ABSTRACT

First published in 1951, Form and Spirit deals with two primary questions regarding religion- a) the nature of religion as a permanent need in human life, and its relation to the cults and creeds in which it has been embodied, and b) whether what is admittedly a crying need of our time can be met by the revival of religious forms which have lost their hold. An attempt is made to trace the evolution of religion, and a brief survey is given of the development of the chief world religions. The object is not to show that any of these can be accounted ‘truer’ than the rest but rather to see what were the reasons for the forms that they have taken, and what elements and tendencies are common to them, as throwing light both on the meaning of religion and on the needs of man's spiritual nature. This is an essential read for general readers interested in religion.

chapter Chapter One|10 pages

Introductory

chapter Chapter Two|18 pages

The Childhood of Religion

chapter Chapter Three|21 pages

The Great Religions (1)

chapter Chapter Four|23 pages

The Great Religions (2)

chapter Chapter Five|30 pages

The Great Religions (3)

chapter Chapter Six|21 pages

Forms of Worship

chapter Chapter Seven|21 pages

God

chapter Chapter Eight|19 pages

Salvation

chapter Chapter Nine|19 pages

Immortality

chapter Chapter Ten|15 pages

Religion and Morality

chapter Chapter Eleven|11 pages

Worship

chapter Chapter Twelve|17 pages

‘These Three’