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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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1001 5 | is found in the Vita S. Euthymii Abbatis, written by his 1002 5 | 1) by the famous Abbot Euthymius of Palestine, a contemporary 1003 6,4| have been given by monks of Eutychian tendencies, and especially 1004 6,6| bribery, under his successor (Evag., iii., 12). There may have 1005 6,8| at Daphne near Antioch (Evagr., iv., 35). "The tradition 1006 1,1| make some things of the Evangelical and Apostolic teaching about 1007 6,2| translated by Philo and Evarestus in their version beginning " 1008 6,0| the Metz clergy on Easter Eve, of a bishop of Rheims slain 1009 6,8| violating the letter, of the ever-famous rule of Nicaea, ta arkeia 1010 6,9| But quite possibly this evidence is of little value. But 1011 1 | it was ratified after so exact an examination of the council. 1012 6,9| in canon xxxvj. renewed exactly canon xxviij. of Chalcedon. 1013 6,2| and the chief honour (thn exaireton timhn) according to the 1014 6,2| province into two," and exalting himself as a metropolitan. 1015 1 | After the question as to examining the letter of Leo was put 1016 2 | Presbyter, is now shown to be exceedingly thoughtless and sadly inexperienced, 1017 6,2| But yesterday after your excellencies and our humility had left, 1018 6,0| originally admitted to minister, excepting those who, having lost their 1019 6,8| Constantinople, ordered the excess of episcopal expenditure 1020 6,8| the self-assertion of Rome excited the jealousy of her rival 1021 1 | clergy of Constantinople exclaimed, "It is a few who cry out, 1022 5 | one and the other alike excluded Monophysitism. ~265 ~inseparably [ 1023 1,1| confession of our own weakness, excluding those who wish us to cling 1024 5 | to put together, nor to excogitate, nor to teach it to others. 1025 6,1| unfeeling absolutism, the only excuse for which consists in the 1026 6,1| Archbishop, and ask to be excused until the ordination of 1027 6,9| entirely in force and practical execution, as far of those most interested 1028 6,6| allow civil judges, "novo exemplo," to audit the accounts 1029 6,8| monasteries or martyries, to be exempt from the jurisdiction of 1030 6,3| from which there is no exemption. Unless further their Bishop 1031 6,4| in the system of monastic exemptions, of which Monte Cassino, 1032 6,6| SS. Ordinat., Parte III., Exercit. V., cap ~272 ~HEFELE. ~ 1033 6,6| revenue in a charterlary, and exhibit it quarterly, or half yearly, 1034 2 | any assertion of yours, we exhort your earnest solicitude, 1035 6,0| Leg., i. 110); and Alcuin exhorts his pupil, archbishop Eanbald, 1036 6,0| other bishops as driven into exile). Somewhat later, the surge 1037 6,2| Marcian had recalled some exiled orthodox bishops "robore 1038 5 | that if any doubt had then existed as to the correct reading, 1039 6,2| such a sentiment one would expect to find rather in the Latin 1040 1,1| and most pious man, who expected perhaps to have no small 1041 2 | and everlasting birth; but expended itself wholly in the work 1042 5 | predecessors, but in order to explain through written documents 1043 6,7| but little difficulty in explaining to his own satisfaction 1044 2 | Dioscorus hid away. ~[Some explanations were asked by the Illyrian 1045 6,2| churches? The answer was explicit: "No, it is against the 1046 6,9| Chalcedon to go on further and express his rejection of the canons. 1047 6,2| villicus," or, as Bingham expresses it, "a bailiff" (iii. 3, 1048 6,2| most respectfully and most expressively. ~It should be added that 1049 6,4| etsi non re, quod olim exstiterat" (De Vita S. Malachioe, 1050 5 | concerning the faith in extenso into his Church History ( 1051 6,2| but think that even this extreme hypothesis is to be preferred 1052 6,4| the bishop must "keep an eye on the negligences of monks" ( 1053 1,1| the fear of God before his eyes; knowing that our most divine 1054 1,1| off the hair: I hid not my face from shame and spitting." 1055 6,2| politically one, he had de facto divided it ecclesiastically 1056 6,8| but, as Samuel and Cyrus failed to appear, pronounced them 1057 2 | down in compassion, not a failure of power. Accordingly, the 1058 2 | has clearly shown, he had fairly begun to abandon his own 1059 6,8| Council had to deal with a fait accompli, which it was wise 1060 1,1| a judgment, how have ye fallen into so foolish a sickness? 