The American Catholic Quarterly Review, Volume 38James Andrew Corcoran, Patrick John Ryan, Edmond Francis Prendergast Hardy and Mahony., 1913 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 84
Pagina 34
... believe Lactantius , he now began to prey upon the fears of Diocletian by sly insinuations , menaces and threats pronounced in his hearing by large bands of soldiers and officers who had been hired for the purpose . Toleration of the ...
... believe Lactantius , he now began to prey upon the fears of Diocletian by sly insinuations , menaces and threats pronounced in his hearing by large bands of soldiers and officers who had been hired for the purpose . Toleration of the ...
Pagina 35
... believe the same if his authority was to pass undisputed . But it was commonly believed in the empire that political success was inextricably bound up with respect for the national gods , whom the Christians flatly refused to adore ...
... believe the same if his authority was to pass undisputed . But it was commonly believed in the empire that political success was inextricably bound up with respect for the national gods , whom the Christians flatly refused to adore ...
Pagina 42
... believe it . But who can longer doubt it , since the victorious Au- gustus , a long time afterwards when I was admitted to his intimacy , told it to me and swore to it on oath . He declared having seen with his eyes , after midday when ...
... believe it . But who can longer doubt it , since the victorious Au- gustus , a long time afterwards when I was admitted to his intimacy , told it to me and swore to it on oath . He declared having seen with his eyes , after midday when ...
Pagina 43
... believe that Constantine would have staked his good name on a fictitious story which the many soldiers who were with him at the time could have easily contradicted . Moreover , he had nothing to gain from such a fiction , first ...
... believe that Constantine would have staked his good name on a fictitious story which the many soldiers who were with him at the time could have easily contradicted . Moreover , he had nothing to gain from such a fiction , first ...
Pagina 59
... he no longer professed to believe . Constantine . kept the office of pagan high priest for the simple political purpose of maintaining religious peace in the realm . To suppress The Liberation of the Church by Constantine . 59.
... he no longer professed to believe . Constantine . kept the office of pagan high priest for the simple political purpose of maintaining religious peace in the realm . To suppress The Liberation of the Church by Constantine . 59.
Inhoudsopgave
17 | |
32 | |
40 | |
46 | |
69 | |
84 | |
100 | |
174 | |
480 | |
497 | |
513 | |
523 | |
536 | |
554 | |
572 | |
595 | |
179 | |
183 | |
184 | |
240 | |
291 | |
355 | |
363 | |
365 | |
369 | |
372 | |
373 | |
400 | |
611 | |
628 | |
677 | |
682 | |
694 | |
706 | |
727 | |
738 | |
750 | |
752 | |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Achæans Aegean Aegean civilization Apostles authority believe Bishops Bismarck called Cardinal Catholic Catholic Church Catholicism century Christ Christian civilization clergy Constantine course death diocese Diocletian divine doctrine Donatists doubt ecclesiastical Emperor empire England English fact faith Falstaff Father France Galerius German Gospel Government Greece Greek hand heart Holy honor human idea Ireland Irenaeus Irish Jesus John Gilmary Shea King Kulturkampf letter living Lord Margaret of York matter Maxentius means Menéndez y Pelayo mind Minoan modern Modernist moral nation nature never Ockham's razor Ozanam pagan peace Pelasgians Pius poet Pope Leo Pope Leo XIII prayer present priest Protestant question rapparee reason regard religion religious Roman Rome saints seems sense Shea soul Spain Spanish spirit teaching things thought tion to-day tradition true truth Vatican Windthorst words writer