Document, Chapter
1 6,3| contracts pertaining to secular affairs, lightly esteeming
2 6,3| slip into the houses of secular persons, whose property
3 6,3| Those who assume the care of secular houses should be corrected,
4 6,3| excepted, the undertaking of secular business was made ecclesiastically
5 6,3| was not the mere fact of secular employment, but secularity
6 6,4| in ecclesiastical nor in secular affairs, nor leave their
7 6,7| military charge nor any secular dignity; and if they shall
8 6,7| clerical dress and put on secular clothing. ~BRIGHT. ~By strateian [
9 6,9| forsake his bishop and run to secular courts; but let him first
10 6,9| episcopal and resort to the secular tribunal. When a cleric
11 6,9| exclude a reference to the secular judges, but regards it as
12 6,2| having had recourse to secular powers, have by means of
13 6,2| application to the government" ("secular powers") had obtained what
14 6,8| utterly prohibited even by the secular law, and much more ought
15 6,4| shall never again become secular dwellings.And they who shall
16 6,4| and of abbot borne by the secular lord for the time" (Skene'
17 6,8| vii.) "We define that no secular power shall hereafter dishonour
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