Explore enduring questions of faith, reason, and church history in this 1879 issue of The Baptist Review.
This volume collects scholarly essays from editor J. R. Baumes that survey topics from the nature of infinity to disputes over miracles, baptism, and eschatology. Written for a readers interested in theology and religious thought, it offers clear, measured analysis rooted in 19th‑century scholarship.
Within these pages you’ll find thoughtful discussions on how humans know infinite things, how miracles are evaluated as divine signs, and how baptism is understood in relation to regeneration. The work combines historical context with careful argument, presenting a window into Baptist intellectual life of the era.
- Clear examinations of knowledge, infinity, and the limits of human understanding.
- Reasoned analysis of miracles, their evidence, and their role in Christian faith.
- Debates over baptism, regeneration, and the nature of spiritual change.
- Contextual insight into 19th‑century theological questions and editorial perspectives.
Ideal for readers of theology, church history, and scholarly 19th‑century religious writing who want a compact view of contemporary debates.