Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 3,3 | bells were rung ~in all the parish churches of England . proved
2 I, 5,1 | bishops in turn taxed the parish clergy, and the clergy ~
3 I, 5,2 | monasteries and from the parish clergy, desired to remain ~
4 I, 5,2 | Sunday by Sunday ~in his parish church. More than anything
5 I, 6,2 | to a group of mar-~ried parish clergy, and in particular
6 I, 6,2 | drastic alterations. ~On the parish level, the reformers did
7 I, 6,2 | and other services in the parish churches should be sung
8 I, 6,2 | expected not only monks but parish priests and ~laity . husband,
9 I, 6,2 | finest elements ~among the parish clergy and the laity of
10 I, 6,3 | a member of the ~married parish clergy, John Sergiev (1829-
11 I, 6,3 | remembered for his work as a parish priest . visiting the ~poor
12 I, 6,3 | religion to the children of his parish, ~preaching continually,
13 I, 7,4 | although the majority ~of the parish clergy and the people of
14 I, 7,6 | delegates far less to his parish clergy than a bishop in
15 I, 7,6 | no means all the married parish clergy of Greece in the
16 I, 7,6 | pre-Revolutionary ~Russia all parish priests had passed through
17 I, 7,6 | of these students ~become parish clergy; a few others are
18 I, 7,9 | Greece, but almost all the ~parish clergy were born and brought
19 II, 0,12| In practice, in ordinary parish churches Matins~and Vespers
20 II, 3,2 | almost all Roman Catholic parish churches, the Eucharist
21 II, 3,2 | monasteries; in a normal parish church it is celebrated
22 II, 3,2 | in an ordinary Orthodox parish church it is sung~only at
23 II, 3,2 | in cathedrals and larger parish churches of the Gothic style,
24 II, 3,2 | but in a~normal Russian parish of the emigration, the Vigil
25 II, 4,3 | 1145A)).~In every Orthodox parish church, the Blessed Sacrament
26 II, 4,4 | not necessarily their parish priest, to whom they go
27 II, 4,5 | appointed~to have charge of a parish for exceptional reasons (
28 II, 5,1 | unfolded~week by week in his parish church. Not among the Greeks
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