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Council of Chalcedon

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10-capit | cardi-eupoi | euthy-lot | lotha-rateu | ratio-tupon | tupos-zosim

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501 1 | arises between the eminent Cardinals Bellarmine and Baronius. 502 2 | himself to be handled with careful and inquisitive touch by 503 6,6| go-by to the whole question (Carm. de Vita sua, 1479 ff.), 504 6,5| Bishop Wilson told Queen Caroline that he "would not leave 505 6,4| exemptions, of which Monte Cassino, St. Martin's of Tours, 506 6,6| also invalid, irritis and cassis. Nor is this to be wondered 507 6,7| officers of the palace called Castrensians (Tertull. De Cor., 12), 508 6,6| Mansi, vi. 564; Cyril, Catech., xiv. 3), and to the Holy 509 2 | Next was read a long catena of quotations from the Fathers 510 1 | questions as a mediator between Catholics and Protestants, his remarks 511 2 | to remain in him without causing a division, and that we 512 1 | all profane contentions cease, for he is indeed impious 513 6,6| figure at the Patriarch's celebrations, standing on the right of 514 6,4| lord for the time" (Skene's Celtic Scotland, ii., 365; cf. 515 6,9| Rome gave way after seven centuries and a half, and the Nicene 516 6,9| satisfactions, mais de pure ceremonie."(1) But ~290 ~Justinian 517 6,4| Chapters of Early Engl. Ch. Hist., p. 244), and culminated 518 6,6| of secreting a jewelled chalice, and bestowing the church 519 6,0| battle" in the plain of Chalons, which turned back Attila 520 6,4| alone in the pulpit, and chanting the "Alleluia melody" (cf. 521 6,6| d) the appointment as chaplain of a monastery. For the 522 6,5| pastorates are not the peculiar characteristics of any one century. ~BRIGHT. ~ 523 6,6| the church's revenue in a charterlary, and exhibit it quarterly, 524 1,1| back to the smiters, and my cheeks to them that plucked off 525 6,2| after those things which are chiefest of all shall have been defined, 526 6,4| clan-principle which assigned chieftain-rights over monasteries to the 527 2 | human nature; the Virgin's child-bearing is an indication of Divine 528 5 | Dorner (Lehre v. der Person Christi, Thl. ii., S. 129), where 529 6,2| Palladius, Dial. de vita Chrysost, p. 50). Chrysostom held 530 6,6| the bishops managed the church-business without stewards, it has 531 6,6| Laodicene Council forbids Churchmen to visit the "martyries 532 6,2| Decretum, Pars I., Dist. ci., canon j. 533 6,6| bishop authority in certain circumstances not to inflict the excommunication 534 6,2| it was brought to pass by circumventing the holy bishops so that 535 5 | LV., col. 733 et seqq.), cite fragments of the Acts of 536 5 | Symbole, S. 118, note 6), cites incorrectly the fourth instead 537 6,8| nurses and physicians and cl., 3). Sozomen calls it " 538 6,4| communities, and, still more, the clan-principle which assigned chieftain-rights 539 6,1| personoe honoratiores and clariores, and the learned Bishop 540 6,7| first, second, and third class" (Neale, Essays on Liturgiology, 541 6,0| Basil distinguished various classes of persons engaged in charitable 542 2 | Virgin Mary." By which three clauses the engines of almost all 543 2 | and inexperienced man be cleansed also from this pestilent 544 2 | of Jesus the Son of God cleanseth us from all sin." And again, " 545 5 | for the explanation and clearer understanding of our confession 546 6,4| is repeated for greater clearness in the last words of the 547 6,0| another city, but they shall cleave to that in which they were 548 6,2| still greater care their clemency has vouchsafed to provide 549 2 | Presbyter (of the title of St. Clement) and also my son Hilarus, 550 6,0| shall be recorded on the clergy-list of the churches of two cities. 551 1,1| Beronician, the most devout clerk of the sacred consistory, 552 1,1| excluding those who wish us to cling to those things which transcend 553 6,9| words were written at the close of ten years' war, during 554 2 | humiliation of swaddling clothes: the greatness of the Highest 555 6,3| saecularium dispositores" (C1. of Clovesho in 747, c. 8), or to be " 556 | co 557 5 | present with us in spirit and co-operating with us through those most 558 6,9| among those of the Roman Code. It may well be that this 559 6,2| Valentinian I. "Nec idem in codera negotio defensor sit et 560 6,8| Jerusalem." ~Some Greek codices have the following heading 561 6,2| praeceptum imperatoris" (Brev. Collat. cum Donatist. iii., 2), 562 6,2| Louis the Pious and his colleague-son Lothar (compare Novel. 