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Document
2003 32| as clearly shown by the ~propositions it rejects as by those it
2004 32| He may sometimes have ~propounded erroneous opinions, but
2005 3 | though unable to deny their ~propriety, because they were affected
2006 17| only an open portico, or propulaion . The first variety ~may
2007 16| without oblation" ( kwris ~ ~ prosforas ) see the notes to Ancyra,
2008 9 | occurs the expression ~ h prosqora tou ~ swmatos kai tou ~
2009 17| accomplices to fasting, to lying prostrate upon the earth, to ~wearing
2010 17| Before ~going out they prostrated themselves to receive the
2011 34| amongst us. May God graciously protect you, my ~beloved brethren.~ ~ ~
2012 9 | extraordinary that it raised no protest, and he very frankly confesses ~(
2013 26| but is denied by all other Protestants; those Calvinists who kept
2014 23| custom of ~translations and protested against it to his master,
2015 17| Vestry; and ~on the other the Prothesis, a side-table, or place,
2016 18| the Council describes in proverbial language, probably borrowed
2017 13| then ~shall the bishop provide for him a place as Chorepiscopus,
2018 34| For this reason, a Divine ~Providence wills that this custom should
2019 9 | year two synods in every ~province--the one before Lent, the
2020 11| vicarins urbis ~comprised ten provinces--Campania, Tuscia with Ombria,
2021 12| Rome as an apostolical see, provoked no open remonstrance, and ~
2022 18| compare ~ thn agaphn sou ~ thn prwthn , Rev. ii. 4). Observe ~
2023 25| cite the authority of the Psalmist and St. ~Augustine(Haddan
2024 30| but, out of respect to the pseudo-Athanasian ~letter, he at first cut
2025 27| the African ~bishops), the PseudoIsidore, and Gratian have all followed
2026 3 | Ptolemaeus in particular, Ptol. Ep. ad. Flor. 4 (in ~Stieren'
2027 3 | Haer. vi. 29, 30; the Ptolemaeus in particular, Ptol. Ep.
2028 33| Marmorica and Secundes of ~Ptolemais; for they also have received
2029 31| girl or ~beyond the age of puberty, whether great in birth,
2030 31| and their duties should be publicly ~described and set forth.~ ~
2031 14| clear that these faults are ~punishable in the bishop no less than
2032 23| the Council of Sardica ~punishes so severely. In all these
2033 11| Alexandria and Antioch was no purely ~Eastern and local thing,
2034 18| who having resolved to "purge his army of ~all ardent
2035 17| teaches how they are to be purged.' This former opinion is
2036 17| Confession made to God purges sins, but that made to the
2037 32| monastery, and his great purity of manners had rendered
2038 17| the hairshirt ~under the purple, and lay upon the earth
2039 30| down to us a Latin letter purporting to have been ~written by
2040 25| for the future ~from the pursuit of gain(Migne, Patrol. Groec.
2041 9 | excommunication was the result of ~pusillanimity, or strife, or some other
2042 31| marry another woman, ~after putting away his wife on account
2043 20| every ~presbyter to have a pyx or vessel meet for so great
2044 22| Decretum, Pars II. ~Causa VII, Q. 1, c. xix.~ ~ ~
2045 21| at the ~beginning of the Quadragesimal fast, and the instruction,
2046 25| cuiquam clericorum ~liceat de qualibet re foenus accipere"(Mansi,
2047 9 | are unaccompanied by any qualifying words, mean to celebrate ~
2048 35| Christendom was ~united, for the Quartodecimans had gradually disappeared.(
2049 9 | poiein in the sense of quein . In the ~fourth place,
2050 10| the first half have been questioned, had it not ~included Rome. ...
2051 27| But ~if in answer to their questioning he shall not answer this
2052 25| subject, enjoining "Sie quis usuras undecunque ~exegerit . . .
2053 18| answered, "Ipsi sciunt quod ipsis ~expediat" (Ruinart,
2054 3 | Nic. ii. 2 <s> 6. ~(4) The quotation in Athanasius is more difficult.
2055 32| endeavours ~to prove by quotations from St. Epiphanius, St.
2056 9 | prayers were regarded as the qusia proper, ~even in the case
2057 13| St. Basil M. Epist. 181; Rab. Maur. ~De Instit. Cler.
2058 17| The gates ~in the chancel rail were called the holy gates,
2059 6 | forbidden to baptize, and to raise to the episcopate or to
2060 27| Church and are baptized, ~are ranked among the laity.~ ~With
2061 12| Church growing up in the rapidly increasing ~city, called
2062 9 | councils have been of the rarest ~occurrence. Zonaras complains
2063 33| from the first, and the rashness and precipitation of ~his
2064 8 | that the election is to be ratified by him. He does so ~when
2065 33| concur in the election and ratify it. This ~concession has
2066 13| conciliar decrees, Conc. Ratispon. A.D. 800, in ~Capit. lib.
