ Where hast thou gleaned to-day? ” 180. Our Thought of God. (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. The certainty of the fact of God ; his presence and reality; our rest in him. 1 81. God within Us. (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. The power, life, thought, justice, love, and will in man are but names of God. 182. What if we Believe in God? (Short.) By Charles F. Dole. The finite human life depends upon the actual present God. 183. God loves All Souls. (Short.) By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. God’s love creating, educating, saving. 184. We Need to Know God. (Short.) By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. More, not less religion needed ; God seen in science and in universal law, in duty, in the mysteries of being. 185. Stilling the Tempest. (Short.) By Julian C. Jaynes. The power of God in man is beautifying the earth, conquering sin, and transfig- uring human character. 186. The Temptation. (Short.) By Julian C. Jaynes. Human temptation, human struggle, and human victory. 187. The Transfiguration. (Short.) By Julian C. Jaynes. The transformation of the human into the divine, the transfiguration of man with the glory of the spirit. Please order by number only . * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION r 1 88. What is Heaven? (Short.) By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. “ The peace of God which passeth understanding.” 189. How to get Eternal Life. (Short.) By James Freeman Clarke, D.D. The problem of human existence ; a sincere desire to serve God brings trust in Him, and love to man. 190. Sureties of Life after Death. (Short.) By Edward P. Pressey. Religious faith confirmed by the teachings of modern science. 191. The Belief of Count Leon Tolstoi. (Short.) Abstracts from his Reply to the Holy Synod, giving briefly his convictions con- cerning God, Truth, Christianity, Immortality. 192. An Outline of Unitarian Thought. (Short.) By George Croswell Cressey, D.D. A short sketch of the salient points of Unitarian belief. 193. The Thorn Bearer. (Short.) By William C. Gannett. Facing fate ; acceptance and surrender ; helps ; heroism. ★194. What Unitarian Parents can teach their Children. (See R. E. Bulletin, No. 3.) By Charles W. Eliot, LL.D. Some of the theories and ideals which can be set before Unitarian children, and which the “ genius of Unitarianism ” can keep before society at large. 195. The Influence of Unitarianism in the Church Universal. By Edward G. Spencer. The prevalence of Unitarian ideas among the Orthodox, as shown by quotations. 196. A Reasonable Easter. By Ulysses G. B. Pierce. Why belief in a future life is not unreasonable; the doubting element of the human mind and its effects; the moral certainty of immortality. 197. Do You Believe in Human Nature or Do You Not? By Charles E. St. John. The present point of distinction; if you answer yes, you are Unitarian; if you say no, you may be Trinitarian. 198. Songs in Exile. By Paul Revere Frothingham. In the lands of pain, disappointment, and sorrow may still be sung the songs of hope, not despair; of sympathy, not isolation; of work, not idle complaint; even of faith in God’s eternal love. 199. The Reproach of Christ. By William H. Lyon, D.D. The reproach not that Christ gave, but which he received; that is even now given by those who reject the newer truths of the spirit, and is received by those who dare to follow the heavenly vision. 200. Why We should be Loyal to Unitarianism. By Prof. Francis A. Christie. Because it inspires a deep sense of happiness, of goodness, of human sympathy, of helpfulness, of God, as the essentials of religion. Our loyalty, too, helps others to avow their belief in our faith. 201. The Passing of Calvinism. By James T. Bixby. Blood-redemption not characteristic of Biblical teachings; the cruel and unten- able position to which the doctrine leads ; the real spiritual atonement. Please order by number only . * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 202. The Real Presence of the Living God. By Edward Everett Hale, D.D. God working in all and through all; men, as his children, partakers with him in all good things and colaborers in all good works. 203. The Power of an Endless Life. By Paul Revere Frothingham. It expands the sense of existence and its meaning; exalts human nature; ex- presses completeness and maturity of life, a future ful film ent. 204. Is there a Righteous God? By Thomas Van Ness. Evil to be recognized; analogy between physical and moral laws; morality de- pendent upon freedom of choice; the real penalty of evil living, and the gain of right conduct. \ 205. The Unitarian Purpose. By Howard N. Brown. The central and vital aims of the Unitarian Church; the true loyalty to Christ. 206. What is “Evangelical” ? By Augustus P. Reccord. What the word really means; in the true sense Unitarians are evangelical. 207. Real Christianity By Edward Everett Hale. Written apropos of the exclusion of Unitarians from the recent Church Con- ference in New York City, and giving the liberal definition of the word “ Christian.” 208. The Bible in the Light of Modern Thought. By Henry Wilder Foote. A summary of its real value and meaning in view of the higher criticism. 209. Divine Because Human. By Ulysses G. B. Pierce. The very humanity of Jesus and of the authors of the Bible makes their teach- ings a revelation of the divine to us and in us more real and vital. 210. The Five Fundamental Principles of our Faith. By Charles W. Casson. Brief, pointed, illuminating expositions of the primary tenets of Unitarianism. 21 1. Good Tidings. By Ellen S. Bulfinch. The great truths which the Unitarian faith brings to the world to-day. 212. Concerning Religion. By Andrew D. White. Selections from the chapters on Religious Development in Andrew D. White’s Autobiography . 