THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES.
-*iMODERNISM IN RELIGION. “The modernist policy,’’ said Dr Major “is essentially an educational one. It has to depend on education, an' dif people will hot think, then modernism has no message for them., j. If, one the other hand, they wish to ' learn and to place religion more in relation to the home life than it is today, then modernism can do a. great \ deal to- helf them.” Dr Major claimed that modernism aimed to purge the Church of schism and superstition, surviving from age lo age, and there had been « tendency to miss the points that were vital. He contended that the union ot Cnristeiulom could not be brought about by endless conferences, but by the eradication of these superstitions. —Auckland Sermon.
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Hokitika Guardian, 5 March 1929, Page 4
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127THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES. Hokitika Guardian, 5 March 1929, Page 4
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