0pera-cardi | carpo-eukar | eul-lente | leont-proph | propo-threw | thril-zealo
Document
1502 4 | perhaps the Arian ~bishop, Leontius, who was the principal cause
1503 9 | deacons and the Priests and Levites of the Old Testament, describing
1504 12| as at the disgraceful ~ lhstrikh of 449, was more conspicuous
1505 31| manifest crime.~ ~CANON LI.~Bishops shall not allow
1506 25| xiv); ~Ambrose(de Tobia liber unus). Jerome(in Ezech.
1507 12| yet ~it clearly shews how lie intended to understand the
1508 6 | Not a novice; lest, being ~lifted up with pride, he fall into
1509 3 | ou poihqenta ] (J. B. Lightfoot. The ~Apostolic Fathers--
1510 31| incompatibility of temper"].CANON LII.~Usury and the base seeking
1511 31| fellowship with Jews.~ ~CANON LIII.~Marriages with infidels
1512 3 | they fought, they had no liking for the terms ~ agennhtos
1513 35| Paschasinus, ~Bishop of Lilybaeum and Proterius of Alexandria,
1514 28| twelfth century, but that it lingered on a little later at ~Constantinople
1515 19| unction, so that properly and literally it could be styled ~"the
1516 5 | the ~Tersanctus(Hammond, Liturgies East and West, p. 377);
1517 11| Rufinus gave rise to a very lively discussion between the ~
1518 31| with the bishop.~ ~CANON LIX.~How all the grades of the
1519 25| Verdun, when applying for a loan to king ~Theodebert, for
1520 11| was no purely ~Eastern and local thing, for a similar state
1521 13| district committed to them, "loco ~episcopi," ordaining readers,
1522 20| constrained to accept the logical justness of its conclusions.~ ~ ~
1523 17| without reprobation by Peter Lombard (In Sentent. Lib. iv. ~dist.
1524 12| in the province, such as London enjoys in ~the Province
1525 17| the latter in Rome at ~S. Lorenzo's, and in Ravenna at the
1526 32| Paphnutius declared with a loud voice, "that too ~heavy
1527 25| evident from the edicts of St. Louis, Philip ~IV., Charles IX.,
1528 28| invited frequently to the love-~feasts, while the pr ,s210>
1529 11| Samnium, Apulia with Calabria, Lucania and that of the ~Brutii,
1530 25| thus: "Usura definitur ~lucrum ex mutuo exactum aut speratum;"(
1531 25| from the New Testament ~Luke vi. 34. "The third assertion
1532 32| Greek Church on this point. Lupus and Phillips explained the ~
1533 3 | dangerous, seemed always to be lurking under the expression Qeos ~
1534 25| refinement of casuistry.(1) ~Luther violently opposed him, and
1535 26| by all Catholics and by Lutherans, ~but is denied by all other
1536 31| his jurisdiction.~ ~CANON LVI.~Of how the presbyters of
1537 31| should go thrice.~ ~CANON LVII.~Of the rank in sitting
1538 31| the archpresbyter.~ ~CANON LVIII.~Of the honour flue the
1539 31| described and set forth.~ ~CANON LX.~Of how men are to be chosen
1540 31| should be examined.~ ~CANON LXI.~Of the honour due to the
1541 31| themselves in their way.~ ~CANON LXII.~The number of presbyters
1542 31| and to its means.~ ~CANON LXIII.~Of the Ecclesiastical Economist
1543 31| contrary to her wish.~ ~CANON LXIX.~Of one of the faithful
1544 31| rule that church.~ ~CANON LXV.~Of the order to be observed
1545 31| office of exequies.~ ~CANON LXVI.~Of taking a second wife,
1546 31| excommunicate him.~ ~CANON LXVII.~Of having two wives at
1547 31| infidel man.] ~ ~CANON LXVIII.~Of giving in marriage to
1548 31| enthronization.~ ~CANON LXXII.~No one is allowed to transfer
1549 9 | XI, Quaest. III., Canon lxxiij., and the latter part in
1550 31| for a ~superior.~ ~CANON LXXIV.~How sisters, widows, and
1551 31| duties and utility.~ ~CANON LXXV.~How one seeking election
1552 31| account of crime.~ ~CANON LXXVI.~Of the distinctive garb
1553 31| monks and nuns.~ ~CANON LXXVII.~That a bishop convicted
1554 31| excommunicated.~ ~CANON LXXVIII.~Of presbyters and deacons
1555 31| excommunicated.~ ~CANON LXXX.~Of the election of a procurator
1556 15| Decretum. Pars I. Dist. ~lxxxi. c.v.~ ~ ~
1557 31| Echellensis's Nova Versio LXXXIV. Arabic. ~Canonum Conc.