213. The Jesus of the Gospels and the Jesus of History. By J. Estlin Carpenter. A tracing of the changing aspects in which the Jesus of the Gospels is viewed and interpreted until he becomes the Christ of the Creeds and of the Church. 214. A Brief Account of Unitarianism. By Brooke Herford. A short summary of what Unitarianism is, with a brief sketch of the growth and present status of Unitarian thought in Europe and America. 215. Twentieth Century Revelation. By Edward D. Towle. The real interpreter of ancient Scriptures is the active life of to-day ; and in business, science, democracy, literature, and art is found the present revelation of truth. Please order by number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 216. The Fatherhood of God. 217. The Brotherhood of Man. 218. The Leadership of Jesus. 219. Salvation by Character. 220. The Progress of Mankind Onward and Upward Forever. By Charles E. St. John. Five brief envelope tracts on the main points of Unitarian Faith. 221. A Statement of Unitarian Belief. Scriptural references arranged by topics, representing the average opinion of the Unitarians of to-day. 222. Seeing Jesus. By Frederic H. Kent. A true image of Jesus is seen through his impression upon those about him, which reveals, through this direct human relationship, the real elements of his power. 223. From the Old Faith to the New. By Five Ministers. The personal experiences of several clergymen, as told by themselves, in giving up their Orthodox faith for the Unitarian. 224. A Little Catechism Of Unitarian faith, fellowship, and organization in the form of twenty-three questions and answers. 225. The Highest Criticism. By William H. Lyon, D.D. Deals with revelation itself, the divine truth and life, not merely with persons and dates, — with substance, not form or outward circumstance. 226. The History of Unitarianism in the Southern Churches. By Arthur A. Brooks. Charleston, New Orleans, Louisville, and Richmond. 227. What is it to be a Liberal in Religion ? By Charles W. Wendte. Charitableness of opinion, conviction of principle, a receptive attitude of mind, sincerity in matters of faith, are all essential elements. 228. The Story of the Resurrection of Jesus. By Joseph May, D.D. Is the physical and earthly resurrection of Jesus mythical or historical? 229. The Wonderful Hope. By Charles F. Dole, D.D. Like love, honor, truth, the hope of immortality, instead of being an uncertain and tenuous thing, really belongs in the same class with the most substantial facts which constitute life. 230. Church Going. By Hon. George F. Hoar. The patriotic, civic, moral, and intellectual aspects of church going all emphasize its importance. Consider the effect of the total abolition of public worship. 231. The Fulfilment of Citizenship. By Ten Leaders of American Thought and Life. Quotations from the public addresses of prominent exemplars of American citizenship on the value of the church and of religious training and ideals in the upbuilding of American character and citizenship. Please order by number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 232. One Hundred and Fifty Laymen on Church Attendance. By Lewis G. Wilson. The testimony of loyal and devoted church attendants who realize the import- ance of the Church and willingly assume the responsibility of supporting it. It contains many interesting and cogent reasons for attending church. 233. Miracles in the Light of Modern Knowledge. By J. T. Sunderland. A summary of the reasons why the modem mind rejects miracles as unneces- sary and non-essential in relation either to the life and teachings of Jesus, the revelation of the divine nature, or the great fundamental verities of religion. 234. The Christmas Birth-poem. By William C. Gannett, D.D. Is the Christmas Birth-story, as told in the Gospels, literally true? And, if not true, how did it rise as a story and enshrine itself in the two Gospels? And why is it that those who do not think it is history love it so well ? 235. The Liberal Church of To-day: Its Ministry. By Frederick W. Perkins. Spiritual leadership is the primary and distinct province of the minister to-day* who should be imbued with the spiritual purpose of his office, his high privilege of leadership, and the importance of his message to the present age. 236. Reasons for Faith in Immortality. By Thomas Van Ness. Twelve convincing grounds of belief in immortality, “to bring renewed trust to those whose faith needs intellectual support.” 237. The Bible from the Liberal Christian Point of View. By J. A. Cruz an. The Bible is a spiritual but human biography of a nation, like other great relig- ious literatures, developing through and exemplifying the evolutionary processes of growth like the human race itself, and revealing the gradual ascent of man in morals and in spiritual discernment. 238. Resources Against Discouragement. By Minot O. Simons. Such resources must be deliberately, persistently, and intelligently cultivated. Friends and work are outward resources, but the chief ones, as arts of defence, must be applied by one’s own sturdy right will. 239. Three Centuries and a Half of Unitarianism in Hungary. By J. T. Sunderland. The name “Unitarian” had its origin in Hungary, where also is to be found the oldest existing body of organized Unitarian Christians, with a history fully three times as long as in any other land. 240. The Church of the Modern Spirit. By Charles W. Casson. A clear, concise statement of the principles and purpose which form the dis- tinctive characteristics of the Unitarian Church, and which make it “a church upon the march with God and man.” 241. The Healing Power. By Charles G. Ames, D.D. This power is the One Life manifesting itself throughout the universe, — a life which we share and from which we derive physical as well as spiritual benefit if we properly put ourselves under its control. 