0pera-cardi | carpo-eukar | eul-lente | leont-proph | propo-threw | thril-zealo
Document
2503 20| of this is found in the ~thrilling description given by St.
2504 18| iii. 13, and of Benevoins throwing down ~his belt at the feet
2505 3 | transcribers have thus ~thrown the subject, it is still
2506 18| underlies ~the tale of the "Thundering Legion,"--the presence of
2507 6 | canon ~of Nicaea, yukikon ti ~ amarthma , is not easy
2508 19| and salvation. It was for tiffs reason that at the beginning
2509 4 | c. 32); of the latter, Tigris, presbyter of ~Constantinople,
2510 13| ordination of a presbyter by Timotheus, a chorepiscopus, is ~recorded (
2511 13| the honorary privilege ( timwmenoi ) of assisting ~at the celebration
2512 25| in Ps. xiv); ~Ambrose(de Tobia liber unus). Jerome(in Ezech.
2513 18| to ~enlist, and on being told by the proconsul that there
2514 25| theft, the desecration of tombs, and ~sacrilege ierosulia ,
2515 34| passover twice in one ~year is totally inadmissible. But even if
2516 3 | anagnwsteon agenhtos tout esti ~ mh poihqeis . Waterland (
2517 9 | the words of institution touto ~ poieite , contained a
2518 9 | Harnack: Hist. of Dogma [Eng. Tr.] Vol. I. p. 209.)~ ~The
2519 23| and the author of ~the tract De Translationibus in the
2520 25| they will ~find~the old, traditional view of the Christian religion
2521 9 | Ignat.), because it is ~ trafh eukaristhqeisa . It is a
2522 21| standing, and were properly trained in the faith, and ~desired
2523 25| Bossuet's work on the subject, Traite de l'Usure,(2) where they
2524 25| exactly how commerce was transacted in the five ~preceding centuries,"
2525 3 | confusion into which later transcribers have thus ~thrown the subject,
2526 31| LXXII.~No one is allowed to transfer himself to another church [
2527 9 | on same page) that "the transference of the sacrificial idea
2528 25| upon as mortal sin has been transfigured ~into innocence, if not
2529 6 | office. And whoso shall ~transgress these[enactments] will imperil
2530 33| concerning the impiety ~and transgression of Arias and his adherents;
2531 30| Canons as given by Turrianus, translating them from the reprint in ~
2532 23| author of ~the tract De Translationibus in the Jus Orient.(i. 293,
2533 10| Rufinus may rank low ~as a translator, yet, being a native of
2534 23| the thing ~prohibited is "transmigration"(which arises from the bishop
2535 34| their custom,(1) we may ~transmit to our descendants the legitimate
2536 5 | so Basil speaks of "the ~transmitted canon of true religion"(
2537 35| celebration of Easter, which ~were transplanted by Columban into Gaul. In
2538 21| After these stages had been traversed each with its appropriate ~
2539 18| performance, the bishop shall ~treat him more lentently than
2540 28| tim reader for a very full treatment of ~the whole subject, is
2541 23| Anthimus was translated from Trebizonde ~to Constantinople, the
2542 5 | discipline, but the Council of Trent continued the ~ancient use
2543 25| undecunque ~exegerit . . . tres annos in pane et aqua"(c.
2544 17| several names, as Bema or tribunal, from ~its being raised
2545 12| ambitious designs and juggling tricks" they are only ~too well
2546 3 | p. 240 sq., Oxf. 1823) tries ineffectually to show that
2547 3 | Anomoeans in[Athan.] Dial. de Trin. ii. passim. ~This fully
2548 35| cycle of nineteen years ~triumphed over all opposition; and
2549 9 | Justin, Apol. I. 66: h ~ trofh auth kaleitai ~ par hmin ~
2550 10| Alexandria, which had been troubled by the ~irregular proceedings
2551 25| at the second council of ~Trullanum(A.D. 692) a like liberty
2552 20| presbyter may be able to say ~truthfully to the sick man, The Body
2553 10| and the Gallican Launoy, try to show that the Council
2554 25| certain conditions(Greg. Tur. Hist. Franc. iii. 34).
2555 12| few of the actors in these turbulent and ~saddening scenes who
2556 30| found in the libraries of Turin, Florence, Venice, ~Oxford,
2557 18| to prevent it from being turned into a formal routine; to
2558 31| with adultery, so that ~he turns her out of doors, the matter
2559 11| ten provinces--Campania, Tuscia with Ombria, Picenum, ~Valeria,
2560 16| shall ~be prostrators for twelve years.~ ~On the expression "
2561 32| the less, as the fifth and twenty-fifth Apostolic ~canons, the fourth
2562 30| sight that it contained twenty-one canons; but on closer consideration ~
2563 14| the fifth century, as the twenty-second ~letter to Pope Innocent
2564 28| Orange, A.D. 441, in its twenty-sixth canon forbids the ~appointment
2565 30| two parts, he has given twenty-two canons, which are ~exactly
2566 16| as happened ~during the tyranny of Licinius, the Synod declares
2567 31| the woman be beautiful or ugly, whether a young girl or ~
2568 3 | ousias tou patros ~ ton uion ~ omoousion (De Synod. 54,
2569 3 | kai eis ~ o ex autou ~ uios gnhsios , ~ gennhma alhqinon ~
2570 3 | pathr , ~ genntos de o ~ uis , ou ~ ths auths ~ ousas .
2571 12| appears to ~have taken no umbrage at his suffragan being preferred
2572 9 | passages where ~they are unaccompanied by any qualifying words,
2573 34| up in few ~words: By the unanimous judgment of all, it has
2574 18| life as such was not deemed unchristian. The case of ~Cornelius
2575 35| the paschal table of his uncle Theophilus, and fixed the
2576 19| reconciliation ~and extreme unction, so that properly and literally
2577 25| enjoining "Sie quis usuras undecunque ~exegerit . . . tres annos
2578 32| themselves honourable and undefiled; that ~the Church ought
2579 33| at ~so great an age has undergone so great fatigue that peace
2580 18| and compare the fact which underlies ~the tale of the "Thundering
2581 26| quoted has most seriously ~understated his case. He says that the
2582 12| him of what Juvenal was undertaking, and ~begging that his unlawful
2583 16| necessity, even if therefore undeserving of ~indulgence, yet some
2584 12| any one found to urge the undoubted claims of the ~see of Caesarea.
2585 13| says that they were so. Undoubtedly they ~ceased to be so in
2586 2 | something clearer and more ~unequivocal must be adopted if real
2587 27| should discover them to be unfit, they ~ought to be deposed.
2588 35| the Church of ~Alexandria. Unfortunately, we now possess only the
2589 9 | contentiousness, or any such like ungracious disposition in the ~bishop.
2590 34| rectified and regulated in a ~uniform way; and everyone, I hope,
2591 29| that all things ~may be uniformly observed everywhere(in every
2592 11| patriarch," yet it may not be unimportant to ~consider what his patriarchal
2593 20| century.(4)~ ~It will not be uninteresting to quote in this connection
2594 7 | have ~formed this spiritual union with the cleric. The injunction,
2595 7 | Nice forbids such spiritual unions, ~but the context shows
2596 34| granted ~me, as I desire, to unite myself with you; we can
2597 2 | expression "of one substance" ~(unius substanticoe) in two places,
2598 23| take another was an act of unjustifiable divorce, and subsequent ~
2599 30| bishop thinks he has been unjustly deposed by ~his colleagues
2600 15| conscious of their guilt or unknowing of it.~ ~HEFELE.~The tenth
2601 | unlikely
2602 4 | sacred ministry should be ~unmutilated was strong in the Ancient
2603 12| scenes who leave a more unpleasing impression. The ruling ~
2604 34| Church. Think, then, how unseemly it is, ~that on the same
2605 28| teach aptly and properly unskilled and rustic ~women how to
2606 30| last supposition is utterly untenable.~ ~Among the learned there
2607 32| who considered it to be untrue and an invention of Socrates
2608 31| But if that woman[untruly charged by her husband ~
2609 25| Ambrose(de Tobia liber unus). Jerome(in Ezech. vi. 18);
2610 5 | 832), for the central and ~unvarying element in the Liturgy,
2611 12| 453 A.D., in which he ~upheld the binding authority of
2612 17| Greek gonuklinontes , or ~ upopiptontes ,and in Latin Genuflectentes
2613 11| ut apud Alexandriam et in urbe Roma vetusta ~consuetudo
2614 13| If nothing ~more could be urged against them, than that
2615 6 | necessity, or through the urgency of ~individuals, many things
2616 3 | earlier editors ~(Voss, Useher, Cotelier, etc.), printed
2617 25| Espen defines usury thus: "Usura definitur ~lucrum ex mutuo
2618 25| Gregory of ~Nyssa(Orat. cont. Usurarios); Cyril of Jerusalem(Catech.
2619 25| the subject, Traite de l'Usure,(2) where they will ~find~
2620 25| can. 12), says that a usurer may even be admitted to
2621 25| promising ~repayment, "cure usuris legitimis," an expression
2622 31| own rank, and let him not usurp the rank of another. And ~
2623 17| confessed to them his crime ~of usurpation with all its circumstances.
2624 13| prevailed ~more widely, to have usurped episcopal functions without
2625 17| repository for the sacred utensils and ~vestments, called the
2626 12| tradition ~was regarded with the utmost indignation by the leaders
2627 9 | Less has also followed this vacation, as his translation of ~
2628 11| and Zonaras still more vaguely says that ~ tpn esperiwn ~
2629 18| cases of ~Valentinian and Valens, Soc. iii. 13, and of Benevoins
2630 18| office (compare the cases of ~Valentinian and Valens, Soc. iii. 13,
2631 3 | Hippol. Haer. vi. 17, 18; the Valentinians, Hippol. ~Haer. vi. 29,
2632 11| Tuscia with Ombria, Picenum, ~Valeria, Samnium, Apulia with Calabria,
2633 9 | prosforai , which obtain their ~value from the prayers, in which
2634 9 | to mitigate it. But ~the variation adopted by the Prisca alters,
2635 21| periods for this registration varied, ~naturally enough, in different
2636 17| or propulaion . The first variety ~may still be seen at S.
2637 3 | more difficult. The MSS. vary, and ~his editors write
2638 2 | one among the Orthodox.~ ~Vasquez treats this matter at some
2639 30| Proemium(1) containing a vast amount of ~information upon
2640 12| bishop of Jerusalem.~ ~(Canon Venables, Dict. Christ. Biography.)~
2641 30| libraries of Turin, Florence, Venice, ~Oxford, Moscow, etc.;
2642 25| also Desideratus, bishop of Verdun, when applying for a loan
2643 12| Bishop of Jerusalem as vice versa, and Beveridge ~has taken
2644 31| XXXVII. of Echellensis's Nova Versio LXXXIV. Arabic. ~Canonum
2645 20| presbyter to have a pyx or vessel meet for so great a sacrament,
2646 17| Latin, and was a narrow vestibule extending the whole width
2647 17| the sacred utensils and ~vestments, called the Diaconicum,
2648 17| Diaconicum, and answering to our Vestry; and ~on the other the Prothesis,
2649 25| penalty, and grounds the veto on ~both Old and New Testament
2650 11| Alexandriam et in urbe Roma vetusta ~consuetudo servetur, ut
2651 31| peoples, as he who ~is the Vicar of Christ our Lord over
2652 11| vicariates, among which the ~vicariate of Rome was the first. At
2653 11| Empire, was divided into four vicariates, among which the ~vicariate
2654 11| milestone, The boundary of the vicarins urbis ~comprised ten provinces--
2655 12| occupy the position ~of vice-president of the council, coming next
2656 4 | Sozomen(H. E. vi. 24) as the victim of a barbarian master.~ ~
2657 18| vocation ~sinful." After the victory of Constantine in the West,
2658 28| diaconissoe, presbyteroe, and viduce.~ ~The one great characteristic
2659 26| Ordinat. P. ~III. Exercit. viij. . . . The present canon
2660 14| crime, and men acting in ~violation of the canon have laid hands
2661 12| took a ~leading part in the violent proceedings of that assembly.
2662 28| Tertullian at sixty years(De Vel. Virg. Cap. ix.), and only changed ~
2663 28| that ~she must be a chaste virgin( parqenos ~ agnh ) or else
2664 5 | compare Socrates(i. 17), "the Virgins enumerated ~ en tw ekklhsiwn ~
2665 4 | but nevertheless remained virgo all his life. It ~is very
2666 31| How a chorepiscopus should visit the churches and monasteries
2667 18| compare Euseb. H. E. x. 8; Vit. Con. i. 54). It is to be
2668 34| Council.~(Found in Eusebius, Vita Const., Lib. iii., 18-20.)~ ~
2669 10| FFOULKES.~(Dict. Christ. Antiq. voce Council of Nicaea).~The
2670 18| like dogs, to ~their own vomit, (so that some spent money
2671 3 | pp. 40, 104, 223, Ign. ~von Ant. p. 565), that at the
2672 3 | v. The earlier editors ~(Voss, Useher, Cotelier, etc.),
2673 28| deaconess was that she was vowed ~to perpetual chastity.(
2674 26| before the bishop. The vulgar version of Isidore reads
2675 3 | decides ~in favour of the vv. Elsewhere he insists repeatedly
2676 10| would his version have waited till the ~seventeenth century
2677 35| the ancient ~Churches of Wales held fast their old tradition.
2678 17| which, ~and against the wall of the chancel, was the
2679 11| search I can find nothing to warrant the great amplitude of this ~
2680 21| a time for fasting ~and watching and prayer(Constt. Apost.
