10-capit | cardi-eupoi | euthy-lot | lotha-rateu | ratio-tupon | tupos-zosim
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2501 6,8| rule (diatupwsin, comp. tupos in Nic., xix.), and to refuse
2502 5 | or ek duo fusewn was the turning-point of the whole controversy
2503 6,6| until the beginning of the twelfth century were regarded as
2504 6,2| discribed as adjudicating, with twelve assessors, in smaller causes,
2505 1,1| to turn from the right, twist my speech to their views,
2506 1 | the letter of Leo as the Type and Rule of faith, by which
2507 6,2| formas" and "pragmaticum typum" (Novel., 7, 9, etc.). The
2508 6,2| of Bithynia its rights as unaffected by the honour conferred
2509 5 | illustrated with the greatest unanimity the word of truth, etc. ~
2510 6,6| church property may not be unattested, and thereby waste ensue,
2511 6,9| health and free from any unavoidable and necessary business,
2512 1,1| reference to Eutyches's unbelieving doubt which was springing
2513 6,2| bishops shall not enter uncalled another diocese for ordination,
2514 5 | and teaching that which is unchanged from the beginning, has
2515 1,1| is to say God. For he is unchanging and unchangeable according
2516 6,1| position of universally and unconditionally valid ecclesiastical rules.
2517 5 | flyings that an unanimous and uncontradicted writing was published by
2518 2 | and buried, inasmuch as he underwent this, not in ~257 ~his actual
2519 2 | of the living God." Not undeservedly, therefore, was he pronounced
2520 1,1| For it is necessary, it is undoubtedly necessary, to understand
2521 6,9| the canon was absolute and unequivocal. In writing to the Emperor
2522 5 | doctrines and renewing the unerring faith of the Fathers, publishing
2523 1 | liable to the charge of unfairness if I quote at some length
2524 6,1| bishop gave vent to harsh unfeeling absolutism, the only excuse
2525 2 | unrighteous than to entertain ungodly thoughts, and not to yield
2526 2 | Eutyches must be regarded as unhappily having no hold, who does
2527 1,1| Paul, which contains an unimpeachable confession of faith, and
2528 6,1| to these Bright seems to unite himself by sating that this "
2529 6,1| them to the position of universally and unconditionally valid
2530 2 | in time; the Lord of the universe allowed his infinite majesty
2531 6,2| things done are just or unjust. ~The most glorious judges
2532 1,1| punishment to which they unjustly sentenced Flavian. This
2533 6,2| negotiating such shameful and unlawful transactions, let him also,
2534 1,1| understanding of this ~252 ~unmixed union, we confess the holy
2535 6,2| suffragans, was making a not unnatural inference in regard to ecclesiastical
2536 1,1| Churches happened altogether unnecessarily and in-opportunely, we now
2537 5 | a great reproach and an unpardonable offence in the fathers of
2538 6,3| ecclesiastical business, or of unprovided orphans or widows and of
2539 1,1| upon their own heads the unquenchable flame. ~Since we have leaned
2540 2 | the "uplifted waves," is unquestionably Divine. As then--to pass
2541 6,9| part of the letter was left unread throughout the Greek empire,
2542 2 | Lord's crucifixion to be unreal, and does not doubt that
2543 2 | What, indeed, is more unrighteous than to entertain ungodly
2544 2 | to act well: he meditated unrighteousness on his bed." What, indeed,
2545 6,0| been "placed on board some unseaworthy vessels," and yet, "by the
2546 1 | tranquillize minds in so unsettled a state of the Church, for
2547 2 | saved by condemning his own unsound opinion. May God keep you
2548 6,0| that is guilty of crime is unworthy of the priesthood. But he
2549 6,2| forced to sign the as yet unwritten canons, of which they made
2550 6,2| Heraclea and Ancyra cited it as upholding their claim to perform the
2551 2 | storm to bring down the "uplifted waves," is unquestionably
2552 6,1| who translate the words en upolhyeiby personoe honoratiores and
2553 6,6| requests Cyril to appoint an upright one (Epist. ii., 127), and
2554 5 | Constantinople, for the uprooting of the heresies which had
2555 6,3| and turning men's houses upside down. Therefore the holy
2556 6,8| says Fleury (xxvij. 19) by Uranius bishop of Himeria, accused
2557 6,4| should at any time through urgent necessity be appointed thereto
2558 6,6| and in another letter urges him to put a stop to the
2559 6,9| his own see, the latter urging that it was only out of
2560 | using
2561 2 | deposition of Dioscorus, but usually on the ground of his refusal
2562 6,2| should undertake to make usurpations, withstand this with suitable
2563 6,4| patroni et defensores," had usurped "forum jus," appropriated
2564 2 | his judges, and that an utterance extremely foolish and extremely
2565 6,8| conspiracy or banding together is utterly prohibited even by the secular
2566 6,6| governed the church during a vacancy of the see (Eucholog., pp.
