0pera-cardi | carpo-eukar | eul-lente | leont-proph | propo-threw | thril-zealo
Document
501 3 | Hippol. Haer. vii. 22; ~Carpocrates, Hippol. Haer. vii. 32.~ ~
502 21| Constt. Apost. viii. 5; 4 C. Carth. c. 85; ~Tertull. De Bapt.
503 3 | and some other. In the ~Casatensian copy of the MS., a marginal
504 18| the gods on pain of being cashiered ~(compare Euseb. H. E. x.
505 25| Great(Epist. iii. 4), and ~Cassiodorus {in Ps. xiv. 10).~ ~The
506 25| Gury, the famous ~modern casuist, well says, "fructum producit
507 25| new-fangled refinement of casuistry.(1) ~Luther violently opposed
508 30| Fabricius makes a similar catalogue of the copies in his Bibliotheca ~
509 21| were ~explained, as in the Catechetical Lectures of Cyril of Jerusalem,
510 8 | entirely by the clergy of the Cathedral Church. ~The Latins then
511 35| and the ~division which it caused between the East and the
512 34| designs of the devil, and thus causing faith, peace, ~and unity
513 3 | places. I may add by way of caution that in two ~other passages,
514 13| including Beveridge, Hammond, Cave, and Routh, have affirmed
515 9 | presupposes it, when (in cc. 40-~44) he draws a parallel
516 30| also the copy which Bishop ~Cecilian, who had himself been present
517 9 | Sacrificare, Sacrificium celebrare in all passages where ~they
518 30| subsequently in their letters to Celestine ~I. (423-432), successor
519 31| made with regard to every celibate priest, and the same ~concerning
520 28| diakonos of the Church of ~Cenchrea. It moreover has been suggested
521 13| recorded [Actt. Episc. ~Cenoman. ap. Du Cange] in late times
522 18| say, without intending to censure ~enlistment as such. They
523 24| receive usury or 150 per cent. he shall be cast forth
524 5 | East. Ch. if. 832), for the central and ~unvarying element in
525 18| Marinus' succession to a centurionship ~was challenged on the ground
526 5 | service(Neale, Introd. East. Ch. if. 832), for the central
527 31| bishop or archbishop in his chair after ordination, ~which
528 20| to the withdrawal of ~the chalice altogether in the West.(
529 18| to a centurionship ~was challenged on the ground that he could
530 13| second opinion, its great champion, Thomassinus shall speak.~ ~(
531 28| viduce.~ ~The one great characteristic of the deaconess was that
532 31| But if that woman[untruly charged by her husband ~with adultery],
533 33| blasphemous ~words. And of the charges against him and of the results
534 31| falsely defames his wife charging her with adultery, so that ~
535 31| an orphan taken ~out of charity under pretext of bringing
536 24| this it is evident that the Chartophylax of the Great Church ~for
537 12| more, and then through the ~chicanery of Juvenal the bishop of
538 8 | sense at the ~Council of Cholcedon--Session xiii.(Mansi., vii.
539 23| imperial power.~ ~Demetrius Chomatenus, however, who was Archbishop
540 9 | Domini, nay, the sanguis Christi and the dominica hostia
541 3 | and when once the othodox Christology was formulated in the Nicene ~
542 35| s desire, and drew up a chronological table of the Easter ~festivals,
543 35| ancient authorities ~of the Church--one might even say, so strongly
544 34| of Asia, of Pontus, and Cilicia. You should consider not
545 25| Theodore's "Penitential"(circ. A.D. 690) what appears
546 11| and further in a suburban circle as far ~as the hundredth
547 18| soldier, unless some ~unlawful circumstance, such as idolatry, or the
548 25| contrary to divine law he ~cites Ex. xxii. 25, and Deut.
549 12| canonical authority, he claimed ~jurisdiction over the great
550 3 | probably it always ~is in Classical writers; for in Soph. Trach.