2067 17| at ~S. Lorenzo's, and in Ravenna at the two S. Apollinares.
2068 25| clericorum ~liceat de qualibet re foenus accipere"(Mansi,
2069 13| this eighth canon orders a re-~ordination.~ ~ ~EXCURSUS
2070 30| and unity ~of faith were re-established between the East and the
2071 35| Theodosius the Great, after the re-establishment of peace in the ~Church,
2072 17| it, stood the Ambo, or reading-desk, the place for the readers
2073 3 | made to discriminate the readings in the ~several places,
2074 18| presents for the sake of readmission, on account of ~the numerous
2075 26| vulgar version of Isidore reads for "touched" ~"received,"
2076 18| make discipline a moral reality, ~and to prevent it from
2077 30| that afterwards the council reassembled and ~set forth seventy altogether.
2078 27| XIX.~ ~Paulianists must be rebaptised, and if such as are clergymen
2079 35| after the conversion of ~Reccared. Finally, under Charles
2080 24| ecclesiastical Canon, shall recklessly remove from their ~own church,
2081 13| considered a forgery since he recognises ~the chorepiscopi as real
2082 33| fact received a fitting ~recompense for his own sin. So far
2083 25| disingenuous to attempt to reconcile the ~modern with the ancient
2084 13| i.e. omitting the cases of reconciled or ~vacant bishops above
2085 18| be too impulsive--they ~reconsidered their position, and illustrated
2086 12| Christian. It is but the record of ~ambition and, worse
2087 25| occasionally been found having recourse to the forbidden practice,
2088 18| some cases by ~bribery--to recover what they had worthily resigned. (
2089 34| that this custom should be rectified and regulated in a ~uniform
2090 8 | intended to prevent the recurrence of such abuses. The ~question
2091 25| of this then new-fangled refinement of casuistry.(1) ~Luther
2092 27| Paulianists who have flown for refuge to the ~Catholic Church,
2093 32| Paphnutius in full: he desired to refute Ballarmin, ~who considered
2094 4 | the purpose of completely refuting the charge of vice which
2095 18| money and by means of gifts ~regained their military stations);
2096 24| before their eyes, nor ~regarding the ecclesiastical Canon,
2097 3 | instructive passages ~as regards the use of these words where
2098 20| altogether in the West.(2) "Regino(De Eccles. Discip. Lib. ~
2099 21| as ~such in the album or register of the church. They were
2100 21| it. The periods for this registration varied, ~naturally enough,
2101 5 | language, like ~Tertullian's "regula fidei," amounted to saying, "
2102 9 | difficulty in securing the ~regular meetings of provincial and
2103 35| Alexandrians and ~Romans) to regulate, by means of mutual concessions,
2104 10| introduce any new powers or regulations into the Church, but to ~
2105 5 | 2 Cor. x. 13, ~15), or a regulative principle of Christian life(
2106 18| arisen under the ~Eastern reign of Licinius, who having
2107 25| with the approval of the ~reigning Pontiff, Plus VIII., decided
2108 34| whose minds were blinded. In rejecting their custom,(1) we may ~
2109 34| myself with you; we can rejoice together, ~seeing that the
2110 3 | Antioch (A.D. 269) in Routh Rel. Sacr. III., p. 290; Method.
2111 31| faith, and of receiving the relapsed, and of those brought into ~
2112 18| as Zonaras and Eusebius relate, required ~from his soldiers
2113 25| Apollinaris(Epist. ~vi. 24) relating an experience of his friend
2114 25| councils differ materially in relation to this subject, ~and indicate
2115 3 | described certain ~ontological relations, whether in time or in eternity.