1558 14| xxiv. c. vij., and Dist. lxxxj., c. iv.~ ~ ~
1559 33| Egypt, and Pentapolis, and Lybia, and every nation under ~
1560 17| accomplices to fasting, to lying prostrate upon the earth,
1561 13| at Pontion ~in 876, at Lyons in 886, at Douzy in 871.~ ~ ~
1562 11| urbis. In our ~time Dr. Maasen has proved in his book,(
1563 3 | for the language of the Macrostich (De Synod. 3, 1, p. ~590),
1564 13| of course no ~question is made--were at first truly bishops
1565 33| his impious doctrine and madness and blasphemous ~words.
1566 25| century, the work of Scipio Maffei, Dell' impiego dell ~danaro,
1567 12| scripta firmare," Leo. Mag. Ep. 119 [92]), and other
1568 14| bigamy, heresy, idolatry, magic, etc.--as the ~Arabic paraphrase
1569 12| the see of Antioch (Leo Magn. Ep. ad Maximum, ~119 [92]).
1570 3 | Hippol. Haer. vii. 28; ~Simon Magus, Hippol. Haer. vi. 17, 18;
1571 11| Salmasius were right in maintaining that, by ~the regiones suburbicarioe,
1572 1 | God, the Father Almighty, maker of all things ~visible and
1573 9 | sacrifice. In the first place, Malachi i. 11, demanded a solemn ~
1574 18| penitents were found to have "manifested their ~conversion by deeds,
1575 32| and his great purity of manners had rendered him ~especially
1576 23| synod held by the patriarch Manuel at Constantinople, in ~the
1577 8 | ordinari" ~"ordinatio" and "manus impositionem."~ ~HEFELE.~
1578 3 | unable to agree with Zahn (Marcellus, pp. 40, 104, 223, Ign. ~
1579 3 | Casatensian copy of the MS., a marginal note is added, ~ anagnwsteon
1580 18| Opusc. i. 410), as when Marinus' succession to a centurionship ~
1581 33| even destroyed Theonas of Marmorica and Secundes of ~Ptolemais;
1582 30| these Arabic canons of the Maronite, Abraham Echellensis. He
1583 25| masterly article by Wharton B. Marriott in Smith and Cheetham's ~
1584 32| Church; he mentions his martyrdom, his miracles, and the Emperor'
1585 18| thought like Maximilian in the Martyrology, who absolutely refused
1586 30| letter is ~contained the marvellous assertion that the Council
1587 18| all ardent Christians" (Mason, Persec. of Diocl. p. 308),
1588 25| which I am indebted to a ~masterly article by Wharton B. Marriott
1589 4 | misinterpretation of our Lord's saying ~(Matt. xix. 12) by which Origen,
1590 8 | ratification or completion of the ~matter--the imposition of hands
1591 13| Basil M. Epist. 181; Rab. Maur. ~De Instit. Cler. i. 5,
1592 18| position, and illustrated the maxim that in morals second thoughts
1593 32| during the persecution under ~Maximian. He was also, celebrated
1594 18| Christians ~thought like Maximilian in the Martyrology, who
1595 12| Antioch (Leo Magn. Ep. ad Maximum, ~119 [92]). No further
1596 | meanwhile
1597 5 | of Rome uses it for the measure of ~Christian attainment(
1598 9 | in securing the ~regular meetings of provincial and diocesan
1599 31| synod of Archbishops, which meets once a year with the ~Patriarch,
1600 9 | the other hand, writes: ~ mekris an tp ~ koinp h tp ~ episkopw ,
1601 25| violently opposed him, and Melancthon also kept to the old ~doctrine,
1602 13| A.D. 829, lib. i.c. 27; Meld. A.D. 845, can. ~44; Metens.
1603 15| Nicaea on the subject of the Meletians, there is ~a distinction
1604 31| yet not public should be ~mended by private exhortation and
1605 8 | and[so-called] Eighth(Ecu-~menical Councils in affirming that
1606 32| to be so, because, ~when mentioning the women who might live
1607 25| Although the conditions of the mercantile community in the East and ~
1608 16| they shall be dealt with mercifully. As ~many as were communicants,
1609 13| East, and were practically merged in ~archdeacons in the West.~ ~
1610 21| Augustine speaks(De Peccat. Merit. ii. 26) ~as given apparently
1611 12| at the impious design ~("merito perhorrescens," Leo. u.
1612 17| with porticoes, called mesaulion or atrium, with a ~font
1613 12| in the Seventh Action, ~ meta pollhn ~ filoneikian . Juvenal
1614 23| kekwlutak , ou mhn ~ h metaqesis : i.e., the thing ~prohibited
1615 13| Meld. A.D. 845, can. ~44; Metens. A.D. 888, can. 8, and Capitul.
