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Association for Improving the Con-
dition of the People, the, G. C.,
391, 392; object of, 391; methods
of, 392

Association for Improving the Con-

dition of the Poor, number of peo-
ple taken to the seashore by,
S. C., 350, 351

Asylums, for the erring, S. C., 87;
for idiots and epileptics, 88
Athanasius, G. C., 330, 336
Atheism in Switzerland, G. C., 144,
145

Atheists, their exclusion from office-
holding, G. C., 167

Athletics in reaching young men, S.C.,

107-129; beneficent effects of the
training undergone in, 110, III;
educational value of, 112, 113; one
of the great training schools for life,
113, 114; how to win young men for
Christ by, 115-117; the dark side
of, 117, 118; professionalism in,
118, 128; betting and, 118; brutality
and foul play in connection with,
118, 119; is it to become a curse
or a blessing to the country? 250
Atwater, Prof., G. C., 157
Auchmuty, Col., G. C., 453
Augustin, St., G. C., 209, 309, 333
Augustin, G. C., 305
Augustus, G. C., 293

Australasia, religious condition of,
G. C., 57-67; morality in, 57;
divorce laws in, 58; the opium
traffic in, 58; the drink traffic in,
58; the social evil in, 59; education
in, 59, 60; missionary societies in,
63

Austria-Hungary, religious liberty in,
G. C., 179-182; religions recog-
nized in, 181; Methodists and Bap-
tists in, 181
Authority, without, no social order

and no progress in material civili-
zation, G. C., 444

Autocracy in the church of Russia,
G. C., 194

Bainbridge, Mrs. Lucy S., S. C.,
addresses by, 290-292, 331-332,
363-366

Bancroft, George, on the Christian
character of the United States,
G. C., 173

Baptist Church, the, is a glorious
church, G. C., 338

Baptist churches, the, G. C., 288; in
France, 85

Baptist Union Theological Seminary,
S. C., 473

Baptists, in Germany, G. C., 89, 90;
in Great Britain, 96; in Austria-
Hungary, 181; the first body of
English Christians that formulated
and enforced the doctrine of relig-
ious liberty, 167; what they stand
for, 273

Barnitz, Rev. S. B., D.D., remarks
by, G. C., 281-283

Baronius, Cardinal, G. C., 331
Barrows, Rev. John Henry, D.D.,
address of welcome, G. C., 7-10
Barzelloti on the Catholicism of
Italians, G. C., III

Basel Mission House, the, G. C.,
367

Basil of Cæsarea, S. C., 88
Bath-house, the Baron de Hirsch, in
New York, S. C., 354; the Demilt
Dispensary, 354; free public, in
Chicago, 354

Bath-house, the People's, in New
York, S. C., 351; description of,
351-353; designed for the accom-
modation of both sexes, 352; total
cost and annual expense of main-
taining, 353

Baths, public, S. C., 349-355; swim-
ming, in New York harbor, 350;
spray or shower, 351
Beecher, Dr., G. C., 203
Benevolence and beneficence, S. C.,
22, 23

Bengel, G. C., 340

Berkeley Temple of Boston, G. C.,

357

Berlin, the City Mission of, G. C.,
376
Bernstorff, Count Andreas von, paper
by, G. C., 87-92

Besant, Walter, G. C., 101
Beza, G. C., 322

Bible, the, inspiration of, G. C., 329
Bible and tract societies in Germany,
G. C., 374

Bible Institute, the, S. C., 96
Bible School, the, S. C., 11-13
Bible societies, the British, Scotch,
and American, their work in Italy,
G. C., 122

Bible study, courses of, S. C., 18-20
Birmer, Miss N. A., S. C., 441
Blackman, Prof. W. F., G. C., 397
Blackstone, G. C., 174

Blatchford, Mrs. E. W., S. C., 325
Bliss, Rev. Howard S., remarks by,
G. C., 484-486; S. C., 139; ad-
dresses by, 47-53, 265-268, 298-|
301, 356-362; remarks by, 156-175
Bodelschwingh, Pastor von, S. C.,

88

Bohemians, Reformed, G. C., 319
Boller, Rev. Benj. F., remarks by,
S. C., 157-175

Bonghi, councillor of state, G. C.,
105; on the attitude of the Italians
toward religion, III; on the
Italian priesthood, 117
Bonney, Pres. C. C., address of
welcome, G. C., 1-4

Bootblack Club, the, S. C., 345,
346

Booth, General, G. C., 386
Bouquillon, Prof., G. C., 157
Bourget, Paul, G. C., 80
Boys' Brigade, the, G. C., 353, 354;

