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      Document 
 501 8    |       scraped away; thus turning the comely beauty of the sacred temples
 502 11   |             his assistance from whom cometh every good and perfect gift,
 503 1    |            us by him concerning your coming--what time we may expect
 504 1    |      preached the Gospel," hath thus commanded--" Feed with discipline the
 505 8    |          against the truth sought to commend their lie. But all the while "
 506 4    |            publicly thanked him, and commended his example to other governors. ~(
 507 2    |            in writing to the Romans, commending their zeal for the true
 508 11   |         remarkable similarity of his commentary on St. John (4, 5, et seqq.)
 509 2    |              to direct all our Roman Commonwealth into the ways of unity and
 510 2    |      Anathema to those who knowingly communicate with those who revile and
 511 2    |            whole body of the Church, compacted and united in one, and confirmed
 512 7    |            Van Espen, 1. c. p. 464. ~Compare with this (as Balsamon advises)
 513 14   |            Four General Councils and compared them to the Four Gospels,
 514 7    |              to do, seeing that need compels. ~NOTES. ~ANCIENT EPITOME
 515 1    |      definition (capitulum) shall be completed, which by the good pleasure
 516 7    |            designed be carried on to completion. The same rule is to be
 517 4    |          monks, and required them to comply with the decrees of the
 518 7    |               X) to Didacus, Abp. of Compostella. ~Despite all this St. Bridget
 519 7    |             State and the Emperor no compromise was made; on the contrary,
 520 2    |             and simple will it bring compunction and benefit. ~The holy Synod
 521 7    |             any one is found to have concealed a book written against the
 522 7    |              lxix., gave occasion to concede the right in question, of
 523 4    |             more pure and immaterial conception of God and the Saviour.
 524 12   |           one part of its action was concerned while in another part it
 525 12   |         writes as follows: ~(Hefele. Concil., 398). ~The second of these
 526 13   |            792, p. 385), and Hefele (Concilien, 425). ~It would be the
 527 11   |            full in Hefele (401). ~In concluding his masterly treatment of
 528 12   |              Nicene Council had been condemand by the authority of this
 529 7    |           they are worthy of special condemnation who turn the monasteries
 530 3    |            and the judgment, and the condign retribution to everyone,
 531 6    |             such wise that no images conducive to false doctrine, and furnishing
 532 2    |           bestowed upon us a rule of conduct tending to peace; wherefore,
 533 7    |              any part himself, or to confer upon his relations the things
 534 1    |        learned divines, had constant conferences respecting the things which
 535 7    |              abbot, had the power of conferring upon the monks of his monastery
 536 6    |      Apostolic Church of the East. ~(Confes. Orthodox. P. III. Q. LII. [
 537 8    |           thus well supported, it is confessedly and beyond all question
 538 7    |              these women do not hear confessions, nor make readers, so neither
 539 7    |               the demands of Maximus Confessor and John of Damascus are
 540 7    |              the Church, and resting confidently in this evil custom (so
 541 Intro|             shall therefore strictly confine myself to two points 1.
 542 7    |            as to their true authors, conformably to the Trullan Synod[2]
 543 9    |             doubtless created by the confused knowledge of the fabricator. ~
 544 6    |       disorderly, or unbecomingly or confusedly arranged, nothing profane,
 545 8    |           they reduced them to utter confusion. Then some bishops became
 546 Intro|           Hoverden (A.D. 1204); (14) Conrude a Lichte-nan, Abbot of Urspurg (
 547 7    |             Decretum, Pars. III., De Consecrat., Dist. I., canon ix., et
 548 7    |           prayers. But whoever shall consecrate a church without these shall
 549 11   |             of the bishops (coeteris consentientibus)," and further not obscurely
 550 Intro|            make the foundation of so considerable a generalization as "the
 551 6    |            glorified God. From these considerations it is evident that when
 552 Intro|           William Palmer. ~Dr. Neale considers the matter at some length
 553 2    |         whole Catholic Church, which consigns me to that outer darkness
 554 3    |            were mere men and did not consist of two natures; we may reply,
 555 Intro|          this position for doctrinal consistency. ~Nor have all Protestants
 556 10   |         conclusion of a development, consistent in the main points. The
 557 7    |           And for those to whom life consists of marrying, and bringing
 558 1    |            most learned divines, had constant conferences respecting the
 559 11   |         serious than to attribute to Constantius, the bishop of Cyprus, the
 560 Intro|           salutation. Both words are constantly used and sometimes refer
 561 10   |     religious earnestness, all which constituted the quickening power of
 562 11   |         which it was so necessary to consult and defer to; and that the
 563 11   |         Whence [i.e. from St. Jerome consulting the Pope] we can understand
 564 7    |          gold to the Church, and who contemn those who were chosen because
 565 4    |       Emperor, indeed, seems to have contemplated the extirpation of monachism.
 566 9    |             author who was neither a contemporary of Leo nor a resident in
 567 11   |              St. Gregory Nyssen with contempt, and refuse to listen to
 568 7    |           the wise, and their office contemptible m the eyes of the common
 569 11   |     ecumenical. But since it was not contented with the teachings of the
 570 6    |     strengthened in remembering, and continually reflecting on the articles
 571 Intro|          Francorum (A.D. 808) in the continuation of the same (A.D. 814),
 572 Intro|           Xth Century. (11) Hermanus Contractus: (12) the author who continued
 573 2    |           witness, and he that would contradict it is without good sense.
 574 3    |           Incarnation of Christ, and contradicted the six holy synods. These
 575 2    |            be made a triumph by wise contradictions, and should be torn to pieces
 576 11   |               But the two claims are contraria inter se. If they were using
 577 14   |              of ignorance or else in contrariety to the teaching of the Roman
 578 7    |        should say, by the argument a contrario, that a bishop should not
 579 11   |            Spirit was the companion (contribulum in the Caroline Books) of
 580 7    |              persons themselves have contributed out of their own property,
 581 8    |            the sacred icons. And the contrivers of this vain, but revolutionary
 582 Intro|             my task is not that of a controversialist. To me at present it is
 583 7    |           and presides over marriage controversies which are taken cognizance
 584 7    |         CANON V. ~That they who cast contumely upon clerics because they
 585 7    |           the ground-floor, and each convent had a separate inclosure;
 586 7    |              the Saviour. "These two convents had one church in common,
 587 7    |           penalty. And now "let your conversation be without covetousness,"
 588 7    |              in the nunnery, let him converse with her in the presence
 589 7    |            monastery for the sake of conversing with anyone therein. No
 590 9    |          contents, we find enough to convert suspicion into a practical
 591 7    |            corporals, is supposed to convey to them the mysterious virtues
 592 2    |       whatever to interfere with the convocation of your most holy council.
 593 3    |          Mosaic law and the prophets cooperated to undo this ruin; but in
 594 9    |             le Duc. This scholar had copied the text from a Greek MS.
 595 11   |             word omofulos he was but copying Sophronius of Jerusalem. ~
 596 6    |            testifies when he says (1 Cor. ~viii. 4), "We know that
 597 2    |           for the sake of St. Peter, coropheus of the Apostles, and for
 598 7    |           and, distilling out to the corporals, is supposed to convey to
 599 11   |          from Pope Hadrian's answer "correcting" those "capitula," that
 600 7    |            are supplied by the Roman Correctors.  CANON XIV. ~That no one
 601 4    |           the same time entered into correspondence with France (Synod of Gentilly,
 602 11   |           judgment (ut ilius judicio corrigerentur). Considering the nature
 603 3    |           into an image made like to corruptible man,... and served the creature
 604 2    |              present and presiding.  Cosmas, the deacon, notary, and
 605 7    |            holy orders to be clad in costly apparel. ~ALL buffoonery
 606 Intro|            embrace by the first five Coun- ~cils--its recognition as
 607 Intro|         ecumenical character of this council--to wit, that many writers,
 608 4    |             mind, without any strong countervailing excitement. The senses were
 609 10   |              was strictly speaking a court movement, backed by the
 610 2    |         honour surely not the tablet covered over with wax, but the Emperor
 611 2    |            this to be a mere pretext coveting his unwillingness to obey
 612 7    |           have resorted to dishonest craft, so that the ruler has bought
 613 Intro|         Creator and sometimes to the creature--e.g., we read that Jacob
 614 7    |            be without covetousness," crieth out Paul the divine Apostle,
 615 Intro|              acts of the synod he is criticising (which we have good reason
 616 7    |           appear, ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not
 617 8    |           dogmas. As your heads were crowned with gold and most brilliant
 618 2    |          when we see an image of our crucified Lord? ~The holy Synod said:
 619 6    |            venerate the image of the crucifixion, and place before our minds
 620 9    |       addressed to his sovereign the crude abuse with which these documents
 621 8    |            eat of their eggs, having crushed one, found it to be addled,
 622 2    |             and adopt his voice, and cry aloud; No Synod, no power
 623 2    |              before you, and plainly crying aloud, "Judge justly ;"
 624 2    |             notary, and chamberlain (Cubuclesius) said: And another letter
 625 6    |           adore and love God, and to cultivate piety. But if any one shall
 626 2    |          martyrs and the fathers and cultivators of the desert. Not indeed
 627 7    |            because human ambition is cunning, ~ ~and solicitously seeks
 628 11   |            ministers the honey-sweet cups of teaching to the Catholic
 629 7    |      unselfish, and to attend to the cure of souls; the monks to observe
 630 2    |          healing of diseases and the curing of sicknesses and the casting
 631 7    |            through these things, the curse of the prophet, who thus
 632 3    |             rejected and removed and cursed one of the Christian Church
 633 8    |           And having a mouth full of cursing and bitterness, they thought
 634 7    |            house, agreeably to Novel CXXIII, chapter 29, of the Emperor
 635 7    |         which is part of Justinian's cxxiij. Novel, also to the first
 636 7    |         houses see Justinian's Novel CXXXIII., Cap. IV. ~CANON XIX. ~
 637 6    |           God, as it is written (Ps. cxxxix. 17) "How dear are thy friends
 638 6    |          also the Psalmist says (Ps. cxxxv. 15), "The images of the
 639 7    |        Maximus Confessor and John of Damascus are heard, though in muffled
 640 7    |         world, giving themselves the dandy airs of the fops of the
 641 7    |             outward show, savours of dandyism, as says Basil the Great.
 642 7    |          been convicted, shall be in danger of losing his degree. And
 643 6    |           and furnishing occasion of dangerous error to the uneducated,
 644 5    |          name only, not in fact, had dared to speak against the God-approved
 645 11   |      Caroline books is thrown into a dark shade indeed, for either
 646 9    |            reasons to suspect copies dating from about 300 years later.
 647 Intro|         Testament Synonyms, sub vote Datreuw). ~To make this matter still
 648 4    |       violent rupture, a new era was dawning which should supersede the
 649 8    |              it," and giving forth a deadly stench. ~In such a state
 650 6    |        written (Ps. cxxxix. 17) "How dear are thy friends unto me,
 651 2    |            ends by saying that. "our dearly-loved proto-presbyter of the Holy
 652 10   |            still extant, to Louis le Debonnaire of France, setting forth
 653 2    |          snatched us from idolatrous deceit. To him therefore be glory,
 654 3    |      scriptural examination into the deceitful colouring of the pictures (
 655 6    |              Conc. Trid., Sess. xxv. December 3d and 4th, 1563. [Buckley'
 656 7    |            never learned how to live decently." It is clear that the "
 657 3    |              being laid waste by the deception of demons, and summoned
 658 12   |            action, viz.: "for it was decided by all [i.e. at Frankfort]
 659 6    |       matters, the bishop, before he decides the controversy, shall await
 660 2    |           bring this subject to some decisive conclusion. Wherefore, having
 661 7    |         apparel. ~ALL buffoonery and decking of the body ill becomes
 662 3    |       Scriptures and the Fathers, we declare unanimously, in the name
 663 6    |              false gods, we ought to dedicate no carved likeness in their
 664 7    |             on the occasion of their dedication or opening. They are called
 665 2    |            emperors, we beg you will deem them worthy of all kindness
 666 7    |              be noted that the synod deems it "filthy lucre" and "separate
 667 14   |          Julian did not enter on any defence of the Ecumenical character
 668 Intro|            council and were ready to defend it. Now this involved the
 669 12   |               I have no intention of defending the position of any one
 670 11   |             necessary to consult and defer to; and that the Synod which
 671 Intro|              accordance with, but in defiance of, the decree of the Second
 672 7    |         Christians. And such as were defiled by it, not only detested
 673 5    |           Holy Spirit indwells her), define with all certitude and accuracy
 674 6    |           belongs exclusively to the Deity; and when we repeat before
 675 1    |           yourself to us and make no delay, but come up hither to aid
 676 Intro|              there is any need of my delaying longer over Dr. Neale's
 677 2    |             determined, after mature deliberation, that when a new Patriarch
 678 7    |         saying: "I have had as great delight in the way of thy testimonies
 679 7    |           made; on the contrary, the demands of Maximus Confessor and
 680 3    |             But the before-mentioned demi-urgos of wickedness could not
 681 3    |            to imitate the customs of demon-worshippers, and to insult the Saints,
 682 3    |            waste by the deception of demons, and summoned the sanctified
 683 2    |           and syllogistically and by demonstration, and having been taught
 684 Intro|         creator or creature. The one denotes service primarily for hire;
 685 11   |              that the Synod which he denounces and rejects had been received
 686 11   |           lame conclusion to all the denunciation of the preceding chapters. ~
 687 8    |       dignity of the priesthood, but denying the power thereof; and thus
 688 7    |         bishop lot hegumenos[1]] has departed, so that there be no occasion
 689 7    |            let him speedily take his departure. ~NOTES. ~ANCIENT EPITOME
 690 3    |             that which should not be depicted--that is, with his polluted
 691 8    |              suppress altogether the depicting of the venerable images.
 692 6    |              eyes of the body, or be depictured by colours or figures. Moreover,
 693 7    |              consecrated without any deposit of the reliques of the Saints,
 694 7    |              consecrated without any deposition of reliques. And they may
 695 7    |             being proud of this, now depreciate other clergymen who were
 696 7    |             therefore, any are found deriding those who are clad in poor
 697 7    |              has been ordained shall derive no advantage from the ordination
 698 10   |              and sacred, as that had descended into the sensuous world
 699 3    |         bread, is made divine by the descent of the Holy Spirit; it becomes
 700 4    |             This is not the place to describe how it was inaugurated and
 701 8    |           Finally, in a word, having desecrated our churches, they reduced
 702 2    |       fathers and cultivators of the desert. Not indeed as gods (God
 703 2    |     ineffable gift, that he hath not deserted us at the end nor hath the
 704 12   |           The second of these canons deserves our full attention; in it,
 705 8    |              power thereof; and thus deserving for themselves the charge
 706 4    |             offered to Almighty God, designating it as they did by altogether
 707 7    |              finish, let what he has designed be carried on to completion.
 708 7    |             monasteries because they desired to rule, and, unwilling
 709 2    |  unwillingness to obey us, would not desist from our importunity, but
 710 7    |             will hold to the one and despise the other." Each one, therefore,
 711 4    |      histories had been effaced, the despoiled shrines, the mutilated images,
 712 10   |              necessary to examine in detail the causes which led to
 713 7    |          accordance with their first determination; unless indeed there be
 714 Intro|             acknowledgeth, called to determine matters of faith and manners.
 715 5    |          world to come. Amen.[1] ~We detest and anathematize Arius and
 716 7    |              defiled by it, not only detested the pictured images, but
 717 10   |             here the conclusion of a development, consistent in the main
 718 7    |            be hid. ~ALL the childish devices and mad ravings which have
 719 2    |    sicknesses and the casting out of devils, as the Christian Church
 720 5    |             or evilly and sharply to devise anything subversive of the
 721 12   |              Germany, and Aquitaine, devoted its attention to a consideration
 722 4    |            Sinclair. Smith and Wace, Dictionary of Chr. Biog., sub voce
 723 7    |        Paschal's letter (Epis. X) to Didacus, Abp. of Compostella. ~Despite
 724 7    |           their place where the worm dieth not and the fire is not
 725 4    |              reverence which did not differ in kind, and not merely
 726 6    |             and the Saints addressed differently. ~From God and from the
 727 12   |        proposed theory is so full of difficulties as to seem to involve more
 728 7    |    frequently open to ecclesiastical dignities, clergymen might easily
 729 5    |           the trend of the truth, we diminish nought, we add nought, but
 730 2    |         charity of the Saints is not diminished by their death, nor does
 731 7    |           city, even without letters dimissory of the local bishop of each
 732 7    |                Those who make common diocesan or monastic goods, unless
 733 2    |              your imperial commands, directed for the Patriarch of the
 734 2    |              good will and under the direction of our God that we have
 735 8    |         moved in accordance with the directions of the mind, so likewise,
 736 7    |            but the Latins also often disapproved of such monasteries. See
 737 11   |           this is sufficient. Ab uno disce omnes. The most famous however
 738 4    |           ill-directed homage always disclaimed with indignation the charge
 739 7    |              be with God-fearing and discreet men and women, so that even
 740 7    |              and abstemiousness, and discretion. ~To surrender all things
 741 11   |             images, we need not here discuss, since to all who either
 742 2    |            enquiry may be most fully discussed and truth may be the more
 743 2    |          from him for the healing of diseases and the curing of sicknesses
 744 1    |           them and subjected them to disgrace and injury: (O may it not
 745 7    |             if they have resorted to dishonest craft, so that the ruler
 746 2    |            with those who revile and dishonour the venerable images. ~Anathema
 747 1    |             hath seen you, forthwith dismiss, that he may come back to
 748 3    |         faith, and the penalties for disobedience. After this follow the acclamations.] ~
 749 8    |         sacred temples into complete disorder. Among doings of this sort,
 750 6    |            that there appear nothing disorderly, or unbecomingly or confusedly
 751 12   |               and to Suarez (Tom. I, Disp. LIV., Sec. iij.), for learned
 752 2    |            you who are accustomed to dispense his Testimony in the unbloody
 753 7    |            their returns; and is the dispenser in this matter as well to
 754 Intro|        assembly, the singular acumen displayed in the arguments employed,
 755 12   |             adorat. imag., Lib. II., Dispt. VII., cap. vij.) and to
 756 11   |            no one now for an instant disputes to have been ecumenical. ~
 757 2    |           boldly spoken, that so all dissensions may be banished from the
 758 12   |               But two things make me dissent from their conclusion: ~
 759 7    |              of, and proceedings for dissolution of the marriage bond; moreover,
 760 7    |             into hiding, or into far distant exile; this had made them
 761 7    |             them by the bishop, and, distilling out to the corporals, is
 762 11   |          Book IV., the third chapter distinctly states that while lights
 763 5    |          himself, and have failed to distinguish between holy and profane,
 764 11   |            Chapters XIV. and XX. are distinguished by the most glaring blunders,
 765 2    |        represent. This is that which distracts my soul -- this is that
 766 2    |              sent to cities or rural districts, they honour surely not
 767 4    |           difficulty, and especially distrust in Rome and the East, after
 768 7    |             The canons therefore are diverse in their scope. The fifth
 769 3    |       condemned Nestorius because he divided the one Son and Word of
 770 2    |             them forth with the evil doers; and peace shall be upon
 771 2    |              unto wickedness. But he doeth well unto those who are
 772 9    |            letters to Leo (epistolhn dogmatikhn, sub A. M. 6172, oi epistolwn,
 773 7    |             the title of Domination (Dominatio); and by no means of that
 774 7    |              viz.: they were majores domus stewards of the estates
 775 11   |      particular they lay them to the door of Gregory of Neocaesarea
 776 Intro|            New Testament. I may then dose this introduction with a
 777 3    |            Anathema to Germanus, the double-minded, and worshipper of wood!
 778 9    |          mentioned elsewhere and was doubtless created by the confused
 779 6    |             the veneration of dulia (douleias), those holy beings of which
 780 Intro|          adore; aspaxomai to salute; douleuw, to serve; eikwn, an image. ~
 781 6    |             the veneration of dulia (doulikws) as the friends of God;
 782 7    |           been given by parents as a dowry for their children, or which
 783 2    |             also the artful and most drastic refutation thereof, which
 784 8    |             water, and gave the foul draught to those about them. Although
 785 3    |          pictures (omoiwmatwn) which draws down the spirit of man from
 786 2    |             conciliabulum hath madly dreamed, which raved against the
 787 7    |             to the other extreme and dressed themselves like men of the
 788 14   |            those who were so rapidly drifting further and further apart
 789 6    |          relics, into revellings and drunkenness; as if festivals are celebrated
 790 9    |        obtained them from Fronton le Duc. This scholar had copied
 791 9    |           Imperial territory of the "Ducatus Romae" terminated at twenty-four
 792 9    |             the opinion of M. l'abbe Duchesne (the editor of the Liber
 793 8    |              set in mosaic work they dug out, and those which were
 794 3    |           Godhead of the Son and the dulness of the flesh. As the human
 795 7    |             translated the canon (si dumtaxat Abbati manus impositio facta
 796 6    |              the performance of this duty, it is most strictly incumbent
 797 7    |             monks and nuns shall not dwell together in the same monastery,
 798 2    |              by his prophets, for he dwelt among us, and went in and
 799 2    |              dominion, one realm and dynasty, which without division
 800 8    |      themselves to be righteous were eager to be reverenced by all,
 801 2    |         slave and cut off his Jewish ear with the sword, so in like
 802 7    |              Zonaras and Balsamon in earlier times, and later Christian
 803 9    |            MSS. have been found, the earliest belonging to the XIth.,
 804 7    |              by punishment. For from early times every man in holy
 805 2    |            for the truth -- such our earnest desire for the interests
 806 10   |        exceptions, all the religious earnestness, all which constituted the
 807 8    |    proceedings to your godly-hearing ears. In proof and confirmation
 808 2    |        mortality and to exchange his earthly pilgrimage for a heavenly
 809 11   |      Caroline books, but are in some eases enlarged, in others abbreviated. (
 810 12   |          merely remarking that it is easier to reject his conclusion
 811 7    |             houses, and so it became easy for people to come in and
 812 13   |             authors as Fleury (Hist. Eccles., Lib, xlvij. iv.), Roisselet
 813 9    |            first time in the Annales Ecclesiastici of Baronius, who had obtained
 814 6    |              Kimmel, Libri Symbolici Ecclesioe Orientalis[1]].) ~Rightly
 815 7    |       Codinus names first The Grand (Economus, "who" (he says) "holds
 816 Intro|      assuming the style of the "Holy Ecu-menical Synod." In the face of such
 817 Intro|              absurd. The test of the ecumenicity of a council is not its
 818 7    |           embroidered in gold on the edge of their raiment. It is
 819 7    |           may be turned to spiritual edification. The same rule is to be
 820 Intro|             overwhelming majority of educated English-speaking people
 821 11   |            the Second Prayer Book of Edward the VIth. ~II. Authority
 822 4    |        Scriptural histories had been effaced, the despoiled shrines,
 823 2    |        Likewise also the figures and effigies of the divine and all-landed
 824 6    |        between idols and images (twn eidwlwn kai twn eikonwn). For idols
 825 2    |           also the venerable images (eikonas) of the incarnation of our
 826 6    |          images (twn eidwlwn kai twn eikonwn). For idols are the figments
 827 Intro|           salute; douleuw, to serve; eikwn, an image. ~The relative
 828 8    |          Surely Jacob did not adore (elatreusen) the top of his staff; and
 829 7    |            the Metropolitan does not elect an oeconomus of the metropolis,
 830 2    |             a new Patriarch had been elected, we should endeavour to
 831 Intro|            Irene. Pope. -- Hadrian. ~Elenchus. ~Introduction. ~The Sacra
 832 7    |           ARISTENUS. ~Whoso is to be elevated to the grade of the episcopate
 833 Intro|         stanch Protestant whom Queen Elizabeth appointed a chaplain in
 834 11   |         books of which they write so eloquently. I have used the reprint
 835 2    |             then Patriarch, was led (emataiwqh) astray. ~These things thus
 836 2    |           the Catholic Church holds, embraces, and receives, in memory
 837 4    |             to us as son of a former Emperor--Apsimar, from the beginning
 838 6    |              stand in need. Hence we employ two different forms of prayer:
 839 7    |             support from some honest employment or work by the example of
 840 7    |            penalties which have been enacted in the canons by our predecessors.
 841 3    |           our faithful Emperors, and endowed them with the same wisdom
 842 3    |              of wickedness could not endure the sight of this adornment,
 843 8    |              was not to be patiently endured, that while in other matters
 844 2    |          said that there was but one energy and will in Christ. These
 845 11   |              Pope did not proceed to enforce the accept-ante of the council
 846 10   |              the power of the State, enforcing its will upon a yielding
 847 7    |             of St. Alban's Abbey, in England, writes that in 1414, King
 848 Intro|    overwhelming majority of educated English-speaking people for several generations,
 849 7    |              Synod. The bishops were enjoined to study, to live simply,
 850 6    |             Trans.]) ~The holy synod enjoins on all bishops, and others
 851 11   |         books, but are in some eases enlarged, in others abbreviated. (
 852 2    |              determined. And when we enquired, Wherefore he thus refused
 853 7    |              province, the canonical enquiries shall be made in the gatherings
 854 2    |          that thus the subject under enquiry may be most fully discussed
 855 7    |             s heritage] ); but being ensamples to the flock. And when the
 856 4    |            Emperor, at the same time entered into correspondence with
 857 11   |              to the faith." ~"Before entering upon a discussion of the
 858 7    |         another ; but if he (or she) enters let (him or her) be received
 859 Intro|              ease could for a moment entertain a doubt as to the ecumenical
 860 Intro|          from the charge of heresy." Entertaining such an opinion at the start,
 861 7    |            food; but if there be the entertainments of the theatre, that is,
 862 7    |              lieu of consecration or enthronement when they are sent to them,
 863 4    |              by no means sprang from enthusiasm for divine service in spirit
 864 2    |      orthodoxy, but it arose from my entire lack of knowledge, and slothful
 865 2    |            and Irene, but not in its entirety, if we may trust Anastasius
 866 Intro|              the figure of Christ be entitled to the same mode of adoration.(
 867 7    |             there could easily be an entrance from one to the other, these
 868 1    |              General Council. And we entreat your paternal blessedness,
 869 2    |              joyfully, and earnestly entreated our peace-making and ~ ~
 870 1    |               or rather the Lord God entreats, "who will have all men
 871 2    |            the kingdom of heaven are entrusted to him. He, therefore, that
 872 7    |              ordination for money is eo ipso to be deposed, whereas
 873 2    |              and ministering powers (Eph. if. 14, 15), and hath reconciled
 874 2    |    Theodosius with time pseudonym of Ephesius, Sisinnius of Perga, with
 875 8    |           for the worship in spirit (epi ths en pneumati latreias),
 876 7    |      monasteries and left vacant the Episcopia or holy houses, and so it
 877 7    |          impositio facta noscatur ab episcopo secundum morem prceficiendorum
 878 9    |              or more letters to Leo (epistolhn dogmatikhn, sub A. M. 6172,
 879 9    |       dogmatikhn, sub A. M. 6172, oi epistolwn, sub A. M. 6221); and we
 880 4    |             a violent rupture, a new era was dawning which should
 881 10   |              would call them to-day) Erastian clergy. (Cf. Harnack, History
 882 12   |              question of the ven- ~ ~eration due to images and of the
 883 Intro|           Council of Nice we reject, ergo it cannot have been an Ecumenical
 884 3    |              upon both, because they err with Arius, Dioscorus, and
 885 5    |           Catholic Church, they have erred from the truth and as the
 886 7    |            of heart. ~SINCE certain, erring in the superstitions of
 887 11   |       instructed by that apostolical erudition, and by his assistance from
 888 8    |          alone, thus Jacob venerated Esau. Then there is the veneration
 889 6    |          offered to them sacrifices, esteeming the gold and silver to be
 890 3    |           images. The Saints live on eternally with God, although they
 891 7    |          relics themselves. The holy Eucharist must then be celebrated
 892 2    |             him be thanks, to him be eucharists, to him be praise, to him
 893 7    |             ceremony is found in the Euchologion (Goar's ed., p. 648). A
 894 3    |    Athanasius of Amphilochius and of Eusebius Pamphili, from his Letter
 895 7    |           extremes. We have seen how Eustathius wore a conspicuous garb
 896 2    |                 at first he answered evasively, That the yoke of the Chief
 897 3    |              altogether spotless and ever-glorious Mother of God, of the prophets,
 898 2    |              peace of the Spirit may evermore protect the whole body of
 899 8    |             he greatly loves, as the everyday custom, which we observe
 900      | everyone
 901      | everything
 902 5    |            reliques of a martyr), or evilly and sharply to devise anything
 903 6    |          want, or to deliver us from evils; but the Saints, because
 904 8    |         called, and its character is evinced by our touching the things
 905 4    |            the synod. In A.D. 766 he exacted an oath against images from
 906 7    |           found, who for the sake of exacting gold or any other gift,
 907 7    |           are to be made without the exaction of gifts. ~THE abomination
 908 4    |        Thracian Theme, seems to have exceeded Copronymus in his ribaldry
 909 7    |            naught all decorum, being exceedingly mad against those who lived
 910 2    |            bands of mortality and to exchange his earthly pilgrimage for
 911 4    |            any strong countervailing excitement. The senses were robbed
 912 13   |            the matter, and Labbe has excluded the pretended proceedings
 913 7    |             ought to be smitten with excommunication, and that the village or
 914 7    |          filthy lucre invent feigned excuses for sins, and exact gold
 915 6    |          place, or church, howsoever exempted, except it shall have been
 916 1    |            his, and that in these we exercise ourselves, since from him
 917 10   |           Caroline Books," and these exercised so mighty an influence on
 918 7    |              with a prompt mind; not exercising lordship over the clergy,
 919 11   |            to wit to confess that he exhibited to creatures the service
 920 7    |          hiding, or into far distant exile; this had made them rustic,
 921 2    |            come to an end with their exit from life, but after their
 922 1    |             coming--what time we may expect will be spent in your journeying
 923 10   |           and, as would naturally be expected, the English Church. ~It
 924 5    |          Chalcedon hath promulgated, expelling from the divine Atrium [
 925 7    |              woman the present canon expels from the Episcopium or bishop'
 926 7    |            on account of their large expenditure on churches and the poor,
 927 11   |            intact, it must be at the expense of his learning or carefulness.
 928 2    |           illustrious nobles than he expired. ~When our Pious Sovereignty
 929 Intro|        weight. We may not be able to explain, nor are we called upon
 930 7    |             calls these, without any explanation, the "Canons of the Apostles,"
 931 7    |              priesthood, speaks thus explicitly, saying, "I have coveted
 932 7    |              such pretexts the synod exposes and rejects in the present
 933 2    |             the heretics, and having expounded the orthodox faith, they
 934 Intro|           Chalcedon, contrary to his expressed wish), and two papal legates
 935 12   |               the Synod of Frankfort expresses its feeling against the
 936 2    |          given the utmost freedom of expressing his sentiments without the
 937 2    |             and earth. For they will extend their shield over your power,
 938 7    |              churches; but our synod extended this prescription also to
 939 8    |             your strength utterly to exterminate it, and thus preserve the
 940 4    |      attacked the monks; he meant to extirpate the hated order, and to
 941 6    |             difficult abuse is to be extirpated, or, in fine, if any more
 942 4    |             to have contemplated the extirpation of monachism. John the Damascene
 943 7    |          decree that no bishop shall extort gold or silver, or anything
 944 7    |             often heretics fall into extremes. We have seen how Eustathius
 945 4    |         between marriage and loss of eyesight. He sold the property of
 946 Intro|            and fifty bishops. ~524 ~(f) They were immediately received
 947 5    |            these we anathematize the fables of Origen, Evagrius, and ~ ~
 948 9    |            confused knowledge of the fabricator. ~
 949 4    |         vacancy of the patriarchate, facilitated his plans, since the hope
 950 1    |             to provide for you every facility of returning with honour
 951 7    |      dumtaxat Abbati manus impositio facta noscatur ab episcopo secundum
 952 7    |            in his oxen power all the faculties of the Church, and all their
 953 7    |        receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away."  NOTES. ~ANCIENT
 954 Intro|              no impartial reader can fail to recognize the profound
 955 5    |        espoused to himself, and have failed to distinguish between holy
 956 Intro|            after all, the contention fails in its very beginning, for
 957 6    |         these things may be the more faithfully observed, the holy synod
 958 Intro|      necessary religious value he is falling back into Judaism, and it
 959 Intro|       superstition and ignorance, of falsehood and folly." (Decline and
 960 3    |        George, his associate, to the falsifier of the doctrine of the Fathers!
 961 2    |              whom your own imperial ~fame is spread abroad by triumphs,
 962 7    |            with the members of their family propose to leave the world
 963 2    |           incurably sick. And with a fan they purged the floor. And
 964 10   |             829 until 842, and was a fanatical iconoclast. The Patriarchs
 965 4    |           might become, as it did, a fanaticism, it could never become a
 966 2    |              all innovations and new fangled inventions. And, as Peter
 967 4    |     secularized. And the politically far-seeing Emperor, at the same time
 968 7    |           alienating any part of the farm lands of the bishoprick
 969 5    |        others, blaspheming in divers fashions. Moreover, with these we
 970 Intro|             all told) one of them is fatal to the argument. For if
 971 2    |            the nature of God and the Father--our Lord Jesus Christ, our
 972 4    |       classes had always been really favourable to them; only the army and
 973 4    |          state that the most zealous favourers and promoters of this ill-directed
 974 6    |              but the Saints, because favourites with God, we solicit to
 975 8    |          love the uppermost rooms at feasts and greetings (aspasmous)
 976 4    |            the transactions began on February 10th, and lasted until August
 977 4    |               We shall very probably feel that in these distinctions
 978 7    |          sake of filthy lucre invent feigned excuses for sins, and exact
 979 7    |          mock at Christ our God, and feigning to be converted to the religion
 980 8    |                And David rose up and fell upon his face and did reverence
 981 8    |           have sent our brethren and fellow priests, God-beloved Bishops,
 982 11   |       learning or carefulness. Bower felt this so keenly that he thinks
 983 7    |         therefore is known to have a female slave or freewoman in the
 984 8    |              as for example, we have ferw and prosferw, kurw and proskurw,
 985 6    |    revellings and drunkenness; as if festivals are celebrated to the honest
 986 8    |              they had woven of thorn fibre, and unfold again the fair
 987 5    |              gift, and having become fickle through the temptation of
 988 8    |          sowed tares in the Church's fields. They mingled wine with
 989 7    |          Iconoclasts was known to be fierce against the monks, and such
 990 Intro|             he has been able to find fifteen individuals who for one
 991 8    |             their own souls in their fighting against Christ. And in taking
 992 6    |          eikonwn). For idols are the figments and inventions of men, as
 993 12   |         concerning the servitude and filiation of Christ was received and
 994 2    |           and these we venerate with firmly-attached(4) affection, as made in
 995 7    |         first canon of the so-called First-and-Second Council held at Constantinople
 996 5    |      painting and mosaic as of other fit materials, should be set
 997 2    |   apportioned to the Persons, and is fitted to the essence severally.
 998 11   |         relied upon it would seem to fix the Frankish custom of that
 999 2    |              be brilliant and deeply fixed in the whole world. But
1000 8    |        Saints, they gave over to the flames. Finally, in a word, having
 
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