1616 10| Patriarchal as to extent, but Metropolical in the ~administration.~
1617 12| condition of his being allowed ~metropolitical jurisdiction over the three
1618 3 | anagnwsteon agenhtos tout esti ~ mh poihqeis . Waterland (Works, ~
1619 23| metabasis ~ kekwlutak , ou mhn ~ h metaqesis : i.e., the
1620 23| response of the patriarch ~Michael, which only demands for
1621 29| of Pentecost." De ~Cor. Mil. s. 3, 4. Many other of
1622 17| seen at S. Ambrogio's in Milan, and the latter in Rome
1623 9 | the bishops to pronounce a milder sentence upon them. ~And
1624 11| as far ~as the hundredth milestone, The boundary of the vicarins
1625 10| irregular proceedings of Miletius, and to confirm the ancient
1626 29| his treatise De Corona ~Militis, which is often quoted,
1627 21| salt which was given ~with milk and honey after baptism.~ ~ ~
1628 34| fearful of crimes, and ~whose minds were blinded. In rejecting
1629 17| which may ~well pass for miraculous. He called together a large
1630 4 | piety, originating in the misinterpretation of our Lord's saying ~(Matt.
1631 4 | Origen, among others, was misled, and their ~observance was
1632 10| other hand, had he greatly ~misrepresented them, would his version
1633 28| in any ~sense, that their mission was not to interfere in
1634 35| evangelized by the Roman missionaries, the ~new converts accepted
1635 35| order to put an end to this ~misunderstanding, the Synod of Sardica in
1636 30| contemporaries, who also ~mixed the canons of Nicaea with
1637 27| I give the original, ~'E mnhsqhm <c210> n ~ tpn en tp ~ skhmati
1638 13| however, takes the more moderate line of ~affirming chorepiscopi
1639 12| No Christian can for a moment ~grudge to the Holy City
1640 31| names and conversation of ~monks and nuns.~ ~CANON LXXVII.~
1641 3 | agennhtos ~. . . tou de ~ monogonous pathr ~ kai gennhtwr , the
1642 3 | interpolator substitutes o ~ monos alhqinos ~ Qeos o agennhtos ~. . .
1643 18| 42 (although later, as a Montanist, he took a rigorist ~and
1644 13| continued ~on, and like the Montanists they rebaptized Catholics
1645 30| Constantinople, in the ~month of November 419; and subsequently
1646 24| hundredth of the sum[as monthly interest], the holy and ~
1647 35| the latter cycle the new moons were marked more ~accurately,
1648 33| of knowing what has been mooted and investigated, and also ~
1649 20| she might ~receive every morning before other food. St. Cyprian
1650 17| mortal ~sins" (crimena mortalia(1)), viz: idolatry, murder,
1651 30| Florence, Venice, ~Oxford, Moscow, etc.; and he adds that
1652 23| bishop himself, ~from selfish motives) not "translation"(wherein
1653 20| man's receiving with his mouth "his food for ~the journey,"
1654 24| should have no power to move from city ~to city and to
1655 23| Metropolitan with his synod, moved by a praiseworthy cause
1656 7 | JUSTELLUS.~Who these mulieres subintroductae were does
1657 25| says, "fructum producit et multiplicatur per ~se."(2)~ ~That the
1658 21| Our Father. Writers who multiply the classes insert here
1659 25| 1011, 1020, 1033, ~1100).~ ~Muratori, in his dissertation on
1660 20| at length, can do so ~in Muratorius's learned "Dissertations"
1661 17| mortalia(1)), viz: idolatry, murder, and adultery. But in ~the
1662 34| anything in common with the ~murderers of our Lord; and as, on
1663 4 | young man had desired to be mutilated by physicians, ~for the
1664 4 | eunuch ~or had suffered mutilation at the hands of persecutors;
1665 35| to regulate, by means of mutual concessions, a common day ~
1666 25| Usura definitur ~lucrum ex mutuo exactum aut speratum;"(1)
1667 5 | truth" for a standard of mystic interpretation, but proceeds
1668 22| namely, the contracting of a mystical marriage between ~them,
1669 17| the church, was called the Naos ~or Nave. This was separated
1670 12| Theophilus of Caesarea and Narcissus of ~Jerusalem were presidents."~ ~
1671 23| translation made, so it is narrated, in obedience to heavenly
1672 12| PATRIARCHATE OF ~JERUSALEM.~ ~The narrative of the successive steps
1673 17| Faerula in ~Latin, and was a narrow vestibule extending the
1674 33| Pentapolis, and Lybia, and every nation under ~heaven, the holy
1675 1 | preach: Go and teach ~all nations, and baptize them in the
1676 10| translator, yet, being a native of Aquileia, he cannot have
1677 5 | Eastern ~Church service(Neale, Introd. East. Ch. if. 832),
1678 30| historians. He was born near ~the period when the Council
1679 25| particularity in the latter, "Nec omnino cuiquam clericorum ~
1680 26| doctrinal statement which is necessarily contained in the ~canon
1681 6 | catechumen himself there is need of time and of a longer
1682 18| Pet. ii. 22, but, it is needless to say, without intending
1683 35| one of the two Churches neglected to make the ~calculation
1684 25| one must not defraud his neighbour nor take unjust advantage
1685 13| Councils of Ancyra and Neo-Caesarea A. D. 314, and again in
1686 6 | probation of some time a ~neophyte is of no advantage( kakos ).