2567 5 | Christian Emperors, Marcian and Valentinan, Augusti, at Chalcedon,
2568 6,2| Apol. c. Arion, 67, where Valesius understands it as "a station"
2569 6,6| still illicitoe, but yet validoe, and even the Council of
2570 6,4| fell down dead (De Persec. Vand., i., 13). Five years before
2571 6,8| the Church, and liable to vary with the dispensations to
2572 6,8| Constantinople acquires a vast jurisdiction, the independent
2573 6,4| venerable church of Llanbadarn Vawr; a "bad custom," ~285 ~he
2574 1 | before the council, nor these vehement cries of the Fathers in
2575 2 | Godhead was covered with a veil of flesh should be concealed,
2576 6,2| has been taken to insert "vel mansionarium" in a parenthesis (
2577 6,1| bishop after bishop gave vent to harsh unfeeling absolutism,
2578 6,4| s proposed canon almost verbally. Occasion for this canon
2579 1,1| follows, and is set down verbatim in this our epistle. Concerning
2580 6,4| who is a heretic, or vice versa. But if any of the Cantors
2581 6,6| the right of the altar, vested in alb and stole, and holding
2582 5 | Walch (Bibloth. symbol veter., p. 106), Hahn (1. c.),
2583 1,1| The blessed Fla- ~248 ~vian hath beautifully and orthodoxly
2584 6,7| domusnostrae militiae" (Vic (4) r Vitens, iv. 2). ~This
2585 6,2| Bonifacius, a presbyter and vicar of the Apostolic See, said:
2586 4 | and Boniface a presbyter, vicars of the Apostolic See of
2587 6,4| woman who is a heretic, or vice versa. But if any of the
2588 6,6| call oeconomi, hoc est, qui vici episcoporum res ecclesiasticas
2589 1,1| were humming around like vicious wasps, and vomiting out
2590 6,0| carried safe to Naples" (Vict. Vitens., De Persec. Vandal.,
2591 6,5| ecclesiae;" and the phrase, "viduata per mortem N. nuper episcopi"
2592 6,5| ego ... visitaterem ipsi viduatae designabo ecclesiae;" and
2593 1,1| twist my speech to their views, I pray your holiness not
2594 6,8| Trullo, Gratian adds "The VIIIth Synod held under Pope Hadrian
2595 6,6| oikonomian eupoiias (canon viij.); and St Basil mentions
2596 6,7| Ari., lxx. 86), and in the VIIth canon of Sardica, so Athanasius
2597 6,4| rule (Bede, Ep. to Egbert, vij.). In the year of his birth,
2598 6,8| acting as "bishop over many villages" (vi. 34, see on Nic., viii.).