551 3 | meaning from the parallel clauses. Such ~language is not in
552 16| though they ~have deserved no clemency, they shall be dealt with
553 3 | more ~obvious than in the Clementine Homilies, x. 10 (where the
554 13| Rab. Maur. ~De Instit. Cler. i. 5, etc. etc.). They
555 25| earlier canon, "ut non liceat clericis fenerari," ~are enforced
556 25| latter, "Nec omnino cuiquam clericorum ~liceat de qualibet re foenus
557 25| money at interest, "Et clericus a diaconatu, et supra, pecuniam
558 13| Acesius, take a ladder, and climb up to heaven alone."(2)~ ~
559 13| death by illness he received clinical ~baptism, and was ordained
560 9 | practice of the ~Church was closely united with it, is nothing
561 30| twenty-one canons; but on closer consideration ~we see, as
562 20| may not be amiss before closing the remark that so far as
563 20| Christ was spilled upon their clothes."(2) From ~this incident
564 3 | While the orthodox party clung to the homousios as enshrining ~
565 25| layman. St. Basil(Epist. clxxxviii. ~can. 12), says that a
566 10| jurisdiction ~they had then was co-extensive with what they had afterward,
567 17| sunestwtes , consistentes, i.e., co-standers, because ~they were allowed
568 30| learned Jesuit Sirmond nor his coadjutors have mentioned what ~manuscripts
569 25| inventing the new moral code on the subject, by which ~
570 31| remembered that in some codices and editions this canon
571 25| severe laws the French ~Kings coerced usurers is evident from
572 1 | the Epistle of Eusebius of Coesarea to his own Church, ~in the
573 5 | use of ~the term and its cognates in reference to the Scriptures
574 31| ordained them.~ ~CANON IV.~The cohabitation of women with bishops, presbyters,
575 35| of the Latins ~generally coincided with that of Alexandria,
576 32| at Elvira, in Spain; this coincidence would lead us to ~believe
577 30| several in his Bibliotheca Coisliniana. ~Fabricius makes a similar
578 18| lentently than had he been cold and indifferent.~ ~LAMBERT.~
579 30| somewhat different ~text, also collated from MSS., and very similar
580 30| unjustly deposed by ~his colleagues he may appeal to Rome, and
581 20| Lib. V. cap. ix. fol. 95. colon. 1560.) ~in 996, and Ivo(
582 35| which ~were transplanted by Columban into Gaul. In 729, the majority
583 29| Augustine; and others, was to ~commemorate the resurrection of our
584 12| episcopate of ~Praylius, which commenced in 417 A.D., was but short,
585 30| Isidore(it was composed at the commencement of the seventh ~century),
586 24| bring with them letters ~commendatory and dimissory from those
587 16| agrees with him), in his comment on this ~canon, says, "they
588 12| documents ("insolenter ausus per commentitia ~scripta firmare," Leo.
589 18| such, for instance, Zonaras comments, as almsgiving ~according
590 25| do not know exactly how commerce was transacted in the five ~
591 17| foregoing words from the Commination Service of the Church of ~
592 23| presence of the imperial commissioners.~ ~The same thing appears
593 6 | shall be de posed if they ~commit a serious offence. Those
594 33| he is a man ~capable of committing again the same disorders,
595 25| et supra, pecuniam non ~commodet ad usuras"(ib. ix. 18).
596 26| the soul of the worthy communicant(and in no way connected
597 17| mentioned in the canons, as "communicating in ~prayers," or "without
598 18| times, to the practice of commuting such ~exercises for money
599 17| However, the Emperor Alexis Comnenus, who took the empire in
600 34| ourselves from the detestable company of the ~Jews, for it is
601 30| Bibliotheca Ecclesiastica, compares the ~two texts. Now all
602 18| triumph of one of the two competitors, but the triumph ~or fall
603 32| was not until after the ~compilation of the Apostolic Canons(
604 12| the Oriental party, they complain that ~Juvenal, whose "ambitious
605 9 | rarest ~occurrence. Zonaras complains that in his time "these
606 31| XLV.~Of the receiving of complaints and condemnation of an archbishop ~
607 19| upon the Eucharist as the complement of Christian ~perfection,
608 35| fresh steps for obtaining a ~complete uniformity in the manner
609 8 | of the consecration which completes it.~ ~This canon has been
610 8 | gives the ratification or completion of the ~matter--the imposition
611 11| boundary of the vicarins urbis ~comprised ten provinces--Campania,
612 16| who have fallen without compulsion, without ~the spoiling of
613 18| Euseb. H. E. x. 8; Vit. Con. i. 54). It is to be observed
614 12| See ("ut nulla illicitis conatibus praeberetur assensio," u.