2116 34| 20.)~ ~When the question relative to the sacred festival of
2117 18| certain ~circumstances a relaxation in the penitential exercises
2118 20| which can be absolutely ~relied upon for the accuracy of
2119 25| king ~Theodebert, for the relief of his impoverished diocese,
2120 3 | This fully explains the reluctance of the orthodox party to
2121 30| declared that they ~did not rely upon these copies, and they
2122 30| most ancient and the most remarkable of all, ~the Prisca, and
2123 13| his error. It is ~well to remember that while beginning only
2124 23| master, Pope Clement VIII., ~reminding him that they were contrary
2125 30| according to the opinion of Renaudot.(5)~ ~Before leaving this
2126 3 | ingenerate" is given as the rendering of both alike. ~If then
2127 18| seriously enough, as Hervetas renders-~-just as if, in common parlance,
2128 4 | fresh ~similar cases to renew the old injunctions; it
2129 22| 341 the ~Synod of Antioch renewed, in its twenty-first canon,
2130 13| that it was not to be a ~reordination. With this interpretation
2131 25| impoverished diocese, promising ~repayment, "cure usuris legitimis,"
2132 13| and ~ordering them to be repeated by "true" bishops; and finally
2133 3 | vv. Elsewhere he insists repeatedly on the distinction ~between
2134 16| communicants, if they heartily repent, shall pass three ~years
2135 12| however, was not long in ~repenting of his too ready acquiescence
2136 12| complaint to pope Leo, who replied by the letter ~which has
2137 12| to this Beveridge justly replies that ~the same is the case
2138 25| George and Theophylact, in reporting their proceedings in ~England
2139 17| side of the chancel was the repository for the sacred utensils
2140 18| Licinius had made himself the ~representative of heathenism; so that the
2141 5 | Christian life(Gal. vi. 16). It represents ~the element of definiteness
2142 12| It is true that he was reprimanded for doing so,(1) but yet ~
2143 30| translating them from the reprint in ~Labbe and Cossart, Concilia,
2144 27| found blameless and without reproach, ~let them be rebaptized
2145 17| also ~mentioned without reprobation by Peter Lombard (In Sentent.
2146 30| Beveridge,(3) has proved this, reproducing an ancient ~Arabic paraphrase
2147 26| minor clergy, but only reproves their insolence and audacity
2148 31| away and let a bill of ~repudiation be written for her, noting
2149 34| in their blindness ~and repugnance to all improvements, they
2150 32| Egypt, a man of a high ~reputation, who had lost an eye during
2151 2 | ready to accede to ~the request of some of the bishops and
2152 17| this increase of offences requiring ~public penance will be
2153 2 | the Father; and that the resemblance of the ~Son to the Father,
2154 18| violence and were seen to have resisted, but who ~afterwards yielded
2155 23| appears also in the synodal response of the patriarch ~Michael,
2156 32| left to each cleric the responsibility of deciding the point ~as
2157 3 | 612). Although he is ~not responsible for the language of the
2158 23| on which such prohibition rested ~were usually that such
2159 24| constraint should be applied to restore them to their own ~parishes;
2160 5 | tendency has appeared to restrict the term ~Canon to matters
2161 14| presbuteroi in the more restricted sense. These words ~of the
2162 13| sufficiently important to require restriction ~by the time of the Council
2163 30| Councils also give the same ~result--for example, the most ancient
2164 3 | forms in double v, which he retained, at the ~same time altering
2165 31| baptism; and of ~others not retaining it, worthy of a worse name,
2166 3 | 1) the Greek MS. still retains the ~double [Greek nun]
2167 17| then he was ~obliged to retire immediately, and to receive
2168 18| soldier's belt), afterwards retracted their resolution, and went
2169 18| agaphn sou ~ thn prwthn , Rev. ii. 4). Observe ~here how
2170 23| in obedience to heavenly revelation. ~It will be noticed that
2171 25| cited, together ~with a review of the conciliar action,
2172 30| Father Romanus's ~translation revised before it was first published,
2173 3 | ii. 3; Tatian Orat. 5; Rhodon in Euseb. H. E. v. 13; ~
2174 31| beautiful, or ~better, or richer, or does so out of his lust
2175 13| the West in the Council of Riez, A. D. 439 (the Epistles ~
2176 18| as a Montanist, he took a rigorist ~and fanatical view, De
2177 20| Chrysostom of the great riot in ~Constantinople in the
2178 20| daring to touch it by fire rising from it."~ ~It is impossible
2179 5 | definiteness appears in the ritual use of the word for a series
2180 31| of the Gospel, and four rivers, etc. And let there be a
2181 5 | original sense, "a straight rod" or ~"line," determines
2182 13| to Pope Nicholas I. (to Rodolph, Archbishop of Bourges,
2183 5 | Bingham traces it to the roll or official list on which
2184 11| apud Alexandriam et in urbe Roma vetusta ~consuetudo servetur,
2185 18| being turned into a formal routine; to secure, as ~Rufinus'
2186 18| sciunt quod ipsis ~expediat" (Ruinart, Act. Sanc. p. 341). But,
2187 10| had not as yet expressly ~ruled. ... Nobody disputes the
2188 3 | time altering the whole run of the sentence so as not
2189 28| and properly unskilled and rustic ~women how to answer at
2190 27| FFOULKES.~(Dict. Chr. Ant. s.v. Nicaea, Councils of.)~That
2191 1 | begotten ~( gennhq , ent <s201)>, not made, ~being of one
2192 28| love-~feasts, while the pr ,s210> sbutioes ~had a definite
2193 23| Constantinople, ~ ?eta ,s215> esis ; the second when
2194 21| was probably the ~ eul <s228 giai or panis benedictus, ~
2195 2 | suspected of being open to a Sabellian ~meaning. It was accepted
2196 2 | distinction: wherefore the Sabellians would ~admit this word:
2197 28| interfere in any way with Sacerdotal functions, but ~simply to
2198 17| sometimes covered with sackcloth and ashes. This is ~the
2199 3 | A.D. 269) in Routh Rel. Sacr. III., p. 290; Method. de
2200 17| human ~institution. But sacramental confession, being of divine
2201 20| his ~edition of the Roman Sacramentaries(chapter XXIV) and in ~Scudamore'
2202 17| Disciplina in Administratione ~Sacramenti Poenitentioe; Bingham, Antiquities;
2203 21| to notice here that the Sacramentum ~Catechumenorum of which
2204 17| body of the church, and Sacrarium or ~Sanctuary. It was also
2205 9 | page) he ~explains that "Sacrificare, Sacrificium celebrare in
2206 18| take part in the heathen sacrifices which were held in the camps,
2207 9 | explains that "Sacrificare, Sacrificium celebrare in all passages
2208 25| desecration of tombs, and ~sacrilege ierosulia , is allowed to
2209 12| five ~patriarchal sees is sad reading for a Christian.