S. C., 120, 245-256; is a religious
movement, 247-249; its object,
247; does not teach the "art of
war," 248; and athletics, 249, 250;
and ambulance work, 250; and
reading and club rooms, 251; and
instrumental bands, 251; its of-
ficers, 251, 252; its headquarters
in Great Britain, 252; the genesis
of, 253-256; its pledge, 254; a
component part of the Sunday-
school, 254; the specific work of,
255

Boys' Club, the, S. C., 67; in the
factory town, 138; its work and
use by the church, 257-268; the
room of, and its equipment, 257;
games in, 257, 266; membership
of, 258; rules of, 258; the super-
intendent of, 259; penny savings
banks in connection with, 259,
263; and trade classes, 259; enter-
tainments in, 259; how best to be
used by a church, 260, 261; and
police-court work, 259, 263; the
leader of, an absolute despot, 265;
physical training in, 266; the
moral side of, 267, 268; as an
element in personal service, 313
Boys' Temperance Cadets, S. C., 3
Bracq, Prof. Jean C., paper by,
G. C., 76-86

Brazil, separation of church and

state in, G. C., 194; marriage
laws in, 194

Briggs, Prof. Chas. A., D.D., G. C.,
346

British and Foreign Bible Society,
G. C., 96, 97, 122, 131
Brooke, Stopford, S. C., 415
Brooklyn's improved tenement-
houses, S. C., 200-206; descrip-
tion of, 201, 202; occupations and
nationalities of tenants in, 203;
their cost and maintenance, 205;
financial and moral returns, 205;
the indirect good accomplished by,
205, 206
Brotherhood, men are hungry for
a profounder, G. C., 480
Brotherhood of Andrew and Philip,
the, S. C., 29, 44-46; member-
ship of, 44

Brotherhood of Christian Unity,
G. C., 2

Brotherhood of men, the, G. C., 50;
only possible where God is recog-
nized as Father, 52

Brotherhood of St. Andrew, the,

S. C., 32-39, 44; the constitution
of, 34; what is this order doing?
36, 37
Brown, Prof. Francis, D.D., Ph.D.,
S. C., 466, 471, 472; remarks by,
426-427, 429-431; address by,
457-460
Brownson, Dr. Orestes A., on dan-
gers from the union of church and
state, G. C., 163

Bryce, Prof., G. C., 476; on Amer-
ican citizenship, 51; on religious
freedom, 169

Bucer, Martin, G. C., 322
Buchanan, Miss E. A., address by,
S. C., 280-283

Buddha, G. C., 443

Bullinger, G. C., 322, 323
Bulwer, G. C., 450
Bunyan, G. C., 467

Bushnell, Horace, S. C., 22
Byington, Rev. E. H., presiding
over conference on "Open-air
Services," S. C., 155-178; address
by, 155-162; remarks by, 171-177

Cabanis, G. C., 78

Cable, George W., S. C., 287
Cairns, Dr. John, G. C., 302
Calhoun, Rev. N. W., D.D., paper
by, S. C., 54-59

Calvin, G. C., 142, 288, 323, 331,
334, 338

Calvinism, G. C., 284
Calvinists, G. C., 314
Calvin's "Institutes," G. C., 322
Cameron, Father, G. C., 297
Camorra, the, G. C., 113
Campbell, Douglas, G. C., 164
Canada, the religious condition of,
G. C., 68-75; number of Protes-
tants in, 68; divorce in, 71; for-
eign missionary enterprises in,
71; temperance in, 72
Canterbury, Archbishop of, G. C.,
197, 386

Capital and labor, conflict between,
G. C., 294

Cappus, Mr., remarks by, S. C.,
476, 478

Capron, Mrs. S. B., address by,
S. C., 96-98

Carey, G. C., 338
Carlyle, G. C., 74, 296

Carroll, Dr. H. K., G. C., 310
Catholic Church, the, her methods,
S. C., 182

Catholicism, in France, G. C., 81, 82;

increase of, in Switzerland, 150
Cavour, G. C., 181, 183

Chalmers, G. C., 312; S. C., 371
Channing, G. C., 339

Chapman, Rev. Wilbur, S. C., 45
Charity, the soul of, is charity to
the soul, G. C., 372; a scientific
basis of, 446-456; blind, a fruitful
cause of pauperism and crime, 450;
bad politics, a cause of the demand
for, 451
Charity Organization Society, what
attitude ought the churches to take
toward it? S. C., 241
Charity Organization Society in Eng-
land, G. C., 385

Charity Organization Society of New
York, the, S. C., 371, 372; and the
provident savings bank, 357
Charlemagne, G. C., 334
Charles II., G. C., 203
Chateaubriand, on liberty, G. C.,
153

Chicago Conference, object of the,
G. C., 21, 23, 29

Chicago, the city of, character of,
G. C., 29; proportion of churches
to population in, 253; composition
of, S. C., 186