1687 31| be ordained.~ ~CANON III.~Neophytes in the faith are not to
1688 12| prominent ~position during the Nestorian and Eutychian troubles towards
1689 12| in his campaign against ~Nestorius for Cyril lightly to discard.
1690 7 | injunction, then, does ~net merely forbid the ~ sunisaktos
1691 25| in defence of this then new-fangled refinement of casuistry.(
1692 3 | is thus created, e.g. in ~Newman's notes on the several passages
1693 33| proclaim to you the good news of the agreement ~concerning
1694 5 | ekklhsiwn ~ kan <ss228> ni ," and(ib. v. 19) on ~the
1695 6 | rule of ~the Council of Nicaea--for instance, that of S.
1696 33| Gelasius, Historia Concilii Nicaeni, lib. II, cap. xxxiii. ; ~
1697 35| following the Council of Nicea--that is, in 326--as well ~
1698 31| Arabic. ~Canonum Conc. Nicoeni, that the reader may compare
1699 22| thus Eusebius, Bishop of Nicomedia, ~had been before Bishop
1700 33| which was assembled at ~Niece through the grace of Christ
1701 5 | might be ~called kan <ss228> nikos , see Cyril ~of Jerusalem,
1702 | nine
1703 35| fixed the time ~for the ninety-five following Easters--that
1704 35| the passover on the 14th Nisan, that he ~died on the 15th(
1705 30| the celebrated bishop of Nisibis, who was ~present at Nice.
1706 3 | the expression Qeos ~ g nnhtos as applied to the ~Son.
1707 18| committed themselves to a noble course: they had cast aside
1708 2 | penetration how he saw them nodding and winking ~to each other
1709 21| teleiwterot the electi, or in the nomenclature of the ~Eastern Church as
1710 8 | remembered that he had nominated bishops without the concurrence ~
1711 33| to ~make appointments and nominations of worthy persons among
1712 30| the Canons, and ~in his Nomocanon, as well as the two other
1713 17| practice of "hearing mass" or "non-communicating ~attendance" clearly had
1714 34| of the South, and of the North, and by some of those of
1715 18| Auxentius, one of Licinius' notaries, had done when, according ~
1716 31| repudiation be written for her, noting the false accusation which
1717 20| XXIV) and in ~Scudamore's Notitia Eucharistica, a work which
1718 17| persons as stood convicted of notorious sin ~were put to open penance,
1719 12| audacious attempt to set ~at nought the Nicene decrees, and
1720 31| XXXVII. of Echellensis's Nova Versio LXXXIV. Arabic. ~
1721 17| these ends at the ~rise of Novatianism in the middle of the second
1722 28| and by Justinian's Sixth Novel(6) ~those who attempted
1723 30| Constantinople, in the ~month of November 419; and subsequently in
1724 6 | saying is clear, "Not a novice; lest, being ~lifted up
1725 12| the ~apostolic See ("ut nulla illicitis conatibus praeberetur
1726 3 | retains the ~double [Greek nun] v, though the claims of
1727 31| conversation of ~monks and nuns.~ ~CANON LXXVII.~That a
1728 28| Church to teach a ~man or to nurse him in sickness would have
1729 4 | clergy." Not, ~ outos ok?nwn , but ~ o kanwn , as if
1730 17| the name of St. Gregory Nyssen, this increase of offences
1731 3 | conceptions, ~not to any obliteration of the meaning of the terms
1732 19| shown by Aubespine (lib. 1, Obs. cap. ~ii.). But while this
1733 23| been translated from his obscure see Sasima(not Nazianzum
1734 23| agreed with these wise ~observations, and promised that he would
1735 34| whilst others are still observing a strict fast. For this
1736 35| to take fresh steps for obtaining a ~complete uniformity in
1737 3 | is the distinction more ~obvious than in the Clementine Homilies,
1738 25| interval, the lower clergy had ~occasionally been found having recourse
1739 12| to ~lend dignity to the occupant of the see; at all events
1740 12| same is the case with the occupants of two other of his suffragan ~
1741 12| disgraceful Latrocinium, Juvenal occupied the third place, after ~
1742 12| his predecessor. Juvenal occupies a prominent ~position during
1743 12| metropolitan of Caesarea, and to occupy the position ~of vice-president
1744 4 | in which this provision occurred except apostolical canon ~
1745 5 | word for a series of nine "odes" in the Eastern ~Church
1746 17| Nyssen, this increase of offences requiring ~public penance
1747 17| might be the more afraid to offend."~ ~The foregoing words
1748 9 | those who ~have confessedly offended against their bishop, may
1749 2 | and this ~rendered it very offensive to many in the Asiatic Churches.