2142. “How About the Moral Man.” By Roderick Stebbins. Written in answer to a circular (of which a photographic reproduction is shown) widely distributed among the students of a Massachusetts college, and bearing the headline given above. Issue is taken with the assertion “ Good morals and good works are most desirable, but they won’t save you.” Please order by number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION / r r 243. From Doubt to Confidence in Religion. By John W. Rowlett, D. D. A clear and straightforward statement of the transition from orthodoxy to Unita- rianism of a Methodist minister who had found intellectual compromise intoler- able, and who discovered in the Unitarian fellowship the joy of an unexpected religious freedom. 244. The Position and Function of the Church. By Julian C. Jaynes. It is first to keep the light of the ideal burning clear and bright amid all con- fusion and storm and darkness, and then, by the glory of that ideal and by the sheer power of its loyalty to itself, to inspire men to go about doing good. 245. Christianity is a Life. By Edward Everett Hale, D. D. “ And what we mean when we say that Christianity is a Life, and not a creed, is that our Christianity must be avouched illustrated, and extended by action. If Christianity is only expressed in creeds, it is as dead as a stereotype plate.” 246. The Religion of the Future. By Charles W. Eliot, LL.D. An address delivered before the Harvard Summer School of Theology that called forth country-wide discussion. A notable contribution to liberal religious literature. 247. What Must I Do to be Saved ? By Christopher J. Street. Better the question, “ What Must I Do to Save? ” Salvation, like happiness, ought not to be made an aim in itself. 248. What Unitarianism Really Is. By Thomas R. Slicer. Under five different heads are expounded and discussed the points of Unitarian belief with singular clearness and force, putting old forms of statement in fresh and convincing phrase. 249. Unitarianism and Modern Thought. By William S. Morgan. Modern thought is scientific thought — about astronomy, chemistry, physics, biology, psychology, evolution. The relation of Unitarianism to the scientific habit of mind explained. 250. The Peril of Paganism. By Augustus P. Reccord. The peril arising from the increasing number of people who continue to dwell in the midst of Christian influences, and yet insist upon the right to live their own lives regardless of the effect upon Christian practices and Christian in- stitutions. 251. The Proof of Immortality. By John Haynes Holmes. Two kinds of proof are employed by modern science — one, actual experience and ocular demonstration ; the other, inference from what is experienced to that which cannot in the nature of things be experienced. This latter, the proof of logical inference, is the one here employed. 252. The Everlasting Reality of Religion. By John Fiske. Commonsense argument puts the scientific presumption entirely and decisively on the side of religion, and against all atheistic and materialistic explanations of the universe. 253. The Right Uses of Fear. By Benjamin A. Goodridge. We ought to recognize fear as one of our very good friends. It keeps us in mind of our limitations. It gives us a lively realization of the consequences of disobedience. Please order by number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 254. Religion and Social Reform. By William M. Brundage. No permanent social reform possible without the inspiration and sanction of religion. Whatever of human brotherhood and social justice has been thus far attained has been gained mainly through those trained in the church. 255. Our Common Inheritances. By Edward C. Moore. The Influence of Congregationalism upon the Nation’s Religion. By Charles E. Park. Addresses before the Massachusetts Convention of Congregational Ministers. 256. Redemption or Recovery ? By Minot Simons. What the human race needs is not redemption, but education. The sinful soul needs not redemption, but recovery from sin. Redemption is external, some- thing done for us ; recovery is internal, a matter of the inner life. 257. In Darkest Naturalism and the Way Out. By George R. Dodson, Ph.D. The need of the time is for a philosophy that shall make legitimate our aspira- tions and release faith and hope from imprisonment, and yet shall be true, for present-day naturalism seems to act like a blight upon religious faith. 258. I Believe. By Charles E. St. John. A proclamation of certain convictions which can never be outgrown, and which new truth will not disturb, such as the belief in God, human nature, the future life, and upward progress forever. 259. The Church which Lieth Foursquare. By William S. Jones. Men should open their eyes more widely and behold the many gates through which, from age to age, the multitudes of truth-seekers pour into the realm of faith. 260. Christ the Understanding Friend. By Charles E. Park. Suggestions as to the nature and function of Christ and the Church’s relations to Christ. The most profitable as well as the most rational character attribut- able to Christ is that of an understanding friend. 261. A Modern View of Retribution. By George Batchelor. Humanity is responsible for the conduct of humanity, one (innocent) member necessarily suffering with other members, else the human race would fall apart, and the gulf constantly widen between the two extremes of human condition. 