Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2,2| have the same sacramental powers, all are divinely appointed
2 I, 2,4| effect, but it lay beyond his powers to dictate the content of
3 I, 3,2| they had exceeded their powers, and he disowned their decision.
4 I, 5,1| aid from Roman Catholic powers. ~ The Sultan himself instituted
5 I, 5,2| Catholic and of Protestant powers, played a ~religious as
6 I, 5,2| representatives of the Roman Catholic powers. Besides invoking ~the political
7 I, 6,2| symphony of two coordi-~nated powers, sacerdotium and imperium,
8 I, 6,2| the theory of two ~equal powers remained the same, in practice
9 I, 6,2| theory of a harmony of ~equal powers. ~ But the decisions of
10 I, 6,2| office of patriarch, whose powers Nicon had so ambitiously
11 II, 1,2| The image denotes the powers with which every man is
12 II, 1,3| Tree he triumphed over the powers which opposed him, when
13 II, 1,3| triumphant victory over the powers of evil, the west particularly
14 II, 2,3| sense; for in exercising his powers the bishop is guided by
15 II, 3,1| himself. ‘Now the celestial powers~are present with us, and
16 II, 5,1| victory of Christ over the powers of evil.~Before we leave
17 II, 6,2| dogmatic~statement on the powers of the episcopate, the Roman
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