http://books.google.com/books?id=R7KWZcOZsPEC
The Eight Points of the Oxford Group
By Clarence Irving Benson
: An Exposition for Christians and Pagans
184 pages
Publisher: Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press, 1937
Melbourne: Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press, 1937
A rare and
hard to find book.

AA Bibliography Home
95cture.jpg
wlskd8 | 95cturev

Text extracted from opening pages of book: THE THE AN EXPOSITION FOR
CHRISTIANS AND PAGANS Bj C. IRVING BENSON HUMPHREY MILFORD OXFORD UNIVERSITY
PRESS CATHEDRAL BUILDINGS, MELBOURNE LONDON, EDINBURGH, TORONTO BOMBAY AND
MADRAS 1938 the p$ ner( il Pf* t Qffice, Melbourne, for transmission m
4hr9ulfftij&& fast us** book Wholly set up and printed in Australia by
Brown, Prior, Anderson Pty. Ltd., Printcraft House, 490 Little Bourke St.,
Melbourne, C. I, 2948. PAGE FOREWORD .... . . . vii CHAPTER I GOD HAS A PLAN
FOR EVERY LIFE 1 II CONFESSION is GOOD FOR THE SOUL 18 III IF THY BROTHER
HATH AUGHT AGAINST THEE . . . . 30 IV THE FOUR ABSOLUTES . . . 44 V BE STILL
AND KNOW . . . . 58 VI DON'T BE AN Ass! 74 VII' LIFE CHANGERS ALL . . . . 89
VIII Lo, HERE is FELLOWSHIP! . . . 102 APPENDIX A THE SECRET OF VICTORIOUS
VITALITY . . . . - 115 B MY TEXT 129 C MY WITNESS 143 D QUESTIONS AND
ANSWERS . . . . 151 IF THIS COUNSEL OR THIS WORK BE OF MEN, IT WILL BE
OVERTHROWN: BUT IF IT BE OF GOD, YE WILL NOT BE ABLE TO OVERTHROW THEMj LEST
HAPLY YE BE FOUND EVEN TO BE FIGHTING AGAINST GOD. GAMALIEL. FOREWORD THE
CROSS IN LAKELAND IN all the glory that is England no place has been so
chanted by poets and nature lovers as the Lake country in Cumberland and
West morland that district which Lowell aptly called c Wordsworthshire.'
Where else in the world is beauty more thickly sown where is there such
unity in variety as in the sweep of landscape which greets the eye from the
shores of Coniston or from Kirkstone Pass? Wordsworth, the laureate of
Lakeland loveliness, has described the eight valleys seen from the top of
Scawf ell, diverging like spokes from the nave of a wheel. The scenery of
Lakeland is asuccession of delightful surprises and of ever changing forms
and colours. Rugged mountains rise amid velvety valleys; there is the
sparkle of myriad waterfalls and the shimmer of ruffled lakes 5 glowing
foxgloves and other wild flowers in rich profusion bedeck verdant carpets of
ferns and lichen-covered rocks are adorned with colours of vivid beauty.
Little wonder that such seers as Wordsworth, Southey, Coleridge, De Quincey,
Arnold and Ruskin fed their souls in this earthly paradise and littered its
winding ways and woodland paths with memories of their presence and poetic
thought. vii viii THE CROSS IN LAKELAND Wordsworth was born in Lakeland, It
gave him his cradle, his home and his grave. He loved it with a deep,
penetrating, interpreting love. Every tiniest flower was full of deepest
suggestion to him. He listened to the music of its running streams, to the
song of the skylark and the cuckoo's call, to the whispering leaves and the
wind in the trees and caught the deeper accents of a voice divine and saw
the Unseen in the seen. A SPIRITUAL PILGRIMAGE On a summer day in the year
1908 there came to this haven of quietness and tranquil beauty a clergyman
from Philadelphia, smitten with a sense of failure and futility. He was a
Lutheran minis ter, sick at heart because of the felt lack of the power of
God in his life and ministry. A man cannot give what he does not possess and
the high calling of the ministry is to give men God. Religion must be
infectious $ it is, as Dean Inge insists, caught rather than taught. Of all
the wretched men in this world, the most to be pitied is a minis ter
spiritually uncontagious. He may be an elo quent preacher, an efficient
organizer, a socialsuccess, but if he is a failure in the main issue of his
life, he is of all men the most miserable. This pilgrim, Dr. Frank Buchman,
went to Lakeland seeking if haply he might find the secret of the missing
power. Not in the many meetings of the Keswick Convention, instinct with
spiritual ity though they were, did he gain that for which he was hungering.
Not yet was his heart open THE CROSS IN LAKELAND ix and receptive. Then one
afternoon he attended a service in a little chapel outside Keswick town and
there to a congregation numbering less than twenty an unknown woman, a m