262. The Layman and the Church. By Salem Hyde. Aims to point out what church members can do for the church in return for what it can and should do for them, if they have the right attitude about it. 263. God’s Part and Ours. By Charles G. Ames, D.D. The universe is made on a plan which favors the growth of Godlike human beings, and is as suitable and adequate for producing spiritual results as for producing physical ones. 264. The Sparrow’s Fall. By William C. Gannett, D. D. A frank recognition is given to the tragedies of life, without attempting their disguise in euphonious phrases; the author, however, brings to bear in their consideration many other facts and observations which lead the reader to look upon them in a new light. 265. Light on Bible Texts. By John Page Hopps. Brief, pointed, and untechnical expositions of many Bible passages often cited by the orthodox for confounding Unitarians on Scriptural grounds in regard to the trinity, the deity of Jesus, the atonement, hell, and the Holy Spirit, closing with citations of certain passages of direct Unitarian significance. 266. Democracy in Religion. By John Dumont Reid. A church without a creed symbolizes not the destruction of faith, but the freedom of faith, and in this freedom is achieved the greater faith that appears in the widening of the boundaries of thought and life, and in the pursuit of all noble ideals. Please order by number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 267. The Priesthood of the Congregation. By William H. Lyon, D.D. Unitarians, while believing thoroughly the prophetic side of their faith, are too shy of taking part in those portions of the public worship which are assigned to them. The defects and the remedies of this attitude of the congregation are here pointed out. 268. Thoughtful Agnosticism, and Present-day Unitarianism. By George H. Badger. When the thoughtful agnostic becomes familiar with Unitarian thought, he will find nothing to deprive him of his bold liberty of thinking, while his own vague surmisals, his aspirations and ideals will be given a chance to assert themselves and find their proper strength in a congenial atmosphere of frank spirituality. 269. The Coming Church. By Elmer S. Forbes. The church in its relation to social service and reform. 270. The Household Religion. By Charles F. Dole, D.D. The past and present attitudes of the religious spirit in the home and the modern demand for its expression. 271. Christian Unity. By William S. Jones. The unifying element of Christianity and the right relation between different denominations. 272. From Orthodoxy to Freedom. By Frank A. Powell. A personal experience of religiousjgrowth. INTERNATIONAL SERIES (A group of pamphlets illustrating and emphasizing the international scope and char - acter of modern religious conceptions . ) 1. Unitarianism and the Missionary Spirit. By Lewis G. Wilson. In what way and to what extent can the Unitarian body sustain the test of mis- sionary activity imposed upon it in common with all other Christian denomina- tions, and justify its existence by its competency as a missionary body? 2. The Fears which Cause the Increasing Armaments. By Charles W. Eliot, LL.D. Apprehension lest a nation’s exterior supplies be cut off, and fear lest a hostile army might make an invasion with almost no warning. Peace depends in part upon international measures to relieve these dangers. 3. The Unitarian Mission in Japan. By Clay MacCauley. An account of the way in which Unitarian Christianity was first introduced into the empire, and the principles and aims which have governed its activities for the nearly twenty years of its existence in Japan. 4. The World Mission of the Unitarian Faith. By Jabez T. Sunderland. The demand for Unitarian missionary endeavor and the duty of a world-wide propaganda. 5. The Promotion of Unitarian Christianity in Foreign Lands. By Charles W. Wendte, D.D. To be published November 1, 1913. SOCIAL SERVICE BULLETIN {The purpose of this series is to offer suggestions for the conduct of work for the com- mon good in our churches , and also to give circulation to articles of value on differ- ent phases of the social question, some original contributions, and others reprints from the magazines and the reports of various societies .) Please order by number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 1. The Social Welfare Work of Unitarian Churches. The report of an investigation to ascertain what the Unitarian Churches are now doing in the way of social service. 2. Working with Boys. By Elmer S. Forbes. Hints on the organization and conduct of boys’ clubs with a view to carrying the boys safely through the perilous years from fourteen to twenty. 3. The Individual and the Social Order in Religion. By Frederic A. Hinckley. How individualism and socialism are reconciled by the power of religion, uniting growth and service in every human being for the enrichment of life. 4. A Remedy for Industrial Warfare. By Charles W. Eliot. A description of the Canadian Act for the maintenance of industrial peace, by which strikes and lockouts have been very largely avoided in Canada. ★5. Some Unsettled Questions about Child Labor. (Out of print.) By Owen R. Lovejoy. Four problems which require immediate attention. A discussion of the child labor question in its larger and more important aspects. 6. The Social Conscience and the Religious Life. By Francis G. Peabody. The definition of duty in terms of social obligation and social redemption ; the awakening of the churches to social problems. 7. Friendly Visiting. By Mary E. Richmond. A method of getting back into genuine relations with people of smaller incomes ; an effort to recover one of the essential elements of civilization. 8. Rural Economy as a Factor in the Success of the Church. By Thomas N. Carver. The success of the country church depends upon its members becoming better and more progressive farmers, business men, mechanics and politicians. 