1061 5 | cast off every plague of falsehood from the sheep of Christ, 1062 6,7| generis--de imperatoria familia" (Gothofred, Cod. Theod., 1063 6,6| and holding the sacred fan (ripidion); his duty was 1064 5 | it drives away those who fancy his form of a servant is 1065 1,1| transcripts which exist among us. Farewell. ~EXTRACTS FROM THE ACTS.~ 1066 6,2| manager of one of the church's farms, a "villicus," or, as Bingham 1067 6,7| reference to Lindsey" (Raine, Fasti Eborac., i. 150). Accordingly, 1068 6,4| give themselves only to fasting and prayer, remaining permanently 1069 6,4| Henry Spelman's History and Fate of Sacrilege, or to the 1070 5 | earlier creed, which was more favourable to the Egyptian doctrine, 1071 6,8| and assigning both to the February of 448 or 449. Fleury inverts 1072 2 | the Holy Ghost who gave fecundity to the Virgin, but it was 1073 5 | the sheep of Christ, and feed them with the tender leaves 1074 1 | great part, "As I see, as I feel, as I have proved, as I 1075 2 | same nature to weep with feelings of pity over a dead friend 1076 6,4| dropped from his hands, and he fell down dead (De Persec. Vand., 1077 1,1| lord, beloved brother, and fellow minister John, greeting 1078 2 | beloved-of-God brother, and fellow-bishop Eusebius be received, and 1079 6,8| against their bishops or fellow-clergy, they shall by all means 1080 1,1| my most-beloved-of-God, fellow-minister and brother Paul, had arrived 1081 1,1| reverend and most religious fellow-priest Nestorius, Cyril sends greeting 1082 6,2| judgment of all his own [fellows] is reasonable and according 1083 6,8| Eastern bishops secretly felt that the cause of Constantinople 1084 1 | set forth their dif- ~245 ~ficulties, mostly arising from a foreign 1085 1 | examination by the council, de fide, not by himself, as they 1086 3 | follows the rule of faith (fidei regulam in the Latin Acts) 1087 2 | Dulcitius, our Notary, of whose fidelity we have had good proof: 1088 6,1| CANON I. ~WE have judged it fight that the canons of the Holy 1089 6,6| deacon; he was a conspicuous figure at the Patriarch's celebrations, 1090 1 | council, not as containing his final and definitive sentence, 1091 5 | the imperial letters was finished]: These divine letters say 1092 6,2| excellency has perceived how many firings were done in the presence 1093 6,2| withstand this with suitable firmness." ~The most glorious judges 1094 1 | Gallican gives him a singular fitness to serve in this and similar 1095 5 | into in; moreover, that ek fits better than en with gnwrizomenon, 1096 1,1| truth of the matter with a fitting document, although so far 1097 1,1| Constantinople said; The blessed Fla- ~248 ~vian hath beautifully 1098 1,1| own heads the unquenchable flame. ~Since we have leaned that 1099 6,5| have heard, neglect the flocks committed to them, and delay 1100 6,9| Latins! Subsequently at Florence the second rank, in accordance 1101 1,1| the Fathers remain fast. ~Florentius, the most reverend bishop 1102 2 | s spear, blood and water flowed out, that the Church of 1103 1,1| be well assured that the followers of every heresy gather the 1104 6,6| widows and the poor, and of food and clothing to church servants, 1105 5 | anathematizes those who foolishly talk of two natures of our 1106 1,1| concerning this to them: ~O fools, and only knowing how to 1107 6,4| as its bishop. Justinian forbade readers to be appointed 1108 6,4| and this present canon forbid one of the orthodox to be 1109 6,3| is not to be construed as forbidding clerics to work at trades 1110 6,5| the see of Evasa had been forcible even to brutality; that 1111 6,7| has decreed that those who forcibly carry off women under pretence 1112 1 | ficulties, mostly arising from a foreign language; others from the 1113 6,8| and cooks. . . . so that foreigners arriving in the city, on 1114 2 | the baptism of John his forerunner, lest the fact that the 1115 1,1| may have the noted glory forever and show forth their most 1116 6,2| who is convicted of this forfeit his own rank; and let him 1117 6,1| was not in human nature to forget this; but the result is 1118 6,9| should certainly not be forgotten. In his epistle to Anatolius ( 1119 1 | Fathers of Chalcedon. The forma is set forth by the Apostolic 1120 6,2| of "pragmaticas nostras formas" and "pragmaticum typum" ( 1121 | formerly 1122 6,9| clergyman, he shall not forsake his bishop and run to secular 1123 6,4| defensores," had usurped "forum jus," appropriated the lands, 1124 6,4| to the descendants