615 33| nor ~privilege should be conceded to him.~ ~These are the
616 30| Fathers ~of Carthage. It is conceived in these terms: "After the
617 24| say, not to be ~allowed to concelebrate sunierourgein with them,
618 26| administer to presbyters who were concelebrating with ~the bishop or another
619 3 | the writer's theological conceptions, ~not to any obliteration
620 33| considered matters which concern the faith of the Church,
621 15| the ninth, inasmuch as it concerns only ~the lapsi and their
622 33| election and ratify it. This ~concession has been made to all the
623 35| regulate, by means of mutual concessions, a common day ~for Easter
624 17| was also called Apsis and Concha Bematis, from its ~semicircular
625 30| reprint in ~Labbe and Cossart, Concilia, Tom. II. col. 291. The
626 31| the same kind, and shall conciliate to ~himself the love and
627 33| Found in Gelasius, Historia Concilii Nicaeni, lib. II, cap. xxxiii. ; ~
628 32| account be true, we must conclude that a law was proposed
629 3 | other hand it cannot be concluded that ~translators who give
630 7 | they were neither wives nor concubines, but women of some ~third
631 33| bishop of Alexandria shall concur in the election and ratify
632 8 | nominated bishops without the concurrence ~of the other bishops of
633 13| series of papal bulls, condemning them; headed, it is true,
634 26| excesses of deacons this canon condemns, at least indirectly. The ~
635 31| penance.[Her reception back is conditioned upon her leaving the ~infidel
636 31| friendship, his fault shall be condoned to him ~after he has done
637 19| everything that could be conducive to the happy death of the
638 8 | well, and the ~election was conducted entirely by the clergy of
639 29| Decretum, Pars III, ~De Cone. Dist. III. c. x.~
640 10| the ~Sixth Canon of Nice confers on the Bishop of Alexandria,
641 9 | that so those who ~have confessedly offended against their bishop,
642 32| question he deserves no confidence. If, as St. ~Epiphanius
643 8 | nomination of a bishop, and confined the nomination exclusively
644 10| really to ~deal with it, confining myself here to an elucidation
645 4 | fact, his ~goods shall be confiscated."(Const. M. 0pera. Migne
646 9 | Supper." But Harnack is confronted by the very evident ~objection
647 2 | one best calculated to confute the Arian heresy."(4)~ ~
648 25| to him, and ~in 1830 the Congregation of the Holy Office with
649 35| agree together. It has been conjectured that ~subsequently Hilary,
650 32| himself, and had ~had no conjugal intercourse. Paphnutius,
651 20| uninteresting to quote in this connection the "Apostolic ~Constitutions,"
652 7 | already spread ~widely. In connexion with this whole subject
653 3 | lost, though in certain connexions the words might be used ~
654 18| treated as lapsi who, ~having conscientiously given up military service (
655 15| and ~promoted them did so conscious of their guilt or unknowing
656 15| punishment of a bishop who should consciously perform such an ~ordination
657 13| induced three bishops to consecrate him, thus ~becoming, as
658 8 | the apostolical canon, he ~consecrates with imposition of hands
659 13| in Gaul) are mentioned as consecrating churches (vide ~Du Cange).
660 8 | imposition of hands and consecration--to the metropolitan ~of
661 13| bishops, such a method of consecreting a bishop being contrary
662 30| and Sardica are written consecutively, ~with the same figures,
663 32| to Paphnutius, ~and the consequent decision of the Synod, agree
664 31| place. As this canon is of considerable length, I only quote the ~
665 23| consent, but ~Thomassinus, considering the case of St. Meletius
666 17| The church itself usually consisted of three divisions within,
667 21| kinds of catechumens: one consisting of ~those who heard the
668 9 | sacrificial act in the Supper ~consists rather, according to Justin,
669 31| love and benevolence of his consort, and shall be willing to ~
670 13| During the persecution he constantly refused to ~assist his brethren,
671 8 | but the present canon by constitution ~( katastasin ) and ordination
672 20| however little one may feel ~constrained to accept the logical justness
673 24| another church; but ~every constraint should be applied to restore
674 21| and watching and prayer(Constt. Apost. viii. 5; 4 C. Carth.
675 1 | substance( omoousion , ~consubstantialem) with the Father. By whom
676 11| et in urbe Roma vetusta ~consuetudo servetur, ut vel ille Egypti
677 23| the ninth century without ~consulting the pope at all, by bishops
678 25| Gregory of ~Nyssa(Orat. cont. Usurarios); Cyril of Jerusalem(
679 32| simply desired ~that the contemplated law should not include the
680 30| with Greek authors, his contemporaries, who also ~mixed the canons
681 22| Church; and even Gregory's contemporary, Pope Damasus, ~declared
682 9 | everywhere treated with great contempt," and that they had actually ~
683 3 | Paul of ~Samosata, and he contends that both councils were
684 12| in the episcopate. Not ~content with aspiring to metropolitan
685 9 | through captiousness, ~or contentiousness, or any such like ungracious
686 30| J., who ~first made its contents known, and translated into
687 10| of Constantinople to be conterminous with what was ~afterward
688 18| payments, etc.~ ~In his last contests with Constantine, Licinius
689 25| Augustine de ~Baptismo contr. Donatistas, iv. 19); Leo
690 31| of these causes he shall ~contract matrimony with another,
691 22| been ~ordained, namely, the contracting of a mystical marriage between ~
692 8 | writing. ~But they are not contradictory; for the Apostolical canon
693 24| or by using any ~other contrivance whatever for filthy lucre'
694 31| concerning such as are convalescent.~ ~CANON XX.~Of avoiding
695 30| no more.~ ~I add for the convenience of the reader the captions
696 28| Constantinople but only in conventual institutions.(Thomassin, ~
697 18| give evidence of ~their conversions by deeds, and not pretence,
698 3 | the words might be used ~convertibly. Whenever, as here in Ignatius,
699 33| decree, he will himself convey it to ~you in greater detail,
700 12| of ~Jerusalem, Maximus, convoked a synod of Palestine, without
701 30| famous ~Asseman, from the Coptic Patriarch, John, and which
702 29| passage in his treatise De Corona ~Militis, which is often
703 17| death, exile, or other grave corporal penalty."(2) In ~the penitential
704 30| view, which was perfectly ~correct, it was only these twenty
705 13| the Greek text must be ~corrected by the ancient Latin versions.