9. The Relation of the Church to the Social Worker. By Herbert Welch. The chief function of the church is to permeate all social work with the religious spirit ; to spiritualize charity and social reform. 10. Popular Recreation and Public Morality. By Luther H. Gulick, M.D. “ The things we do, when we do what we please, are vitally related not only to health, but also to morality and the whole development of the finer self.” 11. The Wise Direction of Church Activities toward Social Welfare. By Charles W. Eliot. Points out effective social work which churches can do, especially in the directions of teaching and providing helpful sports and recreation. 12. The Democracy of the Kingdom. By Charles D. Williams. The church must stand for men simply as men, neither fawning upon the mighty nor truckling to the mob, and be the friend of all that is human. Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 13. What Bad Housing Means to the Community. By Albion Fellows Bacon. Tells what bad housing is, and shows the effects of slum life on the physical and moral health of tenants and of the community. 14. City Building in Germany. By Frederic C. Howe. An admirable account of how art, foresight and commonsense applied to the development of cities make for the general happiness and welfare. 15. Religious Work and Opportunity in Country Towns. An investigation of religious conditions in rural districts, with suggestions for dealing with the problems of the country churches. 16. Comprehensive Planning for Small Towns and Villages. By John Nolen. » Forethought, skill and a controlling ideal necessary if growing towns are to avoid costly mistakes and are to secure the greatest public advantages. 17. The Inter-relation of Social Movements. By Mary E. Richmond. Shows how different social movements are related and how there must be close and intelligent cooperation between them if the best results are to be secured. 18. Vocational Guidance. By Meyer Bloomfield. Multitudes of children go to work unprepared and uninformed and fail miserably. Vocational guidance aims to secure an intelligent choice of occupation. 19. The Improvement of the Rural School. By Harlan Updegraff. Deals with one of our most important educational problems, and finds the solution in the establishment of the socialized country school. 20. The Social Survey in Small Cities and Towns. By Carol Aronovici. How to get the facts which must be known before work for the common good can be most wisely and successfully undertaken. 21. Social Service for Young People in the Church School. By Clara B. Beatley. A practical course of education in social service, illustrated by reference to the plan and methods in use in the Disciples School, Boston. 22. The Church at Work. By Elmer S. Forbes. The church not only worships but works, and is the force which should transform society and make it just and pure and brotherly. 23. Social and Civic Centers. By Edward J. Ward. Explains how the public school 'buildings may be used as the forum of the people and as centers of neighborhood social life. 24. A Rural Experiment. By Ernest Bradley. An interesting account of a successful effort to build up the life of the country on its social side. Please order by number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 25. A Practical Platform for Social Progress. By Charles F. Dole. How the churches may better fulfill their social responsibilities. Of special interest to members of social service committees and men’s clubs. 26. The Rural Problem and the Country Minister. By Joseph Woodbury Strout. A challenge to the country minister to grasp new opportunities of service quite as dramatic and far-reaching as those of his urban contemporary. 27. Prisoners* Work. By E. Stagg Whitin. An exposition of the aims of the more enlightened penal systems. How to make of the criminal a useful and self-respecting member of society. 28. Conservation of National Resources. The report of a committee of the A. U. A. (chairman, Dr. George F. Swain), containing a bibliography of great value. 29. Both Sides of the Servant Question. By Annie Winsor Allen. To be published October 1, 1913. Please order bv number only AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION RELIGIOUS EDUCATION BULLETIN 1. Organizing the Sunday-school for More Efficient Instruction. By William I. Lawrance. Giving counsel in the matter of definitely organizing a school on the side of its educational work. 2. Religious Education in the New World-View. By Edwin D. Starbuck, Ph.D. Presenting four growing world-conceptions which are taking possession of human thought and life. n 3. The Education of Our Boys and Girls. By Charles W. Eliot, LL.D. Showing the influence of noble literature. The Unitarian heritage. Character the object of education. # SUNDAY-SCHOOL SERIES ★1. Sunday-school Attendance. (Out of print.) By Rev. William I. Lawrance. How to increase our Sunday-schools, and how to secure regularity in attend- ance. Advice derived from personal experience. 2. The Class a Parish and the Teacher a Minister. By Rev. William H. Lyon, D.D. Obstacles to the success of a Sunday-school teacher considered. A remedy sug- . gested through the idea of treating the class as a little parish, with directions for carrying this plan out. 3. Mrs. Motherwell on the Sunday-school. By Rev. H. G. Spaulding. Letter from a Unitarian mother who has children in a Unitarian Sunday-school. She states what the Sunday-school ought to be. 4. What is Needed to Make a Successful Sunday-school. By Rev. Earl M. Wilbur. Elaboration of the six points: faithful teachers, interest of parents, co-operation of minister, attention to absent scholars, rational teaching, close relations to the church. 