2210 12| in these turbulent and ~saddening scenes who leave a more
2211 21| and Augusta maintain, the salt which was given ~with milk
2212 31| with their chorepiscopus to salute the bishop, and how religious ~
2213 7 | Bibliothek der kirchenver sammlungen confesses that this ~canon
2214 11| Ombria, Picenum, ~Valeria, Samnium, Apulia with Calabria, Lucania
2215 27| him be baptized."~ ~The Samosatans, according to St. Athanasius,
2216 18| expediat" (Ruinart, Act. Sanc. p. 341). But, says Bingham (
2217 28| Widows and dedicated women(sanctimoniales) who are chosen to ~assist
2218 17| church, and Sacrarium or ~Sanctuary. It was also called Apsis
2219 9 | passio Domini, nay, the sanguis Christi and the dominica
2220 11| of the ~Brutii, Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica. Gothfried
2221 11| called the Prisca, was not satisfied with the Greek wording and
2222 3 | heretical ~writers are given; Saturninus, Iren. i. 24, 1; Hippol.
2223 10| French Protestant Salmasius (Saumaise), the Anglican ~Beveridge,
2224 13| but to lack jurisdiction, save subordinately. And the ~
2225 17| that their souls ~might be saved in the day of the Lord;
2226 12| should be honoured, let him, saving its due ~dignity to the
2227 28| feasts, while the pr ,s210> sbutioes ~had a definite allotment
2228 31| free from all ~suspicion of scandal.(2)~ ~CANON V.~Of the election
2229 12| disgraceful ~artifices. Scarcely had Juvenal been consecrated
2230 12| turbulent and ~saddening scenes who leave a more unpleasing
2231 17| places ~even heretics and schismatics were admitted, stood the
2232 26| In one point the learned scholiast just quoted has most seriously ~
2233 11| no doubt, that the ~Greek scholiasts just quoted deemed it to
2234 24| Zonaras had also in his Scholion given the same explanation
2235 25| barren, an opinion which the Schoolmen also held, ~following Aristotle.
2236 25| eighteenth century, the work of Scipio Maffei, Dell' impiego dell ~
2237 18| service, answered, "Ipsi sciunt quod ipsis ~expediat" (Ruinart,
2238 18| to a stand (see Routh. ~Scr. Opusc. i. 410), as when
2239 3 | would be a ~temptation to scribes to substitute the single
2240 12| insolenter ausus per commentitia ~scripta firmare," Leo. Mag. Ep.