706 11| Brutii, Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica. Gothfried and Salmasius ~
707 30| the reprint in ~Labbe and Cossart, Concilia, Tom. II. col.
708 3 | editors ~(Voss, Useher, Cotelier, etc.), printed it as they
709 18| of Bacchus in the palace-~court; but their zeal, unlike
710 17| besides ~these exterior courts and porch. The first part
711 17| outside the gates, sometimes covered with sackcloth and ashes.
712 18| his own church, a "mere ~covering over of the wound" (Epist.
713 12| metropolitan rank, Juvenal coveted patriarchal ~dignity, and,
714 24| among the Clergy, following ~covetousness and lust of gain, have forgotten
715 5 | to Church laws(Encycl. 2; cp. Apol. c. Ari. 69). The
716 3 | III., p. 290; Method. de Creat. ~5. In no early Christian
717 1 | only God, Father Almighty, Creator of things ~visible and invisible;
718 1 | the first-~born of all creatures, begotten of the Father
719 12| was more conspicuous than ~creditable, and there are few of the
720 25| even a bishop might be a creditor on those terms. We find ~
721 31| after that he had denied it, crept into ~orders.~ ~CANON XIII.~
722 17| pre-eminence "mortal ~sins" (crimena mortalia(1)), viz: idolatry,
723 2 | in answer to the recent criticisms ~of Professor Harnack, by
724 25| the latter, "Nec omnino cuiquam clericorum ~liceat de qualibet
725 13| what he ~considered their culpable laxity in admitting to penance
726 31| account of her adultery. It is curious that ~in the parallel canon
727 33| and harmony, and in the cutting off of every heresy, receive
728 31| election of the Archbishop of Cyprus, who is subject to the ~
729 2 | Harnack, by H. B. Swete, D.D., The Apostles' Creed.~ ~
730 9 | is ~plainly found in the dache, (c. 14), in Ignatius, and
731 26| rite in old times was of daily ~occurrence, for a full
732 3 | Godhead. See esp. Joann. ~Damasc. de Fid. Orth. i. 8 [where
733 3 | orthodox writers, e.g. John ~of Damascus, already quoted in the beginning
734 28| if they marry they ~have "damnation, because they have cast
735 25| Maffei, Dell' impiego dell ~danaro, written on the laxer side,
736 16| their property, without danger or the like, as happened ~
737 3 | Semiarian formula hardly less ~dangerous, seemed always to be lurking
738 4 | advanced to the priesthood.~ ~DANIEL BUTLER.~(Smith & Cheetham,
739 24| excommunicated. And ~if anyone shah dare surreptitiously to carry
740 33| from the persons who have dared to make disturbance ~and
741 20| Lord, was deterred from daring to touch it by fire rising
742 12| has been already quoted, dated June 11, 453 A.D., in which
743 35| week. He indicates both dates in his table, and leaves ~
744 31| marriage to an infidel a daughter or sister without her ~knowledge
745 19| and has ~committed some deadly sin, and desires the Eucharist
746 3 | says, that Athanasius is dealing with one and the same word ~
747 18| stands as ~part of canon 11) deals, like it, with cases which
748 16| clemency, they shall be dealt with mercifully. As ~many
749 3 | regard to homousios. It is dear from this passage, as Zahn ~
750 34| adopting this mode, we desire, dearest ~brethren, to separate ourselves
751 31| be ~deprived before their deaths, except on account of crime.~ ~
752 33| succeed to the office of the deceased; always provided that they
753 26| contrary to canon, and to decent ~order.~ ~VAN ESPEN.~Four
754 3 | the argument of Athanasius decides ~in favour of the vv. Elsewhere
755 32| cleric the responsibility of deciding the point ~as he would.~ ~
756 8 | absent by letter, or a ~declaration that they also will acquiesce
757 3 | two ~other passages, de Decret. Syn. Nic. 28 (1, p. 184),
758 28| It ~was merely a solemn dedication and blessing and was not
759 4 | of the place ~where the deed was perpetrated was aware
760 18| possible that they might "deem" the ~outward form of "entering
761 3 | doctrinal views; see Bull Def. Fid. Nic. ii. 2 <s> 6. ~(
762 31| live with her ~whom he has defamed, even though she be deformed,
763 31| But ~if anyone falsely defames his wife charging her with
764 35| letter to the Pope, what was ~defective in the Latin calculation;
765 25| 1) and then goes on to ~defend the proposition that, "Usury