5. What Shall we Do with the Sunday-school? By Rev. Edward A. Horton. Consideration of certain suggestions, which are rejected. Discrimination and adjustment are offered as the requisite solution. 6. Music in the Sunday-school. By Rev. W. H. Lyon, D.D. A careful treatment of this important question with advice as to good music, and how to train a school in it. ★7. How to Make the Sunday-school Attractive. (Out of print.) * By Rev. John W. Day. Order, life, work, and interest are mentioned as four elements of attractiveness. To which are added living religion and personality. ★8. Why Study the Bible ? (Out of print.) By Rev. J. T. Sunderland. First, a summary of answers to the question, How not to study the Bible. Then the positive side put in the light of modern life and scholarship. ★9. Children in Church. (Out of print.) By Rev. W. H. Lyon, D.D. A reasonable balancing of views as to the relation of home, child, Sunday-school and church. The Sunday-school sustained, but the church given its leading position. Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION ★10. The Sunday-school of To-morrow. (Out of print.) By Rev. Edward A. Horton. Attempt to outline the general character of the teaching in the Sunday-schools of the future, together with an indication of methods and objects. ★n. Personal Contact between Teacher and Scholar. (Out of print.) By Albert Scheible. A presentation of the thought that personality rules in Sunday-school instruc- tion. Also a plea for real friendship between the teacher and scholar. 12. How to Make Larger Sunday-schools. By Rev. Henry T. Secrist. Grouping of hints and devices for the increase of Sunday-school membership. A compilation of reports from many successful workers in the field. ★13. The Sunday-school and the Child. (Out of print.) By Rev. Minot J. Savage, D.D. A forceful argument for the supreme value of religion and the possibilities ot the Sunday-school. Also a sketch of what should be attempted in the way of teaching. ^ ★ 14. The Little Coat. (Out of print.) By Rev. Sylvester Judd. An appeal to parents for giving children the right religious and moral education. 15. The Right Way to Approach the Life of Jesus. By Rev. Thomas R. Slicer. Socialism, Christian Science Healing, Orthodoxy are deftly treated, and the author aims to steady the steps and clear the vision of bewildered students of the life of Jesus. ★16. The Religion of Childhood. (Out of print.) By Rev. Roderick Stebbins. A helpful word to those who are anxious as to the right nurture of children in religious matters. A. Statements of Belief. Our Faith. The well-known statement of Unitarian belief in five points. Red and black, thick paper, x 5. Smaller slip, one color, 4f x 3|. Our Trust. By Miss Alice F. Symmes. In leaflet form, x inches. Suitable for pasting in service books. A psalm of confidence and courage. Also leaflets, 11 In the Love of Truth” “I believe in God the Father Great ” “ What we Believe .” Corner-stones of the Unitarian Faith. By Rev. Edward A. Horton. Seven affirmations with Scripture references. Exposition of our Faith. Compiled by Mrs. Clara Bancroft Beat- ley. Therefore. By Rev. F. B. Mott. An application to character of “Our Faith.” B. How to Organize a Sunday-school. By Mrs. Clara Bancroft Beatley. The directions and advice in this little pamphlet of eight pages will be found helpful in the conduct of a Sunday-school. * C. Sunday-school Conference Leaflets. No. I. General management. No. II. Officers and teachers. No. III. Teaching the lesson. Each leaflet contains about twenty questions, intended as a basis for discussions and remarks at matings of Sunday-school workers. Please order by number only. *Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION MEMORABLE SERMONS AND ADDRESSES OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY ( This series is printed with the aid of the income of the Edward Wigglesworth Fund and contains sermons by distinguished Unitarian preachers of the frst half of the nineteenth century.) 1. The Government of the Thoughts. By James Walker, D. D. Good or bad thinking the basis of character. 2. The Open Windows. By George Putnam, D. D. The windows of the soul to be kept open toward the light ; the windows of memory, sympathy, imagination, hope, religious faith. 3. A Sermon on Immortal Life. By Theodore Parker. The arguments for immortality based on the general belief of mankind, the nature of man, and the nature of God. 4. The Regent God. By Frederic H. Hedge, D. D. Differing thoughts of God and the universe ; government by fixed external laws, by capricious interference, by uniform and direct action of Deity. 5. The Victory over Death. By Octavius B. Frothingham. The dread and the blessing of death. 6. A Discourse on Some of the Distinguishing Opinions of Unita- rians. Delivered at Baltimore in 1819. By William Ellery Channing, D. D. A landmark of historic Unitarianism. 7. Remarks on Creeds, Intolerance, and Exclusion. By William Ellery Channing, D. D. Human creeds, setting bounds to thought and limiting all inquiry tend to arrest that perpetual progress which is the life and glory of an immortal mind. 8. A Discourse on the Church. By William Ellery Channing, D. D. The true church, its simplicity as first constituted by Jesus and his apostles. There is but one essential thing in religion, and this is the doing of God’s will. 9. The Divinity School Address. By Ralph Waldo Emerson. Delivered before the Senior Class in Divinity College, Cambridge, 1838. An epoch-making paper defining the motives and duties of the Christian minister. 10. The Transient and Permanent in Christianity. By Theodore Parker. An illuminating outline of the enduring and temporary elements in the Chris- tian religion. A separation of the essential and inconsequential in Christianity. ★n. Nazareth. (Out of print.) By Caroline H. Dall. A study of the life of Jesus as the result of forty years of Sunday-school teaching. 