2241 12| These falsehoods he did not scruple to ~support with forged
2242 18| do their penance must be scrutinized. And if anyone who is doing ~
2243 12| The statement of Cyril of ~Scythopolis, in his Life of St. Euthymius (
2244 25| producit et multiplicatur per ~se."(2)~ ~That the student
2245 19| perfection, and as the last seal of~hope and salvation. It
2246 11| and 67. After diligent ~search I can find nothing to warrant
2247 28| age, and then only after searching examination. And if, ~after
2248 31| just as he who holds the seat of Rome, is the head and
2249 34| fasting whilst others are seated ~at a banquet; and that
2250 17| Bishop's throne, with the ~seats of the Presbyters on each
2251 3 | Fathers--Part II. Vol. ii. Sec. I. pp. 90, et seqq.)~ ~
2252 24| the clergy list ~he has seceded, let the ordination be void.~ ~
2253 12| which everything else was secondary, ~and which guided all his
2254 13| by several councils his sect continued ~on, and like
2255 33| Theonas of Marmorica and Secundes of ~Ptolemais; for they
2256 18| into a formal routine; to secure, as ~Rufinus' abridgment
2257 9 | the greatest difficulty in securing the ~regular meetings of
2258 31| change it, and order it, as seemeth ~him fit: for he is the
2259 34| same day, and it is not seemly that in so holy a thing
2260 23| having or lacking a see, seizes on a bishopric ~which is
2261 8 | persons ~whom he himself selects.~ ~BALSAMON~also understands
2262 18| lacking in seriousness and self-humiliation. In that case there could
2263 18| called by grace" to an act of self-sacrifice (the phrase is one ~which
2264 23| the bishop himself, ~from selfish motives) not "translation"(
2265 3 | prin ~ gennhqhnai or some Semiarian formula hardly less ~dangerous,
2266 17| Concha Bematis, from its ~semicircular end. In this part stood
2267 30| copies, and they agreed to send to Alexandria ~and to Constantinople
2268 6 | if, as time goes on, any sensual sin should be found out ~
2269 17| reprobation by Peter Lombard (In Sentent. Lib. iv. ~dist. xvij.)."~ ~ ~
2270 18| was utterly ~lacking in seriousness and self-humiliation. In
2271 17| Scriptures read, and the Sermon preached, but ~were obliged
2272 25| Carthage of the ~year 419, serves to suggest that, in the
2273 11| Roma vetusta ~consuetudo servetur, ut vel ille Egypti vel
2274 33| Apostolic Church, who are serving under our most holy colleague ~
2275 8 | the ~Council of Cholcedon--Session xiii.(Mansi., vii. 307).
2276 9 | refusing to go to the latter sessions of the ~Second Ecumenical
2277 12| which came before it for ~settlement was the dispute as to priority
2278 16| years among the hearers; for seven years they shall be prostrators;
2279 6 | contained in the eightieth(seventy-ninth) ~apostolical canon; and
2280 23| of Sardica ~punishes so severely. In all these remarks of
2281 35| little improved by Sulpicius Severus. ~When the Heptarchy was
2282 28| account of the weakness of the sex, ~none for the future were
2283 24| excommunicated. And ~if anyone shah dare surreptitiously to
2284 34| the ~Jews, for it is truly shameful for us to hear them boast
2285 11| actually quoted in this shape by ~Paschasinus at the Council
2286 13| the bishop), he shall be sharer of the title bishop; but
2287 27| astray, since ~they are not sharers of ordination, are to be
2288 12| dispensation the honour shewn it by ~the Church, but he
2289 18| could be ~no question of shortening their penance, time, for
2290 12| church. Cyril of Alexandria shuddered at the impious design ~("
2291 3 | vii. 2 (comp. also Orac. Sibyll. ~prooem. 7, 17); and agennhtos
2292 3 | Hippol. Haer. v. 16 (from Sibylline Oracles); ~Clem. Alex. Strom
2293 30| The presbyter ~Apiarius of Sicca in Africa, having been deposed
2294 11| and that of the ~Brutii, Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica.
2295 17| the other the Prothesis, a side-table, or place, where the bread
2296 25| xlv. 233). A letter of Sidonius Apollinaris(Epist. ~vi.
2297 25| the subject, enjoining "Sie quis usuras undecunque ~
2298 13| of ~Pope Damasus II. ap. Sigeb. in an. 1048) as equivalent
2299 30| might be thought at first ~sight that it contained twenty-one
2300 5 | orthodox belief, ~speaks with significant absoluteness of "the canon"(
2301 3 | also is used in two ways, signifying ~either (1) T o on ~ men ,
2302 23| West.~ ~It was in vain that Simeon, Archbishop of Thessalonica,
2303 3 | Hippol. Haer. vii. 28; ~Simon Magus, Hippol. Haer. vi.
2304 31| successor.~ ~CANON XLIX.~No simoniacal ordinations shall be made.~ ~
2305 23| however, from ~grounds of simple ambition, Anthimus was translated
2306 16| pistoi , which is much simpler and makes better ~sense.~ ~
2307 25| contra evangelia facit sine periculo"(Mansi, iii. 158).
2308 18| like, made the vocation ~sinful." After the victory of Constantine
2309 12| There would seem to be a singular fitness in the Holy City
2310 6 | be found out that he had sinned previously, let him then ~
2311 17| of the ~church, where the sinner must stand and beg the prayers
2312 12| idea of the holiness of the site began to ~lend dignity to
2313 31| CANON LVII.~Of the rank in sitting during the celebration of
2314 12| Juvehal was left master of the situation, and ~the church of Jerusalem
2315 28| fixed ~by Tertullian at sixty years(De Vel. Virg. Cap.
