A History of the English Church: Warre Cornish, F. The English church in the nineteenth century. (2 v.)William Richard Wood Stephens, William Hunt Macmillan and Company, Limited, 1910 |
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Pagina 5
... clergy . with France . The clergy were almost unanimous in supporting the war and the Ministry , both from conviction and from fear of change . There was little to distinguish them from the laity . They were not a separate order , but ...
... clergy . with France . The clergy were almost unanimous in supporting the war and the Ministry , both from conviction and from fear of change . There was little to distinguish them from the laity . They were not a separate order , but ...
Pagina 6
... clergy upheld the use and wont of the Establishment , the malcontents wished for more vital religion and love of souls ; neither party desired much social or political change . The ecclesiastical abuses which were attacked in 1831 were ...
... clergy upheld the use and wont of the Establishment , the malcontents wished for more vital religion and love of souls ; neither party desired much social or political change . The ecclesiastical abuses which were attacked in 1831 were ...
Pagina 7
... clergy were hearty supporters of Pitt . The present writer must ask for some indulgence if he , goes over ground which has already been traversed , to some extent , by that volume of this series which treats of the eighteenth century ...
... clergy were hearty supporters of Pitt . The present writer must ask for some indulgence if he , goes over ground which has already been traversed , to some extent , by that volume of this series which treats of the eighteenth century ...
Pagina 8
... clergy , as they called them- selves , few in number but noisy and inconvenient , were looked upon as dangerous innovators and bad subjects . No high promotion for such men was dreamed of , either by themselves or by their supporters ...
... clergy , as they called them- selves , few in number but noisy and inconvenient , were looked upon as dangerous innovators and bad subjects . No high promotion for such men was dreamed of , either by themselves or by their supporters ...
Pagina 11
William Richard Wood Stephens, William Hunt. = / I HIGH CHURCH CLERGY II of laymen : the clergy , both dignitaries and rank and file , disliked their toleration of dissent and their willingness to work with nonconformists of the Three ...
William Richard Wood Stephens, William Hunt. = / I HIGH CHURCH CLERGY II of laymen : the clergy , both dignitaries and rank and file , disliked their toleration of dissent and their willingness to work with nonconformists of the Three ...
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Populaire passages
Pagina 58 - Committee that it is the duty of this country to promote the interest and happiness of the native inhabitants of the British dominions in India, and that such measures ought to be adopted as may tend to the introduction among them of useful knowledge and of religious and moral improvement.
Pagina 282 - Times, a series of anonymous publications, purporting to be written by members of the University, but which are in no way sanctioned by the University itself: " Resolved, that modes of interpretation such as are suggested in the said tract, evading rather than explaining the sense of the Thirty-nine Articles, and reconciling subscription to them with the adoption of errors which they were designed to counteract, defeat the object, and are inconsistent with the due observance of the above-mentioned...
Pagina 239 - I will not shrink from uttering my firm conviction, that it would be a gain to this country, were it vastly more superstitious, more bigoted, more gloomy, more fierce in its religion, than at present it shows itself to be.
Pagina 347 - There is an assumption of power in all the documents which have come from Rome— a pretension to supremacy over the realm of England, and a claim to sole and undivided sway, which is inconsistent with the Queen's supremacy, with the rights of our bishops and clergy, and with the spiritual independence of the nation, as asserted even in Roman Catholic times.
Pagina 326 - Gorham is not contrary or repugnant to the declared doctrine of the Church of England as by law established, and that Mr. Gorham ought not, by reason of the doctrine held by him, to have been refused admission to the vicarage of Brampford Speke.
Pagina 99 - Churches in England; applied to the Purposes of the Society for Promoting the Enlargement and Building of Churches and Chapels.
Pagina 243 - Pusey?" when I said that I did not see symptoms of his doing as I had done, I was sometimes thought uncharitable. If confidence in his position is, (as it is,) a first essential in the leader of a party, Dr.
Pagina 342 - Your beloved country has received a place among the fair Churches which, normally constituted, form the splendid aggregate of Catholic Communion : Catholic England has been restored to its orbit in the ecclesiastical firmament, from which its light had long vanished, and begins now anew its course of regularly adjusted action round the centre of unity, the source of jurisdiction, of light and of vigour.
Pagina 125 - He did not suffer the primate of his kingdom, the archbishop of Canterbury, if he had called together under his presidency an assembly of bishops, to enact or prohibit anything but what was agreeable to his will and had been first ordained by him.
Pagina 47 - York (Philadelphia, 1940) examines the efforts of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel and the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge...