Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,Intro | Russia. As the Byzan-~tine power dwindled, these newer Churches
2 I,Intro | prelate wielding absolute power over the whole body, ~but
3 I, 2,2 | supremacy of ex-~ternal power and jurisdiction. ~ This
4 I, 2,2 | background, resented the power of Greek Con-~stantinople,
5 I, 2,3 | manifestations ~of man.s spiritual power to redeem creation through
6 I, 2,4 | universe, while the imperial power is preserved in proportion
7 I, 2,4 | sacerdotium) and the ~imperial power (imperium); and while working
8 I, 3,1 | Pope ~claimed an absolute power only in the west, Byzantium
9 I, 3,1 | believed his immediate power of jurisdiction to extend
10 I, 3,2 | to establish an absolute ~power over all bishops in the
11 I, 3,2 | he believed this absolute power to extend to the east also: ~
12 I, 3,2 | it gained a position of power in the west ~such as it
13 I, 3,3 | his spirit acquires the power of .dwelling in the heart,.
14 I, 4,2 | exterminated by Oleg, who assumed power at Kiev ~(the chief Russian
15 I, 5 | convincing than the Miracles and Power which attended its first
16 I, 5,1 | sub-~mit quietly to the power of Islam. ~ Such were the
17 I, 5,1 | inward decay, outwardly its power ex-~panded as never before.
18 I, 5,1 | nineteenth century, as Turkish power declined, the ~frontiers
19 I, 5,2 | the destruction of Kievan power by the Tartars, a large
20 I, 6,1 | When Ivan the Terrible.s power was at its height, the ~
21 I, 6,1 | could ~criticize those in power with a frankness which no
22 I, 6,2 | same, in practice the civil power came to control the Church
23 I, 6,3 | practice wielded considerable power over Church affairs and
24 I, 6,3 | intense awareness ~of the power of prayer, and as he celebrated
25 I, 6,3 | missionaries, and as Mus-~covite power advanced eastward, a great
26 I, 6,3 | sional Government was in power, an All-Russian Church Council
27 I, 7,10 | failure, to discern the power of God fulfill-~ing itself
28 II, 1,1 | thinking about God, in the power of which the fishermen.
29 II, 1,1 | some vague and nameless power, but he is brought face
30 II, 1,1 | governed~in terms of earthly power and jurisdiction. And just
31 II, 1,2 | gave Adam free will — the power to choose between good~and
32 II, 1,2 | takes not away from man the power to will — to will to obey
33 II, 1,3 | to nought him who had the power of death (From the First
34 II, 1,5 | relics as a channel of divine power and an instrument~of healing.
35 II, 2,1 | much in terms of earthly power and organization,~while
36 II, 2,1 | claim to wield an absolute power over all the~rest.~This
37 II, 2,1 | prophetic, priestly, and kingly power ...~The Church and its Founder
38 II, 2,2 | treasure;~the sovereign power comes from God and not from
39 II, 2,2 | believe themselves to~lack the power to do so.~So much for the
40 II, 2,2 | salvation, and God’s~saving power is mediated to man in His
41 II, 2,3 | endowed with the threefold power of~1) ruling, 2) teaching,
42 II, 2,4 | work of the Father,~of His Power and His Spirit ... but it
43 II, 3,1 | Byzantium and Russia — is this power~of perceiving the beauty
44 II, 4,3 | Liturgy, through its divine power, we are projected to the
45 II, 4,4 | unworthy priest, through the power given me by Him, forgive
46 II, 4,5 | Liturgy). Only a bishop has power to ordain (In cases of necessity
47 II, 5,2 | Orthodox believe that the power of God is present in the
48 II, 5,2 | communicates to it the power of deification ... Shining
49 II, 6,1 | to a particular center of power~and jurisdiction (‘Orthodoxy
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