2316 18| Hearers (here, as in c. 8, 19, skhma denotes an ~external visible
2317 31| the devil with such ~arms slays religious, bishops, presbyters,
2318 31| living separately and he sleeping every night with one or
2319 9 | noticed that there is here ~a slight difference between his text
2320 12| was allowed, without the slightest remonstrance, to take ~precedence
2321 23| council to ~pass from a small diocese to one far greater
2322 23| the result would be that smaller and less important sees ~
2323 6 | into condemnation and the snare of the ~devil." But if,
2324 18| Valentinian and Valens, Soc. iii. 13, and of Benevoins
2325 31| say his wife, spurns his society on account of ~the injury
2326 32| often kissed the empty ~socket of the lost eye. Paphnutius
2327 33| lib. II, cap. xxxiii. ; ~Socr., H. E., lib. I., cap. 6;
2328 21| more specifically Christian(Socrat. H. E. vii. 21). . . ~.It
2329 9 | bishops ( tw koinw ) ~to soften it." Gelasius, on the other
2330 34| calculation] of the ~Jews, who had soiled their hands with the most
2331 20| last hour of its earthly sojourn.~ ~Possibly at first the
2332 34| a subject of such great solemnity, there ought ~not to be
2333 31| CANON IX.~Of one who solicits the episcopate when the
2334 11| suburbicariarum ~ecclesiarum sollicitudinem gerat. In the seventeenth
2335 | somewhere
2336 31| of all, and they are his sons. And although ~the archbishop
2337 17| palace became a ~theatre of sorrow and public penance. The
2338 2 | series of ~attempts of this sort it was found that something
2339 18| bona;" compare ~ thn agaphn sou ~ thn prwthn , Rev. ii.
2340 4 | clergy; but, if any one in sound health has castrated ~himself,
2341 30| from different Oriental sources, and sects; ~but that originally
2342 34| Churches of the West, of the South, and of the North, and by
2343 18| at the feet of Justina, Soz. vii. 13). They had done,
2344 5 | also ~George of Laodicea in Sozomon, iv. 13. Hence any cleric
2345 18| after they have passed the ~space of three years as hearers,
2346 32| believe that it was the Spaniard Hosius who proposed the
2347 30| this in the celebrated ~Spanish collection, which is generally
2348 21| name and take one more specifically Christian(Socrat. H. E.
2349 33| the blasphemous words and speculations in which he ~indulged, blaspheming
2350 3 | confusion between ~these words spelled with the double and the
2351 3 | absolutely no authority for the spelling with one v. The earlier
2352 18| accordingly they were ordered to spend three years as Hearers,
2353 25| lucrum ex mutuo exactum aut speratum;"(1) and then goes on to ~
2354 5 | use of it for a prescribed sphere of apostolic work(2 Cor.
2355 20| holy blood of Christ was spilled upon their clothes."(2)
2356 2 | Logos,' as the sun and its splendour are inseparable."(1)~ ~The
2357 16| compulsion, without ~the spoiling of their property, without
2358 32| this condition, and only spoke thus for the sake of escaping
2359 31| separation.]~ ~CANON XXII.~Of sponsors in baptism.~ ~Men shall
2360 33| the contrary are without ~spot in the Catholic and Apostolic
2361 7 | clerical celibacy had already spread ~widely. In connexion with
2362 30| ii. 599) but ~rejected as spurious by Montfaucon the learned
2363 31| that is to say his wife, spurns his society on account of ~
2364 26| of which see Morinus De SS. Ordinat. P. ~III. Exercit.
2365 21| Catechumens.)~ ~After these stages had been traversed each
2366 25| Protestant and Catholic alike, stake their salvation ~upon the
2367 18| and the Isidorian version stands as ~part of canon 11) deals,
2368 15| as the ~preceding canon states, the Church requires those
2369 18| regained their military stations); let these, after they
2370 18| bunch of grapes before a statue of Bacchus in the palace-~
2371 13| the learned ~touching the status of the Chorepiscopus in
2372 3 | And this ~distinction is staunchly maintained in later orthodox
2373 20| sacred oblation ought to be ~steeped in the Blood of Christ that
2374 30| Boniface should take the same ~step(Pope Zosimus had died meanwhile
2375 20| which provides that even the stern and invariable canons of
2376 3 | Ptol. Ep. ad. Flor. 4 (in ~Stieren's Ireninians, Hipaeus, p.