2599 6,2| of the church's farms, a "villicus," or, as Bingham expresses
2600 6,6| lands, the cultivation of vineyards, the payment of clerical
2601 6,8| 72). Those who dare to violate this clearly defined rule (
2602 6,2| shall with no rashness be violated or diminished. Let the dignity
2603 6,8| acting in the spirit, while violating the letter, of the ever-famous
2604 6,9| it would be too great a violation of the ancient canons, particularly
2605 6,9| wrote with still greater violence: "As for the resolution
2606 6,5| pleaded that he had been violently ejected from the see of
2607 2 | which belonged both to his virtue and to his name, who through
2608 6,9| years' war, during which the Visigoths of Septimania "were endeavouring
2609 6,6| Council forbids Churchmen to visit the "martyries of heretics" (
2610 6,5| defunctus episcopus, ego ... visitaterem ipsi viduatae designabo
2611 6,5| that he had never even visited Evasa, that therefore his
2612 6,1| Compare with this canon the VIth Canon of those credited
2613 2 | satisfaction, he shall condemn viva voce, and under his own
2614 6,9| to the bishop of Rome, viz., that any bishop or clergyman
2615 2 | satisfaction, he shall condemn viva voce, and under his own hand,
2616 6,9| admirably says: "Mais leur voix fut peu ecoutee; on leur
2617 5 | with profit, in the same volume of Migne's Latin Patrology,
2618 6,9| subscription to the canons was voluntary or forced was Eusebius,
2619 1,1| like vicious wasps, and vomiting out wretched words against
2620 6,2| care their clemency has vouchsafed to provide for the future,
2621 6,6| marriage made contrary to a vow, but only orders separation
2622 6,6| it seems very likely that vows of this kind at the time
2623 6,2| Series, ed. P. Schaff and H. Wace, (repr. Grand Rapids MI:
2624 6,9| contention with a bishop let him wait till the synod sits, and
2625 5 | times, e.g., Tillemont, Walch (Bibloth. symbol veter.,
2626 2 | ever thirsting again; to walk on the surface of the sea
2627 1,1| be glad" for the middle wall of partition has been taken
2628 6,0| speaking. Besides it is wanting in all the old Greek, as
2629 6,3| partly to supply his own wants, and partly to obtain means
2630 6,9| the close of ten years' war, during which the Visigoths
2631 6,8| Prapidius as having been its warden while acting as "bishop
2632 6,0| Cod., i. 3, 49, and their wardens in Novell., 134, 16. Gregory
2633 1,1| humming around like vicious wasps, and vomiting out wretched
2634 6,6| unattested, and thereby waste ensue, and the episcopate
2635 2 | bring down the "uplifted waves," is unquestionably Divine.
2636 6,0| tois xenois, as well as for wayfayers, and those who needed assistance
2637 6,4| on the subject by James Wayland Joyce, The Doom of Sacrilege.(
2638 6,2| dignity of our person in all ways be guarded by you. And if
2639 6,4| evil which grew with their wealth and influence. At a Council
2640 1,1| letter and it might become wearisome. And we will allow the defined
2641 2 | hunger, to thirst, to be weary, and to sleep, is evidently
2642 6,2| afterwards assented. Only a week before 350 had signed the
2643 6,2| after it had lasted three weeks. ~How it is possible after
2644 2 | belong to the same nature to weep with feelings of pity over
2645 1 | it will be worth while to weigh the sentences and, as they
2646 1 | based on this that, after weighing the matter, they considered,
2647 5 | passage itself. (6) No less weight is to be attached to the
2648 5 | purposely altered by the Westerns into in; moreover, that
2649 6,4| Martin's of Tours, Fulda, Westminster, Battle (see Freeman, Norm.
