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This book contains the three Schweich Lectures for 1913,
printed almost exactly as they were delivered last November.
The only change of importance is that I have divided the third
Lecture into its two constituent parts, so as to keep the specifically
Christian variety of Apocalypse in a class by itself.
In the Lectures I attempted to confine myself as much as
possible to what I believe to be the fundamental idea which underlies
the great series of Jewish Apocalypses, i.e. the idea of the
imminent Judgement to Come, and further, to exhibit this idea
in connexion with what I believe to be both its true historical
setting and the ultimate cause of its manifestation. That which
gives the Apocalypses vitality is the great struggle between
Religion and Civilization, of which the Maccabean Martyrs are
the symbol. I omot the adjectives.
My readers themselves, according as they view the thing,
can say "between spiritual Religion and Material civilization"
or "between fanatical Religion and enlightened Civilization,"
and they will judge the Apocalypses accordingly. But it seemed
to me worth while to exhibit the Apocalypses as clearly as possible
from this quite definite and particular point of view, and therefore
I found it inadvisable to expand what I had said by introducing
other points of view or more details into the printed form of
the Lectures.
Francis C. Burkitt
March, 1914
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