2377 10| authority, and goes so far as to stigmatize his words as "contrary to
2378 10| metropolitans.~ ~BISHOP STILLINGFLEET.~I do confess there was
2379 13| of Rome, who had been a Stoic philosopher and was delivered, ~
2380 17| forty days, having only a ~stone for a pillow.~ ~To all practical
2381 32| bishop into consideration, stopped all discussion upon ~the
2382 20| where the Holy Things were stored, and saw all things therein,"
2383 5 | The original sense, "a straight rod" or ~"line," determines
2384 6 | but a little while, are straightway brought to ~the spiritual
2385 26| But mark ye those who hold strange doctrine ~touching the grace
2386 31| bishops in the ~dioceses of strangers is forbidden. CANON XXXIX.~
2387 20| the ancient church more strenuously ~insisted than the oral
2388 3 | homousios. But, when ~the stress of the Arian controversy
2389 17| second century; the second ~stretches down to about the eighth
2390 24| the clergy and his name stricken from the list.~ ~NOTES.~ ~
2391 21| who were ~married, of the strictest continence(August. De fide
2392 23| Council of Nice is more stringent so far as its words are
2393 7 | III.~ ~THE great Synod has stringently forbidden any bishop, presbyter, ~
2394 12| and commenting in ~the strongest terms on the greediness
2395 25| St. ~Augustine(Haddan and Stubbs, Conc. iii. 457). The councils
2396 25| per ~se."(2)~ ~That the student may have it in his power
2397 12| otherwise ~obtained. A careful study of such records as we possess
2398 27| neither were deaconesses, ~sub-deacons, readers, and other ministers
2399 13| enlarged ~dioceses without subdivision. [They are] first mentioned
2400 7 | clergy whatever, to have a subintroducta ~dwelling with him, except
2401 10| Thebais, which ~were all in subjection to the Bishop of Alexandria,
2402 13| tolerated on condition of his ~submitting himself to the diocesan
2403 12| see of ~Jerusalem from the subordinate position it held in accordance
2404 13| lack jurisdiction, save subordinately. And the ~actual ordination
2405 13| Council of Nice (which is subscribed by fifteen, all from Asia
2406 1 | each of these three is and subsists; the Father truly as ~Father,
2407 3 | theological idea, though substantially he held ~the same views
2408 2 | of one substance" ~(unius substanticoe) in two places, and it would
2409 3 | temptation to scribes to substitute the single v. And to this
2410 3 | 3) When the interpolator substitutes o ~ monos alhqinos ~ Qeos
2411 11| BISHOP OF ROME OVER THE SUBURBICAN CHURCHES.~ ~Although, as
2412 11| vel ille Egypti vel hic suburbicariarum ~ecclesiarum sollicitudinem
2413 33| lately received are to ~succeed to the office of the deceased;
2414 12| Christ. Biography.)~Juvenalis succeeded Praylius as bishop of Jerusalem
2415 18| 410), as when Marinus' succession to a centurionship ~was
2416 12| The narrative of the successive steps by which the See of
2417 13| That chorepiscopi as such--i.e. omitting the cases
2418 17| share their griefs and their sufferings, although ~they had had
2419 17| confession ~to God alone sufficed. The Council of Chalons
2420 8 | meet ~together, and the suffrages of the absent[bishops] also
2421 17| composed of those styled ~ sugklaiontes , flentes or weepers. These
2422 3 | Hermann read agenhton with Suidas. In ~Christian writers also
2423 31| to him ~after he has done suitable and sufficient penance.
2424 35| years, a little improved by Sulpicius Severus. ~When the Heptarchy
2425 16| Caranza translates in his Summary of the Councils ~"if they
2426 31| when fallen into sin, and summoned once, ~twice, and thrice,
2427 9 | those not answering the summons, in large parts ~of the
2428 2 | always in the ~Logos,' as the sun and its splendour are inseparable."(
2429 21| accordingly as Competentes ~ sunaitountes . This was done commonly
2430 21| in Africa on the fourth Sunday in ~Lent(August. Serm. 213),
2431 17| penitents, who were called ~ sunestwtes , consistentes, i.e., co-standers,
2432 24| allowed to concelebrate sunierourgein with them, for ~this is
2433 13| meet the want of ~episcopal supervision in the country parts of
2434 13| century, when they were ~supplanted by exarkoi . [Chorepiscopi
2435 17| to the bare fact, and to supply ~him, from a Roman Catholic
2436 13| autous ~is added. Gratian(1) supposes that this eighth canon orders
2437 12| De Marca is in error in ~supposing that the Council of Nice
2438 12| arrogant assertion of his ~supremacy over the bishop of Antioch,
2439 31| Clerics are forbidden from suretyship or witness-giving in criminal ~
2440 4 | subjected by physicians to a surgical ~operation, or if he has
2441 12| filoneikian . Juvenal surrendered his claim to the two ~Phoenicias
2442 24| And ~if anyone shah dare surreptitiously to carry off and in his
2443 17| commonly either an open area surrounded ~with porticoes, called
2444 2 | Council of Antioch,(2) and was suspected of being open to a Sabellian ~
2445 13| position can no longer be sustained that the chorepiscopi were ~
2446 18| at the outset" ("primum suum ardorem," Dionysius; Philo ~
2447 20| sick persons ~could not swallow under the form of wine alone.
