| Harry Thurston Peck - 1898 - 1152 pages
...Scotland adopted substantially the views of Calvin. The words of the Westminster confession are: " That doctrine which maintains a change of the substance...by consecration of a priest, or by any other way, ii repugnant not to Scripture alone, but even to common sense and reason. . . . Worthy receivers, outwardly... | |
| Samuel Gosnell Green - 1898 - 376 pages
...likewise the Cup of Blessing is a communion [partaking] of the Blood of Christ. Transubstantiation (or the change of the substance of Bread and Wine) into the substance of Christ's body and blood [in the Supper of the Lord] cannot be proved by Holy Writ, but is repugnant to the plain words of Scripture... | |
| Ernst Friedrich Karl Müller - 1903 - 1060 pages
...the Church, sealing unto us our spirituall nourishment and continuall growth in Christ. 15 93. The change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of the Body and Bloud of Christ, commonly called Transubstantiation, cannot be proved by Holy Writ ; but... | |
| Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. General Assembly - 1905 - 974 pages
...albeit, in substance and nature, they still remain truly, and only, bread and wine, as they were before. VI. That doctrine which maintains a change of the...priest, or by any other way, is repugnant, not to Scripture alone, but even to common sense and reason; overthroweth the nature of the Sacrament; and... | |
| Scotland - 1908 - 240 pages
...they still remain truly and only bread and wine as they were before 6. THAT doctrine which maintaines a change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of Christs body and blood (commonly called transubstantiation) by consecration of a priest or by any other... | |
| Darwell Stone - 1909 - 690 pages
...ceasing to be and the body and blood of Christ entering in under the species that are left, or by the change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, — has not yet been defined. For, however it happens, it can be called... | |
| William Joseph McGlothlin - 1911 - 388 pages
...nature, they still remain truly, and only * ' i Cot. Bread, and Wine, as they were "-I6 & before. ='286. That doctrine which maintains a change of the substance of Bread and Wine, into the substance of Christs body and blood (commonly called Transubstantiation) by consecration of a Priest, or by any... | |
| Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines - 1912 - 852 pages
...adopted by the Presbyterian Church of Scotland, which in the main agrees with that propounded by Calvin : "That doctrine which maintains a change of the substance...a priest, or by any other way, is repugnant not to Scripture alone, but even to common sense and reason, overthroweth the nature of the sacrament, and... | |
| Church of England, Edmund Tyrrell Green - 1912 - 474 pages
...in the Church, sealing unto us our spiritual nourishment and continual growth in Christ. (93.) The change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, commonly called Transubstantiation, cannot be proved by holy writ, but... | |
| Francis Aidan Gasquet - 1912 - 378 pages
...English belief in what we now call, with theological precision, Transubstantiation — that is, the change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of our Lord's Body and Blood — was as clear and determined as it certainly was in the later Middle Ages,... | |
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