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1 2 | first feeble cries, the Church took it to her bosom and
2 3 | footprints of the Catholic Church.~
3 4 | authority over the American Church. The well-known friendship
4 4 | amity with the Catholic Church. And not without cause;
5 4 | transgress. Now what is the Church other than a legitimate
6 4 | dignity, to inculcate that the Church, whilst directly and immediately
7 5 | power, so do we behold the Church, from scant and slender
8 6 | well-ordered Republic. For the Church amongst you, unopposed by
9 6 | desirable status of the Church, or that it would be universally
10 6 | expedient for State and Church to be, as in America, dissevered
11 6 | which God has endowed His Church, in virtue of which unless
12 7 | methods in the management of Church affairs. There already,
13 7 | has been the desire of the Church; upon the enlargement of
14 7 | Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church, in Consistory, We expressed
15 8 | originally founded by the Roman Church herself from time to time
16 9 | to become the hope of the Church. For they will carry back
17 11| the administration of the Church of Christ to send forth
18 12| placed as bishops to rule the Church of God." That these rights
19 12| the honor of the Universal Church. My honor is the unimpaired
20 12| the glory of the American Church and the general welfare.
21 13| Our wish that the Catholic Church should not only share in,
22 13| the constitution of the Church shall be strengthened, her
23 13| submission and obedience to the Church. Your faithful people, however,
24 16| right acknowledged by the Church and unopposed by nature.
25 16| condemned by the judgment of the Church, but those also which, in
26 18| their duties towards the Church. It is, of course, the proper
27 18| be of real service to the Church, and with their pens heartily
28 20| restored to the embrace of the Church, the common mother of all,
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