of the founder, left at Dunkeld, Brechin, 1125 6,8| laics points to laymen as founders or benefactors of such institutions. ~ 1126 2 | conception from this pure fountain of Christian faith because 1127 6,6| denounces Martinianus as a fraudulent "oeconomus," and requests 1128 6,2| as given in the Concilia, freedom has been taken to insert " 1129 6,4| Westminster, Battle (see Freeman, Norm. Conquest, iv. 409), 1130 6,2| Empire, p. 212), and by the French kings (Kitchin, Hist. France, 1131 5 | for the refutation of the frenzied folly of Nestorius, and 1132 6,9| the Emperor. The latter frequently referred the decision to 1133 6,1| of the Latrocinium were fresh in their minds, and that 1134 6,0| the Hunnish invasion had frightened the bishop of Sirmium into 1135 6,5| 269); so Hincmar says: "Si fuerit defunctus episcopus, ego ... 1136 6,4| St. Martin's of Tours, Fulda, Westminster, Battle (see 1137 2 | its own benignity, should fulfil by a more secret mystery 1138 6,6| stream of offerings became fuller, the work of dispensing 1139 6,2| 11). In the list of the functionaries of St. Sophia, given by 1140 6,0| Dioscorus for having misapplied funds bequeathed by a charitable 1141 1,1| participation of the peace furnished from God, he is not lacking 1142 5 | passage he remarks: en duo fusesi gnwrizes qnwrizesqai omologei 1143 5 | with the words: en duo fusesiu asugkutws k.t.l. (ed. Mog., 1144 6,9| admirably says: "Mais leur voix fut peu ecoutee; on leur accorda 1145 5 | taught ena krioton en duo futesin asugkutws k.p.l. ~It is 1146 6,5| became common in the West (F. G. Lee, Validity of English 1147 2 | bishops, we have now, at last, gained a clear view of the scandal 1148 6,8| Previously he had proedria now he gains prostasia. As we have ~288 ~ 1149 1 | added. ~(Defens. Dec. Cleri Gall. VII. xvij.) ~This certainly 1150 5 | is Actio iv., c. 7., in Galland. Bibliotheca PP., t. xii., 1151 1 | Bossuet. Defensio Dec. Cleri Gallic. Lib. VII., cap. xvij. [ 1152 2 | with nails, and to open the gates of paradise to the faith 1153 1,1| followers of every heresy gather the occasions of their error 1154 6,0| Attila and rescued Christian Gaul (Hodgkin, ii., 129-152; 1155 6,0| church vessels to Attila's Gaulish secretary and had swept 1156 5 | fashion. These fragments have generally been received as genuine, 1157 6,7| as being "milites alius generis--de imperatoria familia" ( 1158 6,4| former persecution under Genseric (or Gaiseric), the Arians 1159 5 | knowledge of the truth, from the Gentiles, or Jews or any heresy whatever, 1160 6,2| version," which the Ballerini gently describe as "differing a 1161 6,2| Novel. 7, 2 with Pertz, Mon. Germ, Hist. Leg., i., 254), and 1162 6,2| to be used both by later German emperors (see, e.g., Bryce' 1163 6,8| was may be seen from what Gibbon calls the "noble and charitable 1164 6,2| heinousness of "selling the gift" of ordinations (Epist. 1165 2 | craft, was bereft of divine gifts and, being stripped of his 1166 6,4| Malachioe, vj.). So in 1188 Giraldus Cambrensis found a lay abbot 1167 1,1| rejoice, and let the earth be glad" for the middle wall of 1168 1,1| Alexandria, we were filled with gladness, and most naturally at the 1169 1,1| Faith, One Baptism,") we glorified God the Saviour of all, 1170 2 | For since the devil was glorying in the fact that man, deceived 1171 6,2| shall also be the case with go-betweens, if they be clerics they 1172 6,6| official obligations, gave the go-by to the whole question (Carm. 1173 1,1| for this end to blunt the goads of the stubbornness of the 1174 6,5| of the widowed church" (Goar, Eucholog., p. 269); so 1175 6,2| of St. Sophia, given by Goat in his Euchologion (p. 270), 1176 5 | tares among the seeds of godliness, but ever invents some new 1177 6,8| Constantinople was theirs" (Gore's Leo the Great. p. 120); 1178 1,1| likely that certain also gossip about me as having thought 1179 6,9| says that Anatolius only got the See of Constantinople 1180 6,7| de imperatoria familia" (Gothofred, Cod. Theod., tom. ii., 1181 6,2| bishops of Orient shall govern the Oriental diocese only, 1182 6,2| making application to the government" ("secular powers") had 1183 1,1| bishop" in the Latin], who governs the Apostolic See, nor against 1184 6,2| in danger of losing his grade. Such shall also be the 1185 6,9| sentence required at this. Thus gradually the practice was formed 1186 1,1| 164; and in Migne, Pat. Graece., Tom. LXXVII. [Cyrilli 1187 6,2| of Chalcedon we have qeia grammata ("divine" being practically, 1188 6,2| Schaff and H. Wace, (repr. Grand Rapids MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1189 1,1| prevail over their enemies and grants them victory. For he does 1190 2 | regeneration, is still not grasped by the mind of this aged 1191 6,2| the Corpus Juris Canonici, Grat Decretum, Pars I., Dist. 1192 6,8| Great. p. 120); but the gratification of Constantinople ambition 1193 2 | of swaddling clothes: the greatness of the Highest is declared 1194 6,6| a stop to the dishonest greed of those who acted as stewards 1195 6,4| monasteries was an evil which grew with their wealth and influence. 