Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,2 | been humbly supplicated, in order that from the benignity
2 2,3 | of rule, and by the whole Order itself: now however from
3 3,4 | the Friars of this same Order are bound from the profession
4 4,6 | to be received into the Order, that the Friars and their
5 4,6 | the reception into the Order might appear holy and most
6 5,8 | that the said Friars of the Order are not bound, except from
7 6,9 | rule or purity of their Order. We say that the Friars
8 7,10| certainly is licit to the Order and to the Friars), it having
9 7,10| examination which in the Order were said to be done, and
10 7,10| vow and the purity of the Order: clearly, I have established
11 7,10| especially the rectors of the Order itself asserted, that the
12 7,10| them are not done in the Order, that even if the things
13 7,10| very many statutes in the Order have been made quite strict
14 7,10| the aforesaid things, in order, which follow: For since
15 7,10| particular, or for their Order, even in common: We say
16 7,10| since the Friars of the said Order are to be strangers not
17 7,10| the said professors of the Order cannot seek for any temporal
18 8,11| rule and the purity of the Order, according to what the said
19 8,11| the senior Friars in the Order), for whose consciences
20 8,11| that everywhere in their Order they be content with moderate
21 8,14| discrete members of the Order (however before the ex officio
22 8,15| virtuous members of the Order, rather than by the election
23 8,16| has been observed by the Order itself. Otherwise if it
24 8,16| done by the Vicar of the Order about this matter, what
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