7, 563 1,1| midst with his most reverend colleagues and said: We received directions 564 6,8| acknowledged by some Latin collectors also, and was placed by 565 2 | and C., Conc., Tom. IV., cols. 357-368.)] ~EXTRACTS FROM 566 6,7| secretary. It occurs in combination with strateia in a petition 567 5 | protector the most holy and most comely Martyr Euphemia, we gave 568 2 | the ordinary text, thus, "commanded our littleness to preside 569 6,2| other things, gave us this commandment. And he read from the chart, " 570 6,1| to mean that letters of commendation, sustatikai, commendatitioe 571 6,9| and in the same way the commentator Aristenus has declared both 572 6,9| which perhaps need not be commented upon, but should certainly 573 6,3| who maintained himself by commercial transactions (Epist., vi. 574 6,3| bishop of the city shall commit to him the care of ecclesiastical 575 2 | given against him, which was communicated to him in a letter contained 576 6,2| regard to such ordinations no communications to the most holy archbishop 577 6,4| dispersion of religious communities, and, still more, the clan-principle 578 6,2| overruled by a decree of Alexius Comnenus, "in presence and with consent" 579 6,8| defined rule (diatupwsin, comp. tupos in Nic., xix.), and 580 2 | having a transgressor as his companion, and that God, according 581 6,9| force of these words by comparing with them the statement 582 6,9| And if a clergyman have a complaint against his own or any other 583 1 | readers the Acts, practically complete on all disputed points, 584 1,1| the Latrocinium of Ephesus completed. The judges then postponed 585 6,6| dispensing them became more complex, until the archdeacons could 586 1 | at the demand of Flavian, composed this letter for a summary 587 6,2| subjected, like the other comprovincials, to the bishop of Nicomedia ( 588 2 | veil of flesh should be concealed, the voice of the Father 589 6,7| Opusc., ii., 109. It was conceivable that some such outlying 590 6,2| 694). So Fleury renders, "concierge" (xxviij. 29); and Newman, 591 6,6| is said to be taken "ex Concilio Triburiensi." ~ 592 1 | Lucentius had said, thus conclude: "By this we have been satisfied 593 1 | all doubt; for, after the conclusion of the synod, the Emperor 594 1 | agrees." Others, "As it is concordant, and has the same aim, we 595 2 | virginity, while ignorant of concupiscence, supplied the matter of 596 2 | order to pay the debt of our condition, the inviolable nature was 597 1,1| accuracy the examination was conducted: and it was proved that 598 5 | Mog., p. 294). (4) In the conference on religion held between 599 6,9| much force, for Leo himself confesses, in a letter written about 600 2 | saying, "Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ has come 601 6,6| the Church could put no confidence; and the Council, having 602 6,0| that he himself had been confined by Dioscorus in a "xenon" 603 6,8| subjected," so that "by confirming the ek pollou krathsan eqos" 604 6,6| Exiguus and the Prisca added confitentibus, meaning, "if such a virgin 605 1 | then, is the issue of this conflict, unless that it is equally 606 6,2| of their dioceses, nor to confound the churches, but according 607 1,1| who divides and to him who confounds: this is the faith of Archbishop 608 6,2| was necessary. Simply to confront the two, and pass on to 609 6,2| to the next point, was to confute ~294 ~so that the bishop 610 2 | tolerable, because it was not confuted by any assertion of yours, 611 1,1| God the Saviour of all, congratulating one another that our churches 612 6,4| Arians attacked a Catholic congregation on Easter Sunday; and while 613 6,2| Mansi, vii., 89-97). We may connect with this incident a law 614 2 | of them is disjoined from connection with the others; because 615 6,4| Battle (see Freeman, Norm. Conquest, iv. 409), and St Alban' 616 6,2| own action with regard to consecrating a bishop for Gangra.] The 617 6,6| and that the bishop has consented, in order that the church-funds 618 6,2| honoured, let him have his consequent honour, but the rights of 619 6,2| into two, so that there are consequently two metropolitans in one 620 6,1| the only excuse for which consists in the fact that the outrages 621 1,1| 150 fathers set forth as consonant to the holy and great Synod 622 6,8| CANON XVIII. ~The crime of conspiracy or banding