12. Christ the Son of God, and Christ the Son of Man. By William G. Eliot, D. D. Answers the questions: Who was Jesus Christ? what place does he hold in the universe? the meaning of calling him divine and human? what was he in his own nature ? how does he stand in relation to God ? to man ? Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION 13. Orthodoxy and Liberal Christianity Compared and Contrasted. By Henry W. Bellows, D.D. God regarded as a Father, not a Sovereign ; the atonement simply an at-one-ment. ^14. Christianity the Absolute Religion. (Out of print.) By Andrew P. Peabody, D. D., LL.D. The identity of the religion of Christ and absolute religion. The being of God ; duty ; immortality ; Christ, the founder ; ordinances. 15. Spiritual Christianity. By Thomas Starr King. The origin of Christianity ; Paul’s doctrine of the Spirit ; no particular dogmas nor institutions necessary ; all the sects useful. 16. One Faith. By George Putnam. The rightful place of faith in the order of religious thought and experience. 17. John Milton. By William Ellery Channing, D.D. Reprinted from the Works of Channing in recognition of the three hundredth anniversary of the birth of Milton. 18. The Gospel of John. By Francis Tiffany. The historic forces that worked together toward its composition, and the nature of the conceptions which it embodies. 19. The One Religion. By Charles Carroll Everett, D. D. Although there are many theologies, there is but one religion, one central religious truth (common to all religions in varying degree), which is “ the goodness of God and the confidence that man may place in it for life and for death.” GERMAN 1. Eine kurze Darstellung des Unitarianismus. [A Brief Account of Unitarianism .] By Charles W. Wendte. 2. Das Unitarische Christenthum. Eine Ordinations-rede gehalten zu Baltimore , 1819. [Unitarian Christianity. An Ordination Dis- course delivered at Baltimore, 1819.] By William Ellery Channing, D.D. 3. Der alte und der neue Glaube an Christus. Ein Vortrag gehalten von Dr. Moritz Schwalb, reformirten Prediger an St. Martini in Bremen. [ The Old and the New Faith in Christ. A Discourse by Dr. Moritz Schwalb, Preacher at St. Martin in B remen 4. Die Gottliche Erhaltung der Welt. Von Dr. R. Schramm, Dom- prediger in Bremen. [ The Divine Preservation op the World. By Dr. R. Schramm, Preacher at the Cathedral in Bremenl\ 5. Der Unitarianismus in seiner tieferen Bedeutung. [ Unitarianism in its Deeper Significance .] By J. T. Sunderland. 6. Ein Wort zur Verteidigung Unitarischen Christentums. [A Word in Defence of Unitarian Christianity . ] By W. Copeland Bowie. Please order by number only. * Out of print AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION * if SPANISH x. Una Introducci6n al Unitarismo. [An Introduction to Unitarian- ism .] By Samuel M. Crothers, D.D. a. iQue Creen los Unitarios ? Una Declaracion dc FI [ What do Unita- rians Believe ? A Statement of Faith.] By Charles W. W endte. ★3. Origen, Desarrollo, e Historia del Unitarismo. (Out of print.) [ The Origin , Development , and History of Unitarianism. A critical study.] By Samuel A. Eliot, D.D. FRENCH x. Les grandes Lignes de la Religion d’apres les Unitaires [The Main Lines of Religion as held by Unitarians]. • By Brooke Herford, D.D. 2. La Religion de P Avenir. [The Religion of the Future .] By Charles W. Eliot, D. D. SCANDINAVIAN l. Hvad Unitarierna Tro. By August Dellgren. A statement of the Unitarian faith in the Swedish language. 2» Hvad Unitarierne Tror. By Amandus Norman. The real significance of the conception of the incarnation, stated in Norwegian. 3. Den nye Inkarnation. By Amandus Norman. A simple statement in Swedish of the Unitarian view of the incarnation. FINNISH 1. Kuinka pitaa kuoleman. [How to Die.] By Minot J. Savage, D.D. 2. Mies joka piti itsensa kunnossa. [Man who Kept Himself in Repair .] 3. Uskonto-opillisia Periaatteita. By Joseph H. Crooker, D.D. A part of “ The Unitarian Church : Its History and Characteristics.” 4. Katoavainen Ja Pysyvainen Kristinuskossa. [“ The Transient and Permanent in Christianity .”] By Theodore Parker. PAMPHLETS x. The Annual Report of the American Unitarian Association. Annual address of the President, the report of the Secretary, the statement of the Treasurer, and the minutes of the Annual Meeting of the Association. 2. The Unitarian Handbook. Suggestions and recommendations for the organization and administration of liberal churches. How to form a church, call a minister, manage finances, arrange for subsidiary organizations, etc. 3. The Report of the Committee on Covenants. The methods of Unitarian churches in regard to church membership, and specific recommendations to ministers and parish committees. 4. The Parish and the Church in Massachusetts. By Joseph N. Pardee. A study of the relations of “ Congregation,” “ Church” and “ Parish” in the triple-headed organization of many of the old Congregational societies as they exist to-day in New England, with suggestions as to simplification of such organization. Please order by number only. * Out of print ' A LIST OF THE FREE PAMPHLETS ISSUED BY THE Unitarian Temperance Society Orders for any material in this section of the catalogue should be addressed to the above organization at 25 Beacon Street, Boston. HIE UNITARIAN TEMPERANCE SOCIETY is practically the working committee of the Unitarian churches to promote the cause of temperance in every way possible. So long as the people of the United States spend eight hundred millions of dollars a year upon the alcoholic drinks, with the enormous amount of squalor, disease, wretchedness, and death, as well as moral evil and political corruption, which naturally