1750 5 | traces it to the roll or official list on which the names
1751 33| their rank and the right to officiate, but that they shall be
1752 7 | them, not for the sake of ~offspring or lust, but from the desire,
1753 29| mentions it amongst other ohservances ~which, though not expressly
1754 16| as were communicants" ( oi ~ pistoi ) thus following
1755 4 | the clergy." Not, ~ outos ok?nwn , but ~ o kanwn , as
1756 3 | mhte de ~ gennhqen mhte ~ olws ekon ton ~ aition or(2)
1757 11| provinces--Campania, Tuscia with Ombria, Picenum, ~Valeria, Samnium,
1758 13| chorepiscopi as such--i.e. omitting the cases of reconciled
1759 25| particularity in the latter, "Nec omnino cuiquam clericorum ~liceat
1760 2 | words are formed like ~ omobios and omoiobios , ~ omognwmwn
1761 2 | omobios and omoiobios , ~ omognwmwn and omoiognwmwn , ~etc.,
1762 2 | formed like ~ omobios and omoiobios , ~ omognwmwn and omoiognwmwn , ~
1763 2 | omoiobios , ~ omognwmwn and omoiognwmwn , ~etc., etc.~ ~The reader
1764 1 | Christ, the Son of God, the ~only-begotten of his Father, of the substance
1765 3 | htos described certain ~ontological relations, whether in time
1766 21| continence(August. De fide et oper. v. 8). ~Those who passed
1767 4 | physicians to a surgical ~operation, or if he has been castrated
1768 13| arguments of their strong opponents just spoken of. If nothing ~
1769 12| Juvenal, who ~allowed no opportunity of forwarding his ends to
1770 32| alone among the Greeks in opposing the marriage of ~all clerics,
1771 33| lest we should ~seem to be oppressing a man who has in fact received
1772 30| Nicaea; and Zosimus might optima fide fall into an error--~
1773 18| stand (see Routh. ~Scr. Opusc. i. 410), as when Marinus'
1774 16| following Dr. Routh. Vide his Opuscula. Caranza translates in his
1775 3 | Nic. vii. 2 (comp. also Orac. Sibyll. ~prooem. 7, 17);
1776 3 | Haer. v. 16 (from Sibylline Oracles); ~Clem. Alex. Strom v.
1777 28| and the first ~council of Orange, A.D. 441, in its twenty-sixth
1778 6 | the ordained as of the ~ordainer.~ ~ ~
1779 15| previous knowledge of the ordainers, this shall not ~prejudice
1780 31| CANON XII.~Of the bishop who ordains one whom he understands
1781 21| Those who passed through the ordeal were known as the perfectiores ~
1782 33| according to the law and ordinance ~of the Church. But, if
1783 14| necessary to pass ~such ordinances; for even in the fifth century,
1784 8 | translators, who speak of "ordinari" ~"ordinatio" and "manus
1785 26| which see Morinus De SS. Ordinat. P. ~III. Exercit. viij. . . .
1786 8 | who speak of "ordinari" ~"ordinatio" and "manus impositionem."~ ~
1787 28| matter most ~admirably.(De Ordinationibus, Exercitatio X.)~ ~The deaconesses
1788 14| away all the impedimenta ~ordinationis which are the results of
1789 23| Translationibus in the Jus Orient.(i. 293, Cit. Haddon. Art. ~"
1790 30| sources, and sects; ~but that originally they had all been translated
1791 4 | perverted notion ~of piety, originating in the misinterpretation
1792 25| language of the council of Orleans(A.D. 538), ~which appears
1793 3 | Joann. ~Damasc. de Fid. Orth. i. 8 [where he draws the
1794 1 | God was not ( hn ~ pote ote ouk ~ h n ), or that before
1795 3 | words; ~and when once the othodox Christology was formulated
1796 | ourselves
1797 3 | uis , ou ~ ths auths ~ ousas . See also the ~arguments
1798 3 | Creed ~ gennhton ek ths ~ ousias tou patros ~ ton uion ~
1799 23| that such changes were the outcome of ambition, and that ~if
1800 5 | idea' without substance or outline: it ~can be put into form,
1801 4 | admits to the clergy." Not, ~ outos ok?nwn , but ~ o kanwn ,
1802 18| their ~eagerness at the outset" ("primum suum ardorem,"
1803 35| Less who first completely overcame them, by giving to the Latins
1804 3 | henceforth impossible to ~overlook the difference. The Son
1805 13| to minor offices. ~They overlooked the country district committed
1806 13| upon Pope Cornelius, and to overthrow the ~prevailing discipline
1807 31| brethren, and to whom they owe obedience because he is ~
1808 4 | punished with death. If the owner of the place ~where the
1809 3 | Works, ~III., p. 240 sq., Oxf. 1823) tries ineffectually
1810 25| iij, etc. Nay, even ~the pagans themselves formerly forbid
1811 18| sacrifice to the gods on pain of being cashiered ~(compare
1812 17| in their crime. The whole palace became a ~theatre of sorrow
1813 18| statue of Bacchus in the palace-~court; but their zeal, unlike
1814 12| jurisdiction over the three Palestines (Labbe, Concil. iv. ~613).