together is utterly 623 6,8| hold conventicles and to conspire against the bishop, shall 624 6,8| monks, should be detected in conspiring or banding together, or 625 6,7| camp" of Constans (Apol. ad Constant, iv. ), and of that of Constantius 626 6,4| possessionibus suis; ham et constituebantur per electionem etiam, et 627 5 | province, and he should constitute all the bishops who are 628 3 | of God according to the constitution of our most pious and beloved 629 2 | that justice should indeed constrain those who sin, but mercy 630 6,3| penal. Yet this is not to be construed as forbidding clerics to 631 5 | Perhaps neither of them had consulted the passage itself. (6) 632 2 | exhibited], so "Man" is not consumed by the dignity [bestowed]. 633 1,1| pious bishop Paul, which contains an unimpeachable confession 634 2 | he who could neither be contaminated by sin, nor detained by 635 6,2| imperial order, in the cases contemplated by the canon, had only conferred 636 5 | Euthymius of Palestine, a contemporary of the Council of Chalcedon, 637 6,4| monks, who lived there in contempt of all rule (Bede, Ep. to 638 5 | on account of them that contend against the Holy Ghost, 639 6,9| If, however, one of the contending parties lodges an appeal 640 6,0| another city, but must be content with the one in which they 641 6,8| than to Rome. St. Leo is contented to destroy the foundation 642 5 | some from the beginning contentiously made opposition, he shewed 643 6,8| Asia Minor expressed their contentment at seeing it effected. " 644 6,7| provides that if such a contest had arisen within the thirty 645 2 | willed to be enclosed; continuing to be before times, he began 646 6,1| collection and provided with continuous numbers, and such a collection 647 6,7| bishops have peaceably and continuously governed them for the space 648 6,6| Monks or nuns shall not contract marriage, and if they do 649 6,6| validity, as also the marriages contracted by priests until the beginning 650 6,5| dishonour her ministry by contracting a marriage, let her be anathema. ~ 651 6,3| s possessions, and make contracts pertaining to secular affairs, 652 6,4| years, Northumbrian nobles contrived to gain for their estates 653 6,7| Afric., ~281 ~117, "multae controversiae postea inter episcopos de 654 6,9| the practice was formed of controversies being decided by bishops 655 2 | and man, yet that whereby contumely attaches to both is one 656 6,6| introduced in every larger convent, of having at least one 657 6,8| shall have dared to hold conventicles and to conspire against 658 2 | darkness ? For while he conversed with his disciples, and 659 6,2| the Church, let him who is convicted of this forfeit his own 660 1,1| spitting." Let your holiness be convinced nor let anyone else be doubtful 661 6,8| presbyters, with physicians and cooks. . . . so that foreigners 662 5 | Council of Chalcedon, Evagrius copied its decree concerning the 663 6,7| Castrensians (Tertull. De Cor., 12), as being "milites 664 6,4| reader by delivering to him "coram plebe," the "codex" of Scripture: 665 2 | when on being driven into a corner by authoritative words of 666 6,3| secular houses should be corrected, unless perchance the law 667 6,2| their archives, and had been correctly translated by Philo and 668 6,3| epitomized, as the Roman correctors point out. ~ 669 1,1| that certain, after having corrupted it, have set forth the orthodox 670 2 | ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, 671 1,1| God-inspired Scriptures, corrupting in their evil minds the 672 6,9| complains of it to Julian of Cos (Ep. cxxvij.). ~Leo never 673 6,2| sword of a murderer at the cost of his own life (Theodor., 674 6,2| NOTES. ~HEFELE. ~(Hist. Counc., Vol. III., p. 428.) ~That 675 2 | great counsel, Wonderful, Counsellor, Strong God, Prince of Peace, 676 6,9| attempts of the Ballerini to counteract and overthrow his arguments. ~ 677 6,2| ecclesiastics could be abated by the courtly fashion of calling bribes " 678 6,9| bishop and run to secular courts; but let him first lay open 679 6,6| crosses, on his brother and cousins; he ultimately undertook 680 2 | fact that the Godhead was covered with a veil of flesh should 681 6,3| or to be "mongers and covetous merchants" (Elfric's canons, 682 6,3| property they undertake through covetousness to manage. Wherefore the 683 6,8| ta arkeia eqh krateito (cp. Newman, Transl. of Fleury, 684 2 | that man, deceived by his craft, was bereft of divine gifts 