Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 3,1| episcopate a special teaching office, has never known ~this sharp
2 I, 3,1| does not belong to her ~office... How shall we accept decrees
3 I, 3,2| skilful diplomat ever to hold office as Patriarch of Constantinople. (
4 I, 5,1| character. Learning that ~the office of Patriarch was vacant,
5 I, 5,1| Sultan before he could assume office, and for this document he
6 I, 5,1| Patriarchs who have held ~office between the fifteenth and
7 I, 5,1| natural deaths ~while in office. (B. J. Kidd, The Churches
8 I, 5,1| same man ~sometimes held office on four or five different
9 I, 5,2| Six times ~deposed from office and six times reinstated,
10 I, 5,2| brilliant man to have held office as Patriarch since the days ~
11 I, 6,2| but did not resign the office of Patriarch. For eight
12 I, 6,2| altogether ~suppressed the office of patriarch, whose powers
13 I, 6,3| Whereas a Patriarch, holding office for life, could perhaps
14 I, 6,3| was his training for the ~office of eldership. Finally in
15 II, 2,3| attitude to the episcopal~office is well expressed in the
16 II, 2,3| Church, but the holder of an~office in the Church. Bishop and
17 II, 2,3| the bishop’s particular~office to proclaim it. Infallibility
18 II, 3,2| Mass); secondly, the Divine Office (i.e. the two~chief offices
19 II, 3,2| town parishes.~The Divine Office is recited daily in monasteries,
20 II, 4,3| Basil are as follows:~1. The office of preparation — the Prothesis
21 II, 4,3| part of the Liturgy, the Office of Preparation, is performed
22 II, 4,5| has remained a permanent office,~and many deacons have no
23 II, 4,6| succession: the preliminary Office of Betrothal, and the Office
24 II, 4,6| Office of Betrothal, and the Office of Crowning, which~constitutes
25 II, 5,2| church as part of the Divine Office. Husbands and wives are
|