Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2,3 | not only of scholars and clergy, but of all the faithful. .
2 I, 2,4 | society, by laity as well as clergy, by the poor and uneducated
3 I, 3,1 | provided by the Church for its clergy. Theology became the preserve
4 I, 3,1 | this sharp division between clergy and laity which arose in
5 I, 3,1 | Greeks ~allowed married clergy, the Latins insisted on
6 I, 3,2 | accepted baptism from ~Greek clergy. But Boris wanted the Church
7 I, 3,2 | from their own: married clergy, rules of fasting, and ~
8 I, 3,3 | overwhelming ~majority of clergy and laity in the Byzantine
9 I, 3,3 | frac-~tion of the Byzantine clergy and people. The Grand Duke
10 I, 5,1 | in turn taxed the parish clergy, and the clergy ~taxed their
11 I, 5,1 | the parish clergy, and the clergy ~taxed their flocks. What
12 I, 5,2 | monasteries and from the parish clergy, desired to remain ~members
13 I, 5,2 | practices (such as married clergy), and they continued as
14 I, 5,2 | Sacrament, which the Orthodox clergy attended in ~force, wearing
15 I, 6,2 | group of mar-~ried parish clergy, and in particular to the
16 I, 6,2 | standards alike among the ~clergy and the laity. They fought
17 I, 6,2 | together with many other clergy, monks, and lay people,
18 I, 6,2 | elements ~among the parish clergy and the laity of seventeenth-century
19 I, 6,3 | monasteries or from ~the married clergy. ~ The constitution of the
20 I, 6,3 | are told to see that the clergy .walk ~not in a dronish
21 I, 6,3 | Prominent among the higher clergy were Court prelates such
22 I, 6,3 | member of the ~married parish clergy, John Sergiev (1829-1908),
23 I, 6,3 | missionary studies; native ~clergy were trained; the scriptures
24 I, 6,3 | laymen . the bishops and clergy present numbered 250, the
25 I, 7,1 | Constantin-~ople, Orthodox clergy (with the exception of the
26 I, 7,3 | Patri-~arch and most of his clergy are Greek. The whole of
27 I, 7,4 | that time he and the higher clergy were Greek, although the
28 I, 7,4 | majority ~of the parish clergy and the people of the Antiochene
29 I, 7,6 | delegates far less to his parish clergy than a bishop in the ~west,
30 I, 7,6 | means all the married parish clergy of Greece in the past preached
31 I, 7,6 | 1920, of 4,500 married clergy, less than 1,000 had received
32 I, 7,6 | the laity as well as the clergy should take an interest
33 I, 7,6 | students ~become parish clergy; a few others are professed
34 I, 7,9 | permanent ~churches and resident clergy, and in addition a number
35 I, 7,9 | but almost all the ~parish clergy were born and brought up
36 I, 7,9 | generation ago Orthodox clergy in America were often ordained
37 I, 7,9 | converts (almost a third of the clergy of the Syrian ~Archdiocese
38 I, 7,10| missions to build up a native clergy as quickly as possible).
39 I, 7,10| émigrés, including many clergy, fled eastward from Siberia.
40 I, 7,10| the ~Russians: the Russian clergy, together with most of the
41 I, 7,10| 1954. Practically all the clergy are Japanese, but one of
42 II, 2,3 | people of God, bishops, clergy, and laity together. The
43 II, 3,1 | system apprehended by the~clergy and expounded to the laity,
44 II, 3,1 | preserve of the learned and the clergy, as it tended to be in the
45 II, 3,2 | characterizes the behavior of the clergy: ceremonial movements are~
46 II, 3,2 | become something done by the clergy for the laity, but is something
47 II, 3,2 | but is something which clergy and~laity perform together.
48 II, 4,3 | Gifts~E. Communion of the clergy and people~F. Conclusion
49 II, 4,3 | the laity as well as the clergy always receive~communion ‘
50 II, 4,5 | the ‘white’ or married clergy, and the~‘black’ or monastic.
51 II, 4,5 | now a number of celibate clergy who have not taken formal~
52 II, 4,5 | As a rule the parochial clergy of the Orthodox Church are
53 II, 4,5 | exclusively from the monastic clergy (This has been the rule
54 II, 4,5 | bishops to the monastic clergy is no longer desirable under
55 II, 4,5 | the people of the diocese, clergy and laity together.~In Orthodoxy
56 II, 4,5 | should be elected by the clergy and laity; this~ruling is
57 II, 5,1 | immediately before Lent, when clergy and people kneel~one by
58 II, 6,2 | declared that Anglican~clergy who become Orthodox must
59 II, 6,2 | recent years, when Anglican clergy have approached the Patriarchate
60 II, 6,2 | necessary to reordain Anglican~clergy?’~This helps to explain
61 II, 6,2 | are concerned. Anglican clergy who~join the Orthodox Church
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