766 31| should do in the case of a defendant set at liberty ~unpunished
767 12| patriarchal ~dignity, and, in defiance of all canonical authority,
768 8 | thought it necessary to define by precise rules the ~duties
769 25| famous canonist Van Espen defines usury thus: "Usura definitur ~
770 25| defines usury thus: "Usura definitur ~lucrum ex mutuo exactum
771 31| defamed, even though she be deformed, and poor, and ~insane;
772 25| principle ~that one must not defraud his neighbour nor take unjust
773 32| and subdeacons, but by degrees it came to be ~required
774 32| NOTES.~ ~Often the mind of a deliberative assembly is as clearly shown
775 4 | as ~well as to those who deliver themselves over to others
776 34| wild violence, as their delusion may urge them? They ~do
777 34| also that it is right to demand what our reason approves,
778 9 | first place, Malachi i. 11, demanded a solemn ~Christian sacrifice:
779 24| transaction or ~otherwise, as by demanding the whole and one half,
780 23| of the imperial power.~ ~Demetrius Chomatenus, however, who
781 32| thirteenth of the Trullan ~Synod, demonstrate clearly enough what was
782 35| Latin calculation; and this demonstration was taken up ~again, some
783 3 | origin, is that agenhtos ~denies the creation, and agennhtos
784 18| here, as in c. 8, 19, skhma denotes an ~external visible fact)
785 17| preached, but ~were obliged to depart before the celebration of
786 31| one of the faithful who departs from the faith through lust
787 8 | bishops and makes the election depend entirely on the ~decision
788 17| the bread and ~wine were deposited before they were offered
789 7 | Fuchs in his Bibliothek der kirchenver sammlungen confesses
790 5 | to be the more natural ~derivation, see "the holy canon" in
791 34| we may ~transmit to our descendants the legitimate mode of celebrating
792 30| Many of ~these copies have descended to us; many libraries possess
793 9 | Levites of the Old Testament, describing as the chief ~function of
794 20| found in the ~thrilling description given by St. Chrysostom
795 25| usury, unlike theft, the desecration of tombs, and ~sacrilege
796 32| the present question he deserves no confidence. If, as St. ~
797 25| those terms. We find ~also Desideratus, bishop of Verdun, when
798 12| shuddered at the impious design ~("merito perhorrescens,"
799 26| word by which sacrifice is designated in the New Testament, and ~
800 34| more beautiful and more desirable, ~than to see this festival,
801 19| committed some deadly sin, and desires the Eucharist to be granted
802 32| of ~all clerics, and in desiring to introduce into the Greek
803 16| ambo ~[i.e. the reading desk] and went out with the catechumens.~ ~ ~
804 19| communion when his life was despaired of, let him remain among ~
805 30| The bishops of Africa despatched to Pope Boniface the copies
806 28| to ~minister, she shall despise the Grace of God and give
807 23| important sees ~would be despised, and that there would be
808 34| our instrumentality for ~destroying the evil designs of the
809 33| convey it to ~you in greater detail, he having been both a guide
810 25| of the matter in all its details are referred to ~Bossuet'
811 5 | doctrinal and disciplinary ~determinations alike "Canons."~ ~ ~
812 5 | straight rod" or ~"line," determines all its religious applications,
813 20| the Holy ~of the Lord, was deterred from daring to touch it
814 34| separate ourselves from the detestable company of the ~Jews, for
815 25| cites Ex. xxii. 25, and Deut. xxiii. 29; and from the
816 9 | idea, ~as it was already developed at the time of Justin, had
817 13| other two ~we shall now devote our attention.~ ~For the
818 4 | Ant.)~The feeling that one devoted to the sacred ministry should
819 13| according to his own story, from diabolical possession at his ~exorcising
820 25| interest, "Et clericus a diaconatu, et supra, pecuniam non ~
821 17| and ~vestments, called the Diaconicum, and answering to our Vestry;
822 28| their support), ~ khrai , diaconissoe, presbyteroe, and viduce.~ ~
823 28| These women were called diakonissbi , ~ Presbutides (which must
824 27| diakonwn , instead of diakonisspn . ~This change makes all
825 28| speaks of ~Phoebe as being a diakonos of the Church of ~Cenchrea.
