Part 25 (1/2)
[Footnote 579: _Spirit of Prayer_, pt. ii. 202.]
[Footnote 580: Id.]
[Footnote 581: G. Macdonald's _England's Antiphon_, 288.]
[Footnote 582: Chalmers' _English Poets_, xv. 269. _Thoughts on Human Reason_.]
[Footnote 583: M.J. Matter, _Histoire de Christianisme_, vol. iv. 347.
H.J. Rose, _Protestantism in Germany_, 46-9. Dorner's _History of Protestant Theology_, ii. 217-227.]
[Footnote 584: Matter, _Histoire_, &c., 348.]
[Footnote 585: Lavington's _Enthusiasm of Methodists and Papists_, 1747, -- 14.]
[Footnote 586: Id. 20.]
[Footnote 587: Schleiermacher, in a Letter to his Sister, 1805; F.
Rowan's _Life of Schleiermacher_, ii. 23.]
[Footnote 588: Whiston's _Life_, by Himself, 576.]
[Footnote 589: Hatton's _Memoirs_, p. 216, quoted in L. Tyerman's 'Life of J. Gambold,' in his _Oxford Methodists_, 188. Archbishop Potter, in 1737, wrote a Latin letter to Zinzendorf, full of sympathy and interest.
It is given in Doddridge's _Correspondence_, v. 264.]
[Footnote 590: Mosheim's _Ecclesiastical History_, 1758, vol. v. 86.
Doddridge's _Correspondence_, v. 271, note. Remarks on Stinstra's 'Letters,' in J. Hughes' _Correspondence_, 1772, ii. 204-5.]
[Footnote 591: Tyerman, _Oxford Methodists_, 197.]
[Footnote 592: Warburton's 'Doctrine of Grace,' chap. vi.--_Works_, 1788, 4, 626.]
[Footnote 593: Wesley's _Journal_. Quoted in _Wesley's Life_, Religious Tract Society, 34.]
[Footnote 594: 'Life of Gambold,' in L. Tyerman's _Oxford Methodists_, 155-200.]
[Footnote 595: _Second Journal_, p. 26-7. (Quoted by Lavington, -- 21); and _Works_, ed. x. 438.]
[Footnote 596: 'Remarks on Mr. Hill's Review,' &c.--_Works_, x. 438.]
[Footnote 597: 'Answer to Lavington.'--_Works_, ix. 49.]
[Footnote 598: 'Letter to Mr. Law.'--_Works_, ix. 466-509.]
[Footnote 599: I. Taylor, _Wesley and Methodism_, 33.]
[Footnote 600: 'Short View,' &c.--_Works_, x. 201. 'My soul,' he wrote in one of his journals, 'is sick of their _sublime_ divinity.' Quoted in H. Curteis, _Dissent in Relation to the Church of England_, 366.]
[Footnote 601: Stanley instances, in addition to Wesley, Athanasius, Augustine, Luther, and Baxter.--_Speech at Edinburgh_, January 2, 1872.]
[Footnote 602: S. Winkworth's _Tauler's Life and Times_, 86.]