An Ecclesiastical History, Ancient and Modern: From the Birth of Christ, to the Beginning of the Present Century : in which the Rise, Progress, and Variations of Church Power, are Considered in Their Connection with the State of Learning and Philosophy, and the Political History of Europe During that Period, Volume 5Samuel Etheridge, 1811 |
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Page 1
... give a new degree of stability to the tottering grandeur of the papacy . They were begun by Gregory XV . who , by the advice of his confessor Narni , founded at Rome , in the year 1622 , the fa- mous congregation for the propagation of ...
... give a new degree of stability to the tottering grandeur of the papacy . They were begun by Gregory XV . who , by the advice of his confessor Narni , founded at Rome , in the year 1622 , the fa- mous congregation for the propagation of ...
Page 6
... give a specious colour to their own proceed- ings . But all their stratagems were ineffectual . The The reader will find an ample relation of these facts , supported by a cloud of witnesses , in the preface to the Histoire de la ...
... give a specious colour to their own proceed- ings . But all their stratagems were ineffectual . The The reader will find an ample relation of these facts , supported by a cloud of witnesses , in the preface to the Histoire de la ...
Page 12
... give themselves out for inhabitants of the northern regions , are said to have converted a pro- digious number of Indians to Christianity ; and if common report may be trusted to , the congrega- tions they have already founded in those ...
... give themselves out for inhabitants of the northern regions , are said to have converted a pro- digious number of Indians to Christianity ; and if common report may be trusted to , the congrega- tions they have already founded in those ...
Page 20
... give an account of the success of their missions . In these productions , the vir- tues and talents of this emperor , which seem indeed to be universally acknowledged , are described and celebrated with peculiar encomiumą , SECT . I ...
... give an account of the success of their missions . In these productions , the vir- tues and talents of this emperor , which seem indeed to be universally acknowledged , are described and celebrated with peculiar encomiumą , SECT . I ...
Page 23
... give a specious colour to those facts , and use all their artifice and eloquence to justify what they cannot deny . Other articles of these complaints they treat as groundless , and as the fictions of cal- umny , that are invented with ...
... give a specious colour to those facts , and use all their artifice and eloquence to justify what they cannot deny . Other articles of these complaints they treat as groundless , and as the fictions of cal- umny , that are invented with ...
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
An Ecclesiastical History, Ancient and Modern, from the Birth of ..., Volume 5 Johann Lorenz von Mosheim Affichage du livre entier - 1825 |
An Ecclesiastical History, Antient and Modern, from the Birth of ..., Volume 5 Johann Lorenz von Mosheim Affichage du livre entier - 1782 |
An Ecclesiastical History, Ancient and Modern, from the Birth of ..., Volume 5 Johann Lorenz Mosheim Affichage du livre entier - 1803 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
adversaries anabaptists ancient appeared arminians authority bishops brethren Calixtus calvinists cause CENT CENT.XVII century Christ christian church of England church of Rome clergy communion composed congregation consequence contest controversy corrupt court of Rome declared denomination divine divine grace doctors doctrine Dutch ecclesiastical edict eminent employed England entitled faith famous favour France French Gallican church genius gospel Hence Histoire holy scriptures honour jansenists Jansenius jesuits king labours laws learned liberty lutheran church maintain manner matter maxims Memoires ment mentioned missionaries moral Mosheim multitude nation nature obliged observed opinions papal peculiar persons philosophy pietists piety pious pope popery Port Royal prince principles protestant published quakers reformed church reign religion religious rendered respect Roman pontiff Romish church sacred SECT sentiments socinians Spinoza spirit synod synod of Dort tenets theological things tion trine true truth worship writers XVII XVIL zeal
Fréquemment cités
Page 52 - Some Passages of the Life and Death of John Earl of Rochester ;" which the critic ought to read for its elegance, the philosopher for its arguments, and the saint for its piety.
Page 341 - ... by the ministers of Rome. This persecution was carried on with peculiar marks of rage and enormity in the years 1655, 1686, and 1696, and seemed to portend nothing less than the total destruction and entire extinction of that unhappy nation.
Page 369 - I charge you, my good people, ministers, doctors, elders, nobles, gentlemen and barons, to stand to your purity, and to exhort the people to do the same, and I forsooth, so long as I brook my life and crown, shall maintain the same against all deadly.
Page 409 - And laid it down as a fundamental rule of interpretation, that the words and phrases of Scripture are to be understood in every sense of which they are susceptible. Or, in other words, that they signify in effect every thing that they can possibly signify.
Page 240 - Rome, concerning the eucharist, and the real conversion of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ in that holy ordinance, had been received by christians in all ages of the church.
Page 384 - A declaration of the faith and order owned and practised in the congregational churches in England, agreed upon, and consented unto, by their elders and messengers, in their meeting at the Savoy, October 12, 1658.
Page 369 - Edinburgh 1590; when standing with his bonnet off, and his hands lifted up to heaven, " he praised God that he was born in the time of the light of the gospel, and in such a place, as to be king of such a church, the sincerest [purest] kirk in the world.
Page 88 - While Newton seemed to draw off the veil from some of the mysteries of nature, he showed at the same time the imperfections of the mechanical philosophy ; and thereby restored her ultimate secrets to that obscurity, in which they ever did and ever will remain.
Page 182 - That actions intrinsically evil, and directly contrary to the divine laws, may be innocently performed, by those who have so much power over their own minds, as to join, even ideally, a good end to this wicked action, or, to speak in the style of the Jesuits, who are capable of directing their intention aright ;' " That philosophical sin is of a very light and trivial nature, and does not deserve the pains of nell.
Page 494 - ... in one visible universal church or kingdom before the dissolution of this earthly globe. This prediction she delivered with a peculiar degree of confidence, from a notion that her Philadelphian society was the true kingdom of Christ, in which alone the Divine Spirit resided and reigned. She believed, it is said, the doctrine of the final restoration of all intelligent beings to perfection and happiness.