Chicago Theological Seminary, the,
and financial aid to students, S. C.,
431
Child, every, is born a religious
creature, S. C., 334; the, his emo-

tional nature far in advance of his
intellectual, 336

Children, neglect of their education,
S. C., 182; their need of being
shepherded, 182; their neglect a
fruitful source from which flows a
criminal population, 183; rate of
mortality among, 196
Child-training, growing interest in
questions relating to, S. C., 332;
importance of environment in,
333

China, religious liberty in, G. C.,
189

Christ, civilization's highest ideals
culminate in, G. C., 55; celebra-
tion of his resurrection in Girgenti,
115; the divine concord of all hu-
man discord, 328; character of his
teaching, 347, 348; the supreme
Reformer, the Savior of society,
440; the person of, the revelation
of the eternal foundations of so-
ciety, 458; the love of, is natural
law, 461; cared more for humanity
than for religion, 467; came
make a better world, 467
Christ's sonship, the peculiar lessons
to Americans from, G. C., 52
Christendom, the reunion of, G. C.,
305-340; the difficulty of the prob-
lem of, 305, 306

to

Christendom, the divisions of, G. C.,
308

Christian basis of social reform, the,
G. C., 457-465

Christian co-operation, examples of,
G.C., 299; and the social mission of
the Church,290-304; Bishop Moor-
house on, 387

Christian co-operation in church ex-
tension, G. C., 261-272; what it
means, 262; is practicable, 263; in
Maine, 263, 264; meeting in New
York on, 264, 265; the duty of,
owed to contributors to home mis-
sions, 267, the devoted mission-
aries and their families, 268, and
to Christ and our common Chris-
tianity, 270; Mr. Mornay Williams
on, 272-275; Rev. Dr. Barnitz
on, 281-283; Rev. Dr. King on,
284, 285; Bishop Fowler on, 286-
289
Christian Endeavor Societies, G. C.,
317, 353

Christian Evidence Society, G. C.,

240

Christian inconsistency, G. C., 280

Christian Kingdom Society, G. C.,
388

Christian liberty, G. C., 153-220; in

Holland, 130

Christian

Literature Society for

India, G. C., 240
Christian socialist party, G. C., 88
Christian Social Union of Oxford,
G. C., 389

Christian sociological literature and
education, results of, G. C., 401
Christian union, different kinds of,
G. C., 315, 316; means of promot-
ing, 335, 336; article on, 385;
and co-operation, 221-341
Christian Union for Promoting In-
ternational Concord, the, G. C.,
383

Christian work, in Holland, among

lunatics and the fallen, G. C., 126;
failures in, S. C., 367-378; the
effect of disintegration of Chris-
tianity on, 369

Christian work in factory towns,
S. C., 130-139; what is meant by
it? 130

Christian work in the lumber camp,
S. C., 140-154; must be unde-
nominational, 143, 144; methods
of, 143-145

Christian worker, the, should be
the practical evolutionist, G. C.,

470
Christian

Workers' Convention,

S. C., 168, 169
Christian Workers' Home in New
York, S. C., 363
Christianity, the significance to, of
the discovery of America, G. C.,
34; a part of the law of the U. S.,
174; embodies religious liberty,
206; must have liberty in its work
on character, 214; the discovery
of selfhood the preliminary mis-
sion of, 400; and the evolution of
society, 466-471; organic, S. C.,
179, 180; the attitude of American,
toward those who are a danger to
society, 367; what is it doing to
make good citizens? 368; what
use is it making of the material
wealth under its control? 377, 378
Christlieb, Prof. Theodore, G. C.,
91

Chrysostom, St., G. C., 321, 336
Church, the social mission of, G. C.,
290-304; the New Testament,
290-292; a working centre, 291;
a school, 291; a home, 292; of

to-day, 292; has lost living touch
with the people, 292, 293, 294;
social mission of, cannot longer
be neglected, 299; must keep
pace with civilization, 329; and
science, 333; and sociological
problems, 341-491; plea for an
enlarged view of the mission of,
341-350; lays vastly more em-
phasis upon theology than upon
Christianity, 345-347; the story
of a, 351-356; the institutional,
357-365; and municipal govern-
ment, 429-439; and the labor
movement, 440-445; misunder-
stood by friend and foe, 440; does
not stand for the kingdom of God
and his Christ, 462; has not yet
begun to practice unity itself, 482;
influence of open-air services on,
S. C., 155, 167; the mission of,
179; the ordinary Protestant idea
of, 182; the workingman's attitude
toward, 185, 186; the relation of,
to political reforms, 214-225; the
wealth of, too largely substituted
for the power of personality, 377
Church, a working, S. C., 1-25
Church, the Protestant, is losing its
hold on a large part of the popula-
tion, S. C., 464

