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In the discharge of my duties for forty years as professor of Sanskrit in the University of
Oxford, I have devoted as much time as any man living to the study of the Sacred Books of the
East, and I have found the one keynote, the one diapason, so to speak, of all these so-called
sacred books, whether it be the Veda of the Brahmans, the Puranas of Siva and Vishnu, the Koran
of the Mohammedans, the Zend-Avesta of the Parsees, the Tripitaka of the Buddhists -- the one
refrain through all -- salvation by works. They all say that salvation must be
purchased, must be bought with a price, and that the sole price, the sole purchase money, must
be our own works and deservings. Our own Holy Bible, our sacred Book of the East, is from
beginning to end a protest against this doctrine. Good works are, indeed, enjoined upon us
in that sacred Book of the East far more strongly than in any other sacred book of the East; but
they are only the outcome of a grateful heart -- they are only a thank-offering, the fruits of
our faith. They are never the ransom money of the true disciples of Christ.
(Cited by Pieper. Op. cit., Vol. I, pp. 15, 16.)
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