Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,Intro | while ~universal in its mission, has tended in practice
2 I, 4,1 | as in Bulgaria, the Greek mission soon clashed with German
3 I, 4,1 | filio-~que. To free his mission from German interference,
4 I, 4,1 | full support to the Greek mission, confirm-~ing the use of
5 I, 4,1 | Traces of the Slavonic mission lingered ~on in Moravia
6 I, 4,1 | employed in the Moravian ~mission. Greek was replaced by Slavonic,
7 I, 7,5 | The Russian Spiritual Mission in Pales-~tine, as well
8 I, 7,5 | of schools. This Russian Mission has naturally ~been sadly
9 I, 7,6 | concerned with the .Home Mission,. was ~founded in 1930.
10 I, 7,9 | Moscow) a Dutch Orthodox ~Mission . all of them following
11 I, 7,10 | Anyone who reflects on the mission of Cyril ~and Methodius,
12 I, 7,10 | exist, while a ~new Orthodox mission has shot up suddenly and
13 I, 7,10 | awareness. ~ The Chinese mission at Peking was set up in
14 I, 7,10 | their ~chaplain with them. Mission work, however, was not undertaken
15 I, 7,10 | to be no longer a foreign mission but an indigenous Church
16 I, 7,10 | Japanese people. ~ The Russian mission in Korea, founded in 1898,
17 I, 7,10 | would seem to be less. The mission suffered in 1950 during
18 I, 7,10 | in 1967. At present the mission is under the charge of the
19 II, 1,1 | Spirit, and the temporal~mission, the sending of the Spirit
20 II, 1,1 | saying that, so far as the mission of the Spirit to the~world
21 II, 1,1 | Father alone, a temporal mission from the Son: such was the
22 II, 1,1 | allow not only a temporal mission, but an eternal~manifestation
23 II, 3,1 | and sordid Presbyterian mission hall in a mews over a garage,
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