belong with such a volume of self-indulgent expenditure, it is obviously nec- essary that churches should take vigorous means to stop the mischief. ^ Liberal or modem religion is specially characterized by the fact that it aims to improve and ennoble human life. It is not so much a scheme of opinions as a spirit of beau- tiful conduct. It fills men with generous discontent at the sight of suffering. It enlarges their sympathy and stirs them to do whatever they can for the social welfare. €J This Society publishes and freely distributes addresses, pamphlets, leaflets, and tracts, such as are adapted to help in the struggle which is going on to make a clean, tem- perate, and happier world. The Society is glad to arrange for conferences on the subject of temperance, or to send speakers to general meetings where this subject may prop- erly have a share in the interest and attention. €J While the habit of a considerable number of the mem- bers of the Society is that of total abstainers from the alcoholic drinks, a hearty welcome to membership is ex- tended to all who may be ready in any form to assist in the general purpose of the Society. The annual mem- bership fee is one dollar. The Society is almost wholly dependent upon its fees and the gifts of generous friends. Correspondence and inquiries are solicited. UNITARIAN TEMPERANCE SOCIETY When the numbers are not given the pamphlets are out of print S^’How to Do It. By Joseph H. Crooker. A small tract which shows churches and ministers, Sunday-schools and Alliances, Young People’s Religious Unions, and individuals generally, what may be done and what ought to be done for Temperance. Also references to the printed helps to be used. 1. Temperance: The New View. By Charles F. Dole. The rule of the greatest good ; giving up whatever, on the whole, clearly works more harm than good ; temperance associations ; the noble life. 2, Personal Purity. By Edward Everett Hale. Making the most of one’s self ; lessons of the tremendous power of purity of body and mind ; a higher standard in modem society ; evidences of progress. 4. Address on Temperance. By William Ellery Channing. A remarkably illuminating essay, discussing the great essential evil of intem- perance ; the extent of its temptations ; its causes ; means of prevention or cure. 7. Intemperance and Social Ills. By Anna Garlin Spencer. Its intimate bearing through weakened body and will on licentiousness, gambling, crime, pauperism, transmitted defects; social means of lessening intemperance. 8. The Man who never Cried. By Mary L. Spalding. An interesting story for children, based upon a true incident ; an impressive les- son for older folks as well. 13. A Plain Question of Personal Duty. By Earl M. Wilbur. Entire abstinence the only full discharge of duty toward one’s self and others ; no perfect safety in moderation ; effect of example. 14. What Converted me. By Charles F. Dole. Taking the side which really strives for temperance ; sacrifice of personal pleasure for the general good ; the beneficent result of total abstinence ; the sense of duty. 17. Some World-aspects of the Temperance Question. By J. T. Sunderland. Observations in England, France, Germany, Africa, and India, based upon a year’s travel and study ; pertinent facts and conclusions. 18. Mary Elizabeth. By Elizabeth Stuart Phelps. A touching temperance story, wherein a forlorn child shows a noble spirit of self- sacrifice for one supposedly more needy than herself. 19. What might have saved Jamie. By William C. Gannett. The right influence of the true home ; removal of public temptation ; strong friends as body-guards ; imaginative sympathy. 25. Witnesses for Temperance. Brief expressions of opinions by Rudyard Kipling, Carroll D. Wright, David Starr Jordan, John D. Long, and others, emphasizing temperance principles. 27. The World War with Intoxicants. By W. G. Tarrant. An eloquent and cogent outline of the evil influence and effect of the liquor habit and trade ; the necessary steps towards their control. Please order by number only A LIST OF THE FREE PAMPHLETS ISSUED BY The Alliance of Unitarian Women Orders for any material in this section of the catalogue should be addressed to the above organization at 35 Beacon Street* Boston. nr^HE Alliance of Unitarian Women has for its objects: 1. Primarily to quicken the religious life of our Unitarian churches, and to bring the women of the denomination into closer acquaintance, co-operation, and fellowship. 2. To promote local organizations of women for missionary and denominational work, and to bring the same into asso- ciation. 3. To collect and disseminate information regarding all matters of interest to the denomination, namely: Needs of local societies. Facilities for meeting these needs. Work to be done. Collection and distribution of money, etc. 4. To devise ways and means for more efficient usefulness. THE ALLIANCE 1. Study Class Leaflets. (a) The Books of the Old Testament : A little help in reading them. (c) Four Programs for Alliance study. \d) History of Unitarianism in New England. \e ) Unitarian Beliefs. if) Great Hymns of our Faith and their Authors. (g) Answers to questions on Unitarian Belief. No. i. (h) Brief answers to questions on Unitarian Belief. No. 2. (z) A Study of Social Questions. (j.) The Books of the New Testament. (k) Programs for Alliance Study. 2. Miss Ellis’s Mission. The life and letters of the founder of the Post-office Mission. 3. Post-office Mission. Suggestions for conducting the work. 4. Cheerful Letter Exchange. Circular of information. Cheerful Letter , sample copies. 6. Catalogue of the Circulating Library. The books are for free use, and will be sent to any person desiring them, the borrower to pay return postage. % Please order by number only I 4 t A % f t