Document, Chapter
1 6,2| the gift" of ordinations (Epist. I., 26, 30, 37); and names
2 6,2| the payment of premiums" (Epist. xi. 46, to the bishop of
3 6,2| to take care of the poor (Epist., v. 29), and of the church
4 6,3| for a livelihood (Basil, Epist., cxcviii., 1); and some
5 6,3| commercial transactions (Epist., vi. 8), and in the Anglo-Saxon
6 6,4| the negligences of monks" (Epist., i. 149). The Western Church
7 6,4| encouraged by Gregory the Great (Epist., i. 12; ii. 41), the IVth
8 6,8| compare Basil himself, Epist., xciv., on its staff of
9 6,8| is mentioned by Basil ~(Epist., cxliij.) as governed by
10 6,0| on the Christian model (Epist. xlix.). The Basiliad at
11 6,0| way (tous parapempontas, Epist. xciv.). Jerome writes to
12 6,0| for pilgrims to Bethlehem (Epist. xvi., 11, 14). Chrysostom
13 6,0| be audited by the bishop (Epist. iv., 27). Charles the Great
14 6,0| xenodochia, id est, hospitalia" (Epist. L.). This canon is found
15 6,2| pragmatici sui" (Leon., Epist. lxxvij.). Justinian speaks
16 6,4| at will to his own uses (Epist. viii., 31). In ancient
17 6,6| oeconomi of his own church (Epist., xxiij. 1), and the "tamiai
18 6,6| appoint an upright one (Epist. ii., 127), and in another
19 6,6| examined by the bishop alone (Epist. cxxxvij. 2). In after days
20 6,8| of Council to Leo, Leon. Epist. xcviij., 4), "they were
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