1815 13| chorepiscopus, is ~recorded (Pallad., Hist. Lausiac. 106). In
1816 21| i. 5; Hieron. Ep. 61, ad Pammach. c. 4:). ~To catechumens
1817 2 | times by St. Irenaeus, and Pamphilus ~the Martyr is quoted as
1818 25| exegerit . . . tres annos in pane et aqua"(c. xxv. 3); a penance
1819 21| the ~ eul <s228 giai or panis benedictus, ~and not, as
1820 3 | ought not to be treated as parallels to the present ~passage
1821 13| twice married, and to grant ~pardon to the lapsed. And on this
1822 3 | agennhtos the generation or ~parentage. Both are used at a very
1823 10| of Rome also"] standing parenthetically between what ~is decreed
1824 24| restore them to their own ~parishes; and, if they will not go,
1825 18| renders-~-just as if, in common parlance, it did not signify: the
1826 3 | date; e.g. ~ agenhtos by Parmenides in Clem. Alex. Strom. v.
1827 31| bishop of one city, and one parochus of one ~town; also the incumbent,
1828 28| must be a chaste virgin( parqenos ~ agnh ) or else a widow.
1829 32| said ~that Socrates had a partial sympathy with the Novatians,
1830 30| business decided by judices in partibus." The canon quoted ~by the
1831 18| reasonable to admit them to a ~participation in the prayers," to the
1832 21| fwtizowenoi , the present participle being used of ~course with
1833 25| are enforced with~greater particularity in the latter, "Nec omnino
1834 28| Discipline de l' Eglise, I Partie, Livre III.)~ ~ ~
1835 35| Easter, and brought the two parties(Alexandrians and ~Romans)
1836 3 | Athan.] Dial. de Trin. ii. passim. ~This fully explains the
1837 9 | first to designate the ~passio Domini, nay, the sanguis
1838 5 | explained by ~Westcott in a passive sense so that "canonized"
1839 34| frequently celebrate two ~passovers in the same year. We could
1840 30| Athanasius's works(ed. Patav. ii. 599) but ~rejected
1841 18| by awe, and tears, and patience, and good ~works" (such,
1842 25| Nazianzum(Orat. xiv. in Patrem tacentem). Gregory of ~Nyssa(
1843 25| in his power to read the Patristic view of ~the matter, I give
1844 3 | gennhton ek ths ~ ousias tou patros ~ ton uion ~ omoousion (
1845 27| ARISTENUS.~Their(the Paulicians') deaconesses also, since
1846 12| Jerusalem has from that epoch peaceably enjoyed the ~patriarchal
1847 2 | he is also referred to Pearson, On the Creed; Bull, Defence
1848 21| which Augustine speaks(De Peccat. Merit. ii. 26) ~as given
1849 6 | the Latin words animale peccatam, believing that the Council
1850 25| clericus a diaconatu, et supra, pecuniam non ~commodet ad usuras"(
1851 9 | subject, and the severe ~penalties attached to those not answering
1852 18| dispense with part of a ~penance-time is recognized in the fifth
1853 2 | describes ~with much wit and penetration how he saw them nodding
1854 21| to one of the grades of penitence). (Edw. H. Plumptre in ~
1855 27| creed; and if they shall perceive that he was ~baptized into
1856 13| in the ~same rank, unless perchance in the same city there be
1857 19| complement of Christian ~perfection, and as the last seal of~
1858 21| ordeal were known as the perfectiores ~ teleiwterot the electi,
1859 18| shews himself zealous in its performance, the bishop shall ~treat
1860 15| ordained, even after having performed penance; for, as the ~preceding
1861 12| impious design ~("merito perhorrescens," Leo. u. s.), and wrote
1862 25| contra evangelia facit sine periculo"(Mansi, iii. 158). The language, ~
1863 13| for the text seems ~to permit chorepiscopi to ordain priests.