685 1,1| silence those who say that a crasis, or mingling or mixture 686 2 | regard to man, whom he had created in so high a position of 687 6,6| although Gregory Nazianzen took credit to himself for declining 688 6,1| the VIth Canon of those credited to the First Synod at Constantinople, 689 1 | other adverse suspicion creep in, persons were at first 690 1 | council, nor these vehement cries of the Fathers in the council, 691 3 | on account of the other crimes of which you have been found 692 5 | laid aside. And when the crisis demanded that all the most 693 4 | beautifully drafted, and make no criticisms. ~The most blessed bishops 694 6,2| as it is supposed by the critics to be more pure than the 695 2 | hung on the wood of the cross; and let him understand 696 6,6| revenues, and gold and silver crosses, on his brother and cousins; 697 1,1| scattered between us, would crown your Church and ours with 698 2 | does not think the Lord's crucifixion to be unreal, and does not 699 1,1| proved that they had been cruelly and improperly condemned. 700 6,1| were so eager to terrify or crush, had actually supported 701 6,4| Ch. Hist., p. 244), and culminated in the system of monastic 702 6,6| care of church lands, the cultivation of vineyards, the payment 703 6,2| imperatoris" (Brev. Collat. cum Donatist. iii., 2), and 704 2 | with a Laver and with a Cup. Let him listen also to 705 6,6| compare Augustine, De Cura pro Mortuis, VI.). ~This 706 6,2| over of property to the Curia," which was required by 707 2 | let him not give a mere cursory reading to the words of 708 6,2| The third charge was thus curtly worded: "Moreover he receives 709 6,2| suitable form. But it is customary at synods, after those things 710 6,2| Fathers. "Let the ancient customs prevail, those of Egypt, ~ 711 6,3| livelihood (Basil, Epist., cxcviii., 1); and some African canons 712 6,8| mentioned by Basil ~(Epist., cxliij.) as governed by a chorepiscopus. ~ 713 6,9| the Empress Pulcheria (Ep. cxvi.), that the Illyrian bishops 714 6,9| it to Julian of Cos (Ep. cxxvij.). ~Leo never gave over 715 6,9| part of the latter (Ep. cxxxii.). Leo's successors followed 716 6,9| of Constantinople in his CXXXIst Novel. (cap. j.), and the 717 6,6| the bishop alone (Epist. cxxxvij. 2). In after days the " 718 6,3| time Spyridion, the famous Cypriot bishop, still one of the 719 1,1| Graece., Tom. LXXVII. [Cyrilli Opera, Tom. X.], col. 173. 720 6,2| Diogenes, the bishop of Cyzicum, said: I call God to witness 721 6,8| hospital for the sick at Daphne near Antioch (Evagr., iv., 722 5 | babblings; some of them daring to corrupt the mystery of 723 2 | Moreover, being in the dark as to the nature of Christ' 724 2 | his own blindness he had darkened for himself the brightness 725 6,2| incident a law of Martian dated in 454, by which "all pragmatic 726 6,8| Tillemont (xv., 474 et seqq.) in dating the trial at Berytus slightly 727 5 | respects faithful Empress, our daughter and Augusta Pulcheria, with 728 3 | wit that on the thirteenth day of the month of October 729 2 | the elements tremble after daylight had been turned into night; 730 6,5| said in the Excursus on deaconesses to canon Nix. of Nice. ~ 731 6,8| that the Council had to deal with a fait accompli, which 732 2 | the bishop] to his [most] dear brother Flavian. ~Having 733 6,7| border-land might be the "debate-able" land: the two neighbour 734 2 | and, in order to pay the debt of our condition, the inviolable 735 6,0| provides for the restoration of decayed "senodochia" (Capitul. of 736 6,2| seizes the goods of his deceased bishop shall be cast forth 737 2 | restore; for of that which the deceiver brought in, and man, thus 738 6,2| idea. Tillemont, without deciding between the two Greek readings, 739 6,8| FOLLOWING in all things the decisions of the holy Fathers, and 740 6,2| commissioners granted it by declaring that the canons should everywhere 741 6,6| took credit to himself for declining to appoint a "stranger" 742 1 | of that faith which the decretal letter set forth. And at 743 6,4| Juris Canonici, Gratian's Decreturn, Pars II., Causa XVI., Quest. 