1196 1,1| has been taken away, and grief has been silenced, and all 1197 2 | condemnation. For which if he grieves sincerely and to good purpose, 1198 2 | immortality, had come under the grievous sentence of death, and that 1199 5 | pupil Cyril in the Analecta Groeca of the monks of St. Maur, 1200 6,4| custom," ~285 ~he says, "had grown up, whereby powerful laymen, 1201 6,2| appealed to a later ordinance, guaranteeing to the capital of Bithynia 1202 6,3| called by the law to the guardianship of minors, from which there 1203 6,2| pragmatici prioris," "sub hac pragmatica jussione," in 1204 6,8| VIIIth Synod held under Pope Hadrian II., canon xxj." (Decretum 1205 1,1| them that plucked off the hair: I hid not my face from 1206 6,2| paramonarius" from monh "mansio," a halting-place, so that the sense would 1207 6,4| cure possessionibus suis; ham et constituebantur per electionem 1208 6,3| priest "diligently to learn a handicraft" (No. 11; Wilkins, i. 225). 1209 2 | feet, that it is I myself; handle me and see, for a spirit 1210 2 | and allowed himself to be handled with careful and inquisitive 1211 6,4| Sacrilege, or to the more handy book on the subject by James 1212 2 | up to life again; or to hang on the wood, and to make 1213 1,1| disagreement of the Churches happened altogether unnecessarily 1214 6,8| the Emperor Theodosius of happy memory), we also do enact 1215 1,1| your Church and ours with harmony and peace. ~Of the reason 1216 6,1| after bishop gave vent to harsh unfeeling absolutism, the 1217 6,8| or banding together, or hatching plots against their bishops 1218 5 | have kept the faith. May hatred be far removed from your 1219 1,1| Roman city, which is the head of all the churches, which 1220 6,8| codices have the following heading to this canon. ~"Decree 1221 1,1| the envy of the devil and heal our divisions, and who by 1222 6,8| softened the Egyptian's heart" (ib., 248). Four of his 1223 6,9| session, in a moment of heat and indignation, by Lucentius 1224 5 | form of a servant is of an heavenly or some substance other 1225 1,1| greeting in the Lord. ~"Let the heavens rejoice, and let the earth 1226 2 | least have received with heedful attention that general Confession 1227 6,9| arguments. ~It would be the height of absurdity for any one 1228 6,2| his bishop Eusebius on the heinousness of "selling the gift" of 1229 6,3| partly to obtain means of helping the poor (Soz., vii. 28). 1230 | hence 1231 6,3| holy Synod decrees that henceforth no bishop, clergyman, nor 1232 6,4| this whole subject to Sir Henry Spelman's History and Fate 1233 6,4| readers were of old called "heralds" (De Eccl. Offic., ii., 1234 2 | at Ephesus [i.e. at the heretical synod held there] ? These 1235 6,0| minister. But if any one has heretofore been removed from one church 1236 6,6| Suspension, S. 220, and Hergenrother, Photius, etc., Bd. ii., 1237 2 | voices of angels. He whom Herod impiously designs to slay 1238 6,4| and the English Council of Hertford (canon iij., Bede, iv. 5, 1239 6,2| and this was done in no hidden nor secret fashion, but 1240 2 | hath alienated from him all hieratic worthiness. Therefore let 1241 2 | whom he had created in so high a position of honour; there 1242 6,2| absence, we beseech your highness to command to be rescinded. 