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178 church
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164 bishop
160 were
157 on
155 at

Council of Nicea I

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bishop

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1 4 | it was perhaps the Arian ~bishop, Leontius, who was the principal 2 7 | stringently forbidden any bishop, presbyter, ~deacon, or 3 8 | all means proper that a bishop should be appointed by all 4 8 | EPITOME OF CANON IV.~ ~A bishop is to be chosen by all the 5 8 | the latter enjoins that a bishop ordained by two or ~three 6 8 | enjoins that the election of a bishop do not take place unless 7 8 | the ~consecration of a new bishop, and it was cited in that 8 8 | decided(a) that a single bishop of the province was not 9 8 | only of ~the choice of the bishop, or whether it also treats 10 8 | at the ~nomination of a bishop, and confined the nomination 11 8 | for the ~ordination of a bishop three bishops at least are 12 9 | ungracious disposition in the ~bishop. And, that this matter may 13 9 | confessedly offended against their bishop, may be seen by all to ~ 14 9 | assembly ~of bishops, or to the bishop (who has passed the sentence)," 15 9 | well understood that the bishop who has passed ~the sentence 16 10| Pentapolis prevail, that ~the Bishop of Alexandria have jurisdiction 17 10| like is ~customary for the Bishop of Rome also. Likewise in 18 10| that if any one be made bishop without the ~consent of 19 10| a ~man ought not to be a bishop. If, however, two or three 20 10| EPITOME OF CANON VI.~ ~The Bishop of Alexandria shall have 21 10| Pentapolis. As also the Roman bishop over those subject to Rome. ~ 22 10| subject to Rome. ~So, too, the Bishop of Antioch and the rest 23 10| under ~them. If any be a bishop contrary to the judgment 24 10| Metropolitan, ~let him be no bishop. Provided it be in accordance 25 10| right is assigned to the Bishop of Alexandria which places 26 10| of ~Nice granted to the Bishop of Alexandria only the rights 27 10| ordinary ~metropolitans.~ ~BISHOP STILLINGFLEET.~I do confess 28 10| peculiar in the case of the Bishop of ~Alexandria, for all 29 10| the patriarchate of the Bishop of ~Alexandria; that is 30 10| all in subjection to the Bishop of Alexandria, were also ~ 31 10| Canon of Nice confers on the Bishop of Alexandria, but the ~ 32 10| the jurisdiction of ~the Bishop of Antioch. The civil diocese 33 11| THE JURISDICTION OF THE ~BISHOP OF ROME OVER THE SUBURBICAN 34 11| here the primacy of the Bishop of Rome over the whole Church, ~ 35 11| Phillips "has proved" that the Bishop of Rome had ~patriarchal 36 11| ancient custom that the bishop of the city ~of Rome should 37 11| confirms the ~rights of the Bishop of Rome as patriarch over 38 11| being simply that ~the Bishop of Rome is over the Western 39 12| have prevailed that the Bishop of ~AElia [i.e., Jerusalem] 40 12| OF CANON VII.~ ~Let the Bishop of AElia be honoured, the 41 12| precedence" granted to the Bishop of AElia, nor is it clear 42 12| took ~precedence of the Bishop of Jerusalem as vice versa, 43 12| that in the signatures the Bishop of Jerusalem does ~sign 44 12| of his suffragan ~sees. Bishop Beveridge's opinion is that 45 12| Council had adjourned, the Bishop of ~Jerusalem, Maximus, 46 12| chicanery of Juvenal the bishop of Jerusalem.~ ~(Canon Venables, 47 12| Juvenalis succeeded Praylius as bishop of Jerusalem somewhere about ~ 48 12| Juvenal been consecrated bishop of Jerusalem ~when he proceeded 49 12| his ~supremacy over the bishop of Antioch, and his claim 50 12| between Juvenal and ~Maximus Bishop of Antioch. The contention 51 12| patriarchal authority over the Bishop of Antioch put ~forward 52 13| come over where there ~is a bishop or presbyter of the Catholic 53 13| it is manifest that the ~Bishop of the Church must have 54 13| the Church must have the bishop's dignity; and he who was ~ 55 13| dignity; and he who was ~named bishop by those who are called 56 13| it shall seem fit to the Bishop to admit him to partake ~ 57 13| satisfactory, then ~shall the bishop provide for him a place 58 13| the same order, so that a bishop shall still be ~bishop. 