From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 13
Page 4
... English Constitution ) : - " In the Church of Ireland there are four archbishops and eighteen bishops , * whose united income is estimated at £ 185,700 a - year . But , besides this acknowledged income , the revenue the Irish Church ...
... English Constitution ) : - " In the Church of Ireland there are four archbishops and eighteen bishops , * whose united income is estimated at £ 185,700 a - year . But , besides this acknowledged income , the revenue the Irish Church ...
Page 3
... English public have been long accustomed to the cry of " Justice to Ireland , " and , by its very frequency , have been almost led to forget the fact , that other por- tions of the empire equally stand in need of justice B 2 THE ...
... English public have been long accustomed to the cry of " Justice to Ireland , " and , by its very frequency , have been almost led to forget the fact , that other por- tions of the empire equally stand in need of justice B 2 THE ...
Page 5
... English bishops and other officials , many of whom were utterly indifferent to the moral elevation of the people ... English clergy , who served at the altars of Rome . This feeling , however , gradually disappeared , for in the ninth ...
... English bishops and other officials , many of whom were utterly indifferent to the moral elevation of the people ... English clergy , who served at the altars of Rome . This feeling , however , gradually disappeared , for in the ninth ...
Page 6
... English aggression . In the year 1188 , Baldwin , Archbishop of Canter- bury , visited the four cathedrals , and ... English court . Their first specific com- plaint was that the Archbishop of Canterbury appointed English bishops , who ...
... English aggression . In the year 1188 , Baldwin , Archbishop of Canter- bury , visited the four cathedrals , and ... English court . Their first specific com- plaint was that the Archbishop of Canterbury appointed English bishops , who ...
Page 7
... English court became milder . Having achieved its objects of conquest , the Government was content to let the agen- cies of the church return to their own proper channel . During the first three reigns after the subjugation of the ...
... English court became milder . Having achieved its objects of conquest , the Government was content to let the agen- cies of the church return to their own proper channel . During the first three reigns after the subjugation of the ...
Common terms and phrases
a-year amount annual value annum Archbishop Archdeacon Asaph average attendance Bangor benefices Bishop Bishop of London BLACKFRIARS blishment British Anti-state-church Association cathedral chapels Church Establishment CHURCH IN WALES Church of England Church of Scotland Church property Church-rates Churchmen clergy clerical Commissioners Commutation congregations connexion David's Dean deanery Denbighshire dignitaries diocese of Llandaff diocese of St Dissent ecclesiastical revenue endow English episcopal Established Church Establishment in Wales estates estimated F. W. Newman four Free-church glebe glebe-houses incumbents Ireland Irish Church Kirk land leases liberty Llandaff London Lord Luxmoore ment Merioneth Merionethshire MIALL AND COCKSHAW ministers moral nett income parishes parishioners Parliament Parochial Benefice patronage pew-rents places of worship population prebend Prelate Presbytery present princes purposes quoad sacra quoad sacra churches religion religious rent-charges Report returns Sir Thomas Philips sittings spiritual State-church tion tithes town TRACTS voluntary principle voluntaryism Welsh whole
Popular passages
Page 28 - For it is easier for a camel to go through a needle's eye, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.
Page 11 - ... whatever to the production. When years perhaps, of care and toil have matured an improvement; when the husbandman sees new crops ripening to his skill / and industry; the moment he is ready to put his sickle to the. grain, he finds himself compelled to divide his harvest with a stranger. Tithes...
Page 6 - According to the usual form of procedure, this is the time for making up the roll ; but in consequence of certain proceedings affecting our rights and privileges, — proceedings which have been sanctioned by Her Majesty's Government, and by the Legislature of the country, and more especially in respect that there has been an infringement on the liberties of our constitution, so that we could not now constitute this court without a violation of the terms of the union between Church and State in this...
Page 29 - Ireland and to the three articles of the thirtysixth canon of 1603, and to all things contained in them, and having also before us subscribed a declaration of your conformity to the Liturgy of the United Church of England and Ireland as is now by law established. In testimony,
Page 8 - Commissioners therein named to make a full and correct Inquiry respecting the Revenues and Patronage belonging to the several Archiepiscopal and Episcopal Sees in England and Wales to all Cathedral and Collegiate Churches, and to all Ecclesiastical Benefices (including Donatives, Perpetual Curacies and Chapelries), with or without Cure of Souls, and the Names of the several Patrons thereof, and other circumstances therewith connected...
Page 9 - The Parliament is the temporal head of the Church, from whose acts, and from whose acts alone, it exists as the National Church, and from which alone it derives all its powers.
Page 5 - Church ;— and further declare that no person shall be held to be entitled to disapprove, as aforesaid, who shall refuse, if required, solemnly to declare, in presence of the Presbytery, that he is actuated by no factious or malicious motive, but solely by a conscientious regard to the spiritual interests of himself or the congregation.
Page 6 - ... into a perpetuity ; and partly from a tax levied on all ecclesiastical dignities and benefices, according to a scale of taxation specified in a schedule to the act ; in consideration of which tax all first-fruits are abolished. The commissioners are invested with extraordinary powers by the act. Thus, they have authority to disappropriate benefices united to dignities, and to unite them to vicarages in lieu thereof. They have also the power of suspending the appointment to benefices which are...