744 6,4| and while professing to dedicate it to God, write themselves 745 6,6| lawful for a virgin who has dedicated herself to the Lord God, 746 1 | quote at some length the deductions of the Eagle of Meaux, the 747 6,8| appear, pronounced them defaulters and set aside the case ( 748 2 | proper character without defect; and as the form of God 749 1,1| judge, you ought not to defend yourself as if you were 750 6,9| of Constantinople if the defendant were a metropolitan. HEFELE. ~ 751 1 | of the Church is added. ~(Defens. Dec. Cleri Gall. VII. xvij.) ~ 752 1 | and respect. ~(Bossuet. Defensio Dec. Cleri Gallic. Lib. 753 2 | of a servant" without the defilement of sin, enriching what was 754 6,2| the aforementioned canons; defining by necessity.] ~The most 755 1 | containing his final and definitive sentence, but as an instruction, 756 6,7| not be easy to assign them definitively to this or that bishopric. 757 6,4| destroyed by the Northmen, "non defuit,"says St. Bernard, "qui 758 6,5| Hincmar says: "Si fuerit defunctus episcopus, ego ... visitaterem 759 6,2| so shall be in danger of degradation from their own rank. ~NOTES. ~ 760 6,0| XXIX. ~It is sacrilege to degrade a bishop to the rank of 761 6,0| He is sacrilegious who degrades a bishop to the rank of 762 6,8| that Christ was but a man deified, was rebutted by a statement 763 2 | pope Leo, inviting him to deign to be present at the holy 764 6,2| glory is increased, have deigned to define this, in order 765 6,2| Properly a "pragmatic" was a deliberate order promulgated by the 766 1 | receive it, until they had deliberated, and found that Leo's letter 767 1 | the words of one plainly deliberating, not blindly subscribing 768 1 | to synodical inquiry, and deliberation. What, then, is the issue 769 1,1| became clear after your deliberations. Now however the question 770 1,1| peace. We were therefore delighted at meeting with that distinguished 771 5 | forward or to teach or to deliver a different Creed (eteron 772 6,0| at his own altar, of the deliverance of Orleans at the prayer 773 6,4| bishop ordained a reader by delivering to him "coram plebe," the " 774 6,4| and is conferred with delivery of the book containing the 775 1 | of Eutyches, and at the demand of Flavian, composed this 776 5 | aside. And when the crisis demanded that all the most holy bishops 777 6,6| xxiv.). Isidore of Pelusium denounces Martinianus as a fraudulent " 778 6,8| made the chief, not of one department but of three; for which 779 6,1| Greek method, the wording departs but little from that of 780 1,1| celebrated Father Athanasius, deprecating the least departure from 781 6,2| But Justellus (i. 91) derives "paramonarius" from monh " 782 6,9| leur accorda sans doute des satisfactions, mais de pure 783 6,4| over monasteries to the descendants of the founder, left at 784 1,1| say our Lord Jesus Christ descended from heaven, and from above, 785 2 | Accordingly, the Son of God, descending from his seat in heaven, 786 6,2| which the Ballerini gently describe as "differing a little" 787 2 | in his own misbelief, and deserved to receive sentence of condemnation. 788 2 | Eutyches, who seemed to be deserving of honour under the title 789 6,5| visitaterem ipsi viduatae designabo ecclesiae;" and the phrase, " 790 6,9| of the Metropolis shall designate, and all matters of pressing 791 6,6| time of his ordination be designated to a definite church. The 792 2 | He whom Herod impiously designs to slay is like humanity 793 6,0| which synodical sanction was desirable (see above Canons iij. and 794 5 | great, and ecumenical synod, desiring to exclude every device 795 5 | since the evil one does not desist from sowing tares among 796 6,4| had forbidden bishops to despoil consecrated monasteries ( 797 6,4| monastery of Bangor in Down was destroyed by the Northmen, "non defuit," 798 2 | contaminated by sin, nor detained by death, had taken upon 799 6,8| clergymen or monks, should be detected in conspiring or banding 800 6,1| seems quite impossible to determine just what councils are included 801 2 | birth in time in no way detracted from, in no way added to, 802 6,2| of pragmatics made to the detriment of the canons; the Council 803 2 | examined by our interference (dialalias). [The Latin reads where 804 6,8| this clearly defined rule (diatupwsin, comp. tupos in Nic., xix.), 805 2 | had been crucified and had died--what else was accomplished 806 6,8| xxj." (Decretum Pars I., Diet. xxij., C. vii.) "We define 807 1 | subscribe." Many set forth their dif- ~245 ~ficulties, mostly 808 6,2| the Paramonarius. Opinions differ as to the functions intended. 