1243 5 | Pulcheria, with joy, and hilarity we placed upon the holy 1244 2 | Clement) and also my son Hilarus, Deacon, to represent us; 1245 6,8| 19) by Uranius bishop of Himeria, accused Ibas of Nestorianism 1246 6,5| Eucholog., p. 269); so Hincmar says: "Si fuerit defunctus 1247 6,2| submitted to what he could not hinder (see Tillemont, ix., 175, 1248 2 | folly do they fall who, when hindered by some obscurity from apprehending 1249 6,0| munificent to "xenotrophia" (Hint. Lausiac, 144). There was 1250 6,6| Mansi, iii., 1257). At Hippo St. Augustine had a "praepositus 1251 6,3| clergyman, nor monk shall hire possessions, or engage in 1252 6,3| through lust of gain, become hirers of other men's possessions, 1253 6,2| others as "a monastery," see Historical Writings of St. Athanasius, 1254 6,6| the Greeks call oeconomi, hoc est, qui vici episcoporum 1255 1,1| blessed memory hath most holily and perfectly expounded 1256 6,1| words en upolhyeiby personoe honoratiores and clariores, and the learned 1257 6,7| letter-carriers. In the same sense Honorius, by a law of 408, forbids 1258 6,7| Hist. Ari., xxxvij.); so Hosius uses the same phrase in 1259 6,0| Julian had directed Pagan hospices (xenodokeia) to be established 1260 6,0| establish "xenodochia, id est, hospitalia" (Epist. L.). This canon 1261 6,8| and "founded other such hospitals setting over them two pious 1262 6,0| martyries, almshouses, and hostels belonging to it. And if, 1263 6,8| for lepers, and also for house-less travellers; "a storehouse 1264 6,9| Chalcedon (which had been an hulled by Leo) was given to the 1265 6,2| Apostolic See ought not to be humiliated in our presence. I do not 1266 2 | Babe is exhibited by the humiliation of swaddling clothes: the 1267 1,1| accustomed to find fault were humming around like vicious wasps, 1268 2 | transfixed with nails and hung on the wood of the cross; 1269 2 | pay duteous service. To hunger, to thirst, to be weary, 1270 6,7| 42); and the Vandal king Hunneric speaks of "domusnostrae 1271 6,0| later, the surge of the Hunnish invasion had frightened 1272 6,2| had informed Leo that her husband Marcian had recalled some 1273 6,0| could establish "xenodochia, id est, hospitalia" (Epist. 1274 6,2| law of Valentinian I. "Nec idem in codera negotio defensor 1275 6,9| declared both terms to be identical adding that only the Patriarch 1276 2 | beloved brother. Given on the Ides of June, in the Consulate 1277 1,1| the sacred assembly (ths ieras sugklhtou (3)) had sat down 1278 6,0| sufficiently startling, tw ierei, tw basilei (Mansi, vii., 1279 2 | inviolate virginity, while ignorant of concupiscence, supplied 1280 6,9| rejecting the canons, both the IIId of Constantinople and the 1281 6,7| Gratian's Decretum, Pars IL, Causa xx., Quaest. iii., 1282 6,6| this sort to be not only illicit but also invalid, irritis 1283 6,6| is well known, are still illicitoe, but yet validoe, and even 1284 6,0| assistance on account of illness, and Basil distinguished 1285 2 | appropriate remedy for our ills, one and the same "Mediator 1286 6,4| says St. Bernard, "qui illud teneret cure possessionibus 1287 2 | very man; and there is no illusion in this union, while the 1288 4 | most blessed bishops of Illyria said: Let those who contradict 1289 1,1| bishops except those of Illyrica who said: "We all have erred, 1290 6,8| which the Popes took over Illyricum, where, however, they did 1291 2 | destroy them, wills us to imitate his own loving kindness; 1292 1,1| kings, who are the best imitators of the piety of their ancestors 1293 1,1| most glorious judges and immense assembly ((uperfuhs sugklhtos) 1294 2 | be passible Man and the immortal One to be subjected to the 1295 2 | stripped of his endowment of immortality, had come under the grievous 1296 6,4| gain for their estates the immunities of abbey-lands by professing 1297 5 | natures, (1) unconfusedly, immutably, indivisibly, distinctly, 1298 2 | form of a servant does not impair the form of God. For since 1299 2 | enriching what was human, not impairing what was divine: because 1300 6,6| considered diriment but only impedient impediments from which the 1301 6,6| diriment but only impedient impediments from which the bishop of 1302 6,7| monarchy. The court of the Imperator was called his camp, stratopedon ( 1303 6,7| milites alius generis--de imperatoria familia" (Gothofred, Cod. 1304 6,2| explains it by "praeceptum imperatoris" (Brev. Collat. cum Donatist. 