2650 5 | or by any other persons whatsoever, this shall be restored,
2651 | whence
2652 6,9| the Synod shall be held where-ever the bishop of the Metropolis
2653 | wherein
2654 | Whereupon
2655 6,2| ANCIENT EPITOME OF CANON II. ~Whoso buys or sells an ordination,
2656 6,7| tend these "sheep in the wilderness ;" as we read in Cod. Afric., ~
2657 6,3| learn a handicraft" (No. 11; Wilkins, i. 225). In short, it was
2658 2 | Word of God, and was not willing, for the sake of obtaining
2659 2 | body was derived; and "when Wisdom was building herself a house,"
2660 1,1| though when he dispenses most wisely this mystery, he appears
2661 2 | not to yield to persons wiser and more learned? But into
2662 6,6| mistrusted by the clergy, who wished to get rid of them "and
2663 2 | And as the Word does not withdraw from equality with the Father
2664 6,4| monks had, as Eutychians, withdrawn themselves from the jurisdiction
2665 6,2| undertake to make usurpations, withstand this with suitable firmness." ~
2666 2 | there are three that bear witness--the Spirit, the water, and
2667 6,4| sons of readers may take wives who are heretics, etc.,
2668 6,2| repr. Grand Rapids MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1955), XIV,
2669 1,1| pray your holiness not to wonder; but be well assured that
2670 6,6| cassis. Nor is this to be wondered at, if we take into account
2671 2 | peerlessly wonderful, and wonderfully peerless, in such a sense
2672 2 | not fault; nor does the wondrousness of the nativity of our Lord
2673 6,2| third charge was thus curtly worded: "Moreover he receives for
2674 6,3| business, or occupy himself in worldly engagements, unless he shall
2675 5 | of his Father before the worlds according to his Godhead;
2676 1 | in this form, it will be worth while to weigh the sentences
2677 2 | alienated from him all hieratic worthiness. Therefore let this most
2678 2 | person showed to them the wound in the side, the prints
2679 6,3| Zeno, bishop of Maiuma, wove linen, partly to supply
2680 1,1| wasps, and vomiting out wretched words against me, as that
2681 1 | not by himself, as they wretchedly object, but of that faith
2682 6,1| differently by the old Latin writers, Dionysius Exiguus and Isidore,
2683 1,1| will not suffer so great a wrong to be done us and you, as
2684 6,4| 173), and in the canons wrongly ascribed to a IVth Council
2685 6,8| part of it. The words kai wste are meant to suggest that
2686 6,8| Council to Leo, Leon. Epist. xcviij., 4), "they were acting
2687 6,0| bequeathed by a charitable lady xenewsi kai ptwkeiois in Egypt,
2688 6,0| Basiliad at Caesarea was a xenodkeion as well as a ptwkeion; it
2689 6,0| directed Pagan hospices (xenodokeia) to be established on the
2690 6,0| contained katagwggia tois xenois, as well as for wayfayers,
2691 6,0| Olympias was munificent to "xenotrophia" (Hint. Lausiac, 144). There
2692 6,1| canons vii., viii., and xj. of Antioch; and on canon
2693 6,4| Singers are placed by the xliijrd. Apostolic canon between
2694 6,1| of Antioch; and on canon xlij. of Laodicea. ~HEFELE. ~
2695 6,0| a xenon" (in Act. Hom., xlv. 4). His friend Olympias
2696 6,6| ecclesiasticas tractant (canon xlviij., Mansi, x, 631). There
2697 6,9| Causa XI., Q.I., canon xlvj. ~
2698 6,5| adulterer" (Liberatus, Breviar., xviij.). ~This canon is found
2699 6,8| reckon this decree as a XXIXth canon (Justellus, ii., 694,
2700 6,9| question why Leo rejected the xxviijth canon of Chalcedon. It is
2701 6,2| Mansi, vii. 224). The xxvijth Trullan canon repeated this
2702 6,3| Pars I. Dist. lxxxvi., C. xxvj. ~
2703 6,4| Decretum, Pars I, Dist. xxxii. c. xv. ~
2704 6,6| Antioch (In Act. Apost. Hom., xxxviii. 5; Dial., p. 17), and Palladius
2705 6,2| synod (on Trullan, canon xxxviij.). ~The first part of this
2706 6,9| Synod in Trullo in canon xxxvj. renewed exactly canon xxviij.
2707 6,6| exhibit it quarterly, or half yearly, to the patriarchs; and
2708 | yourself
2709 5 | this pious, faithful, and zealous Sovereign, and has called
2710 6,3| part of the fourth century Zeno, bishop of Maiuma, wove
2711 6,8| named, and, as Balsamon and Zonoras point out, both are included. ~
2712 6,2| 26, 30, 37); and names Zosimus, a priest, and Maron, a
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