Rendered from the trenches mudstained and worn there is still an amazing freshness and originality to this manuscript. A scholar's work with a touch of real genius making the reader doubly conscious of the toll of war. The author may well take his place with that valiant band whose passing left the world of letters, and life itself, the poorer. A band in which we are constantly discovering new names to add to those of Rupert Brook, Donald Hankey, and deferred casualties such as Studdert Kennedy. St. Paul is difficult, and this interpretation makes us ask for more. After twenty years it stands the test. It is applicable and helpful. We only wish he might have been spared to complete his Greek New Testament instead of stopping with Corinthians and Ephesians. For clergy, and laymen, and especially for youths in schools and colleges.