Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,11| questions are resolved and decisions are made which benefit the
2 1,18| leaders of the Church and its decisions were subsequently approved
3 2,3 | entire Church. When the decisions reached in such a council
4 2,3 | and times, and when the decisions are certified by a subsequent
5 2,15| Michael explains that when the decisions reached in general councils
6 2,35| the Church, a council's decisions must be in harmony with
7 2,35| cannot be ecumenical if its decisions are in disharmony with the
8 2,35| Ecumenical Councils. If the decisions meet these standards, they
9 2,35| must “agree and accept the decisions and canonizings by the Ecumenical
10 2,35| this course notes that the decisions of a general council are
11 3,5 | the legitimacy of their decisions was to be determined by
12 3,5 | James who summed up the decisions and decided the issue of
13 3,5 | were present and signed its decisions [Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy;
14 6,7 | while Rome adhered to the decisions of the Ecumenical Councils,
15 6,10| adhered to the previous decisions of the Universal Church
16 7,11| Orthodox Church and the decisions of Orthodoxy's Ecumenical
17 7,18| 18.~ How do the decisions of a local council obtain
18 7,18| to error. However, if the decisions reached in local councils
19 7,19| is in harmony with, the decisions of the Fathers of the Church
20 7,19| metropolitan also explains that the decisions of the Synods on dogmatic
21 7,19| This text contains the decisions of the Seventh Ecumenical
22 7,19| Orthodoxy comprises the decisions of both the Seventh Ecumenical
23 8,14| amplify and explain the decisions reached at an earlier Council.
24 10,15| infallible, but because the decisions of the Councils are the
25 10,15| of the Holy Spirit (the decisions of the Councils always begin
26 10,19| emperors. However, all final decisions and formal proclamations
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