1864 26| neither canon nor custom permits that they who ~have no right
1865 4 | place ~where the deed was perpetrated was aware of it and hid
1866 18| ardent Christians" (Mason, Persec. of Diocl. p. 308), ordered
1867 4 | mutilation at the hands of persecutors; an instance of ~the former,
1868 18| with fear, and tears, and ~perseverance, and good works, when they
1869 31| them, nor gaze upon them persistently. And the same ~decree is
1870 24| ordained them and cannot be persuaded to ~return, are to be separated
1871 4 | were aimed against that perverted notion ~of piety, originating
1872 18| probably borrowed from ~2 Pet. ii. 22, but, it is needless
1873 28| office there is a ~special petition that the newly admitted
1874 17| centre, styled a cantharus or phiala, or sometimes ~only an open
1875 25| the edicts of St. Louis, Philip ~IV., Charles IX., Henry
1876 18| suum ardorem," Dionysius; Philo ~and Evarestus more laxly, "
1877 13| Rome, who had been a Stoic philosopher and was delivered, ~according
1878 18| the graphic anecdote of Philostorgius (Fragm. 5), his master bade ~
1879 28| 1) where he speaks of ~Phoebe as being a diakonos of the
1880 26| to the ordinary Catholic phraseology only admitting that "the ~
1881 11| Campania, Tuscia with Ombria, Picenum, ~Valeria, Samnium, Apulia
1882 17| having only a ~stone for a pillow.~ ~To all practical purposes
1883 30| made of it. Another Jesuit, Pisanus, was writing a history of
1884 3 | agenhton (for this is plain from the context), and that ~
1885 9 | Supper as a sacrifice, is ~plainly found in the dache, (c.
1886 12| fifth century. But the part played by him at the councils ~
1887 33| appointments of ~persons who may be pleasing to them, nor to suggest
1888 12| was entirely destroyed and ploughed as a field according ~to
1889 21| of penitence). (Edw. H. Plumptre in ~Dict. Christ. Antiq.
1890 25| of the ~reigning Pontiff, Plus VIII., decided that those
1891 17| Administratione ~Sacramenti Poenitentioe; Bingham, Antiquities; and
1892 9 | words of institution touto ~ poieite , contained a command with
1893 3 | agenhtos tout esti ~ mh poihqeis . Waterland (Works, ~III.,
1894 9 | 137) notes that he has pointed out in his notes on the
1895 25| Latin church, Hilary of Poitiers(in Ps. xiv); ~Ambrose(de
1896 12| the Seventh Action, ~ meta pollhn ~ filoneikian . Juvenal
1897 5 | canon of truth"(i. 9, 4): Polycrates(Euseb. v. 24) and probably ~
1898 25| approval of the ~reigning Pontiff, Plus VIII., decided that
1899 13| 830, at Mayence in 847, at Pontion ~in 876, at Lyons in 886,
1900 34| the ~dioceses of Asia, of Pontus, and Cilicia. You should
1901 23| sees to make themselves popular with the ~important persons
1902 17| these exterior courts and porch. The first part after passing
1903 3 | Trach. 743 we should after Porson ~and Hermann read agenhton
1904 17| sometimes ~only an open portico, or propulaion . The first
1905 17| open area surrounded ~with porticoes, called mesaulion or atrium,
1906 5 | recognized by the ~Church as portions of Holy Scripture. Again,
1907 6 | is that they shall be de posed if they ~commit a serious
1908 8 | people the right previously possessed of voting in the ~choice
1909 31| him care ~for the church's possessions.~ ~CANON LXIV.~Of the offices
1910 35| Alexandrians did, or should be ~postponed for a week. He indicates
1911 29| kneeling was the common posture for prayer in the primitive ~
1912 1 | Son of God was not ( hn ~ pote ote ouk ~ h n ), or that
1913 8 | of princes and earthly ~potentates in episcopal elections.
1914 10| not ~to introduce any new powers or regulations into the
1915 28| love-~feasts, while the pr ,s210> sbutioes ~had a definite
1916 13| so in the East, and were practically merged in ~archdeacons in
1917 12| nulla illicitis conatibus praeberetur assensio," u. s.). ~Juvenal,
1918 3 | 122); Maximus in ~Euseb. Praep. Ev. vii. 22; Hippol. Haer.
1919 4 | Christians. St. Justin neither ~praises nor blames this young man:
1920 23| with his synod, moved by a praiseworthy cause and ~probable pretext,
1921 17| what then were called by pre-eminence "mortal ~sins" (crimena
1922 1 | he sent his disciples to preach: Go and teach ~all nations,
1923 17| Scriptures read, and the Sermon preached, but ~were obliged to depart
1924 5 | and "the ~canon of the preaching" in iii. 32; and so Basil
1925 33| first, and the rashness and precipitation of ~his character, the same
1926 8 | it necessary to define by precise rules the ~duties of the
1927 21| Jerusalem, with ~dogmatic precision. Special examinations and
1928 12| years before that of his predecessor. Juvenal occupies a prominent ~
1929 11| on the other. The ~great prefecture of Italy, which contained
1930 15| any ~other ecclesiastical preferment as well, and requires their
1931 12| umbrage at his suffragan being preferred before him), as ~next in
1932 20| Dissertations" which are prefixed to his ~edition of the Roman
1933 15| ordainers, this shall not ~prejudice the canon of the Church
1934 12| respects as the ~second prelate in the assembly. The arrogant
1935 28| the female ~catechumens preliminary instruction, but their work
1936 6 | even by ~ordaining others prematurely, are threatened with deposition
1937 30| manuscripts were consulted in preparing this edition; probably they ~
1938 28| distinguished from the ~ presbuterai , a poor class referred
1939 14| bishops as well as to the ~ presbuteroi in the more restricted sense.
