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Professor Charles Zueblin, Ph.B., of Chicago University, will give the last of the series of six lectures on "A Democratic Religion" in the New Lecture Hall at 4.30 o'clock this afternoon. The exceptional interest aroused by Professor Zueblin's lectures has been well attested by the large crowds that have filled that hall on each occasion. He is lecturing under the auspices of the Ethical Society and committee of ten, of which Professor James is chairman.
In his first lecture Professor Zueblin, dwell on the importance of individuality in a man's religion. In the second and third lectures he spoke of the broad realm of orthodoxy and of the modern decay of authority, and at the next lecture he took up the responsibility of the church in its effects on the happiness of a perfect moral society. Last Monday Professor Zueblin said that the great trouble of our modern life is its fragmentary character and that the best way of securing the wholeness of life is to satisfy these six great wants of human society: wealth, health, sociability, taste, knowledge and righteousness. He maintained that one of the ways in which the church could help society is by establishing a more rational idea of Sunday. Professor Zueblin's special subject this afternoon will be "Impersonal Immoriality."
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