Part, Paragraph
1 1 | consecrated him. That is why in cases of necessity any one can
2 1 (5) | administer baptism in such cases was expressly recognized
3 1 (5) | give absolution in such cases rests on the principle that
4 2 (15) | reserving it to himself in other cases. The practice of reserving
5 2 | bishoprics and the like. In these cases the Holy Roman See of Avarice
6 2 (42) | own motion." In ordinary cases the exercise of the appointing
7 Prop1 (19)| it was complained that cases were cited to Rome as a
8 Prop1 | Rome,21 but that all such cases shall be left to the temporal
9 Prop1 | injury to all lands that such cases are tried at Rome. It increases
10 Prop1 | it might be granted that cases which concern benefices
11 Prop1 (22)| citing into their courts cases which properly belong in
12 Prop1 | court of appeal for German cases. The officers of this consistory
13 Prop1 | reservati,27 the "reserved cases," should also be abolished,
14 Prop1 | ridiculous and childish cases about which they make so
15 Prop1 (27)| i.e., The cases in which a priest was forbidden
16 Prop1 (27)| The reference here is to cases in which only the pope could
17 Prop1 | calling daily sins, still less cases so grave that the pope may
18 Prop1 | of God are not reserved cases; but sins against what God
19 Prop1 | these must be reserved cases, solely that no one be hindered
20 Prop1 | indeed a reason for reserved cases, but even then there should
21 Prop2 (1) | On this sort of reserved cases see Discussion of Confession,
22 Prop2 (45)| absolution in "reserved cases" (see above, p. 105, note
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