1305 1 | should consider it a piece of impertinence were I to attempt to add 1306 2 | of angels. He whom Herod impiously designs to slay is like 1307 6,2| ostiarium" in the Prisca implies the same idea. Tillemont, 1308 2 | born of a Virgin's womb, imply that his nature is unlike 1309 6,8| used a "blasphemous" speech implying that Christ was but a man 1310 6,9| not in any way lessen the importance of the fact that at the 1311 4 | council, and the Emperor imposed this with the threat that 1312 6,8| and Flavian, which seems improbable. "The Council is believed," 1313 1,1| they had been cruelly and improperly condemned. What course we 1314 6,1| imperial commissioners, improved by the legate Paschasinus, 1315 1,1| dekomai). I am forced to be impudent, but the matter is one which 1316 1,1| altogether unnecessarily and in-opportunely, we now have been fully 1317 2 | and also from the other be incapable. Therefore in the entire 1318 1,1| because God the Word was incarnate and became Man, and from 1319 6,2| We may connect with this incident a law of Martian dated in 1320 6,5| ecclesiastical penalties, and the income of the widowed church shall 1321 6,6| his duty was to enter all incomings and outgoings of the church' 1322 2 | satisfactory issue, the inconsiderate and inexperienced man be 1323 5 | S. 118, note 6), cites incorrectly the fourth instead of the 1324 6,2| their kingdom and glory is increased, have deigned to define 1325 2 | Virgin's child-bearing is an indication of Divine power. The infancy 1326 6,9| in a moment of heat and indignation, by Lucentius the papal 1327 6,2| action with regard to the indignity done to his See and to the 1328 5 | truth have through their individual heresies given rise to empty 1329 1 | that free, and each bishop individually is inferior to the First, 1330 5 | unconfusedly, immutably, indivisibly, distinctly, in the year 1331 6,8| abide under it," and not to indulge selfwill by "turning restive" 1332 6,3| or (3) as an example of industry or humility. Thus, most 1333 6,5| three months, unless an inevitable necessity should some time 1334 2 | indication of Divine power. The infancy of the Babe is exhibited 1335 6,2| was making a not unnatural inference in regard to ecclesiastical 1336 2 | the universe allowed his infinite majesty to be overshadowed, 1337 2 | on himself a share in our infirmities did not make him a par-taker 1338 6,6| certain circumstances not to inflict the excommunication which 1339 6,8| which malignant plotters had inflicted on St. Chrysostom. ~This 1340 6,2| guarded by you. And if any, influenced by the power of his own 1341 6,8| to the canon of 381, so ingeniously linked on to it as to seem 1342 1,1| this the words of the holy initiators into mysteries confirm to 1343 1,1| Epictetus, so as thereby to injure many; therefore it appeared 1344 6,2| also to be advocates of injured clerics (ib., ix. 64) and 1345 2 | the other succumbs' to injuries. And as the Word does not 1346 6,8| Popes took up a thing so injurious to their dignity, and of 1347 1 | for, says he, "he does an injury to the judgment of the most 1348 6,8| Certainly it was an odious innovation to see a Bishop made the 1349 6,6| such an ordination shall be inoperative, and that such shall nowhere 1350 6,8| appoint a commission for inquiring into the matter. Two sessions, 1351 2 | handled with careful and inquisitive touch by those who were 1352 6,2| freedom has been taken to insert "vel mansionarium" in a 1353 5 | as genuine, and have been inserted by Mansi (Toni. vii., 722 1354 6,9| Anatolius by an apparently insincere letter on the part of the 1355 6,1| BRIGHT. ~The council could insist with all plainness on the 1356 2 | that, if by God's merciful inspiration the case is brought to a 1357 5 | of Christ our common Lord inspiring us, we may cast off every 1358 6,9| clergyman might at the first instance bring his cause before the 1359 6,2| proceedings to imagine for an instant that the bishops of this 1360 1 | Others, "As I am persuaded, instructed, informed, that all agrees, 1361 2 | himself was by his questions instructing the faith of the disciples, 1362 6,2| saying they had received no instructions on the subject. We referred 1363 6,3| when the church-funds were insufficient to maintain them, or (2) 1364 2 | up among you, against the integrity of the faith; and what at 1365 6,0| another church,"--an exception intelligible enough at such a period. 1366 6,7| multae controversiae postea inter episcopos de dioecesibus 1367 6,9| execution, as far of those most interested were concerned, long before 1368 2 | should be examined by our interference (dialalias). [The Latin 1369 6,0| to another, he shall not intermeddle with the affairs of his 1370 6,2| omits the word; but in the "interpretario Dionysii," as given in the 1371 2 | accomplished during that interval of forty days than to make 1372 6,2| led to St. Chrysostom's intervention. Antoninus, bishop of Ephesus, 1373 6,6| wording of the canon seems to intimate that the synod of Chalcedon 1374 1,1| decree on the faith but intimated that Dioscorus and his associates 