826 27| all followed a reading ~ diakonwn , instead of diakonisspn . ~
827 33| now in ~the Church should die, then those who have been
828 2 | Alexander Natalis (H.E. t. iv., Dies. ~xiv.); he is also referred
829 25| canons of later councils differ materially in relation to
830 15| HEFELE.~The tenth canon differs from the ninth, inasmuch
831 22| even if such practical ~difficulties had not arisen, the whole
832 11| I., pp. 66 and 67. After diligent ~search I can find nothing
833 31| doors, the matter must be diligently examined; and ~if the accusation
834 18| Christians" (Mason, Persec. of Diocl. p. 308), ordered his ~Christian
835 20| intinction," that is the dipping of the bread into the wine
836 34| boast that without ~their direction we could not keep this feast.
837 29| indifferent, and not commanded directly or ~indirectly in Scripture,
838 13| canon of ~Antioch, which directs that chorepiscopi, even
839 35| of Easter did not indeed ~disappear after the Council of Nicea.
840 23| West, Cardinal Bellarmine disapproved the prevailing custom of ~
841 12| Nestorius for Cyril lightly to discard. When the council met at
842 20| West.(2) "Regino(De Eccles. Discip. Lib. ~I. c. lxx.) in 906,
843 7 | pretenee of her being a disciple to ~them."~ ~VAN ESPEN~translates:
844 5 | calling its doctrinal and disciplinary ~determinations alike "Canons."~ ~ ~
845 11| especially an ~apple of discord. Et ut apud Alexandriam
846 31| her husband on ~account of discord--[in American, "incompatibility
847 22| the great disturbance and discords that occur, it is ~decreed
848 27| if the examination should discover them to be unfit, they ~
849 30| independently of the ~Arabic discovery, such are Baronius and Card.
850 12| forward at Ephesus was discreetly dropped. TIle difficulty
851 18| to full communion. ~This discretionary power of the bishop to dispense
852 3 | and no attempt is made to discriminate the readings in the ~several
853 25| esteemed a form of theft and dishonesty. Those who ~wish to read
854 25| disturbed." It is entirely disingenuous to attempt to reconcile
855 6 | Those who are guilty of disobedience to this ~great Synod, either
856 6 | a person who presumes to disobey fie great Synod.~ ~NOTES.~ ~
857 33| but, on account of his ~disorderly conduct from the first,
858 31| the former one has been disowned for ~any cause, or even
859 12| the Holy City of the old dispensation the honour shewn it by ~
860 18| discretionary power of the bishop to dispense with part of a ~penance-time
861 18| were called by grace, and displayed the first zeal, having ~
862 31| out of his lust which is displeasing to God; ~and after she has
863 9 | any such like ungracious disposition in the ~bishop. And, that
864 3 | the Arian controversy the ~disputants were not alive to the difference
865 2 | matter at some length in his Disputations, (3) and ~points out how
866 25| been admonished ~and has disregarded the admonition.~ ~Generally
867 13| parts of the empire as the disseminators of his error. It is ~well
868 35| the ~well-known British dissensions about the celebration of
869 20| in Muratorius's learned "Dissertations" which are prefixed to his ~
870 8 | necessity or because of distance, three at least should meet ~
871 4 | Decretum Gratiani. Pars. I. Distinctio ~LV., C vij.~ ~ ~
872 17| three ~periods sufficiently distinctly marked. The first of these
873 23| be deposed.(2)~ ~Balsamon distinguishes three kinds of translations.