2448 2 | Professor Harnack, by H. B. Swete, D.D., The Apostles' Creed.~ ~
2449 9 | expression ~ h prosqora tou ~ swmatos kai tou ~ aimatos .~
2450 32| that Socrates had a partial sympathy with the Novatians, he certainly ~
2451 3 | other passages, de Decret. Syn. Nic. 28 (1, p. 184), Orat.
2452 8 | namely, the provincial ~synod--will be considered under
2453 30| Canonici and Beveridge in his ~Synodicon(both of the eighteenth century),
2454 17| each side of it, called synthronus. On one ~side of the chancel
2455 11| and ~refers to Beveridge's Syodicon, Tom. I., pp. 66 and 67.
2456 25| are equally explicit and systematic in their condemnation of ~
2457 20| remains and place it in the tabernacle."(5)~ ~Perhaps it may not
2458 25| Nazianzum(Orat. xiv. in Patrem tacentem). Gregory of ~Nyssa(Orat.
2459 12| pretensions were at least tacitly allowed. At the next council,
2460 25| their laws." He then quotes ~Tacitus(Annal. lib. v.), and adds, "
2461 28| deaconesses as an order( tagma ), ~asserts that "they were
2462 18| fact which underlies ~the tale of the "Thundering Legion,"--
2463 34| still ~be your duty not to tarnish your soul by communications
2464 3 | Theoph. ad. Aut. ii. 3; Tatian Orat. 5; Rhodon in Euseb.
2465 6 | been proved should be a teacher of ~others, unless by a
2466 25| universal opinion of all ~teachers of morals, theologians,
2467 17| that made to the priest ~teaches how they are to be purged.'
2468 35| contradiction to their ~teaching--that Christ partook of the
2469 21| known as the perfectiores ~ teleiwterot the electi, or in the nomenclature
2470 31| American, "incompatibility of temper"].CANON LII.~Usury and the
2471 9 | churches. Various reasons tended towards seeing in the Supper
2472 30| order, and according to the tenor ~which we find elsewhere.~ ~
2473 7 | 5.~ ~HEFELE.~It is very terrain that the canon of Nice forbids
2474 5 | Liturgy, beginning after the ~Tersanctus(Hammond, Liturgies East
2475 23| Antiq.) sums up the matter ~tersely in the statement that h ~
2476 21| 5; 4 C. Carth. c. 85; ~Tertull. De Bapt. c. 20; Cyril.
2477 5 | into form, and by it we 'test the spirits whether they
2478 5 | harmony between the two Testaments "a canon for the Church," ~
2479 14| Pope Innocent the First testifies, some held that as baptism ~
2480 8 | absent also agreeing and testifying their assent by writing. ~
2481 12| Theodosius, together with Thalassius of Caesarea (who appears
2482 9 | from the prayers, in which thanks are given for the gifts
2483 26| abstain from ~eucharist(thanksgiving) and prayer, because they
2484 17| Of these, St. Gregory ~Thaumaturgus says: "Weeping takes place
2485 17| The whole palace became a ~theatre of sorrow and public penance.
2486 | thee
2487 25| applying for a loan to king ~Theodebert, for the relief of his impoverished
2488 33| H. E., lib. I., cap. 6; Theodor., H. E., lib. I., cap. 9.)~ ~
2489 25| is known ~as archbishop Theodore's "Penitential"(circ. A.D.
2490 25| all ~teachers of morals, theologians, doctors, Popes, and Councils
2491 3 | support the writer's heretical theology): see also viii. ~16, and
2492 33| that he has even destroyed Theonas of Marmorica and Secundes
2493 3 | Suppl. 10 (comp. ib. 4); ~Theoph. ad. Aut. ii. 3; Tatian
2494 3 | Suppl. 4 with Otto's note; Theophil, ~ad Autol. ii. 3, 4; Iren.
2495 25| the legates, George and Theophylact, in reporting their proceedings
2496 | therein
2497 26| body of Christ was offered. Thirdly that not to all, nor ~even
2498 26| none for the hungry or thirsty. They abstain from ~eucharist(
2499 32| canon of Gangra, and the thirteenth of the Trullan ~Synod, demonstrate
2500 25| St. Bonaventura, of ~St. Thomas and of a host of others:
2501 18| maxim that in morals second thoughts are not best ~(Butler, Serm.
2502 18| those who in time of peace "threw away their ~arms" (can.
|