809 6,9| ecclesiastical, but the civil differences of the clergy, in the first 810 6,2| contention involves not only many difficulties but also no few absurdities; 811 6,7| subject will have but little difficulty in explaining to his own 812 6,3| reign ordered every priest "diligently to learn a handicraft" ( 813 6,2| rashness be violated or diminished. Let the dignity of our 814 6,7| postea inter episcopos de dioecesibus ortae aunt, et oriuntur" ( 815 6,2| midst, the most reverend Diogenes, the bishop of Cyzicum, 816 6,2| but in the "interpretario Dionysii," as given in the Concilia, 817 6,3| African canons allow, or even direct, a cleric to live by a trade, 818 6,0| many instances. Julian had directed Pagan hospices (xenodokeia) 819 6,6| of the church under the direction of its own bishop; so that 820 6,6| synod were not considered diriment but only impedient impediments 821 5 | the end that no one might disagree with his neighbour concerning 822 6,2| 270), the Protecdicos is discribed as adjudicating, with twelve 823 1 | open afresh, and publicly discuss, what has been once judged, 824 6,2| 602). Another case was discussed in the 13th session of the 825 6,2| considered the rights they were discussing to be of Divine origin, 826 2 | the impassible God did not disdain to be passible Man and the 827 6,6| him to put a stop to the dishonest greed of those who acted 828 2 | and not one of them is disjoined from connection with the 829 4 | be given our letters of dismission, and let a synod be held 830 3 | divine canons, and of your disobedience to this holy and ecumenical 831 6,4| which they filled with disorderly monks, who lived there in 832 6,8| liable to vary with the dispensations to which the Church was 833 6,6| bishop of the diocese could dispense at least as far as the canonical 834 1,1| impassible, even though when he dispenses most wisely this mystery, 835 6,6| became fuller, the work of dispensing them became more complex, 836 6,4| Scotland, the occasional dispersion of religious communities, 837 6,0| Presbyter; and if they have been displaced without any charge, they 838 1,1| any fear of pleasing or displeasing, to set forth (ekqeqai) 839 6,3| negotiorum saecularium dispositores" (C1. of Clovesho in 747, 840 1 | practically complete on all disputed points, and to leave them 841 3 | synod, on account of your disregard of the divine canons, and 842 6,7| magistrate of the palace), "but I disregarded strateias tosutsn kronau 843 2 | Antichrist." Now what is to dissolve Jesus, but to separate the 844 2 | of which the session was dissolved by the judges. (Col. 371.)] ~ 845 2 | and every spirit which dissolveth Jesus is not of God, and 846 6,6| Council actually met. In the distinct sense of a visible testimony, 847 2 | life. Accordingly while the distinctness of both natures and substances 848 1,1| himself the Lord of powers distributes good things with plenteous 849 6,4| monks in every city and district shall be subject to the 850 6,7| that some such outlying districts might form, ecclesiastically, 851 6,3| for a long time, raising disturbances and troubling the ecclesiastical 852 6,0| he himself had built a "diversorium "for pilgrims to Bethlehem ( 853 1,1| believes: anathema to him who divides and to him who confounds: 854 6,2| them for the purpose of "dividing one province into two," 855 1,1| of the devil and heal our divisions, and who by removing the 856 5 | explain through written documents their faith concerning the 857 2 | anathematize the impious dogma you understood, brother, 858 6,6| of clerical stipends, of doles to the widows and the poor, 859 6,4| ANCIENT EPITOME OF CANON ~Domestic oratories and monasteries 860 6,8| Nestorianism before his patriarch Domnus of Antioch, who held a synod, 861 6,6| Augustine had a "praepositus domus" who acted as Church-steward ( 862 6,7| king Hunneric speaks of "domusnostrae militiae" (Vic (4) r Vitens, 863 6,2| imperatoris" (Brev. Collat. cum Donatist. iii., 2), and Balsamon 864 6,4| James Wayland Joyce, The Doom of Sacrilege.