Document
1 7 | Eunomians or ~ ~[Anomoeans, the Arians or] Eudoxians, and that
2 7 | Eunomians or ~ ~Anomaeans, the Arians or Eudoxians, the Semi-Arians
3 7 | canon identifies with the Arians [according ~ ~to his text,
4 7 | contradistinction to the strict Arians or Anomaeans on one side,
5 7 | had been used by the old Arians, ~ ~that what is called
6 7 | indivisible Godhead," Newman's Arians, p. ~ ~226; or as Tillemont
7 7 | some who had left the ~ ~Arians from disgust at their blasphemy
8 7 | unchangeableness, while Arians taught his ~ ~changeableness (
9 7 | his career in Newman's ~ ~Arians, p. 347); but their leader
10 7 | the more ~ ~"respectable" Arians represented in their eyes
11 8 | THE ARIANS OR EUDOXIANS.~ ~(Bright.
12 8 | Bright. Ut supra.)~ ~"The Arians or Eudoxians." By these
13 8 | these are meant the ordinary Arians of the ~ ~period, or, as
14 8 | than moral (cf. ~ ~Newman, Arians, p. 317), so that the practical
15 9 | the Father (see Newman's Arians, pp. 120 et seqq.). Such
16 9 | could be utilised by the Arians against maintainers ~ ~of
17 14| had ~ ~written against the Arians (as to which Gregory sarcastically
18 17| following method and ~ ~custom: Arians, and Macedonians, and Sabbatians,
19 17| Quarto-decimans or Tetradites, Arians, Macedonians, Sabbatians,
20 19| us by the power of the ~ ~Arians, and to attempt to give
21 19| the ~ ~Eunomians, of the Arians, and of the Pneumatomachi
22 19| a good fight against the Arians. We beseech your reverence ~ ~
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