1375 6,7| forbids non-Catholics "intra palatium militare" (Cod 1376 6,2| Writings of St. Athanasius, Introd., p. xliv.). Bingham also 1377 5 | not as though they were introducing anything that had been lacking 1378 1 | GENERAL INTRODUCTION~I should consider it a piece 1379 6,6| declared them to be properly invalidoe, but only as without effect ( 1380 6,0| the surge of the Hunnish invasion had frightened the bishop 1381 2 | to make void by shameless inventions that mystery by which alone 1382 5 | seeds of godliness, but ever invents some new device against 1383 6,8| February of 448 or 449. Fleury inverts this order, and thinks that, " 1384 6,1| character shall first be investigated. ~NOTES. ~ANCIENT EPITOME 1385 2 | debt of our condition, the inviolable nature was united to the 1386 6,2| mutilated, but the contention involves not only many difficulties 1387 2 | have apprehended with his inward ear the declaration of Isaiah, " 1388 6,5| episcopus, ego ... visitaterem ipsi viduatae designabo ecclesiae;" 1389 6,6| illicit but also invalid, irritis and cassis. Nor is this 1390 6,8| gave equal privileges (isa presbeia) to the most holy 1391 6,0| at ~276 ~Nitria (ib., 7). Ischyrion, in his memorial read in 1392 6,7| although Dionysius and Isidorian take in as "situated on 1393 1 | and since his somewhat isolated position as a Gallican gives 1394 5 | believe in one God, etc. ~Item, the Creed of the one hundred 1395 6,4| with tithes and offerings (Itin. Camb. ii., 4). This abuse 1396 6,4| handy book on the subject by James Wayland Joyce, The Doom 1397 6,8| self-assertion of Rome excited the jealousy of her rival of the East," 1398 6,0| parapempontas, Epist. xciv.). Jerome writes to Pammachius: "I 1399 6,4| marriage to a heretic, or a Jew, or a heathen, unless the 1400 6,6| accused, e.g., of secreting a jewelled chalice, and bestowing the 1401 6,0| Causa ~XXI., Q. L., canon jj., and again Causa XXI., 1402 6,2| episkopois) from Rome, to join with us in these matters, 1403 6,7| bishops, when addressing Jovian ~273 ~(Soz., vi. 4); so 1404 5 | Augusta Pulcheria, with joy, and hilarity we placed 1405 6,4| subject by James Wayland Joyce, The Doom of Sacrilege.( 1406 5 | shall be restored, after judicial proof, by them who took 1407 6,2| of a Latin MS., the Codex Julianus, now called Parisiensis, 1408 2 | appointed our brethren, Julius, Bishop, and Reatus, Presbyter ( 1409 2 | brother. Given on the Ides of June, in the Consulate of the 1410 6,4| defensores," had usurped "forum jus," appropriated the lands, 1411 6,2| prioris," "sub hac pragmatica jussione," in ordinances in Append. 1412 6,6| church law suits,--all "cure jussu et arbitrio sui episcopi" ( 1413 1,1| Cyril's letter to Nestorius kaGaFlnaronoi and his letter to John of 1414 6,2| had instead of tois palai kanosi, tois paralambanousin. Van 1415 6,0| Chalcedon, and in so far a kanwn, but it was not added as 1416 1,1| greeting in the Lord. ~[katafluarousi mho k. t. l. Lat. Obloquuntur 1417 6,0| a ptwkeion; it contained katagwggia tois xenois, as well as 1418 6,5| age because she was poor" (Keble's Life of Wilson, ii., 767); 1419 6,6| titulus beneficii. As various kinds of this title we find here ( 1420 5 | xii., p. 633. Gieseler (Kirchengesch. i., S. 465), and after 1421 2 | rejoice to adore on their knees is Lord of all. Now when 1422 6,5| Ultimately, the Council cut the knot by ordering that a new bishop 1423 6,2| asked the lord bishops (knriois tois episkopois) from Rome, 1424 6,6| permanent suspension). Cf Kober, Suspension, S. 220, and 1425 6,8| of Nicaea, ta arkeia eqh krateito (cp. Newman, Transl. of 1426 6,8| confirming the ek pollou krathsan eqos" in regard to the ordination 1427 5 | that the Synod taught ena krioton en duo futesin asugkutws 1428 6,7| disregarded strateias tosutsn kronau in order to enter the ministry" ( 1429 6,2| clergy, and substantial (kthtorwn) and most distinguished 1430 2 | of intelligence, to make laborious search through the whole 1431 1,1| as absolutely to need no labour to be bestowed upon us. 1432 6,2| adopted in the text does not lack MS. authority, and is the 1433 6,0| bequeathed by a charitable lady xenewsi kai ptwkeiois in 1434 1,1| t. l.; and in the Latin Laetentur caeli.] ~THE LETTER OF CYRIL 1435 2 | from the grave where he had lain four days, by a voice of 1436 2 | Jesus ~258 ~Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without 1437 6,7| might be the "debate-able" land: the two neighbour bishops 1438 1,1| Remove not the ancient