(2) ~BRIGHT. ~ 865 6,4| rank him even below the doorkeepers (Mansi, iii., 952). The 866 2 | to the disciples when the doors were shut, and by his breath 867 6,7| of York, and Remigius of Dorchester, were at issue for years " 868 5 | Trinitatslehre, Bd. i., S. 820, and Dorner (Lehre v. der Person Christi, 869 1,1| reverend bishop of the city of Dorylaeum, stepping into the midst, 870 6,9| was Eusebius, bishop of Doryloeum, an Asiatic bishop who said 871 6,2| persons ordained for money, doubtless in view of such a state 872 6,9| ecoutee; on leur accorda sans doute des satisfactions, mais 873 4 | have been so beautifully drafted, and make no criticisms. ~ 874 5 | legislation under three heads, the drafts for which were read.] ~After 875 4 | as to whether the decree drawn up and presented should 876 6,7| laid aside their clerical dress and put on secular clothing. ~ 877 1 | Pontiff, the Gallican clergy drew theirs, that in questions 878 2 | which can secure him that drinks of it from ever thirsting 879 1,1| peace of the Church, and to drive away the laughter of the 880 5 | two natures of Christ; it drives away those who fancy his 881 5 | with one unanimous consent, driving away erroneous doctrines 882 6,4| his throat, the "codex" dropped from his hands, and he fell 883 6,2| here supports himself upon Du Cange, by "prosmonarios" 884 5 | the dispensation into a Duad of Sons; it repels from 885 6,9| Chalcedon, but as M. l'abbe Duchesne so admirably says: "Mais 886 2 | them we have associated Dulcitius, our Notary, of whose fidelity 887 6,4| of the founder, left at Dunkeld, Brechin, Abernethy, and 888 2 | whom, as God, angels pay duteous service. To hunger, to thirst, 889 1,1| be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have 890 6,4| never again become secular dwellings.And they who shall permit 891 2 | one element be capable of dying and also from the other 892 5 | between Monophysitism and Dyophysitism." Cf., on the other side, 893 6,1| supplicants, whom they were so eager to terrify or crush, had 894 1 | length the deductions of the Eagle of Meaux, the famous Bossuet, 895 6,0| exhorts his pupil, archbishop Eanbald, to think where in the diocese 896 6,6| must be remembered that the earliest monks were in no wise clerics, 897 2 | of yours, we exhort your earnest solicitude, dearly beloved 898 6,9| WHEREAS it has come to our ears that in the provinces the 899 1,1| first man is of the earth, earthy; the Second Man is the Lord 900 6,7| to Lindsey" (Raine, Fasti Eborac., i. 150). Accordingly, 901 6,4| old called "heralds" (De Eccl. Offic., ii., 11). (b) The 902 6,5| ipsi viduatae designabo ecclesiae;" and the phrase, "viduata 903 6,6| qui vici episcoporum res ecclesiasticas tractant (canon xlviij., 904 6,2| the canons; the Council echoed ~278 ~this request; and 905 1,1| the Saviour of all, by an economic appropriation to himself, 906 6,6| EPITOME OF CANON XXVI. ~The (Economus in all churches must be 907 6,9| Mais leur voix fut peu ecoutee; on leur accorda sans doute 908 1,1| the Canonical epistles and ectheses of the holy fathers Gregory, 909 6,3| yet the canons of King Edgar's reign ordered every priest " 910 6,2| Grand Rapids MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1955), XIV, pp. 244-295 ~ 911 6,8| contentment at seeing it effected. "It is, indeed, more than 912 6,4| of all rule (Bede, Ep. to Egbert, vij.). In the year of his 913 6,7| BRIGHT. ~The adjective egkwrious is probably synonymous with 914 6,5| fuerit defunctus episcopus, ego ... visitaterem ipsi viduatae 915 6,4| before the Council, a boy of eight named Epiphanius was made 916 6,2| made as they acknowledge eighty years ago. If therefore 917 6,1| faithful. The letters of peace (eirhnikai) on the contrary, were given 918 6,6| of the person appointed, eis oikonomian eupoiias (canon 919 6,5| that he had been violently ejected from the see of Ephesus. 920 6,2| Fleury, i. 163, ij. 16). ~The ekdikos, "defensor," was an official 921 1,1| displeasing, to set forth (ekqeqai) the pure faith, so that 922 1,1| Any other setting forth (ekqesin allhn) no one makes, neither 923 1,1| set forth [anything new] (ekqesqai). For the fathers taught, 924 2 | archbishop of the great and elder Rome, through us, and through 925 6,4| ham et constituebantur per electionem etiam, et abbates appellabantur, 926 6,8| Constantinople, after the proper elections have been held according 927 2 | Christ Jesus," might from one element be capable of dying and 928 2 | wood, and to make all the elements tremble after daylight had 929 6,0| enough at such a period. Eleven years before, the Vandal 930 6,5| of Bassian, who, in the eleventh session (Oct. 29), pleaded 931 6,3| and covetous merchants" (Elfric's canons, xxx.), yet the 932 6,7| CANON XXVII. ~If a clergyman elope with a woman, let him be 933 | elsewhere 934 2 | seemed obscure has now been elucidated and explained. By this means 935 1 | Bellarmine will not take that to emanate from the supreme and indefectible 936 2 | was divine: because that "emptying of himself," whereby the 937 6,8| happy memory), we also do enact and decree the same things 938 1,1| Church