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Alphabetical    [«  »]
pope 138
pope-make 1
popery 2
popes 58
popovich 3
populace 1
popular 9
Frequency    [«  »]
58 above
58 antichrist
58 dogma
58 popes
58 prayers
58 work
57 1054
Steven Kovacevich
Apostolic Christianity and the 23,000 Western Churches

IntraText - Concordances

popes

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 Fwd,2| was vehemently denied by popes and faithful laymen alike 2 Fwd,2| indisputable fact that many Roman popes were heretics and that they 3 Fwd,6| Church, think of Rome, the popes, the martyrs, the catacombs 4 1,1 | bore was taken over by the popes. Thus, Fr. Victor notes, 5 1,1 | Church overtook the Roman popes, and in this striving, Rome 6 1,1 | and jealousy, the Roman popes asserted an absolutist primacy 7 1,1 | called Martin Luther.... The popes, blindly and without thinking, 8 1,1 | their own prerogative, the popes seized power in the temporal 9 1,1 | power that the power-hungry popes arrogated to themselves, 10 1,1 | the power of the heretical popes against the Orthodox Church). 11 3,5 | authority. However, the popes were seldom present at the 12 3,5 | Latin Church is that early popes condemned the title Supreme 13 3,5 | title of the Roman Catholic popes.~ The falsehood of supremacy 14 3,5 | infallibility was denied by popes and faithful laymen). Concerning 15 3,5 | Church, the post-schism popes invented new and unscriptural 16 3,5 | concerning the errors of popes in questions of dogma and 17 3,5 | and the contradictions of popes among themselves in matters 18 3,5 | translation, and subsequent popes withdrew it from church 19 3,5 | church use. Which of the popes was infallible, Sixtus or 20 3,5 | possessed the post-schism popes who uttered them:~ ~The 21 3,5 | words still remain).~ ~The popes' love of power exceeded 22 3,5 | ascribed various titles to the popes, and these included: King 23 3,5 | afford the Roman Catholic popes any primacy, for Orthodoxy 24 3,11| occasions when the Roman popes fell into heresy, the Patriarchate 25 3,18| own admission — many Roman popes were heretics, and despite 26 6,7 | Roman power cease, many popes became involved in a relentless 27 6,8 | prohibition of many ancient popes. (It is important to note, 28 6,10| to note the fact that the popes had earlier affirmed the 29 6,10| failed to mention that the popes had earlier refused to fall 30 6,15| the moral purity of the popes. It entailed a radical change 31 6,15| modi operand of the Roman popes. Conceit, pride, lust for 32 6,15| the behavior of the Roman popes only as tendencies, as sporadic 33 6,15| takes possession of the popes.~ ~At first, the popes set 34 6,15| the popes.~ ~At first, the popes set themselves the task 35 6,15| the African Church, the popes succeeded comparatively 36 6,15| of the Roman bishop, the popes succeeded in subordinating 37 6,15| preaching of Christianity.~ ~The popes, while subordinating the 38 6,15| sixty decretals of the Roman popes. Of these sixty decretals, 39 6,15| of the Middle Ages. The popes began to cite the decretals 40 6,16| Church admits that many Roman popes were heretics and that many 41 6,16| exclusively by the avarice of the popes and the Catholic clergy. 42 6,16| indulgencesincluding the popes, who trafficked in them, 43 6,16| the Church in 1054, the popes were no longer so much as 44 6,16| Schism. After the dictatorial popes were cut off from Christ' 45 6,16| Latin Church through the popes' ex cathedra promulgations 46 6,17| placed into the hearts of the popes by the devil — the temptation 47 6,17| sovereignty and domination. The popes yielded to that satanic 48 6,17| heresies promoted by the popes and their toadies.” [The 49 6,18| denying the authority of the popes in their pronouncements 50 7,14| Europe, the Renaissance popes, themselves fully supported 51 7,14| works were condemned by popes and proclaimed heretical 52 7,14| eleventh century, the Germanic popes allied themselves with the 53 7,14| and, with its countless popes, completely destroyed the 54 7,14| power of being infallible popes (as St. Ilarion correctly 55 8,14| it has been used by all popes since the Second Vatican 56 10,26| of the fifteenth century, popes remained apart from these 57 10,26| finally, the patronage of the popes after Sixtus IV — all of 58 10,26| this act was that the Roman popes were infallible in matters


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