A Sketch of the Reformation, 1. köideJ. Munroe, 1906 - 259 pages |
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... Ecclesiastical History , Yale University , New Haven , Conn . [ Revised and Enlarged Edition . CHRISTIAN INSTITUTIONS . By A. V. G. ALLEN , D.D. , Professor of Ecclesiastical History , Protestant Episcopal Divinity School , Cambridge ...
... Ecclesiastical History , Yale University , New Haven , Conn . [ Revised and Enlarged Edition . CHRISTIAN INSTITUTIONS . By A. V. G. ALLEN , D.D. , Professor of Ecclesiastical History , Protestant Episcopal Divinity School , Cambridge ...
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... Ecclesiastical Religion 79 2 * 88 84 86 89 95 99 103 106 112 114 • 117 · 119 121 127 127 135 · 137 139 Ecclesiastical Reforme carried out by the secular authorities 140 Medieval Charity - Beggars , ecclesiastical and other - Lay ...
... Ecclesiastical Religion 79 2 * 88 84 86 89 95 99 103 106 112 114 • 117 · 119 121 127 127 135 · 137 139 Ecclesiastical Reforme carried out by the secular authorities 140 Medieval Charity - Beggars , ecclesiastical and other - Lay ...
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... Ecclesiastical jurists had translated their assertions into legal language , and had expressed them in principles borrowed from the old imperial law . Precedents , needed by the legal mind to unite the past with the present , had been ...
... Ecclesiastical jurists had translated their assertions into legal language , and had expressed them in principles borrowed from the old imperial law . Precedents , needed by the legal mind to unite the past with the present , had been ...
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... ecclesiastical empire ruled by the Bishop of Rome . The requirements of the practical religion of everyday life were also believed to be in the possession of this ecclesiastical monarchy to give and to withhold . For it was the almost ...
... ecclesiastical empire ruled by the Bishop of Rome . The requirements of the practical religion of everyday life were also believed to be in the possession of this ecclesiastical monarchy to give and to withhold . For it was the almost ...
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... ecclesiastical jurists alone ; but in the thirteenth century . theology also began to state them from its own point of view . Thomas Aquinas set himself to prove that sub- mission to the Roman Pontiff was necessary for every human being ...
... ecclesiastical jurists alone ; but in the thirteenth century . theology also began to state them from its own point of view . Thomas Aquinas set himself to prove that sub- mission to the Roman Pontiff was necessary for every human being ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aleander Archbishop of Mainz Augsburg Augustinian authority Basel believed Bishop of Rome Brethren burghers Charles Christ Christian cities classes clergy Colet Confession convent Council Curia declared deutschen Diet Diet of Worms doctrine Duke earlier ecclesiastical edition Elector Elector of Saxony Emperor Empire England Erasmus Erfurt Europe evangelical faith fifteenth century France German Geschichte Humanists Hutten imperial Indulgences Italian Italy Jesus John king lands landsknechts Latin learning Leipzig living Lord Luther Lutheran Maximilian medieval Church Middle Ages monks moral movement nobles Nürnberg Papacy papal parish peasants pilgrimages pilgrims pious Pope Pope John XXII popular preacher preaching priests princes Protestant Reformation Reichstagsakten religion religious Renaissance Reuchlin revolt Roman Roman Curia Romanist sacraments Saxony scholars Scholastic sermons sixteenth Spain spiritual Strassburg taught teaching temporal theologians theology things thought tion town Ulrich Ulrich von Hutten University vernacular Wittenberg words Worms
Popular passages
Page 247 - Why hast thou then broken down her hedges, So that all they which pass by the way do pluck her ? The boar out of the wood doth waste it, And the wild beast of the field doth devour it.
Page 460 - ROMANS p)AUL, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated unto the gospel of God, (which he had promised afore by his prophets in the holy scriptures,) concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord...
Page 174 - The mysteries of kings it may be safer to conceal, but Christ wished his mysteries to be published as openly as possible. I wish that even the weakest woman should read the Gospel — should read the epistles of Paul. And I wish these were translated into all languages, so that they might be read and understood, not only by Scots and Irishmen, but also by Turks and Saracens. To make them understood is surely the first step. It may be that they might be ridiculed by many, but some would take them...