Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,Intro | rule of a non-Christian government. ~ Such are the main stages
2 I, 1 | forbidden and persecuted by the government; today persecution is no
3 I, 2,3 | of reach of the Byzantine government. It was not the last ~time
4 I, 2,4 | Christian in its principles of government and in its daily life. Byzantium ~
5 I, 2,4 | earth a living icon of God.s government ~in heaven. ~ ~
6 I, 5,1 | administration. The bishops became government officials, the Patriarch
7 I, 5,2 | the Orthodox Church. ~ The government authorities recognized only
8 I, 6,3 | Emperor himself, but by a government official, ~the Chief Procurator.
9 I, 6,3 | of any scheme which the government might consider sedi-~tious,
10 I, 6,3 | The system of Church government which Peter the Great established
11 I, 6,3 | when the Provi-~sional Government was in power, an All-Russian
12 I, 6,3 | abolish the Synodical form of government established by Peter the
13 I, 7,1 | danger that the Turkish government will eventually expel the
14 I, 7,1 | negotiations, the Greek government eventually allowed five
15 I, 7,6 | 1950s, and ~the Socialist government elected in 1981 began to
16 I, 7,9 | obstruction from the Turkish government. ~Around 1950 the Ecumenical
17 I, 7,10 | changed utterly. The communist government in China, when it ~ordered
18 I, 7,10 | since the ~ 79~Chinese government allows no foreign missions,
19 II, 0,11 | system of doctrine, Church government,~worship, and art which
20 II, 6,2 | Poland by a Roman Catholic government~between the two World Wars.
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