59 13| a bishop shall still be ~bishop. Whoever was a bishop among 60 13| be ~bishop. Whoever was a bishop among the Cathari let him, 61 13| of a presbyter or ~of a bishop. For in one church there 62 13| Council of Nice the Novatian bishop at Constantinople, Acesius, ~ 63 13| same city there be found a bishop ~of the Catholic Church, 64 13| case ~he that was properly bishop from the first shall have 65 13| the Cathari ~was called bishop, shall be honoured as a 66 13| or (if it so please ~the bishop), he shall be sharer of 67 13| shall be sharer of the title bishop; but he shall exercise ~ 68 13| out of respect to ~the bishop of the City they were forbidden 69 13| permission of their diocesan bishop. They confirmed in their 70 13| consecration by a single bishop, and that they ~actually 71 13| that he might be a full bishop] merely proves the ~general 72 13| consecrated bishops, unless some ~bishop had consecrated a bishop 73 13| bishop had consecrated a bishop for a town and the bishop 74 13| bishop for a town and the bishop thus ~ordained contrary 75 13| chorepiscopus might be a bishop, but only ~through having 76 13| furnishes another example of a bishop lowered to ~the rank of 77 13| chorepiscopus happened to be a bishop.~ ~This is the meaning which 78 13| Diocesan without any other bishop can ordain the chorepiscopus, 79 13| method of consecreting a bishop being contrary to ~canon 80 13| the word ~ genesqai by the bishop of the city (canon x.). 81 14| faults are ~punishable in the bishop no less than in the priest, 82 15| deposition. ~The punishment of a bishop who should consciously perform 83 17| receive the imposition of the ~bishop's hands with prayer. This 84 17| of the chancel, was the Bishop's throne, with the ~seats 85 18| prayers; and ~after that the bishop may determine yet more favourably 86 18| in its performance, the bishop shall ~treat him more lentently 87 18| permission also to the bishop to come to a yet more indulgent ~ 88 18| discretionary power of the bishop to dispense with part of 89 19| the Eucharist, ~let the Bishop, after examination made, 90 22| done away; so that neither bishop, presbyter, ~nor deacon 91 22| for which he was ordained bishop or ~presbyter.~ ~NOTES.~ ~ 92 22| EPITOME OF CANON XV.~Neither bishop, presbyter, nor deacon shall 93 22| HEFELE.~The translation of a bishop, priest, or deacon from 94 22| take others: thus Eusebius, Bishop of Nicomedia, ~had been 95 22| Nicomedia, ~had been before Bishop of Berytus; Eustathius, 96 22| of Berytus; Eustathius, Bishop of Antioch, had ~been before 97 22| Antioch, had ~been before Bishop of Berrhoea in Syria. The 98 23| forbade, ~the translation of a bishop from the see for which he 99 23| that the diocese was the bishop's bride, and that to desert ~ 100 23| 293, Cit. Haddon. Art. ~"Bishop," Smith and Cheetham, Dict. 101 23| transmigration"(which arises from the bishop himself, ~from selfish motives) 102 23| translations. The first, when a ~bishop of marked learning and of 103 23| esis ; the second when a ~bishop, whose see has been laid 104 23| and the third ~when a bishop, either having or lacking 105 23| command of the Emperor a bishop, ~elected and confirmed, 106 23| to the translation of a ~bishop, this can, without doubt, 107 23| continues: "It was usually the bishop or ~archbishop of another 108 23| Primatial See of Canterbury a bishop already ~approved in the 109 24| consent of his own ~proper bishop, from whom although he was 110 24| own diocese. But ~if any bishop should ordain one who belongs 111 24| without the consent of his own bishop, the ordination shall be ~ 112 24| letters ~dimissory from the bishop who ordained them. But such 113 24| further provides that if a bishop receive a ~cleric coming 114 24| another diocese without his bishop's letters ~dimissory, and 115 24| shall ordain him, such a bishop shall be separated. ~From 116 25| interest, ~and that even a bishop might be a creditor on those 117 25| find ~also Desideratus, bishop of Verdun, when applying 118 26| are the ministers of the bishop and the ~inferiors of the 119 26| presbyters, and let either the bishop or the ~presbyter administer 120 26| offering together with the ~bishop who was sacrificing; by 121 26| mass with the ordaining bishop; and this rite in old times 122 26| concelebrating with ~the bishop or another presbyter.~ ~ 123 26| sacred gifts ~before the bishop. The vulgar version of Isidore 124 26| presbyters, and let the bishop or the presbyter administer 125 27| rebaptized and ordained by the Bishop of the Catholic ~Church; 126 27| year 260, had been made bishop of ~Antioch, but had been 127 30| by James, the celebrated bishop of Nisibis, who was ~present 128 30| Twenty years later, Gelasius, Bishop of Cyzicus, after much ~ 129 30| African bishops and the Bishop ~of Rome, on the subject 130 30| containing ~these words: "When a bishop thinks he has been unjustly 131 30| appeal to Rome, and the Roman bishop shall ~have the business 132 30| consulted also the copy which Bishop ~Cecilian, who had himself 133 30| ancient councils. The ~French bishop John Tilius presented to 134 31| V.~Of the election of a bishop and of the confirmation 135 31| those excommunicated by one bishop are not to be received by ~ 136 31| archbishop.~ ~CANON X.~How the bishop of Jerusalem is to be honoured, 137 31| examination.~ ~CANON XII.~Of the bishop who ordains one whom he 138 31| become a monk without the bishop's license, and why a ~license 139 31| honour to be paid to the bishop and to a presbyter by the ~ 140 31| should be given to the bishop of Jerusalem and to the 141 31| of Jerusalem and to the bishop of ~Seleucia. ~ ~CANON XXXIV.~ 142 31| and of the primacy of the Bishop of ~Rome over all.~ ~Let 143 31| unpunished by the decision of the bishop, presbyter, or even of a ~ 144 31| another.~ ~CANON XLVIII.~No bishop shall choose his own successor.~ ~ 145 31| There shall be but one bishop of one city, and one parochus 146 31| also the incumbent, whether bishop or parish priest, shall 147 31| chorepiscopus to salute the bishop, and how religious ~should 148 31| service in church by the ~bishop, the archdeacon and the 149 31| during the absence of the bishop, and when they go about ~ 150 31| they go about ~with the bishop.~ ~CANON LIX.~How all the 151 31| observed at the funeral of a bishop, of a ~chorepiscopus and 152 31| CANON LXXI.~Of the placing a bishop or archbishop in his chair 153 31| CANON LXXVII.~That a bishop convicted of adultery or 154 32| decidedly by Paphnutius, ~bishop of a city of the Upper Thebais 155 32| serious words of ~the Egyptian bishop into consideration, stopped 156 32| expressly obtained from their bishop permission to do so. ~The 157 32| Church wishes to leave the bishop free to decide the matter; 158 32| who ~expressly says that Bishop Paphnutius was present at 159 32| According to them, the ~Egyptian bishop was not speaking in a general 160 33| elect them, and that the ~bishop of Alexandria shall concur 161 33| love, our colleague your ~Bishop Alexander, who has gladdened 162 35| Great then asked Theophilus, Bishop of Alexandria for ~an explanation 163 35| explanation of the difference. The bishop responded to the ~Emperor' 164 35| Emperor, by Paschasinus, ~Bishop of Lilybaeum and Proterius


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