1924. Suggestions Toward a Philosophy of the Person and Work of Christ. Primarily written with reference to the needs of the average minister, some of the topics discussed in the text include: the discovery of the actual practical significance of Christ as that is attested in human experience; human nature in its end-seeking capacity, the claim being made that the ends sought are determined by the individual, social, and religious needs which are elemental in every man; the conditions of life, especially in their harsher aspects and the argument that man's task is to organize and control these conditions in such a way as to wrest from them a value; a preliminary study of Christ himself, as he is revealed to us in the Gospels, with a view to ascertain how he solved the problem of his own life as respects the relations to the world, the relation to God, and the relation to men; and the nature of that personal and social and religious challenge that confronts any man who accepts the understanding of Christ set forth in this book.