1940 13| adding chorepiscopi to presbyteri, of which latter the council ~
1941 13| an ~episcopal, not of a presbyterial kind, although limited to
1942 28| khrai , diaconissoe, presbyteroe, and viduce.~ ~The one great
1943 32| Church exacted of those ~presenting themselves for ordination,
1944 18| far as ~to give money and presents for the sake of readmission,
1945 23| Nazianzen resigned the ~Presidency of the First Council of
1946 12| Narcissus of ~Jerusalem were presidents."~ ~It was this feeling
1947 4 | wilfully do the thing and presume to castrate themselves, ~
1948 26| implied that some deacons had presumed to receive ~Holy Communion
1949 6 | position, as ~a person who presumes to disobey fie great Synod.~ ~
1950 26| insolence and audacity in ~presuming to administer to presbyters
1951 9 | But even Clement of Rome presupposes it, when (in cc. 40-~44)
1952 32| the other hand, ~Thomassin pretends that there was no such practice,
1953 7 | woman in their houses under pretenee of her being a disciple
1954 12| open remonstrance, and ~his pretensions were at least tacitly allowed.
1955 30| kind had ~taken place was prevalent in parts of the East, and
1956 35| between the East and the West, prevented the ~decree of Sardica from
1957 6 | lest, being ~lifted up with pride, he fall into condemnation
1958 28| were only women-elders, not priestesses in any ~sense, that their
1959 14| which were a bar to the priesthood--~such as blasphemy, bigamy,
1960 35| and began from the feria prima of ~January.(b.) The Romans
1961 12| metropolitan see of Caesarea, to a primary place in the episcopate.
1962 23| power to appoint to the Primatial See of Canterbury a bishop
1963 11| hath always had a primacy ~(primatum)," and as a matter of fact
1964 18| and Evarestus more laxly, "primordia bona;" compare ~ thn agaphn
1965 18| eagerness at the outset" ("primum suum ardorem," Dionysius;
1966 3 | the Arian formula ~ ouk hn prin ~ gennhqhnai or some Semiarian
1967 11| Rome should have a primacy (principatum), so that he should ~govern
1968 3 | Useher, Cotelier, etc.), printed it as they found it in the
1969 12| settlement was the dispute as to priority between Juvenal and ~Maximus
1970 26| afflicted, none for the ~prisoner, none for the hungry or
1971 31| willing to ~return to his pristine friendship, his fault shall
1972 9 | consecrated elements which in all probability Cyprian already ~found in
1973 6 | presbyterate. For without a probation of some time a ~neophyte
1974 5 | see Cyril ~of Jerusalem, Procatech.(4); so we read of "canonical
1975 12| bishop of Jerusalem ~when he proceeded to assert his claims to
1976 34| ought to be regarded as proceeding ~from the will of God. Make
1977 5 | mystic interpretation, but proceeds to call the ~harmony between
1978 33| been done.~ ~We further proclaim to you the good news of
1979 18| and on being told by the proconsul that there were Christian ~
1980 31| LXXX.~Of the election of a procurator of the poor, and of his
1981 25| casuist, well says, "fructum producit et multiplicatur per ~se."(
1982 30| new translation with a Proemium(1) containing a vast amount
1983 13| necessary that they should profess in ~writing that they will
1984 13| over, let them first make profession that ~they are willing to
1985 2 | the recent criticisms ~of Professor Harnack, by H. B. Swete,
1986 31| admonition; if he will not profit by ~this, he must be excommunicated.~ ~
1987 30| point I should notice the profound research on ~these Arabic
1988 32| continency: in this way(by not prohibiting ~married intercourse) the
1989 23| the conciliar and papal prohibitions, translations did take ~
1990 6 | also given offence, ei ~ de proiontos tou ~ krono , n ; that is
1991 4 | civil authorities for his project, that he ~renounced his
1992 35| we now possess only the prologue of his ~work.~ ~Upon an
1993 12| predecessor. Juvenal occupies a prominent ~position during the Nestorian
1994 23| wise ~observations, and promised that he would himself make,
1995 25| his impoverished diocese, promising ~repayment, "cure usuris
1996 23| dioceses with the hope of promotion. ~Besides this objection
1997 30| Council of ~Nice to have promulgated more than twenty canons:
1998 9 | meeting of the bishops to pronounce a milder sentence upon them. ~
1999 27| but a blessing was ~merely pronounced over them by prayer and
2000 3 | comp. also Orac. Sibyll. ~prooem. 7, 17); and agennhtos in
2001 12| field according ~to the prophet. As a holy city Jerusalem
2002 25| authority, "nemo contra prophetas, nemo ~contra evangelia
|