Religion and policy and the countenance and assistance each should give the other, with a survey of the power and jurisdiction of the pope, Volume 2

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Pagina 423 - Regnans in excelsis, cui data est omnis in coelo et in terra potestas, unam sanctam catholicam et apostolicam ecclesiam, extra quam nulla est salus, uni soli in terris, videlicet, apostolorum principi Petro, Petrique successori Romano pontifici, in potestatis plenitudine tradidit gubernandam. Hunc unum super omnes gentes et omnia regna principem constituit, qui evellat, destruat, dissipet, disperdat, plantet, et aedificet ; ut fidelem populum, mutuae charitatis nexu constrictum, in unitate spiritus...
Pagina 479 - Rome, and obtained an interview ; but the pope positively refused to acknowledge his diplomatic qualifications : all that passed between them must be considered mere private discourse ; and yet there was much public import in what he said to the ambassador of Henry IV. " Do not tell me that your king is a Catholic. I will never believe that he is truly converted, unless an angel come from heaven to whisper it in my ears. As to the Catholics who have followed his party, I look upon them only as disobedient...
Pagina 415 - Religion and policy and the countenance and assistance each should give to the other. With a survey of the power and jurisdiction of the Pope in the dominions of other princes.
Pagina 649 - Popes, and do themselves pay and enjoin their subject! to render that submission and obedience to him, have not that opinion of his divine right, nor do they look upon it as any part of their religion ; so that in truth the obligation which is imposed upon the Catholic subjects of Protestant Princes is another religion, or at least consists of more articles of faith than the Catholic Princes and their subjects do profess to believe.
Pagina 667 - King, to say that they do not acknowledge any temporal authority to be in the Pope, so that he cannot disturb the^ peace of the kingdom; and that, if himself came to invade the kingdom, they would...
Pagina 711 - ... religion flourish amongst Christians, without any violation of Christian charity; and, the uncharitableness of all faction being removed, there would remain such an innocence and integrity in the heart, as would make our religion acceptable to God ; and when no mischievous action doth necessarily result from our opinions, how erroneous soever, we should be no more offended with each other for those differences, than for the distinct colour of our eyes or hair.
Pagina 668 - ... soever it is thought to be, shall be enough to give law to the temporal, when a spiritual end shall so direct it : and all Kings have reason to believe, that every Pope thinks...
Pagina 688 - Nothing is harder to be made, or, being once made, of more dangerous influence, than a General Synod; so that, as long as the course of' the world shall go on as it does, an attempting it in extreme necessity, would be a perfect tempting of God, and such an assembly would make the Church run an evident risk of having its flock scattered.
Pagina 707 - ... exercised." He recalled the fact that Alexander VII. had refused all help to the exiled Charles II. unless he should become a Roman Catholic, and he urged that if an oath of abjuration of the political power of the popes were required from all Roman Catholics in England the penal laws might be suspended. "For if that subjection to the pope were once disclaimed and rooted out, their other errors are not dangerous to the State.
Pagina 666 - ... control those actions, and dispose the persons not to perform them; as when the Pope excommunicates all those whom he calls Heretics, and absolves all those who are in subjection to those excommunicated persons from any oaths they have taken to them, and from all duty that they are understood to owe them. And when Princes see that, accordingly, their subjects depart from their duty and obedience, have they not great reason to make themselves as sure as may be, that those subjects to whom they...

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