2681 3 | tout esti ~ mh poihqeis . Waterland (Works, ~III., p. 240 sq.,
2682 30| present ~anything able to weaken the conclusion that flows
2683 28| that, on account of the weakness of the sex, ~none for the
2684 25| provided ~he gives his acquired wealth to the poor and abstains
2685 17| prostrate upon the earth, to ~wearing haircloth, and to all the
2686 32| made of bishops living in wedlock, and ~Church history shows
2687 35| did not ~do so for five weeks later--that is to say, till
2688 17| Gregory ~Thaumaturgus says: "Weeping takes place outside the
2689 33| holy and great; ~and to our well-beloved brethren, the orthodox clergy
2690 33| done, as we believe, to the well-pleasing of Almighty God ~and of
2691 25| to a ~masterly article by Wharton B. Marriott in Smith and
2692 19| case of any dying person whatsoever asking to receive the Eucharist, ~
2693 | whence
2694 | Whenever
2695 | whereas
2696 | whereby
2697 | wherein
2698 13| of the Catholic Church. ~Wheresoever, then, whether in villages
2699 33| Wherefore, rejoicing in these wholesome results, and in our common ~
2700 34| communications with such ~wicked people[the Jews]. Besides,
2701 18| who ~afterwards yielded go wickedness, and returned to the army,
2702 25| side, having attracted a widespread ~attention. The Ballerini
2703 31| shall a ~presbyter who is a widower; neither shall they escort
2704 17| vestibule extending the whole width of the ~church. In this
2705 34| been led ~by reason but by wild violence, as their delusion
2706 4 | this is said ~of those who wilfully do the thing and presume
2707 34| reason, a Divine ~Providence wills that this custom should
2708 2 | he saw them nodding and winking ~to each other when the
2709 17| faithful, i.e., those ~persons wire were in full communion with
2710 23| entirely agreed with these wise ~observations, and promised
2711 20| general, to give place to the withdrawal of ~the chalice altogether
2712 32| elsewhere, if her husband withdrew from her married ~intercourse).
2713 31| forbidden from suretyship or witness-giving in criminal ~causes.~ ~CANON
2714 30| published a new edition at ~Wittemberg in 1614, using a second
2715 31| conversation of evil workers and wizards, also of the ~penance of
2716 28| asserts that "they were only women-elders, not priestesses in any ~
2717 17| the Narthex by rails of wood, with ~gates in the centre,
2718 17| public penance. The emperor wore the hairshirt ~under the
2719 31| the conversation of evil workers and wizards, also of the ~
2720 18| to recover what they had worthily resigned. (Observe the ~
2721 18| mere ~covering over of the wound" (Epist. 30, 3), an "injury"
2722 27| oros in Canon ~xvii., and wrisen , in Canon vi. It has been
2723 28| set forth in many ancient writings, I ~cite here what is commonly
2724 3 | In this he is certainly wrong.~ ~The MSS. of early Christian
2725 26| Decretum. Pars I. ~Dist. XCIII., c. xiv.~
2726 31| to anathema.(2)~ ~CANON XL.~Of the provincial synod
2727 31| the patriarch.~ ~CANON XLII.~Of a cleric or monk who
2728 31| the case may be.~ ~CANON XLIV.~How an archbishop ought
2729 31| his own successor.~ ~CANON XLIX.~No simoniacal ordinations
2730 31| against his patriarch.~ ~CANON XLVI.~How a patriarch should
2731 31| absolved by another.~ ~CANON XLVIII.~No bishop shall choose
2732 28| city in canons xvij and xviij, decrees that deaconesses
2733 24| Causa VII. Quaest. I. c. xxiij.; and Pars I. Dist. ~LXXI.,
2734 31| excommunicating others.~ ~CANON XXIX.~Of not kneeling in prayer.~ ~
2735 31| criminal ~causes.~ ~CANON XXVII.~Of avoiding the excommunicate,
2736 31| excommunicated.~ ~CANON XXVIII.~How anger, indignation,
2737 31| kneeling in prayer.~ ~CANON XXX.~Of giving[only] names of
2738 31| come to the faith.~ ~CANON XXXI.~Of the system and manner
2739 17| of Chalons in 813 (canon xxxiij.), ~says: 'Some assert that
2740 31| bishop of ~Seleucia. ~ ~CANON XXXIV.~ Of the honour to be given
2741 31| strangers is forbidden. CANON XXXIX.~Of the care and power which
2742 31| Synod ~of Greece.~ ~CANON XXXV.~Of not holding a provincial
2743 31| metropolitans of Antioch.~ ~CANON XXXVI.~Of the creation of a patriarch
2744 31| patriarch of Antioch.~ ~CANON XXXVIII.~That the ordination of
2745 8 | the election(or ~vote,( yhfw ) made by the three who
2746 18| resisted, but who ~afterwards yielded go wickedness, and returned
2747 32| voice, "that too ~heavy a yoke ought not to be laid upon
2748 25| Penitential of Egbert of York(c. ii. 30). In like manner, ~
2749 | yourselves
2750 6 | Zonaras has said, all sins are yukika amarthmata . We must then ~
2751 6 | of the canon ~of Nicaea, yukikon ti ~ amarthma , is not easy
2752 18| doing ~penance shews himself zealous in its performance, the
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