Church and state, sphere and func-
tion of, G. C., 157, 158; separa-
tion of, 159-161; union of, 159,
208; the relation of, in the U. S.,
159, 160; dangers from the union
of, 161-163; Macaulay, Dr. Schaff,
Cardinal Gibbons, Dr. Orestes A.
Brownson on dangers from the
union of, 162, 163; opinions on
the separation of, 163; dependence
of, reciprocal in Russia, 195
Church attendance, to-day and thirty
years ago in Ohio, S. C., 385
Church committees and their duties,
S. C., 6, 7

Church edifices, in Berlin, G. C., 90,
91; exempt from taxation in
France, 192

Church history, the study of, pro-

motes Christian union, G. C., 336
Church of England, the, G. C., 197,
322; and factory operatives, S. C.,
132

Church of England Temperance
Society, G. C., 385, 389
Church of England Purity Society,
G. C., 385

Church of Rome, fundamental error

of the, G. C., 112, 113; paganism
in the, 114

Church of Scotland, the, G. C., 200
Church Parochial Mission, the, in
Great Britain, G. C., 95

Church statistics in the state of
Washington, G. C., 266, 267
Church work, institutional methods
of, S. C., 26-31

Churches, dying for lack of adapta-
tion, G. C., 251; number of,
against secret societies, S. C., 46
Churches, the, their present state,
S. C., 179, 180; and tenement-
house reform, 196-213; and tem-
perance reform, 226-234; and or-
ganized charities, 235-244
Cicero, G. C., 107

Cities, the, the ganglionic centres of
modern civilization, G. C., 430
Citizens, what is American Chris-
tianity doing to make good, S. C.,
367, 368

Citizenship, what is good? S. C., 367
City Mission of Berlin, the, G. C.,
376

City missons, S. C., 16
Civil-marriage laws, in Colombia

(S. A.), G. C., 193; in Brazil, 194
Civilization, its highest ideals cul-
minate in Jesus Christ, G. C., 55
Clark, Rev. Joseph B., D.D., re-
marks by, G. C., 275-279
Class systems in the U. S., S. C.,
304

Clement of Rome, G. C., 337
Clergy, the, in Russia, their re-
sources, G. C., 195

Clergymen, their exclusion from of-
fice-holding, G. C., 167

Clerk of church, his duty, S. C., 4
Coke, G. C., 312

Coleridge, S. C., 184

Colgate, Samuel, G. C., 415
College, the, the relation of the theo-

logical seminary to, S. C., 466-478
College course, the, not an ideal
preparation for the theological
seminary, S. C., 467

College settlement in Rivington St.,
New York, S. C., 360

College settlements, S. C., 302-309,
413

Collins, Rev. John C., address by,

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Colonists, character of the early
American, G. C., 41-46
Columbus, Christopher, G. C., 305;
meaning of his discovery, 37
Comenius, John Amos, S. C., 103
Comity, the problem of interdenomi-
national, among country churches,
S. C., 390-404; denominational co-
operation the principal solvent of,

402

Commons, Prof. John R., papers by,
S. C., 214-225, 226-234
Competition, denominational, a seri-
ous evil, S. C., 390-399; causes of,
399-402; remedies for, 402-404
Comstock, Anthony, S. C., 148; pa-
per by, G. C., 414-428
Congregational church, the, is a
glorious church, G. C., 338
Congregationalists, are predisposed
to be tolerant of every form of evan-
gelical Christianity, G. C., 275,
276; believe in denominational
courtesy, 276, 277

Connecticut, state religion in, G. C.,
203

Constantine the Great, G. C., 106,
334

Constitution of the U. S., proposed
XVI. Amendment to, G. C., 161,
201
Continuation and Recreation Schools,
S. C., 341-348; in London, 343,
344 in Chemnitz, Saxony, 344;
their organization desirable in the
United States, 345

Conwell, Rev. Russell H., D.D.,
LL.D., address by, G. C., 351-356;
remarks by, S. C., 484
Cooking schools, S. C., 232; no
temperance reform more urgently
needed than, 230

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Coolev, Judge, on religious liberty,
G. C., 154; on religious equality,
170; on Christianity as a part of
the law of the U. S., 174
Cooper, Peter, G. C., 453
Co-operation, of the local churches,
G. C., 258; in church extension,
261-281; in Christian work pro-
motes Christian union, 335: be-
tween Christians of all denomina-
tions, 384-389; among churches in
charitable work, S. C., 235-244;
the lack of, an incalculable lower-
ing of the influence of Christianity,
369-372; lack of denominational,
in the planting of churches in
Ohio, 380

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