874 26| deacons the authority to distribute the Eucharist to laymen,
875 13| They overlooked the country district committed to them, "loco ~
876 8 | by ~bitter experience to distrust the interference of princes
877 25| justifiable, were "not to be ~disturbed." It is entirely disingenuous
878 26| bread, which was but the divinely appointed sign and ~assurance
879 8 | point connected with this division--namely, the provincial ~
880 17| usually consisted of three divisions within, besides ~these exterior
881 23| an act of unjustifiable divorce, and subsequent ~adultery.(
882 25| of morals, theologians, doctors, Popes, and Councils of
883 9 | Adolph Harnack: Hist. of Dogma [Eng. Tr.] Vol. I. p. 209.)~ ~
884 21| Cyril of Jerusalem, with ~dogmatic precision. Special examinations
885 18| afterwards returned, like dogs, to ~their own vomit, (so
886 9 | to designate the ~passio Domini, nay, the sanguis Christi
887 9 | sanguis Christi and the dominica hostia as the ~object of
888 31| towns which are ~under the dominion of the great cities let
889 25| Augustine de ~Baptismo contr. Donatistas, iv. 19); Leo the Great(
890 4 | instance of ~the former, Dorotheus, presbyter of Antioch, is
891 3 | theological conception. He even "doubts whether there was any ~such
892 13| 876, at Lyons in 886, at Douzy in 871.~ ~ ~
893 9 | The elements are only ~ dpra , prosforai , which obtain
894 3 | more recently by Hefele, Dressel, and some other. In the ~
895 35| the ~Emperor's desire, and drew up a chronological table
896 12| at Ephesus was discreetly dropped. TIle difficulty presented ~
897 18| interpolation. I do not see how ~dropping the "not" makes the meaning
898 5 | or for any ~Church office(Ducange in v.); also in its application
899 10| refers to the dissertation of Dupin, ~in his work De Antiqua
900 23| Cabasilas, Archbishop ~of Durazzo, says that by the command
901 3 | where it is equivalent to dusgenwn . Here the ~distinction
902 7 | to have a subintroducta ~dwelling with him, except only a
903 18| and had shown "their ~eagerness at the outset" ("primum
904 18| examined." Again we see the ~earnest resolution of the Council
905 26| presbyters. To ~understand more easily the meaning of the canon
906 35| it about the period for Easter--in fact(a), the ~Romans
907 29| enjoy the same liberty from Easter-day to that of Pentecost." De ~
908 35| the ninety-five following Easters--that is, from 436 to 531
909 6 | yukikon ti ~ amarthma , is not easy to explain: some render
910 20| the West.(2) "Regino(De Eccles. Discip. Lib. ~I. c. lxx.)
911 11| vel hic suburbicariarum ~ecclesiarum sollicitudinem gerat. In
912 25| immediate deposition of the ~ecclesiastic found guilty of the practice,
913 30| in his recent Bibliotheca Ecclesiastica, compares the ~two texts.
914 10| in his work De Antiqua Ecclesoe Disciplina. Hefele says: "
915 28| canon of Chalcedon is but an echo(Canon xv). "A ~woman shall
916 31| LXIII.~Of the Ecclesiastical Economist and of the others who with
917 1 | forth this Creed.(1)~ ~The Ecthesis of the Synod at Nice.(2)~ ~
918 8 | Seventh and[so-called] Eighth(Ecu-~menical Councils in affirming
919 30| of St. Athanasius's works(ed. Patav. ii. 599) but ~rejected
920 25| usurers is evident from the edicts of St. Louis, Philip ~IV.,
921 21| the grades of penitence). (Edw. H. Plumptre in ~Dict. Christ.
922 14| some held that as baptism ~effaces all former sins, so it takes
923 25| which loans of money were effected.~ ~ ~
924 25| enjoined in the Penitential of Egbert of York(c. ii. 30). In like
925 11| consuetudo servetur, ut vel ille Egypti vel hic suburbicariarum ~
926 30| those of Ancyra, etc. Elias Ehmger published a new edition
927 18| purpose, and the nature ( eidos ) of ~their repentance"
928 6 | in fact contained in the eightieth(seventy-ninth) ~apostolical
929 13| Du Cange). They granted eirenikai , or letters ~dimissory,
930 3 | agennhton o ~ pathr , kai eis ~ o ex autou ~ uios gnhsios , ~
931 3 | Nicene Creed ~ gennhton ek ths ~ ousias tou patros ~
932 5 | Virgins enumerated ~ en tw ekklhsiwn ~ kan <ss228> ni ," and(
933 3 | de ~ gennhqen mhte ~ olws ekon ton ~ aition or(2) T o ~
934 11| esperiwn ~ arkein eqos ~ ekrathse . That the whole West was
935 27| meaning of the phrase oros ~ ekteqeitai , viz. "a decree has now
936 31| among the bishops as an elder brother, who hath the ~care
937 33| worthy, and that the people elect them, and that the ~bishop
938 21| perfectiores ~ teleiwterot the electi, or in the nomenclature
939 30| canons, those of Ancyra, etc. Elias Ehmger published a new edition
940 15| prokeirizein is used to signify eliger.~ ~This canon is found in
941 10| confining myself here to an elucidation of the words found ~in the
942 4 | themselves over to others to be ~emasculated by them, viz., that they
943 22| Council of Nice several eminent men were present who had
944 23| secular ~power, and the Emperors of Constantinople were often
945 32| latter often kissed the empty ~socket of the lost eye.