landmark which thy fathers have set," 1439 1 | mostly arising from a foreign language; others from the subject 1440 6,6| a martyr's grave. So the Laodicene Council forbids Churchmen 1441 6,2| of Chalcedon after it had lasted three weeks. ~How it is 1442 6,9| was in the hands of the Latins! Subsequently at Florence 1443 1,1| the flesh? They are to be laughed at who babble such things 1444 1,1| Church, and to drive away the laughter of the heterodox, and for 1445 6,0| to "xenotrophia" (Hint. Lausiac, 144). There was a xenodochion 1446 2 | be refreshed both with a Laver and with a Cup. Let him 1447 1 | letter of Leo should be lawfully examined by the council, 1448 6,2| assent (Mansi, xii., 177; cf. Le Quien, i., 602). Another 1449 5 | of holy memory, were the leaders, we do declare that the 1450 5 | in which he repeats the leading doctrine in the words of 1451 1,1| unquenchable flame. ~Since we have leaned that certain, after having 1452 2 | disciples of the truth. For what learning has he received from the 1453 6,2| his own life (Theodor., Lect. ii. 11). In the list of 1454 6,4| CANON XIV. ~A Cantor or Lector alien to the sound faith, 1455 6,5| common in the West (F. G. Lee, Validity of English Orders, 1456 6,2| counsel for the Church. The legal force of the term "defensor" 1457 6,8| which it was wise at once to legalize and to regulate; that the " 1458 5 | i., S. 820, and Dorner (Lehre v. der Person Christi, Thl. 1459 6,9| yet it does not in any way lessen the importance of the fact 1460 6,7| xij., on the emperor's letter-carriers. In the same sense Honorius, 1461 6,6| arbitrio sui episcopi" (Ep. to Leudefred, Op. ii., 520); and before 1462 6,3| most popular saints in the Levant (Stanley's East. Church, 1463 6,2| anything was done after our levering let it be read. ~And before 1464 6,4| Council of Toledo (canon li.), and the English Council 1465 6,5| expelled as an "adulterer" (Liberatus, Breviar., xviij.). ~This 1466 1,1| the charge under which he lies, be specifically made. ~ 1467 6,2| sacristan who had the duty of lighting the church (Dial., i. 5); 1468 6,3| pertaining to secular affairs, lightly esteeming the service of 1469 2 | Paschasinus the bishop of Lilybaeum, in the province of Silicia, 1470 6,2| regard to ecclesiastical limits from political rearrangements 1471 6,7| years "with reference to Lindsey" (Raine, Fasti Eborac., 1472 6,3| bishop of Maiuma, wove linen, partly to supply his own 1473 6,8| canon of 381, so ingeniously linked on to it as to seem at first 1474 2 | and with a Cup. Let him listen also to the blessed Apostle 1475 6,2| loc.). Mansionarius is a literal rendering; but what was 1476 6,8| s authority" (afhnixw is literally to get the bit between the 1477 1 | Council of Chalcedon. The literature upon the subject is so great 1478 6,9| ANCIENT EPITOME OF CANON IX. ~Litigious clerics shall be punished 1479 6,4| Alleluia melody" (cf. Hammond, Liturgies, p. 95), an arrow pierced 1480 6,7| class" (Neale, Essays on Liturgiology, p. 302). ~This canon is 1481 6,4| in Laodic., c. 23, in the Liturgy of St. Mark (Hammond, p. 1482 6,4| with disorderly monks, who lived there in contempt of all 1483 6,3| practised sedentary trades for a livelihood (Basil, Epist., cxcviii., 1484 2 | because the Catholic Church lives and advances by this faith, 1485 1 | acts. ~(Gallia Orthod., LIX.) ~Nor did Anatolius and 1486 6,4| the venerable church of Llanbadarn Vawr; a "bad custom," ~285 ~ 1487 2 | five thousand men with five loaves, and give to the Samaritan 1488 6,2| 373; see Beveridge, in loc.). Mansionarius is a literal 1489 6,9| of the contending parties lodges an appeal against the bishop' 1490 2 | lowliness of man and the loftiness of Godhead meet together. 1491 6,8| Aristenus(1) and Symeon, Logothetes reckon this decree as a 1492 5 | These things are fair to look upon. ~The most reverend 1493 6,2| decision the present canon looks back, when it forbids any 1494 6,1| clergymen are not to be received loosely and without examination, 1495 2 | the resurrection of the Lord--which was in truth the resurrection 1496 6,4| write themselves down as lords of what has been thus consecrated, 1497 6,2| Prosmonarius, shall be in danger of losing his grade. Such shall also 1498 2 | had conceived him, without loss of virginity. (2) But if 1499 6,0| excepting those who, having lost their own country, have 1500 6,7| anathema. The same shall be the lot of any that assist him. ~


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