The History of the Council of Constance, 1. köideA. Bettesworth, C. Rivington, J. Batley, T. Cox ... [and 6 others], 1730 |
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Page xii
... Doctrine or Difcipline , to condemn real or pretended Hereticks , and to re- • form fuch Abuses as had only crept into fome Parts of Europe , or among a certain Order of Men : This Council had greater Work upon their Hands , viz . to ...
... Doctrine or Difcipline , to condemn real or pretended Hereticks , and to re- • form fuch Abuses as had only crept into fome Parts of Europe , or among a certain Order of Men : This Council had greater Work upon their Hands , viz . to ...
Page xiv
... Doctrine or Difcipline , to condemn real or pretended Herefies , and to reform Abuses that had crept into fome Parts of the World only , and among one certain Order of Men : For in the firft Place , the Business of this Council was to ...
... Doctrine or Difcipline , to condemn real or pretended Herefies , and to reform Abuses that had crept into fome Parts of the World only , and among one certain Order of Men : For in the firft Place , the Business of this Council was to ...
Page xiv
... Doctrine , which was at that time no lefs cor- rupt than Morals . But if the Right of the Council feem'd indisputable in that refpect , Sentiments are very much divided about the Ufe they made of their Authority ; and it was the Opinion ...
... Doctrine , which was at that time no lefs cor- rupt than Morals . But if the Right of the Council feem'd indisputable in that refpect , Sentiments are very much divided about the Ufe they made of their Authority ; and it was the Opinion ...
Page xxxix
... Doctrine as unpolish'd and wild . ( a ) Adver tilement on Part 11. of Peggiana , No XXII , XXIX . ( b ) P. 9 . GREAT Ufe was made of the Hiftorics of Leonard Aretin in the former Edition ; but at that time I had not feen his Letters ...
... Doctrine as unpolish'd and wild . ( a ) Adver tilement on Part 11. of Peggiana , No XXII , XXIX . ( b ) P. 9 . GREAT Ufe was made of the Hiftorics of Leonard Aretin in the former Edition ; but at that time I had not feen his Letters ...
Page 17
... Doctrine of John Petit , this Duke's Advocate . John XXIII . having therefore found fo happy v.d. Hard , a Correspondent in Frederick of Auftria , made him Captain - General of T. II . P. ix . all his Troops , and of thofe of the Roman ...
... Doctrine of John Petit , this Duke's Advocate . John XXIII . having therefore found fo happy v.d. Hard , a Correspondent in Frederick of Auftria , made him Captain - General of T. II . P. ix . all his Troops , and of thofe of the Roman ...
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Common terms and phrases
Accufation Affair Affembly againſt alfo Ambaffadors Anſwer Archbishop Arragon Articles Auftria Authority becauſe Benedict Benedict XIII Bishop Bishop of Arras Bishop of Paris Bohemia Cafe call'd Cambray Cardinal of Cambray Caufe Chriftian Church of Rome Clergy Commiffioners condemn'd Condemnation Confequence cou'd Coun Council of Conftance Council of Pifa declar'd declares Decree defire Deputies Doctors Duke of Burgundy Ecclefiaftical Elector Palatine Emperor faid Faith falfe fame Favour fays fecond fent feveral fhall fhould firft fome France fuch Gregory XII Hardt Herefy Hereticks Hiftory himſelf Holy Hufs Jacobel Jefus Chrift Jerome of Prague John Hus John Petit John XXIII King laft Letter moft moſt Nations neceffary Niem Number oblig'd Occafion Perfons Peter de Luna Pope Pope's prefent Prelates pretended Prieft Prifon Princes Proctors Propofitions Proteft publick Reafon receiv'd Refignation refolv'd Reformation Safe-Conduct Schifm Seffion Sigifmond thefe themſelves theſe Things thofe thoſe Treatife Univerfity Wickliff wou'd
Popular passages
Page 574 - Now we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto him, that ye be not soon shaken in mind, or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from us, as that the day of Christ is at hand.
Page 274 - And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, and shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to battle, the number of whom is as the sand of the sea.
Page 301 - As I live, saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that he turn from his way and live.
Page 274 - Lord, what is come upon us: consider and behold our reproach. Our inheritance is turned to strangers, our houses to aliens. We are orphans and fatherless, our mothers are as widows. We have drunken our water for money; our wood is sold unto us.
Page 265 - I fay unto you ; except ye eat the flejh of the Son of Man, and drink bis blood, ye have no life in you...
Page 422 - I have written and taught," these were the words of Huss, " was in order to rescue souls from the power of the devil, and to deliver them from the tyranny of sin; and I do gladly seal, what I have written and taught, with my blood.
Page 506 - ... had done what they had defired him to do, could never afterwards bear to look a man in the face. The Council of Conftance pafled a decree in the fame year in which John Hufs was burned ( 1415^, to declare that every Jafe-conduct granted by the Emperor, Kings, &c.
Page xxxviii - ... such that in spite of the decrees of the holy oecumenical council of Constance, contained in sections IV and V, approved by the Holy Apostolic See, confirmed by the practice of the whole Church and the Roman Pontiff, and religiously observed in all times by the Gallican Church, remain in all their force and virtue; and that the Church of France does not approve the opinion of those who attack these decrees, or who weaken them by saying that their authority is not well established, that they have...
Page 170 - Bull, and which is impressed on one side with the heads of St. Peter and St. Paul, and on the other with the name of the Pope, and the year of his pontificate.
Page 140 - ... that age in erudition and knowledge. He admits the pope to be Christ's vicar on earth; but asserts that his power is limited, and ought to be restrained by certain rules and laws for the edification of the church, to which the authority of the pope and all other persons ought to be devoted. Gerson seems to have disregarded the authority of scripture, which knows nothing of such a vicar of Christ. Common sense, however, and the experience of the necessity of some restrictions of the papal power...