946 4 | in this canon make no new enactment but only ~confirm by the
947 10| first half of the canon enacts merely that what had long
948 5 | generally to Church laws(Encycl. 2; cp. Apol. c. Ari. 69).
949 3 | their adversaries used to endanger the homousios. But, when ~
950 35| Roman Archdeacon Hilary, endeavoured to make the Roman and the ~
951 32| was no such practice, and endeavours ~to prove by quotations
952 12| was long and severe. It ~ended in a compromise agreed on
953 17| of their being obliged to endure the ~inclemency of the weather.~ ~
954 18| OF CANON XII.~ ~Those who endured violence and were seen to
955 33| anathematized, not even ~enduring to hear his impious doctrine
956 29| Fathers thus sanction and enforce by their authority a ~practice
957 25| Carthage of the year 348 enforces the ~original prohibition,
958 9 | Harnack: Hist. of Dogma [Eng. Tr.] Vol. I. p. 209.)~ ~
959 7 | JOHNSON.~For want of a proper English word to render it by, I
960 25| general law on the subject, enjoining "Sie quis usuras undecunque ~
961 12| from that epoch peaceably enjoyed the ~patriarchal dignity
962 12| province, such as London enjoys in ~the Province of Canterbury.
963 18| who absolutely refused to ~enlist, and on being told by the
964 18| without intending to censure ~enlistment as such. They now desired
965 3 | gennh os as man and ~ a , ennhtos as God, for this is ~clearly
966 9 | This is not ~the place to enquire whether the first celebration
967 13| answer to the emperor's enquiry whether ~he was willing
968 3 | clung to the homousios as enshrining ~the doctrine for which
969 1 | God, begotten ~( gennhq , ent <s201)>, not made, ~being
970 31| after ordination, ~which is enthronization.~ ~CANON LXXII.~No one is
971 18| visible fact) sufficient to entitle them to the character of ~
972 17| rather toward the lower or entrance part of ~it, stood the Ambo,
973 9 | as for the holy meal, and entreaty is ~made for the introduction
974 5 | Socrates(i. 17), "the Virgins enumerated ~ en tw ekklhsiwn ~ kan <
975 30| copies; thus ~Montfaucon enumerates several in his Bibliotheca
976 35| they ~calculated from the epact, and began from the feria
977 11| Rome is over the Western Eparchies ~( tpn esperiwn ~ eparkiwn )
978 11| Eparchies ~( tpn esperiwn ~ eparkiwn ) and Zonaras still more
979 27| skhmati exetasqeispn , ~ epei . Hefele's translation ~
980 25| Epiphanius(adv. Haeres. Epilog. c. 24), Chrysostom(Hom.
981 13| chorepiscopus recorded [Actt. Episc. ~Cenoman. ap. Du Cange]
982 13| committed to them, "loco ~episcopi," ordaining readers, exorcists,
983 13| of Riez, A. D. 439 (the Epistles ~of Pope Damasus I. and
984 12| Jerusalem has from that epoch peaceably enjoyed the ~patriarchal
985 11| tpn esperiwn ~ arkein eqos ~ ekrathse . That the whole
986 30| which is generally but erroneously attributed to St. ~Isidore(
987 30| optima fide fall into an error--~which he shared with Greek
988 31| widower; neither shall they escort them; nor be ~familiar with
989 23| Constantinople, ~ ?eta ,s215> esis ; the second when a ~bishop,
990 3 | even in his Godhead. See esp. Joann. ~Damasc. de Fid.
991 13| were merely presbyters, is espoused by ~Morinus and Du Cange,
992 9 | It does not change the essential meaning of the ~passage;
993 3 | anagnwsteon agenhtos tout esti ~ mh poihqeis . Waterland (
994 23| Sasima to Constantinople, ~ ?eta ,s215> esis ; the second
995 3 | and by Agothon in Arist. Eth. Nic. vii. 2 (comp. also
996 31| creation of a patriarch for Ethiopia, and of his power, and of
997 9 | hostia as the ~object of the eucharistic offering." In a foot-note (
998 20| in ~Scudamore's Notitia Eucharistica, a work which can be absolutely ~
999 9 | because it is ~ trafh eukaristhqeisa . It is a mistake ~to suppose
1000 9 | to Justin, only in the ~ eukaristian poiein whereby ~the koinos
1001 9 | becomes the ~ artos ths ~ eukaristias .(2) The sacrifice of the
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