of Constantinople, the encyclical or synodical letter of the 939 6,1| Aubespine of Orleans has endeavored to prove, in his notes to 940 6,9| Visigoths of Septimania "were endeavouring to take Arles and Narbonne" ( 941 1 | most religious council, who endeavours to open afresh, and publicly 942 6,2| decreed by the Synod. Thus ended the Council of Chalcedon 943 2 | and, being stripped of his endowment of immortality, had come 944 5 | empire, and may your kingdom endure for ever ! ~Our most sacred 945 1,1| to himself the sufferings endured in his own flesh. To the 946 6,8| novelty, and the attempt to enfold it in the authority of the 947 6,3| shall hire possessions, or engage in business, or occupy himself 948 6,0| various classes of persons engaged in charitable ministrations, 949 6,3| occupy himself in worldly engagements, unless he shall be called 950 2 | which three clauses the engines of almost all heretics are 951 6,4| Bright's Chapters of Early Engl. Ch. Hist., p. 244), and 952 6,8| Sovereignty and the Senate, and enjoys equal privileges with the 953 | enough 954 1,1| however the question to be enquired into, studied, and decided, 955 6,4| the Catholic Church and enrich them with divine baptism. ~ 956 2 | without the defilement of sin, enriching what was human, not impairing 957 6,6| unattested, and thereby waste ensue, and the episcopate incur 958 5 | that is our whole synod, entered the martyry of the most 959 2 | the glory of the Father, enters this lower world, born after 960 1,1| that he might overcome the envy of the devil and heal our 961 6,7| apply for redress to the eparch (or prefect, a substitute 962 6,7| the sees are divided into eparchies of the first, second, and 963 6,4| substitutes apetaxanto for epetaxanto, which would mean "over 964 1,1| which is often styled "the Ephesine Creed.") ~Cyril to my lord, 965 1,1| Athanasius to the Blessed Epictetus, so as thereby to injure 966 6,4| Council, a boy of eight named Epiphanius was made a reader in the 967 5 | bishop of old Nicepolis in Epirus said: The canon thus defines, 968 6,6| oeconomi, hoc est, qui vici episcoporum res ecclesiasticas tractant ( 969 6,7| controversiae postea inter episcopos de dioecesibus ortae aunt, 970 6,5| says: "Si fuerit defunctus episcopus, ego ... visitaterem ipsi 971 6,2| lord bishops (knriois tois episkopois) from Rome, to join with 972 6,3| but with the last part epitomized, as the Roman correctors 973 6,8| rule of Nicaea, ta arkeia eqh krateito (cp. Newman, Transl. 974 6,8| confirming the ek pollou krathsan eqos" in regard to the ordination 975 2 | Word does not withdraw from equality with the Father in glory, 976 1,1| or did he in any respect err concerning it? ~Paschasinus 977 1,1| Illyrica who said: "We all have erred, let us all be pardoned." ( 978 5 | unanimous consent, driving away erroneous doctrines and renewing the 979 6,7| of Chalcedon: he says, "'Es<S235]rateusamen for about 980 6,0| ministrations, including those who escorted the traveller on his way ( 981 6,5| whom the whole Church was espoused (see Eph. v. 23 ff.). So 982 6,7| and third class" (Neale, Essays on Liturgiology, p. 302). ~ 983 5 | they say, of ek and en is essentially the same, and the one and 984 6,8| almost always followed in the establishment of the metropolis, according 985 6,2| decrees were made, which we esteem to have been done contrary 986 6,3| secular affairs, lightly esteeming the service of God, and 987 6,6| a "stranger" to make an estimate of the property which of 988 5 | forward a different faith (eteran pistin), nor to write, nor 989 2 | weakness by power, mortality by eternity; and, in order to pay the 990 5 | deliver a different Creed (eteron sumbolon) to as wish to 991 6,4| constituebantur per electionem etiam, et abbates appellabantur, 992 6,4| appellabantur, servantes nomine, etsi non re, quod olim exstiterat" ( 993 6,5| Chrysostom's restoration Eudoxia claimed to have "given back 994 1,1| letter to John of Antioch EuFraineoqwsan] had been read, the most 995 1,1| This letter begins, Eufraineqwsan oi ouranoi k. t. l.; and 996 6,8| Samuel, Cyrus, Maras, and Eulegius), stimulated, says Fleury ( 997 6,2| fashion of calling bribes "eulogiae" (Fleury, XXVI, 20), just 998 4 | of the most holy martyr Euphemis and afterward,s reported 999 6,6| on the "martyry" of St. Euphenia at Chalcedon in which the 1000 6,6| appointed, eis oikonomian eupoiias (canon viij.); and St Basil


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