Document, Part
1 14,3| therefore, those guilty of crimes, ordinarily, in order to
2 14,3| on account of grievous crimes, to be degraded from sacred
3 14,3| sacred Orders. ~And whereas crimes so grievous are sometimes
4 14,5| their behalf, in regard of crimes whether committed, or that
5 14,5| them, even though the said crimes should be ever so enormous
6 15,1| unto whom all the mortal crimes, into which the faithful
7 15,1| the grievousness of the crimes, and impose on the penitents,
8 15,1| atrocious and more heinous crimes should be absolved, not
9 15,1| certain more grievous cases of crimes. Neither is it to be doubted,--
10 15,1| especially as regards those crimes to which the censure of
11 15,1| according to the quality of the crimes and the ability of the penitent;
12 15,1| works for very grievous crimes, they be made partakers
13 15,5| jurisdiction,--for their excesses, crimes, and delinquencies, as often
14 23,1| penitence, forgives even heinous crimes and sins. For the victim
15 25,4| wilful homicide, and those crimes which have been already
16 26,3| the robberies and other crimes of wicked men, the bishops
17 26,4| in law. Nevertheless, in crimes arising from incontinency,
18 26,4| also in the more heinous crimes which require deposition
|