The Eve of the Reformation: Studies in the Religious Life and Thought of the English People in the Period Preceding the Rejection of the Roman Jurisdiction by Henry VIIISimpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Company, Limited, 1900 - 3 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 39
Sivu 2
... natural and necessary outcome of an attempt to maintain at all hazards an effete ecclesiastical organisation , which clung with the tenacity of despair to doctrines and observances which the world at large had ceased to accept as true ...
... natural and necessary outcome of an attempt to maintain at all hazards an effete ecclesiastical organisation , which clung with the tenacity of despair to doctrines and observances which the world at large had ceased to accept as true ...
Sivu 27
... nature of the most acute judgment , and , in a word , fully instructed in every kind of learning . " 1 Ibid . , lxiii . p . 145 . 114 * Sir Thomas More writing to Colet says : " I pass my time here ( at Oxford ) with Grocyn , Linacre ...
... nature of the most acute judgment , and , in a word , fully instructed in every kind of learning . " 1 Ibid . , lxiii . p . 145 . 114 * Sir Thomas More writing to Colet says : " I pass my time here ( at Oxford ) with Grocyn , Linacre ...
Sivu 59
... nature . " And there is no doubt , " he says , " but that the Parliament may with a cause take that power from them ( i.e. , the clergy ) , and might likewise have done so before it was recognised by the Parliament and the clergy that ...
... nature . " And there is no doubt , " he says , " but that the Parliament may with a cause take that power from them ( i.e. , the clergy ) , and might likewise have done so before it was recognised by the Parliament and the clergy that ...
Sivu 63
... nature of the clerical state to justify any claim to absolute exemption , nor was it , he contended , against the law of God that the clergy should be tried for felony and other crimes by civil judges . In all such things they , like ...
... nature of the clerical state to justify any claim to absolute exemption , nor was it , he contended , against the law of God that the clergy should be tried for felony and other crimes by civil judges . In all such things they , like ...
Sivu 67
... nature of things why ecclesiastical property should not bear the burden of national works as well as every other 1 1 Ibid , f . II . 2 Ibid . , f . 14 . kind of wealth . " I pray you hold your THE TWO JURISDICTIONS 67.
... nature of things why ecclesiastical property should not bear the burden of national works as well as every other 1 1 Ibid , f . II . 2 Ibid . , f . 14 . kind of wealth . " I pray you hold your THE TWO JURISDICTIONS 67.
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The Eve of the Reformation: Studies in the Religious Life and Thought of the ... Francis Aidan Gasquet Esikatselu ei käytettävissä - 2015 |
The Eve of the Reformation: Studies in the Religious Life and Thought of the ... Francis Aidan Gasquet Esikatselu ei käytettävissä - 2018 |
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
¹ Ibid abuses Archbishop Archbishop Warham authority Bible Bishop Bishop Fisher Bishop of Rome Bishop Tunstall called Canterbury Cardinal Catholic chantry Christ Christchurch Christian clergy Cochlæus common condemned declared doubt Dyalogue ecclesiastical Edgworth England English Erasmus Erasmus's evidence evil example fact faith Father fifteenth George Joye God's Greek guilds Henry VIII heresies heretics Holy honour John jurisdiction king king's Lady Latin latria learning letters Linacre living London Lord Luther Lutheran Mass matter mind monastery monks Moria never obits opinion Oxford parish church period pilgrimages poor Pope pray prayer pre-Reformation preaching priest printed question realm Reformation regard religion Richard Pace Roman Rome Sacrament Saint-German saints says Scripture sermon Sir Thomas sixteenth century souls spiritual teaching temporal Testament things Thomas Lupset tion tract translation true Tyndale Tyndale's whilst word worship writes Wynkyn de Worde
Suositut otteet
Sivu 274 - Germany during the second half of the sixteenth and the first half of the seventeenth century if she did not actually begin, at any rate she encouraged and actively aided, the religious wars.
Sivu 313 - Every man or woman, of what state or condition that he be, shall be free to set their son or daughter to take learning at any school that pleaseth him within the realm.
Sivu 221 - It was wonderful to see with what. joy this book of God was received not only among the learneder sort and those that were noted for lovers of the reformation, but generally all England over among all the vulgar and common people; and with what greediness God's word was read and what resort to places where the reading of it was.
Sivu 228 - All which great errors and pestilent heresies, being contagious and damnable, with all the books containing the same, with the translation also of Scripture corrupted by William Tyndale, as well in the Old Testament as in the New...
Sivu 285 - Scotch are much handsomer; and that the English are great lovers of themselves, and of everything belonging to them; they think that there are no other men than themselves, and no other world but England; and whenever they see a handsome foreigner, they say that 'he looks like an Englishman...
Sivu 225 - ... many children of iniquity, maintainers of Luther's sect, blinded through extreme wickedness, wandering from the way of truth and the Catholic faith, craftily have translated the New Testament into our English tongue, intermingling therewith many heretical articles, and erroneous opinions, pernicious and offensive, seducing the simple people...
Sivu 72 - It was a wonderful system. The whole of western Europe canonical * system. was subject to the jurisdiction of one tribunal of last resort, the Roman curia. Appeals to it were encouraged by all manner of means, appeals at almost every stage of almost every proceeding2.
Sivu 313 - But if the question be asked, How must one's possessions be used? the Church replies without hesitation in the words of the same holy Doctor: "Man should not consider his outward possessions as his own, but as common to all, so as to share them without difficulty when others are in need.
Sivu 225 - God, and the true sense of the same, of the which translation there are many books imprinted, some with glosses, and some without, containing in the English tongue that pestiferous and most pernicious poison dispersed throughout all our diocese of London...
Sivu 292 - But above all are their riches displayed in the church treasures; for there is not a parish church in the kingdom so mean as not to possess crucifixes, candlesticks, censers, patens, and cups of silver; nor is there a convent of mendicant friars so poor, as not to have all these same articles in silver, besides many other ornaments worthy of a cathedral church in the same metal. Your Magnificence may therefore imagine what the decorations of those enormously rich Benedictine, Carthusian, and Cistercian...